Babaloo Mandel
About
Biography
Biography
As one of the most successful comedy screenwriting teams in Hollywood, Marc "Babaloo Mandel, along with writing partner Lowell Ganz, penned some of the biggest hits of the 1980s and 1990s. After serving time as a joke writer for the likes of Joan Rivers, Mandel partnered with Ganz and embarked on an incredibly successful feature career that benefited from frequent collaborations with producer Brian Glazer and director Ron Howard, starting with "Night Shift" (1982). Mandel and Ganz went on to write huge hits like "Splash" (1984) and "Parenthood" (1989) while also faltering with more mundane projects like "Gung Ho" (1986) and the Cyndi Lauper vehicle "Vibes" (1988). Mandel and Ganz had perhaps their greatest success, both critically and commercially, with "City Slickers" (1991), and followed up with the warmhearted comedy about a forgotten piece of history, "A League of Their Own" (1992). The pair saw their creative success falter when they went back to the well on the inevitable sequel "City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly's Gold" (1994) before striking out with rather mediocre offerings like "Multiplicity" (1996) and "Father's Day" (1997). Following a period where they wrote uncredited drafts of several high-profile projects, Mandel and Ganz reemerged with "Robots" (2005) and "Fever Pitch" (2005), both of which displayed the comic touch that was on full display during the height of their careers.
Born on Oct. 13, 1949 in New York City, Mandel was raised in a household of six headed by his taxi driver father. When he was older and on his own, Mandel moved to Los Angeles to begin a screenwriting career, where he sold jokes to various comedians like Joan Rivers. In 1981, Mandel met future writing partner Lowell Ganz at the famed Comedy Store, which soon blossomed into a vibrant career would end up becoming arguably the most successful comedy tandem in cinema history. The pair made the first of many collaborations with producer Brian Grazer and director Ron Howard on their feature debut, "Night Shift" (1982), a comedy about a soft-spoken morgue attendant (Henry Winkler) whose quiet shifts at night get turned upside down when his overeager assistant (Michael Keaton) convinces him to use the morgue as a brothel. The film became a cult hit and made a star out of the outlandish Keaton. The pair reunited with Grazer and Howard on "Splash" (1984), a romantic comedy about a man unlucky in love (Tom Hanks) who falls in love with a strange, beautiful woman (Darryl Hannah) who happens to be a mermaid that saved him from drowning when he was eight years old. Both a critical hit and huge box office success, "Splash" also earned Mandel and Ganz an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay.
Mandel and Ganz took a step back with the rather unfunny John Landis comedy, "Spies Like Us" (1985), which followed two loser CIA agents (Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase) who are suddenly thrust into the Cold War after cheating on their service exams. Moving on, they wrote "Gung Ho" (1986) for Ron Howard and Brian Grazer, a culture-clash comedy about an American automobile factory taken over by the Japanese at the behest of the plant's wheeler-dealer foreman (Michael Keaton). The film spawned a short-lived series, "Gung Ho" (ABC, 1986-87), which involved virtually none of the original cast from the feature. Following the commercial failure of Cyndi Lauper's feature debut "Vibes" (1988), Mandel and Ganz had one of their biggest hits of the time, "Parenthood" (1989), an ensemble comedy chronicling the pratfalls of being a parent as seen from differing points of view, including a father and mother (Steve Martin and Mary Steenburgen) dealing with their high-strung son (Jasen Fisher), and a single mom (Dianne Wiest) trying to raise her moody son (Leaf (Joaquin) Phoenix) and independent-minded daughter (Martha Plimpton) on her own. "Parenthood" was another huge score for the writing team, earning over $100 million in domestic box office gross while receiving near unanimous praise from critics.
Ganz and Mandel followed up with another big hit, "City Slickers" (1991), a genuinely funny and sincere comedy about a down-and-out middle-aged urbanite (Billy Crystal) who is convinced by his two best pals (Bruno Kirby and Daniel Stearn) to go on a cattle drive in rural Montana, where they meet a rough-and-tumble cowboy (Jack Palance) who ends up teaching them a thing or two about life. Once again, the duo scored a huge hit with critics and audiences, while also brushing against Oscar glory when Palance won a statute for Best Supporting Actor. For their next project, Mandel and Ganz collaborated with Crystal again on the actor's directorial debut, "Mr. Saturday Night" (1992), an unfortunately bland comedy-drama about a comedian (Crystal) whose self-destructive behavior keeps him from rising above his five-decade long mediocrity. The duo rebounded with "A League of Their Own" (1992), a heartwarming comedy about the formation of an all-female professional baseball league to fill in the gap left by men fighting in World War II. Starring Tom Hanks as a recovering alcoholic struggling to manage his misfit team which includes Geena Davis, Rosie O'Donnell and Madonna, the writing team scored a big hit artistically and creatively. After soft-peddling a potentially dark and satirical comedy, "Greedy" (1994), starring Michael J. Fox, Mandel and Ganz wrote the inevitable sequel, "City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly's Gold" (1994), which failed to capture the warmth, laughs and box office dollars of its predecessor.
