Paul Mazursky


Director, Screenwriter
Paul Mazursky

About

Also Known As
Carlotta Gerson, Irwin Mazursky
Birth Place
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Born
April 25, 1930

Biography

An independent filmmaker and often onscreen performer frequently compared with fellow New Yorker Woody Allen, Paul Mazursky spent years in show business developing an acting career and a reputation as a writer before finally directing his own screenplays. After making his feature debut as an actor in Stanley Kubrick's "Fear and Desire" (1953), Mazursky went on to write for "The Danny Kay...

Family & Companions

Betsy Mazursky
Wife
Married March 12, 1953; has acted in six of husband's movies, beginning with "Tempest" (1982).

Bibliography

"Show Me the Magic"
Paul Mazursky, Simon & Schuster (1999)

Notes

Mazursky's psychiatrist Donald F. Muhich has acted in four films by the director, playing (what else?) a psychiatrist of one kind or another.

Though the setting for "Scenes from a Mall" was supposedly the Beverly Center in California, Mazursky actually filmed in a Stanford, Connecticut mall designed by the Beverly Center's architect in order to use the notoriously West Coast-shy Woody Allen. Allen did spend three days in Los Angeles shooting the opening scenes in the Hollywood Hills and one shot where he and Bette Midler drive up to the Beverly Center. That architect also designed a lavish two-story Beverly Center replica at the Kaufman-Astoria Studios in Queens for the filmmaker's use.

Biography

An independent filmmaker and often onscreen performer frequently compared with fellow New Yorker Woody Allen, Paul Mazursky spent years in show business developing an acting career and a reputation as a writer before finally directing his own screenplays. After making his feature debut as an actor in Stanley Kubrick's "Fear and Desire" (1953), Mazursky went on to write for "The Danny Kaye Show" (CBS, 1963-67) while also penning the pilot episode for "The Monkees" (NBC, 1966-68). Though denied his feature directorial debut by star Peter Sellers with his script for "I Love You Alice B. Toklas" (1968), he was finally able to helm his first movie with "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" (1969), a once-controversial, but now tame by comparison look at loose sexual mores in the "free love" era. He went on to direct several fine movies in the following decade, including "Blume in Love" (1973) and "Harry and Tonto" (1974), before having one of his biggest hits with the feminist-themed "An Unmarried Woman" (1978). Mazursky continued to charm audiences with "Moscow on the Hudson" (1984) while having perhaps his greatest box office success with "Down and Out in Beverly Hills" (1986). Following an atypical effort with the tragic-comic "Enemies: A Love Story" (1989), Mazursky began to stumble as a director with "Scenes from a Mall" (1991) and "The Pickle" (1993). While leaving feature directing largely behind, Mazursky made acting appearances in several movies and on television shows, while making clear as the years passed that he had left the director's chair for good. Paul Mazursky died in Los Angeles on June 30, 2014 at the age of 84.

Born on April 25, 1930 in Brooklyn, NY, Mazursky was raised by his father, David, a Jewish immigrant from the Ukraine who worked as a laborer for FDR's New Deal agency and Works Progress Administration, and his mother, Jean, a pianist who played part-time for a dance school. After graduating Brooklyn's Thomas Jefferson High School in 1947, he attended Brooklyn College, where he first ventured into the arts as an actor. Mazursky spent his summers upstate in the Catskills, where he concurrently waited tables and regaled the mainly Jewish audiences with a stand-up comedy routine that included imitations of Hollywood stars like Edward G. Robinson. During his senior year at Brooklyn College, he landed a role in a college revival of Leonid Andreyev's "He Who Gets Slapped" (1950). The play transferred off-Broadway to the Master Institute Theatre, where playwright Howard Sackler introduced the young actor to Stanley Kubrick. The first-time director cast him in the low-budget war drama, "Fear and Desire" (1953), in which, by his own admission, Mazursky overplayed a G.I. cracking under the strain of combat.

