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Music Career
During the 1970s, Steve Martin was the most successful stand-up comedian in America, earning the level of commercial success -- sell-out arena performances, platinum records, hit singles and delirous fan adulatation -- usually reserved for rock stars. Although his career went on to encompass stints as an acclaimed dramatic actor and playwright, for many supporters the "Wild and Crazy Guy" persona defined on his comedy records remains Martin's true artistic legacy. Although born August 14, 1945 in Waco, Texas, Martin spent the majority of his childhood in California, eventually working a concession booth at Disneyland as a teen. There he learned a variety of performing skills ranging from magic and juggling to playing the banjo and sculpting balloon animals. After graduating college,
Martin began writing, and occasionally performing, comic material for
television programs including The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, The
Glen Campbell Hour and The Sonny and Cher Show. At the tail end of the
1960s he moved to Canada, where, in addition to appearing as a
semi-regular on the syndicated series Half the George Kirby Comedy Hour,
he also began working as a stand-up. The contrast with his
increasingly high-concept comic idenity was sharp: superficially silly
and daft, Martin's act contemptuously mocked the inherent stupidity of
the stand-up form, mining catch-phrases, props and schtick to create a
unique brand of scathing anti-comedy. Nonetheless, Martin was
clearly losing interest in the narrow parameters of the stand-up form;
after his final two albums, 1979's Comedy Is Not Pretty and the
following year's Steve Martin Brothers, he made the film musical Pennies
From Heaven, a significant move away from his idiotic Jerk persona, and
eventually retired from stand-up performance altogether. Still, by the 1990s Martin seemed largely disenchanted with Hollywood filmmaking, virtually sleepwalking through bland, mainstream comedies like Father of the Bride and Sgt. Bilko; instead, he focused his energies on the stage, writing the acclaimed theatrical production Picasso at the Lapin Agile. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide |
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