
The Improv
Description
Get an insider's oral history of the World's most iconic comedy club, featuring exclusive interviews with today's most hilarious stars recalling their time on stage (and off) at the Improv.
In 1963, 30-year-old Budd Friedman—who had recently quit his job as a Boston advertising executive and returned to New York to become a theatrical producer—opened a coffee house for Broadway performers called the Improvisation. Later shortened to the Improv, its first seedy West 44th Street location initially attracted the likes of Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli, Albert Finney, and Jason Robards, as well as a couple of then-unknowns named Dustin Hoffman and Bette Midler.
While it drew near-capacity crowds almost from day one, it wasn't until comedians began dropping by to try out new material that the Improv truly hit its stride. The club became the first venue to present live stand-up in a continuous format, and in the process reinvented the art form and created the template for all other comedy clubs that followed.
From the microphone to the iconic brick wall, the Improv has been the launching pad for practically every major name in American comedy over the last five-plus decades. Now, in The Improv, Friedman, along with a Who's Who of his most famous alumni—including Jay Leno, Jerry Seinfeld, Jimmy Fallon, Larry David, Billy Crystal, Lily Tomlin, Judd Apatow, Al Franken, Paul Reiser, Howie Mandel, Bob Saget, Drew Carey, and many more—tell it like it was in the first-ever oral history of how this game-changing comedy club came to be.
The Improv gives readers an exclusive look at what really happened onstage and off-mic at one of America's most venerable institutions.
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Persons
Budd Friedman, the man who could well be called the father of the modern comedy club, was born in Norwich, Connecticut, moved to New York, fought in Korea and returned to Manhattan, where he obtained a degree in Advertising and Marketing from New York University. Less than enthralled with advertising, he hit upon the idea that was to become the Improvisation. The rest, as they say, is history. Ever the entrepreneur, Budd produced a political/satirical theatrical revue in New York entitled What's a Nice Country Like You Doing in a State Like This? He became Jay Leno and Bette Midler's first manager, and in 1975 he opened a West Coast branch of the Improv on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles.
Budd auditioned for and won the coveted role of ""Budd Friedman"" in Man on the Moon, the biopic about Andy Kaufman starring Jim Carrey and Danny DeVito. In 2002, he hosted and executive produced a one-hour primetime special for NBC celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Improv. He also co-created and executive produced National Lampoon's Funny Money for the Game Show Network. More recently, he reprised his role of ""Budd Friedman"" in Judd Aptow's Funny People. He continues to bring stand-up into the hearts and minds of everyone in the United States. As of 2015, there were 22 Improv comedy clubs in 12 states.
Content
Foreword by Jay Leno
Prologue
Introduction
Part One
- Growing Up Fatherless and Struggling to Find My Way
- Broadway Bound and the Unexpected Detour
- Building the House That Hilarity Built
- Flying by the Seat of My Pants
- The Improv Gets Hot
- A Future Film Legend Wanders into West 44th Street and I Nearly Produce My First Show
- The Singing Waitresses
- Liza Minelli and Judy Garland . . . Onstage at the Improv
- Not So Blown Away by Bette Midler . . . at First
- Comedians Start Coming to the Improv
- The Anointment of King Richard
Part Two
- Revelry and Rivalry
- Stiller and Meara
- More Momentum, My Monocle-and Lily Tomlin's Grand Entrance
- The One and Only Rodney Dangerfield
- Robert Klein Elevates Stand-Up-and the Improv-to a New Level
- Locking Horns with David Brenner
- Richard Lewis
- The Hippest Room in America
- The Improv's Gentle Giant
- The Improv and The Tonight Show
- A Tale of Two Comedy Clubs
- Meeting Jay
- Producing My First Show
Part Three
- Expansion
- My Early California Adventures
- Andy Kaufman Turns Stand-Up Upside Down
- Dissing Larry David
- A Tsunami Named Robin
- Comedy's Tragic Prinze
- A Troubling Nemesis Named Mitzi Shore
- Going Up in Flames
- Old Enemies and New Beginnings
Part Four
- An Evening at the Improv
- The Improv Explodes . . . and the Stakes Get Even Higher
- The Comedy Boom Busts and Finding Fallon
- Passing the Baton and Looking Ahead: The 2000s to the Present
Acknowledgments
About the Authors