Taking to the stage once more, Mazursky performed summer stock in several notable roles, playing Willie Loman in "Death of a Salesman" (1953), Sorin in "The Seagull" (1953) and Undershaft in "Major Barbara" (1953). Typecast as a juvenile delinquent after the success of "Blackboard Jungle" (1955), Mazursky returned to comedy, performing an act called "Igor and H" - he was Igor - with fellow comic Herb Hartig, and later working with the Second City Improvisational Revue in Los Angeles. While appearing in episodes of "The Twilight Zone" (CBS, 1959-1964), he was forced to write his own material with Second City, which eventually led to writing for others and with his partner Larry Tucker. After the two landed a lucrative gig on "The Danny Kaye Show" (CBS, 1963-67), Mazursky and Tucker wrote the pilot episode for "The Monkees" (NBC, 1966-68). He next had a co-starring role in Vic Morrow's feature adaptation of Jean Genet's play, "Deathwatch" (1966), which starred Leonard Nimoy as a convicted murderer fending off a challenge to his prison leadership by two other cell mates (Mazursky and Michael Forest).

Moving into feature writing, Mazursky planned on making his debut as a director on the satirical romantic comedy, "I Love You Alice B. Toklas" (1968). But he had to content himself with being an executive producer when its star Peter Sellers refused to be directed by a neophyte. Together with co-writer Tucker, Mazursky fashioned an outstanding script helmed by Hy Averback that sent up both the hippie and Establishment ways of living while creating believable and consistent characters who never lost their dignity despite the attendant hilarity. Sellers had his best role in years as the square lawyer who turns on to marijuana brownies, drops out for awhile, then tries to drop back in only to find conformity wanting. It was the first of four successive scripts reflecting Mazursky's wide-eyed infatuation with the rampant pop nuttiness of his adopted Los Angeles. He scored a critical and commercial success with his directorial debut, "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" (1969), a now-tame study of middle-class attitudes about sex and marriage that seemed risqué at the time. Starring Natalie Wood, Robert Culp, Elliott Gould and Dyan Cannon, while inspired by Mazursky's investigation of an Esalen encounter group, the satirical comedy-of-manners made him rich enough to ignore the financial pressures that typically forced most directors to accept unwelcome studio assignments.

Following the failure of the overly self-indulgent "Alex in Wonderland" (1970), an autobiographical tale of a young, one-hit director (Donald Sutherland) in search of a powerful theme for his next project, Mazursky re-examined the institution of marriage and divorce in the pain-tinged "Blume in Love" (1973). The film starred George Segal as a divorce lawyer who becomes his own client after being tossed out by his wife (Susan Anspach) for having an affair. He next wrote and directed the road drama, "Harry and Tonto" (1974), which starred Art Carney as a 70-year-old widower who loses his Upper West Side apartment to the wrecking ball, prompting him to go on a road trip of self-discovery with his pet cat. Along the way, he comes across a like soul in a young hitchhiker (Melanie Mayron) while visiting his daughter (Ellen Burstyn) in Chicago and finally meeting his youngest son (Larry Hagman) in Los Angeles. Though he initially had trouble finding backers for the bittersweet story of a crotchety septuagenarian crossing the country with his feline friend, Mazursky managed not only to get the film made, but direct Carney to an Oscar-winning and career-reviving performance.

Mazursky went on to write and direct the underappreciated coming-of-age dramedy, "Next Stop, Greenwich Village" (1976), which chronicled the director's own move from Brooklyn to exotic Greenwich Village in the 1950s that featured wonderful period atmosphere and characterizations. He had his greatest success of the 1970s with "An Unmarried Woman" (1978), which starred Jill Clayburgh as a wife and mother who seemingly has it all, until her husband (Michael Murphy) suddenly leaves her for a younger woman. The film was much more than a critical and box office hit - it became a beacon of the women's movement, with Jill Clayburgh earning an Oscar nomination for her depiction of a woman rebuilding her life on her own terms after a divorce. Following a brief return to acting with a starring role in the crime comedy, "A Man, a Woman and a Bank" (1979), Mazursky used Greenwich Village as the setting for "Willie and Phil" (1980), a look at a contemporary menage-a-trois between two friends (Michael Ontkean and Ray Sharkey) and a free-spirited Southerner (Margot Kidder). The film's retelling of Francois Truffaut's "Jules and Jim" (1962) began rather coyly with the two men meeting at a Bleecker Street Cinema screening of the Truffaut classic. Though over-sentimentalizing his characters' situations softened the film's satiric bite - a common refrain throughout his career - Mazursky nonetheless managed to get the audience to identify with his characters.

