Miss May does not exist The life and work of Elaine May, Hollywood's hidden genius

Carrie Courogen

Book - 2024

"Miss May Does Not Exist, by Carrie Courogen is the riveting biography of comedian, director, actor and writer Elaine May, one of America's greatest comic geniuses. May began her career as one-half of the legendary comedy team known as Nichols and May, the duo that revolutionized the comedy sketch. After performing their Broadway smash An Evening with Mike Nichols and Elaine May, Elaine set out on her own. She toiled unsuccessfully on Broadway for a while, but then headed to Hollywood where she became the director of A New Leaf, The Heartbreak Kid, Mikey and Nicky, and the legendary Ishtar. She was hired as a script doctor on countless films like Heaven Can Wait, Reds, Tootsie, and The Birdcage. In 2019, she returned to Broadway w...here she won the Tony Award for Best Leading Actress in The Waverly Gallery. Besides her considerable talent, May is well known for her reclusiveness. On one of the albums she made with Mike Nichols, her bio is this: "Miss May does not exist." Until now. Carrie Courogen has uncovered the Elaine May who does exist. Conducting countless interviews, she has filled in the blanks May has forcibly kept blank for years, creating a fascinating portrait of the way women were mistreated and held back in Hollywood. Miss May Does Not Exist is a remarkable love story about a prickly genius who was never easy to work with, not always easy to love and frequently often punished for those things, despite revolutionizing the way we think about comedy, acting, and what a film or play can be"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Carrie Courogen (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 386 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 332-376) and index.
ISBN
9781250279224
  • Prologue: A Few Thoughts from a Bench Across the Street from Elaine May's Apartment
  • Chapter 1. I Will Tell You Anything, but I Warn You Now, It's a Lie
  • Chapter 2. When in Doubt, Seduce (1952-1957)
  • Chapter 3. Nichols and May Take Manhattan (1957-1961)
  • Chapter 4. What the Hell Happened to Elaine May? (1961-1967)
  • Chapter 5. You Make the Crew Nervous: Adaptation/Next and A New Leaf (1968-1971)
  • Chapter 6. Laugh and Laugh and Laugh and Shudder Later: The Heartbreak Kid (1972)
  • Chapter 7. Two Stolen Reels and a Clown Car: Mikey and Nicky (1976)
  • Chapter 8. Nothing Was a Straight Line: Heaven Can Wait, Reds, and Tootsie (1976-1985)
  • Chapter 9. Dangerous Business: Ishtar (1987)
  • Chapter 10. There's No Prize, Just a Smaller Size (1988-1996)
  • Chapter 11. Don't Call It a Comeback: The Birdcage (1996) and Primary Colors (1998)
  • Chapter 12. We Adapt Very Quickly (1998-2014)
  • Chapter 13. What Is Important in Life and Art? (2015-2023)
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Now in her nineties, comedian Elaine May is still best remembered for her brilliant improvisations with Mike Nichols, a performance art form she helped start. But while Nichols went on to cinematic glory as a director who won all the major awards (he's an EGOT), May, as the title references, tended to disappear. She directed four films, including the much-maligned Ishtar, and she was an occasional actress and an in-demand script doctor, though she often refused credit. Courogen makes the point--repeatedly--that May was always the smartest, most talented person in the room. But she was also obsessive compulsive, unable to let go of a work, touchy, and reclusive. Hollywood sexism hindered her career as well. The research here is impeccable, but no real intimates, and certainly not May, agreed to interviews. Consequently, Courogen presents primarily a career biography with large dollops of the intense relationship between Nichols and May scattered throughout. Still, this is a captivating look at an influential, one-of-a-kind talent in the performing arts pantheon whom comedy, theater, and film fans should know about.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Courogen (Go All the Way) delivers a vibrant biography of filmmaker Elaine May. Born in 1932, May rose to prominence with the improv comedy act she developed with Mike Nichols. The duo became an overnight sensation after a 1958 television appearance, but May quit three years later, fearing the act had grown stale. She hadn't planned on becoming a director, but was effectively forced to by Paramount after the studio only agreed to finance her first film, A New Leaf, which she wrote and was set to star in, on the condition that she direct so the studio could save money by paying her less than a male director. Depicting May as an auteur obsessed with creative control, Courogen describes how she allegedly hid film reels of the in-progress Mikey and Nicky to prevent studio interference. Courogen traces this tension between commercial concerns and May's uncompromising artistry through her major successes (she received acclaim for writing Heaven Can Wait and The Birdcage), as well as her infamous directorial bomb, Ishtar, and captures her larger-than-life spirit in lithe prose: "Elaine was a world-wise woman among children, with a mind that seemed to run only at high speed, a cruel wit that could be weaponized at a moment's notice, and an intimidating raw and unbalanced intelligence." This is a gem. Agent: Nicki Richesin, Dunow, Carlson & Lerner Literary. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Known for being highly intelligent and often prickly, Elaine May proved herself a multifaceted talent as she transitioned from comedian to writer/director/actor and sought-after script doctor. Working tirelessly for most of the last 70 years, May (born in 1932) has remained an enigmatic figure whose work has often gone uncredited. She has always valued her privacy and reportedly has a penchant for half-truths and humorous exaggerations, but writer/editor/director Courogen skillfully takes on the challenge of discovering the woman behind the legend. She found that May, a single mother at 18, asked her own character-inspiring mother to raise May's daughter while May partnered with Mike Nichols to revolutionize stand-up comedy and improvisation. She dabbled in acting and directing, most notably helming The Heartbreak Kid and Ishtar, which received advance reviews that sunk the film and created May's lifelong distrust of the press. On the other hand, her work saved numerous films, including Tootsie and Primary Colors, and her role in the Broadway revival of The Waverly Gallery led to a Best Actress Tony win in 2019 when she was in her late eighties. VERDICT The writing in this book is whip-smart and funny. It produces a fully realized portrait of a mysterious film genius.--Lisa Henry

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A biography of an iconic entertainer. Courogen makes an engaging book debut with an appreciative biography of comedian, director, playwright, and actor Elaine May (b. 1932), as famous for her prickly personality as for her brilliant, sardonic wit. Drawing on abundant published material and interviews, the author chronicles May's roller-coaster career. The daughter of peripatetic entertainers, by the time she was 10, she had been enrolled in more than 50 schools. She left school for good when she was 14, married when she was 16, and by the next year had a baby. Leaving her daughter with her mother, in 1952, she hitchhiked to Chicago, where she met Mike Nichols. "Mike and Elaine," Courogen writes, "found their possibilities in a shared interest in people's pretentious natures (including their own), a mutual fascination with betrayal, and above all else, an unending love for language." The two created a nightclub act that catapulted them to fame on TV and Broadway, as well as "a blur of nonstop gigs." But in 1961, Elaine, bored and restless, quit. While Nichols went on to become an award-winning director, May's career sank for years before it revived. Courogen recounts in detail her reincarnation as a director, actor, and, notably, script doctor, "someone who could make your project better, often at the eleventh hour." By the mid-1980s, "she had gone from someone who was practically unhireable to someone who was not only constantly booked and busy, but able to turn down work left and right, agreeing only to scripts she found truly interesting or exciting." Though Courogen thoroughly documents May's career, her inner life remains elusive; as someone who knew May commented, she's "wickedly smart, wickedly funny, wickedly clever. But you could never get to the center of her." A sympathetic yet somewhat incomplete portrayal of a unique talent. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.