Marshall Brickman
Biography and cause of death of Marshall Brickman
Marshall Jacob Brickman (August 25, 1939 – November 29, 2024) Marshall Brickman was an American screenwriter and director, best known for his collaborations with Woody Allen, with whom he shared the 1977 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Annie Hall. He was previously the head writer for Johnny Carson, writing scripts for recurring characters such as Carnac the Magnificent. He is also known for playing the banjo with Eric Weissberg in the 1960s, and for a series of comical parodies published in The New Yorker.
Marshall Brickman Background
Marshall Jacob Brickman was born on August 25, 1939, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to American parents Pauline (née Wolin) and Abram Brickman. His parents were Jewish. His father was a Polish immigrant. The family returned to the United States in 1943, and Brickman grew up in Flatbush, Brooklyn.
After attending the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he studied science and music and briefly aspired to be a doctor, he became a member of folk act the Tarriers in 1962, recruited by former classmate Eric Weissberg. A banjo album that he and Weissberg recorded around this time was later re-licensed as the bulk of the soundtrack to the 1972 film Deliverance. Following the disbanding of the Tarriers in 1965, Brickman joined the New Journeymen with John Phillips and Michelle Phillips, who later had success with the Mamas & the Papas.
Marshall Brickman Career
Marshall Brickman left the New Journeymen to pursue a career as a writer, initially writing for television in the 1960s, including Candid Camera, The Tonight Show, and The Dick Cavett Show. It was during this time that he met Allen, with whom he would collaborate on three completed film screenplays during the 1970s: Sleeper (1973), Annie Hall (1977, which won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar), and Manhattan (1979). In 2015, members of the Writers Guild of America voted Annie Hall as the funniest screenplay ever written.
Brickman directed several of his own scripts in the 1980s, including Simon, Lovesick, and The Manhattan Project, as well as Sister Mary Explains It All, a TV adaptation of the play by Christopher Durang. His script with Allen for Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993) had been put aside some years earlier when the project was later revived.
With partner Rick Elice, he wrote the book for the Broadway musical Jersey Boys, about 1960s rock ‘n’ roll group The Four Seasons. The two collaborated again in 2009 to write the book for the musical The Addams Family.
Brickman’s “Who’s Who in the Cast,” a parody of a Playbill cast list, was published in the July 26, 1976, issue of The New Yorker, and drew so much attention that it was republished in the special theatre issue of May 31, 1993. His Other pieces for The New Yorker include “The Recipes of Chairman Mao” (August 27, 1973) and “The New York Review of Gossip” (May 19, 1975).
Marshall Brickman Personal life and death
In 1973, Brickman married Nina Feinberg, with whom he had two daughters. He died in Manhattan on November 29, 2024, at the age of 85.
Source: Wikipedia