Despite an appealing cast, beautiful scenery and some engaging scenes, Mazursky failed to pull together a cohesive film in his contemporary reworking of Shakespeare's "Tempest" (1982), starring John Cassavetes, Susan Sarandon and Raul Julia. But he bounced back after drawing out a superb performance from Robin Williams as the Soviet musician who defects to America via Bloomingdale's in "Moscow on the Hudson" (1984). A sweet film that was longer on mood than message, "Moscow" sagged after its premise was established, leaving Williams' character little more to do than haphazardly assimilate into his new chosen society. Still, the film did well enough in theaters to introduce the film's star to a wider audience. Meanwhile, "Down and Out in Beverly Hills" (1986), based on Jean Renoir's "Boudu Saved From Drowning" (1932), marked Mazursky's return to West Coast subjects after a long absence and proved to be his biggest box-office hit in years. The satirical comedy starred Nick Nolte as Jerry Baskin, a hapless hobo rescued from the pool of a philandering businessman (Richard Dreyfuss) and his wife (Bette Midler). Invited to stay at their Beverly Hills mansion, Jerry turns the family upside down in more ways than one while befriending the family dog as well. A big box office hit, "Down and Out" was later turned into a short-lived television show.

Mazursky next directed "Moon Over Parador" (1988), a hodgepodge of satire and show business comedy about a Caribbean cabinet minister (Raul Julia) who hires a self-centered American actor (Richard Dreyfuss) to impersonate the country's dictator who is actually dead. Though not as biting in its satire on banana republics as one would have hoped, the film was memorable for Mazursky's hilarious onscreen turn as Momma, after replacing the original actress who failed to show. He went on to helm "Enemies, A Love Story" (1989), a very atypical picture that was arguably one of the director's finest. Reining in his impulse for broad comedy, Mazursky presented a tragi-comic narrative of a Holocaust survivor (Ron Silver) who finds himself with two wives (Anjelica Huston and Margaret Sophie Stein) and a mistress (Lena Olin) he would like to marry in post-World War II New York City, with his failure to commit partly a result of an entire culture's displacement and ruin. The ambitious adaptation of Isaac Bashevis Singer's novel spoke eloquently of resilience, humor and passion in the shadow of genocide and boasted a brilliant ensemble working within production designer Paul Guzman's lavishly detailed sets that perfectly evoked a bygone era.

Though a collaboration between Mazursky and the comedic talents of Woody Allen and Bette Midler seemed promising with "Scenes from a Mall" (1991), the domestic comedy was a profound disappointment, offering nothing new in its jabs at contemporary consumer culture. Hitting a low point in his directing work with "The Pickle" (1993), a charmless mess of a showbiz satire starring Danny Aiello as a director in desperate need of a hit, Mazursky began stepping out from behind the camera with ever increasing frequency, while leaving directing behind. After directing Chazz Palminteri in the stagey crime comedy, "Faithful" (1996), he helmed the critically-admired "Winchell" (HBO, 1998), which garnered an Emmy Award for Stanley Tucci in the title role of feared Hollywood columnist Walter Winchell. His relative inactivity as a director during the 1990s freed him to act more frequently in films like "Carlito's Way" (1993), in which he had a terrific cameo as a weary judge; "2 Days in the Valley" (1996) and TNT's "A Slight Case of Murder" (1999), not to mention his voicing one of the animated "Antz" (1998). Following a small part as a poker dealer named Sunshine on "The Sopranos" (HBO, 1999-2007), he had a recurring role as Norm, a slow golfer with high blood pressure, on Larry David's "Curb Your Enthusiasm" (HBO, 2000- ). Meanwhile, Mazursky received a career achievement award from the L.A. Film Critics Association in January 2011. That same year, he made his final screen appearance in a voice role in the animated comedy sequel "Kung Fu Panda 2" (2011). Paul Mazursky died of pulmonary cardiac arrest at Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles on June 30, 2014. He was 84 years old.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

Yippee: A Journey to Jewish Joy (2006)
Director
Coast to Coast (2004)
Director
Winchell (1998)
Director
Faithful (1995)
Director
The Pickle (1993)
Director
Scenes from a Mall (1991)
Director
Enemies, A Love Story (1989)
Director
Moon Over Parador (1988)
Director
Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986)
Director
Moscow on the Hudson (1984)
Director
Tempest (1982)
Director
Willie & Phil (1980)
Director
An Unmarried Woman (1978)
Director
Next Stop, Greenwich Village (1976)
Director
Harry and Tonto (1974)
Director
Blume in Love (1973)
Director
Alex in Wonderland (1970)
Director
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

