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Review: Steve Martin slips with funny but thin movie memoir

ā€œNumber One Is Walking: My Life in the Movies and Other Diversions,ā€ by Steve Martin with drawings by Harry Bliss (Celadon): Between the covers of this surprisingly thin memoir are truffles of humor from comedian Steve Martinā€™s movie career illustrat
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This cover image released by Celadon shows ā€œNumber One Is Walking: My Life in the Movies and Other Diversions,ā€ by Steve Martin with drawings by Harry Bliss. (Celadon via AP)

ā€œNumber One Is Walking: My Life in the Movies and Other Diversions,ā€ by Steve Martin with drawings by Harry Bliss (Celadon):

Between the covers of this surprisingly thin memoir are truffles of humor from comedian Steve Martinā€™s movie career illustrated by cartoonist Harry Bliss. The book is a sweet and smooth treat but ultimately unsatisfying.

It is a tempting concept: Martin revisits his first starring role, in ā€œThe Jerkā€ (1979), and the more than 40 movies that followed. But his choice to offer anecdotes on only a dozen of them and skip the rest is disappointing.

Instead of providing a charming twist on the standard memoir, Blissā€™ drawings come off as padding. More than half the pages are his one-frame cartoons, the ā€œother diversionsā€ promised in the title. At least theyā€™re amusing enough to accomplish their mission.

Indeed, some of the funnier moments in Martinā€™s memoir come from other people. His mother once called to tell him: ā€œSome friends of ours went to the movies last weekend and they couldnā€™t get in anywhere, so they went to see yours, and they loved it!ā€ The director Mike Nichols summed up Martinā€™s movie career in saying, ā€œYou always aim high at something low.ā€ Actor Michael Caine learned early on who was making the real money in Hollywood: Actors decorated their homes with pictures of themselves; on producersā€™ walls were Van Goghs and Monets.

Thatā€™s right ā€” ā€œNumber One Is Walkingā€ doesnā€™t lack humor, insight or Martinā€™s ironic take on life, but it does lack depth. He comes closest when he writes: ā€œI made more than 40 movies, barely pausing to breathe, and hereā€™s why: I believed I had to make 40 to get five good ones.ā€

Revisiting, even briefly, a personal and popular triumph like ā€œRoxanneā€ (1987) is welcome. So might have been Martin's thoughts on the risky musical ā€œPennies from Heavenā€ (1981). Fans might wonder why Martin made the bland ā€œPink Pantherā€ and ā€œCheaper by the Dozenā€ films in the 2000s instead of writing more edgy original scripts like the one for the underrated comedy ā€œBowfingerā€ (1999). Easy to say but hard to do? Tell us more.

If someone with a sense of the ironic set out to write a blurb, he might say: ā€œReading ā€˜Number One is Walkingā€™ was the funniest 35 minutes of my life this week. I wish it had been 45.ā€

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Douglass K. Daniel is the author of ā€œAnne Bancroft: A Lifeā€ (University Press of Kentucky).

Douglass K. Daniel, The Associated Press