In another collaboration with Crystal, they penned the script to "Forget Paris" (1995), the actor's second venture as director, which told the tale of an NBA referee (Crystal) who travels to Paris to bury his deceased father and meets an airline attendant (Debra Winger) whom he marries mere days later. After two relative box office failures with "Multiplicity" (1996) starring Michael Keaton and "Father's Day" (1997) with Robin Williams, the duo became two of several writers who shared credit on the screenplay for "Stuart Little" (1999), the story of a little mouse with a big heart who searches for a sense of belonging and a place to call home. The hybrid animation and live-action feature raked in a ton of box office cash and spawned the sequel, "Stuart Little 2" (2002), for which Mandel and Ganz were uncredited for their work. Meanwhile, the writing team ventured into cultural satire with Ron Howard's "EDtv" (1999), which depicted an Everyman (Matthew McConaughey) whose world is turned upside down when his life is recorded on camera 24 hours a day for a foundering cable station. With obvious comparisons to "The Truman Show" (1996), "EDtv" failed to dig deeper into that familiar territory.
After penning the sentimental coming-of-age drama, "Where the Heart Is" (2000), Mandel and Ganz spent the next few years performing uncredited rewrites on a number of high-profile projects. Emerging five years later, they returned to the fore with two sharp hits, "Robots" (2005), an animated adventure about an idealistic robot (Ewan McGregor) who travels to the Big City with the hope of making his clanky, mechanical world a better place, and "Fever Pitch" (2005), a romantic comedy about a rabid Boston Red Sox fan (Jimmy Fallon) who finds his new relationship with a corporate executive (Drew Barrymore) suddenly deteriorating once baseball season starts. Though nowhere along the lines of "Parenthood" and "City Slickers," both movies announced a return to form that had been lacking in the latter half of the previous decade. But any good will they earned soon evaporated when they once again found themselves as members of a larger screenwriting committee on "The Tooth Fairy" (2010), a ridiculous, albeit successful comedy in which Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson played a tough-as-nails hockey player sentenced to hard labor as a real tooth fairy for discouraging a youngster's dreams.
Filmography
Cast (Feature Film)
Writer (Feature Film)
Producer (Feature Film)
Misc. Crew (Feature Film)
Director (Special)
Cast (Special)
Writer (Special)
Producer (Special)
Special Thanks (Special)
Life Events
1976
First job as a staff writer on ABC's "Laverne and Shirley"
1981
Collaborated with Ganz on episodes of ABC's "Happy Days"
1982
First feature credit for the screenplay of Ron Howard's "Night Shift"; first collaboration with Grazer and Howard
1984
Co-wrote the screenplay for the Ron Howard directed, "Splash"; earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay
1985
Collaborated with Dan Aykroyd on the screenplay for John Landis' "Spies Like Us"
1986
Served as executive producer for short-lived TV sitcom version of "Gung Ho"
1990
Collaborated with Ganz and Ron Howard on the screenplay for "Parenthood"; Howard also directed
1991
First collaboration with Billy Crystal on screenplay for "City Slickers"
1992
Collaborated with Ganz on the screenplay for "A League of Their Own"; directed by Penny Marshall
1992
First film with executive producer credit, Billy Crystal's "Mr. Saturday Night"
1994
Co-wrote sequel of "City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly's Gold"
1995
Contributed to the script for Billy Crystal's "Forget Paris"
1996
Co-wrote the comedy, "Multiplicity"; co-produced and directed by Harold Ramis
1997
Worked on screenplay for the Billy Crystal and Robin Williams comedy, "Father's Day"
1999
Co-wrote (with Ganz) the Ron Howard directed, "EDtv"
2000
Penned the screenplay for "Where the Heart Is," starring Natalie Portman and Ashley Judd
2005
Adapted the Nick Hornby novel, "Fever Pitch" for the screen
2005
Collaborated on the screenplay for the computer-animated comedy, "Robots"
2010
Re-teamed with Lowell Ganz to write "The Tooth Fairy"