The Other Side of the Wind (2018)
Himself
Casting By (2013)
Kung Fu Panda 2 (2011)
Voice
I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With (2006)
Searching for Orson (2006)
Himself
Yippee: A Journey to Jewish Joy (2006)
Coast to Coast (2004)
The Magic of Fellini (2002)
Himself
Big Shot's Funeral (2002)
The Majestic (2001)
Voice
Fellini (2001)
Himself
A Slight Case of Murder (2000)
Crazy in Alabama (1999)
Antz (1998)
Voice
Why Do Fools Fall in Love? (1998)
Weapons of Mass Distraction (1997)
Touch (1997)
2 Days in the Valley (1996)
Miami Rhapsody (1995)
Faithful (1995)
Love Affair (1994)
Carlito's Way (1993)
The Pickle (1993)
Man Trouble (1992)
Scenes from a Mall (1991)
Scenes From the Class Struggle in Beverly Hills (1989)
Enemies, A Love Story (1989)
Punchline (1988)
Moon Over Parador (1988)
Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986)
Into The Night (1985)
Moscow on the Hudson (1984)
Tempest (1982)
History of the World Part I (1981)
Willie & Phil (1980)
Narrator
An Almost Perfect Affair (1979)
A Man, a Woman and a Bank (1979)
An Unmarried Woman (1978)
A Star Is Born (1976)
Harry and Tonto (1974)
Blume in Love (1973)
Alex in Wonderland (1970)
Hal Stern
Deathwatch (1966)
Maurice
Blackboard Jungle (1955)
Emmanuel Stoker
Fear and Desire (1953)
Sidney

Writer (Feature Film)

The Pickle (1993)
Screenplay
Scenes from a Mall (1991)
Screenplay
Enemies, A Love Story (1989)
Screenplay
Moon Over Parador (1988)
Screenplay
Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986)
Screenplay
Moscow on the Hudson (1984)
Screenplay
Tempest (1982)
Screenplay
Willie & Phil (1980)
Screenplay
An Unmarried Woman (1978)
Screenplay
Next Stop, Greenwich Village (1976)
Screenplay
Harry and Tonto (1974)
Screenplay
Blume in Love (1973)
Screenplay
Alex in Wonderland (1970)
Screenwriter
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969)
Writer

Producer (Feature Film)

Yippee: A Journey to Jewish Joy (2006)
Producer
The Pickle (1993)
Producer
Scenes from a Mall (1991)
Producer
Taking Care of Business (1990)
Executive Producer
Enemies, A Love Story (1989)
Producer
Moon Over Parador (1988)
Producer
Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986)
Producer
Moscow on the Hudson (1984)
Producer
Tempest (1982)
Producer
Willie & Phil (1980)
Producer
An Unmarried Woman (1978)
Producer
Next Stop, Greenwich Village (1976)
Producer
Harry and Tonto (1974)
Producer
Blume in Love (1973)
Producer
I Love You, Alice B. Toklas! (1968)
Executive prod & writ

Music (Feature Film)

I Love You, Alice B. Toklas! (1968)
Composer

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

The Other Side of the Wind (2018)
Other
Fellini (2001)
Other
Federico Fellini's Intervista (1987)
Other

Cast (Special)

Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures (2001)
Hidden Values: The Movies of the '50s (2001)
Homeward Bound (1994)
Street Scenes: New York on Film (1992)
Call to Danger (1961)

Life Events

1950

Landed the leading role in a college revival of Leonid Andreyev's "He Who Gets Slapped" while a senior at Brooklyn College; play transferred for a time Off-Broadway to the Master Institute Theatre where the scenarist Howard Sackler saw him and introduced him to Stanley Kubrick

1951

Changed first name from Irwin to Paul while acting in his first movie on location in California's San Gabriel Mountains

1953

Film acting debut in Kubrick's "Fear and Desire"

1953

Worked in summer stock on Cape Cod, playing Willy Loman in "Death of a Salesman", Sorin in "The Seagull" and Undershaft in "Major Barbara"

