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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 792.0977311
EAN: 9780345514226
ISBN: 034551422X
Label: Villard
Manufacturer: Villard
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 288
Publication Date: September 29, 2009
Publisher: Villard
Release Date: September 29, 2009
Studio: Villard
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: In 1959, a group of like-minded Chicagoans joined forces to open a hip new venue dedicated to coffee, cigarettes, conversation, and comedy. The result, a nightly cabaret featuring a troupe of inventive young actors skewering everything from politics to popular culture in witty, rapid-fire, improvised scenes, not only made delighted audiences laugh–it made history.
Copping its iconic name from a New York journalist’s disparaging remark, Chicago’s Second City theater brashly defied the role of runner-up and single-handedly made the Windy City North America’s cradle of comedic brilliance from which generations of household names would spring. Now, in The Second City Unscripted, a Who’s Who of the celebrated comedy camp’s alumni–including Alan Arkin, David Steinberg, Harold Ramis, Dan Aykroyd, Eugene Levy, Amy Sedaris, and Stephen Colbert–tell it like it was in the house that hilarity built.
Here are candid tales of John Belushi’s raw ambition and chemical experimentation, Bill Murray’s heckler-pummeling and lady-killing, superstar Mel Gibson’s roof-raising appearance in Braveheart regalia, and legendary director Del Close’s shuttling between the comedic asylum he ruled over and the real one he rehabbed in.
In this unvarnished, unexpurgated, and unprecedented account, what happened onstage, backstage, and offstage at Second City isn’t staying there anymore. From the smash hits and near misses to the love affairs and the bitter feuds, from the showbiz politics and pitfalls to the inspired tomfoolery and heartbreaking tragedy, The Second City Unscripted is part memoir of a cherished era, part time capsule from a comedic renaissance, and part valentine to the exquisite art of being funny. It captures like never before the history of the men and women who caught lightning–and laughter–in a bottle.
Average Rating: 
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I was looking forward to this book after being a fan of Saturday Night Live. What i found was disjointed segments of quotes. not what I expected.
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For years, people tried to get me to write a sequel to Something Wonderful Right Away. I didn't. UNSCRIPTED does it differently than I would have, but most of the important points and voices are here. I recommend it.
A prior commentator asked where in UNSCRIPTED are Barbara Harris, Mina Kolb and Jack Burns. Barbara Harris and Mina Kolb are in Something Wonderful Right Away -- there's a chapter devoted to each of them. Jack wasn't in the mood to talk when I contacted him, but his partner Avery Schreiber was, and there's a nice meaty chapter with him, too.
If you want to know the origins of Second City, that's why SOMETHING WONDERFUL is still in print. One of the reasons Mike Thomas didn't talk to some of the founders is that they aren't in a position to talk. I managed to get most of them.
But there's plenty of story past 1978, where SOMETHING WONDERFUL leaves off. Just as my book was being published, SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE was confirming its central place in the culture. The movement of the Second City sensibility into the mainstream -- hell, the mainstream sensibility BECAME the Second City sensibility -- that's the bulk of Thomas's book.
So, as I said elsewhere, you need both his book and my book. You also should look at Janet Coleman's THE COMPASS, and Sheldon Patinkin's coffee table book with swell photos, and Bernie Sahlins's memoir. And pretty soon a swell documentary about the making of a Second City show called SECOND TO NONE will be released as a DVD with commentary tracks by Tina Fey, Rachel Dratch, Mick Napier and Scott Adsit, among others. It captures the process as nothing else I've seen does.
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I was a medical student/resident physician in Chicago from 1964-1975. During those years Old Town in general and Second City in particular were where entertainment was happening. I remember 2nd City for bentwood chairs, John Belushi, Van Camps Beans, and vodka tonics. It was intellectual and interactive, and even though in those days I didn't read the NYT, I thought I was as hip as the U of C crowd. I love this book's format compiling pieces related by the luminaries. (Here I'm also thinking of the similar book about Hunter S Thompson). These guys have shaped the nature of humor on TV, on stage, and in the movies for the last 50 years.
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This is a decent overview of this legendary comedy theatre. However, it suffers in comparison with Donna McCrohan's fantastic (and now out-of-print) tome, "The Second City," published in 1987. This book's strongest point is the fact that it provides a snapshot of the theatre from 1987-2009. When McCrohan's book was published, such recent luminaries as Stephen Colbert, Steve Carell, Chris Farley, Bob Odenkirk, and Tim Meadows had not set foot on the Second City's fabled stages. However, this book's major weakness is it's lack of coverage of the theatre's early years. Granted, many of it's early cast members have now passed on but several remain and we barely hear from them (where is Mina Kolb, Barbara Harris, Jack Burns, etc.?). Also, it tends to focus on the MOST famous contemporary luminaries. I would've liked to hear more from those who went on to very respected careers as character actors but maybe are not household names. So, it's better than nothing and it does dish some dirt (apparently, Mike Myers and Jim Belushi were among those who were not always popular with their fellow castmates). But, ultimately, I feel there were a multitude of missed opportunities that could've resulted in a very good, ROUNDED portrait of the granddaddy of all comedy troupes.
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If you have a pulse, you probably like to laugh. If you laugh, you are probably fans of all of the great performers who have come from the ranks of Chicago's Second City. When you read this book, you'll get a chance to learn who these people really are and get to know a big part of what made them great. It's history. It's a part of what makes you smile -- when you watch Colbert, or SNL, or all of the great films and shows these people made -- these Second City alums are cornerstones in our lives. When I read this book, I felt like I had been given private audience to the inner lives of these great men and women and events that shaped them. Brilliantly composed and a comfortable read, I think that this book completely hits the mark.
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