āNumber 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 Martinās 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 āThe 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 āother diversionsā promised in the title. At least theyāre amusing enough to accomplish their mission.
Indeed, some of the funnier moments in Martinās memoir come from other people. His mother once called to tell him: āSome friends of ours went to the movies last weekend and they couldnāt get in anywhere, so they went to see yours, and they loved it!ā The director Mike Nichols summed up Martinās movie career in saying, āYou 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.
Thatās right ā āNumber One Is Walkingā doesnāt lack humor, insight or Martinās ironic take on life, but it does lack depth. He comes closest when he writes: āI made more than 40 movies, barely pausing to breathe, and hereās why: I believed I had to make 40 to get five good ones.ā
Revisiting, even briefly, a personal and popular triumph like āRoxanneā (1987) is welcome. So might have been Martin's thoughts on the risky musical āPennies from Heavenā (1981). Fans might wonder why Martin made the bland āPink Pantherā and āCheaper by the Dozenā films in the 2000s instead of writing more edgy original scripts like the one for the underrated comedy āBowfingerā (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: āReading āNumber 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 āAnne Bancroft: A Lifeā (University Press of Kentucky).
Douglass K. Daniel, The Associated Press