"American Masters" Nichols and May: Take Two (TV Episode 1996) Poster

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8/10
Fun whether or not you remember this comedy team.
planktonrules9 May 2021
If you are unfamiliar with the comedy team of Nichols and May, this is a nice introduction. It's not perfect...but is probably the best way to learn about their style...which, in many ways, plays like a two person Bob Newhart style stand-up act. At the time and even today, Nichols and May's humor and style is unique...and the show celebrates this by showing various clips of their work as well as having interviews with the team.

So is this perfect? No. I saw two problems, though they were minor. Mike Nichols was alive when this show was made, and May still is alive...yet neither were interviewed. Hearing from them sure would have been nice. Also, oddly, little is said about their careers post-comedy team. Both (especially Nichols) were very prolific in films following the dissolution of the team--writing and directing various movies...and some of their work (especially Nichols' "The Graduate") is very famous.

By the way, this was first shown on PBS's "American Masters" and was recently re-shown on Turner Classic Movies.
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8/10
nichols/may 2
mossgrymk20 May 2021
Good documentary of the greatest standup team of all time with, thankfully, ample footage of the two of them taking precedence over the talking heads. And speaking of talking heads, what, in the name of all that is funny, is TOM BROKAW doing within a thousand feet of comedy?
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7/10
Final Cut
boblipton10 May 2021
I am just a bit too young to recall Nichols & May in their performing days, but I have heard about them for decades, and seen their later works: Mike Nichols as a director, and Elaine May as writer-director-performer. Here, looking at this TV documentary which relies on copies of their routines as seen on television, I can see their brilliance Yet I wonder how meaningful it will be to younger people.

Understanding the era in which they arose, the 1950s, it's easy to understand the repression, but not the reasons why. The truth is that America had risen from isolation to one of the world's two great superpowers in ten short years, and as a nation we were freaking out, uncertain of what to do, and wishing for a return to what we viewed as normality. And so we pretended.... and Nichols and May told us it was pretense. They did not do it with the extravagant anger of comics like Lenny Bruce or mort Sahl, who went to jail. Instead they did it with surgical precision, showing us precisely how all the nice people actually behaved, from funeral directors gouging the bereaved, to horny teenagers trying to have sex.

And so they gave no purchase to those who fought back. They may not have seemed as revolutionary as Bruce, but he went to jail, and they won. Isn't that the purpose of revolution?
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10/10
sooo funny!
mariposarosa24 October 2005
I wasn't familiar with the brilliant comedy duo of Mike Nichols and Elaine May, until I saw this program (originally broadcast in 1996 on PBS). Their combination of great comic timing and natural improvisational ability is showcased, here, in rare clips of their comedy sketchs. Whether they take on contemporary political issues, teenage dating rituals or the divisions of social class, this couple was simply amazing! They came up with funnier material on their feet, than some of the so-called "comedy" developed for the sit-coms of today, written weeks in advance! Check it out, if you can find this video. You will love it.
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8/10
they were so great together. and apart.
ksf-27 November 2022
Nichols and may take II, an episode of the american masters series, shown on may 22 1996. Nichols and may highlights, from their radio, television, and film bits. They really were genius! Starting with an outline, they added improv; sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. Nichols directed some HUGE films... the graduate, virginia woolf, birdcage, silkwood. I personally LOVE elaine may as actress and director. "A new leaf" (elaine may, walter matthau) is incredible. Although ishtar clearly had issues... but I blame those on warren beatty, who owned the rights. And cast himself. But he should have cast someone else in his role. Jack parr, steve allen, steve martin, and even robin williams talk about the ups and downs of their type of comedy. One problem was that the sponsors didn't always get it. Or the explicit talk of sex. Or cheating on a spouse sometimes caused problems. But when they worked together, it was magic; they really had a great sense of timing and comedy.
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