1954

Was briefly in Hollywood before returning to NYC; began acting in live TV shows

1955

Played a juvenile delinquent and pal to big bully Vic Morrow in Richard Brooks' "Blackboard Jungle"

1956

Had a small success in Off-Broadway revue "Shoestring '57"

1957

Acted in and directed revue and nightclub acts in Greenwich Village, San Francisco and Chicago

1959

Moved to Los Angeles with writing partner Larry Tucker; joined Second City Improvisational Revue; appeared on episodes of "The Twilight Zone" (CBS)

1966

With Tucker, wrote the pilot for "The Monkees" (NBC)

1966

Acted in Morrow's "Deathwatch", film version of Jean Genet play; Morrow co-scripted (with his wife Barbara Turner) and co-produced with Leonard Nimoy, who also acted

1968

Debut as executive producer and as screenwriter (with Larry Tucker), "I Love You, Alice B. Toklas" (also played a bit part), Hollywood's first send-up of hippie culture; began his long association with production designer Pato Guzman

1969

Feature directorial debut, "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice"; also co-wrote with Tucker and played a bit part; received first Oscar nomination for Best Screenplay; film partly inspired by Mazursky's experiences with an Esalen encounter group

1970

Reteamed with Tucker on script of "Alex in Wonderland"; also directed; daughter Meg played Alex's (Donald Sutherland) daughter

1973

Produced first film that he also directed, "Blume in Love"; also played Blume's uptight law partner; first solo film script

1974

Produced, directed, scripted (with Josh Greenfield) and played a gay man in "Harry and Tonto"; garnered second Oscar nod for Best Screenplay; Art Carney took home the Best Actor Oscar

1976

Chronicled his own move from Brooklyn to NYC during the early 1950s in "Next Stop, Greenwich Village"

1978

Delivered tour de force vehicle for Jill Clayburgh, "An Unmarried Woman", writing, directing and producing (with Tony Ray), as well as acting in it; film earned him two Oscar nominations, one for Best Picture and another for his screenplay

1982

First film with Guzman as co-producer as well as production designer, "Tempest"; also first collaboration with screenwriter Leon Capetanos

1984

Co-scripted (with Capetanos), directed, produced and acted in "Moscow on the Hudson"; provided a breakthrough screen role for star Robin Williams

1986

Scored box office hit with "Down and Out in Beverly Hills", a remake of Jean Renoir's "Boudu Saved From Drowning"; starred Nick Nolte, Richard Dreyfuss and Bette Midler

1988

Credited as Carlotta Gerson for his role as Momma in "Moon Over Parador", which he produced, directed and co-wrote with Capetanos (their fourth consecutive collaboration), second film with Dreyfuss

1989

With Roger L Simon, co-wrote "Enemies: A Love Story", based on the novel by Isaac Bashevis Singer; received Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay

1990

Executive produced "Taking Care of Business", directed by Arthur Hiller (only the second film he has produced and not directed), screenplay written by his daughter Jill

1991

12th and last collaboration with Guzman, "Scenes from a Mall", starring Woody Allen and Midler; co-written with Simon; Mazursky dedicated the film to his long-time friend Guzman, who died prior to film's opening

1993

Helmed the disappointing feature, "The Pickle"

1996

Acted in "2 Days in the Valley", which reunited him with Marsha Mason from "Blume in Love" and Danny Aiello from "The Pickle"

1996

Last feature (to date) as director, "Faithful"; co-produced by Robert De Niro; marked first time he had helmed a screenplay which he had not written

1998

Helmed HBO's acclaimed "Winchell", which earned Stanley Tucci an Emmy in the title role

1998

Provided the voice of the psychologist in the animated feature "Antz"

1999

Played recurring role as Sela Ward's father on "Once and Again" (ABC)

1999

Acted in TNT's "A Slight Case of Murder", a black comedy starring William H Macy and Adam Arkin

2000

Had a small part as 'Sunshine,' the poker dealer, on HBO's popular series "The Sopranos"

2004

Appeared in five episodes of HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm" as Norm, one of Mel Brooks' associates

2006

Appeared in Jeff Garlin's feature directing debut, "I Want Someone to Eat Cheese with"

