BECOMING MIKE NICHOLS, AN INTIMATE DOCUMENTARY PORTRAIT OF THE GREAT DIRECTOR IN HIS HISTORIC FINAL FILMED APPEARANCE, DEBUTS FEB. 22, EXCLUSIVELY ON HBO Our Coverage Sponsored by Martin's Tavern of Georgetown Est. 1933
Established in 1933, Martin's Tavern is one of Washington DC’s most historic family-owned enterprises. For 80 years, Martin’s Tavern has been a renowned fixture in the mid-Atlantic and a must-visit establishment in historic Georgetown. In the late 1890's, William S. Martin traveled from Galway, Ireland to America. Forty years later, he and his son, William G. Martin, the current Billy's grandfather, opened Martin’s Tavern on the corner of Wisconsin Avenue and N Street NW which is run today by our friend, William A. Martin Jr. You can call him Billy! From sitting Presidents and media icons, to city residents and worldly travelers, Martin’s Tavern is a welcoming home to the many who have long embraced its warm atmosphere. Its quintessentially classic American fare has delighted discriminating palates for decades from the Oakwood Atlantic Smoked Salmon to the Filet Mignon to whatever your little heart desires from the convincing menu. Every President from Truman to George W. Bush has happily dined at Martin's Tavern, and you can see the delicious culinary choices preferred by each in our review: Martin's Tavern is Highly Recommended by Whom You Know:
The President’s favorite booths, The Proposal Booth of Jack and Jackie Kennedy, Mickey Mantle in The Dugout Room, George W. Bush and family at Table 12 are just a few of the iconic stories. Fourth generation owner Billy Martin, Jr. continues the tradition of Washington’s oldest family owned restaurant and Georgetown landmark.
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“This is what you need to know about movies:
You get lucky in various strange ways.”
– Mike Nichols
Much more than lucky, Mike Nichols wowed movie and theatergoing audiences alike for more than six decades with a rich and deeply varied body of work. Just four months before he died, in a set of final, historic interviews, Nichols opened up to his close friend and colleague, theater director Jack O’Brien, about the storied beginnings of his career, including his comedy collaboration with Elaine May, his direction of two Neil Simon stage classics, and his acclaimed feature-film debut, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” and its follow-up, “The Graduate.”
With disarming candor, wry wit and sharp self-deprecation, Nichols delivered a master class on his craft in what would be his last in-depth interviews, for BECOMING MIKE NICHOLS, debuting MONDAY, FEB. 22, exclusively on HBO, following its world premiere at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival.
The documentary will also be available on HBO NOW and HBO GO.
One of the great contemporary artists, Mike Nichols created a body of film work that received a total of 42 Academy Award® nominations. Over his career, he won one Oscar®, four Emmys®, nine Tonys and a Grammy. Directed by Douglas McGrath (Oscar®-nominated writer of “Bullets over Broadway” and writer-director of “Emma” and “Infamous”), BECOMING MIKE NICHOLS features an intimate, relaxed and candid exchange between O’Brien and Nichols, which took place over two days in the summer of 2014 at the Golden Theatre, where the groundbreaking “An Evening with Nichols and May” had its smash Broadway debut in 1960.
Nichols offers insights into his childhood as a seven-year-old immigrant to America (his family escaped Nazi Germany in 1939), as well as the genesis of his career as a performer at the University of Chicago. Despite suffering from stage fright, Nichols rose to stardom as half of the improvisational comedy duo Nichols and May, having met the comedian during his time with The Compass Players in the mid-1950s. They never rehearsed and Nichols’ ability to let go and “revere the unconscious” became the catalyst that informed his later directorial style.
“Not naming something, not deciding what to do, being brave and going out empty is the only way,” explains Nichols. “And it’s both terrifying and thrilling. And what I didn’t know is that it applies to directing, too.”
His first foray into stage directing was Neil Simon’s “Barefoot in the Park” in 1964. With the participation of a young Robert Redford and advice from friend Lillian Hellman, the production won Nichols his first Tony Award. Directing Simon’s “The Odd Couple” earned him a second Tony, and sparked in him the keen observation that “there are only three types of scenes: negotiations, seductions and fights.”
This would prove true on his debut film, 1967’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” with its inimitable pairing of Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. Nichols admits that at the time, his knowledge of filmmaking was almost non-existent. With the help of his friend, actor Anthony Perkins, he spent a frantic three days learning about cameras and lenses. The film received 13 Oscar® nominations and won five awards, most notably a Best Actress prize for Taylor.
BECOMING MIKE NICHOLS also delves into the making of “The Graduate,” Nichols’ second film, which brought him an Academy Award®for directing and was nominated for six other Oscars®. Nichols’ instincts drove him to cast an unknown young actor he recounts seeing as “a transvestite Russian fishwife in an off-Broadway play,” and with that, Dustin Hoffman’s career was launched. Discussing the iconic Simon and Garfunkel soundtrack, Nichols reveals how the inventive montages came about and also touches on the legendary last shot, noting, “That ending was what taught me what movies really are.”
Nichols went on to direct such classic films as “Carnal Knowledge,” “Silkwood” and “Working Girl,” and earned Emmys® for his HBO productions of “Wit” and “Angels in America.” His other award-winning stage productions included “The Real Thing,” “Monty Python’s Spamalot” and “Death of a Salesman,” starring Philip Seymour Hoffman.
With access to archival photographs and footage from Nichols’ days as a performer and a theater director, and an illuminating use of movie clips from “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and “The Graduate,” BECOMING MIKE NICHOLS goes inside the head and heart of this brilliant artist. He lays bare his creative process, his drive and his formidable sense of humor with touching behind-the-scenes anecdotes.
In addition to “Bullets over Broadway” and “Emma,” director Douglas McGrath’s films include “Nicholas Nickleby,” “Infamous” and the Emmy®-nominated HBO documentary “His Way.” He also wrote the Tony-nominated book for “Beautiful: The Carol King Musical,” currently running on Broadway.
Jack O’Brien has won three Tonys and five Drama Desk Awards for his work in the theater, where he directed such productions as “Hairspray,” “Henry IV” and “The Coast of Utopia.” He served as artistic director of the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego from 1981 to 2007.
Executive producer Frank Rich spent more than three decades as a writer at the New York Times before joining New York magazine in 2011. He currently serves as an executive producer on HBO’s Emmy®-winning comedy series “Veep” and executive produced the Peabody Award-winning HBO documentary “Six by Sondheim.”
HBO Documentary Films presents BECOMING MIKE NICHOLS; a film by Douglas McGrath; directed by Douglas McGrath; executive produced by Frank Rich, Jack O’Brien and Douglas McGrath; edited by Camilla Toniolo. For HBO: produced by Ellin Baumel; supervising producer, Lisa Heller; executive producer, Sheila Nevins.