Videos

Movie Clip

Blume In Love (1973) -- (Movie Clip) I Hope The Plane Crashes! Susan Anspach as Nina, wife of the divorce-lawyer title character (George Segal), in her job at the California welfare office, in writer-director Paul Mazursky’s non-linear narrative, meeting Kris Kristofferson as Elmo, then a clever edit to Shelley Winters as an aggrieved client, early in Blume In Love, 1973.
Blume In Love (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Venice Brings Out The Love Writer-director Paul Mazursky’s opening, with the familiar tune by the Milanese composer Ponchielli, with George Segal the title character, narrating his thoughts over shots of Venice’s Piazza San Maro, Susan Anspach as his ex-wife introduced near the end, in Blume In Love, 1973, co-starring Kris Kristofferson and Marsha Mason.
Blume In Love (1973) -- (Movie Clip) Do You Know What You Are To Me? Writer-director Paul Mazursky as Kurt, L-A divorce-law partner of the title character George Segal, suddenly facing his own divorce after being caught in an affair with his secretary Gloria (Annazette Chase), in his acclaimed comic-drama Blume In Love, also starring Susan Anspach and Kris Kristofferson.
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969) -- (Movie Clip) Opening, Now Scream! With Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus, co-writer and director Paul Mazursky is expressing a certain sort of Southern California irony, opening his landmark comedy, with Bob & Carol (Robert Culp, Natalie Wood) headed to the new-age “Institute," with nudity, and Mazursky himself learning to scream, in Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, 1970.
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969) -- (Movie Clip) We Had Intercourse Home from a trip north, documentarian Bob (Robert Culp) in L-A with spouse Carol (Natalie Wood), shortly after their experience at the new age “institute,” having put their son to bed, feels a need to confess, Paul Mazursky directing from his screenplay written with Larry Tucker, in Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, 1970.
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969) -- (Movie Clip) The Gazpacho Was Astonishing Another flourish in the screenplay by director Paul Mazursky and Larry Tucker, as Bob and Carol (Robert Culp, Natalie Wood) pull out the weed for Ted and Alice (Elliott Gould, Dyan Cannon) after the stuffier guests split, in Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, 1969.
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice -- (Movie Clip) What Do You Feel? In the first scene for their co-stars (Dyan Cannon and Elliiott Gould as Ted and Alice), Bob and Carol (Robert Culp, Natalie Wood) try out the liberating truth-telling rules they've learned at "The Institute,” at a restaurant somewhere in LA, Lee Bergere the waiter, early in Paul Mazursky's Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, 1969.
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice -- (Movie Clip) I'm Your Guide Following the credits, Greg Mullavey steers his group at the Southern California “institute,’ Robert Culp and Natalie Wood, as Bob and Carol, Diane Berghoff as Myrna, Andrè Philippe as silent but obsequious Oscar, in Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, 1969, directed by Paul Mazursky from his screenplay with Larry Tucker.
Harry And Tonto (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Did You See Ironside? Opening scene from writer, producer and director Paul Mazursky, Art Carney the title character with Tonto his cat, Rene Enriquez as "Jesus" and Herbert Berghof as "Jacob" in support, from Harry And Tonto, 1974.
Harry And Tonto (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Great Town For Cats At Newark airport ready to begin his journey west, Harry (Art Carney) discovers Tonto has to go through the metal detector so he abandons the plane, and meets a talkative cabbie (Muriel Beerman), in Paul Mazursky's Harry And Tonto, 1974.
Harry And Tonto (1974) -- (Movie Clip) What Happened To Chico? With hitcher Ginger (Melanie Mayron), Harry (Art Carney) arrives at the Chicago bookshop run by his lovelorn daughter Shirley (Ellen Burstyn), his grandson Norman (Josh Mostel) making a half-hearted attempt to intervene, in Paul Mazursky's Harry And Tonto, 1974.
Harry And Tonto (1974) -- (Movie Clip) Thinking About Lear Arrival of the police car indicating that the situation has suddenly become urgent, retired New York schoolteacher Harry (Art Carney) being evicted, and panicked son Burt (Philip Bruns) with a weak rescue, early in writer-producer-director Paul Mazursky's Harry And Tonto, 1974.

Trailer

Family

Jean Mazursky
Mother
Played piano part-time for a dancing school.
David Mazursky
Father
Laborer. Worked for the WPA and later for a newspaper company.
Meg Mazursky
Daughter
Has appeared in father's movies.
Jill Mazursky
Daughter
Screenwriter.

Companions

Betsy Mazursky
Wife
Married March 12, 1953; has acted in six of husband's movies, beginning with "Tempest" (1982).

Bibliography

"Show Me the Magic"
Paul Mazursky, Simon & Schuster (1999)

Notes

Mazursky's psychiatrist Donald F. Muhich has acted in four films by the director, playing (what else?) a psychiatrist of one kind or another.

Though the setting for "Scenes from a Mall" was supposedly the Beverly Center in California, Mazursky actually filmed in a Stanford, Connecticut mall designed by the Beverly Center's architect in order to use the notoriously West Coast-shy Woody Allen. Allen did spend three days in Los Angeles shooting the opening scenes in the Hollywood Hills and one shot where he and Bette Midler drive up to the Beverly Center. That architect also designed a lavish two-story Beverly Center replica at the Kaufman-Astoria Studios in Queens for the filmmaker's use.

About working with the dog in "Down and Out in Beverly Hills": "The trainer, Clint, came in with this Mike the dog. And I knew right away that Clint was different, because he talked to the dog as if it were his friend. 'Mikey, do you want to show Paul that?' And Mikey would go, 'mm-hmm,' and he would do it . . . I met with Clint the way I'd meet with an actor or an actress, and discussed the motivation for Mike's stuff. He made me do it. So I would say, 'Well, when they rescue the bum and put him down in the chaise lounge, I want the dog to go crazy.' And he'd say, 'Yeah, but when they pull him out, he wouldn't lick him right away.' I said, 'Why not?' and he'd say, 'Mikey just wouldn't do that.'"

"Mike the dog went to the Deuville film festival with me, and we flew on the same plane, first class. I'm there with my wife and kids, and I've got 'Down and Out in Beverly Hills' there, so I'm the star of the festival. And they give me the crappiest room I have ever seen. I mean, a tiny, junk room. So I call down and say, 'I'm not going to stay in this room.' They say, 'What room?' I say, '234.' 'No, no, that's the dog's room.' So I go up to 434, and I see the dog in a huge suite, lying in the bed. And I say, 'Mikey, you're out.' That's a true story." --Paul Mazursky, quoted in American Film, January 1990.

"I based the mother in my film 'Alex in Wonderland' on my mom. I didn't want her to be surprised, so I showed her the script. My mother said, 'So, who's going to play me?' When I said, 'I don't know,' she wanted to do it."I said, 'Mom, you'll have to audition.' She did, and she was so bad, I turned her down. Then I told her I'd cast an actress named Viola Spolin to play the part, and Mom said, 'So, you couldn't pick Bette Davis? When this film comes to New York, I think I'm gonna picket it.' And she wasn't kidding. I had to beg her not to."My mother was a very intense and difficult woman. I loved her but I didn't always like her. I remember when my movie 'Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" played at the New York Film Festival, she said, 'Big deal. I guess you think you're a big shot now.' I swear she said that."

"It was my mother who was the real influence in my life. She freed me to dream big dreams even though she was a very neurotic woman. For some bizarre reason, maybe because she wanted to escape, she loved opera and she used to take me."She'd also take me to see foreign films, and we'd go to Harlem to the Amateur Hour, where I watched the greats like Billie Holiday, Cab Calloway and Count Basie."In fact, my mother even let me play hooky to see movies. She'd say, 'Come on, there's a double feature. You can skip school today.'" --Paul Mazursky to Jeanne Wolf in Daily News, September 22, 1996.

"I can't talk about Brooklyn now, but Brooklyn then, in the '30s and '40s was like an earthly paradise. There was an electric excitement in the streets. You learned about life by your wits, and it never leaves you. You're tougher, shrewder, and it teaches you humor and irony. But leaving Brooklyn for Manhattan in the early '50s was just as big a trip for me as going to Paris."It was 1952, and I took an apartment at 205 W. 10th St. and it was a completely different universe than Bergen St. in Brownsville. I'd walk down the street to the White Horse Tavern and, 'Who's this Welshman spouting poetry? My God, it's Dylan Thomas!' And you'd see Allen Ginsberg walking around the street. It cracked open my life." --Mazursky, quoted in Daily News, June 13, 1999.