Steve Martin (born August 14, 1945) is an Emmy Award-winning American
actor, comedian, writer, playwright, producer, musician, and composer. He was
raised in Southern California in a Baptist family, where his early influences
were working at Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm and working magic and comedy
acts at these and other smaller venues in the area. His ascent to fame picked up
when he became a writer for the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, and later became
a frequent guest on the Tonight Show.
In the 1970s, Steve performed his offbeat, absurdist comedy routines before
packed houses on national tours. In the 1980s, having branched away from
stand-up comedy, he became a successful actor, playwright, and juggler, and
eventually earned him an Emmy, Grammy, and American Comedy awards.
Biography
Steve was born in Waco, Texas, the son of Mary Lee Steve and Glenn Vernon
Martin, a real estate salesman and an aspiring actor.
Steve was raised in Garden Grove, California. One of his earliest memories is of
seeing his father, as an extra, serving drinks onstage at the Call Board Theatre
on Melrose Place. During World War II, in England, Glenn had appeared in a
production of Our Town with Raymond Massey. Years later, he would write to
Massey for help in Steve's fledgling career, but would receive no reply.
Expressing his affection through gifts of cars, bikes etc., Glenn was not
emotionally open to his son. He was proud of the boy but extremely critical,
Steve later recalling that in his teens his feelings for his dad were mostly
ones of hatred.
His first job was at Disneyland, selling guidebooks on weekends and fulltime
during the summer school break. That lasted for three years (1955–1958). During
his free time he haunted the Disneyland magic shop, Merlin's Magic Shop, where
tricks were demonstrated to the potential customers. By 1960 he had mastered
several of the tricks and illusions, and took a job there in August 1960.
There he perfected his talents for magic, juggling, playing the banjo and
creating balloon animals frequently performing for tips.
After high school graduation, Steve attended Santa Ana Junior College, taking
classes in drama and English poetry. In his free time he teamed up with friend
and Garden Grove High School classmate Kathy Westmoreland to participate in
comedies and other productions at the Bird Cage Theatre, a theater concession
inside Knott's Berry Farm. Later, he met budding actress Stormie Sherk, and they
developed comedy routines while becoming romantically involved. Stormie's
influence caused Steve to apply to Cal State Long Beach for enrollment with a
major in Philosophy. Stormie enrolled at UCLA, about an hour's drive north, and
the distance eventually caused them to lead separate lives.
His philosophy classes intrigued him, and for a short while he considered
becoming a professor instead of an actor-comedian. His time at college changed
his life: "It changed what I believe and what I think about everything. I
majored in philosophy. Something about non sequiturs appealed to me. In
philosophy, I started studying logic, and they were talking about cause and
effect, and you start to realize, 'Hey, there is no cause and effect! There is
no logic! There is no anything!' Then it gets real easy to write this stuff,
because all you have to do is twist everything hard—you twist the punch line,
you twist the non sequitur so hard away from the things that set it up, that
it's easy . . . and it's thrilling." Steve periodically spoofed his philosophy
studies in his 1970s stand-up act, comparing philosophy with studying geology.
"If you're studying geology, which is all facts, as soon as you get out of
school you forget it all, but philosophy you remember just enough to screw you
up for the rest of your life."

In 1967, Steve transferred to UCLA and switched his major to theater. While
attending college, he appeared in an episode of The Dating Game. Steve soon
began working local clubs at night, to mixed notices. At age twenty-one, he
dropped out of college for good.
In 1967, his former girlfriend Nina Goldblatt, a dancer on The Smothers Brothers
Comedy Hour, helped Steve land a writing job with the show by submitting his
work to head writer Mason Williams. Williams initially paid Steve out of his own
pocket. Along with the other writers for the show, Steve won an Emmy Award in
1969. He also wrote for John Denver (a neighbor of his in Aspen, Colorado, at
one point), The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour, and The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour.
He also appeared on these shows and several others, in various comedy skits.
During these years his roommates included comedian Gary Mule Deer and
singer/guitarist Michael Johnson.
Steve also performed his own material, sometimes as an opening act for groups
such as The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and The Carpenters. He appeared at San
Francisco's The Boarding House, among other venues. He continued to write,
earning an Emmy nomination for his work on Van Dyke and Company in 1976.
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In the mid-1970s, Steve made frequent appearances as a stand-up comedian on The
Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. That exposure, together with appearances on
The Gong Show, HBO's On Location and NBC's Saturday Night Live (SNL) (on which,
despite a common misconception, he was never a cast member) led to his first of
four comedy albums, Let's Get Small. The album was a huge success; one of its
tracks, "Excuse Me", helped establish a national catch phrase. His next album, A
Wild and Crazy Guy, was an even bigger success, reaching the #2 spot on the
sales chart in the U.S. and featured another catch phrase (the album's title),
also featured in a Saturday Night Live sketch in which Steve and Dan Aykroyd
played a couple of bumbling Czechoslovak would-be playboys, the Festrunk
Brothers. The album ended with a song "King Tut", sung and written by Steve and
released as a 45 RPM single during the King Tut craze that accompanied the
extremely popular traveling exhibit of the Egyptian king's tomb artifacts; the
single reached #17 in 1978. The song was backed by the "Toot Uncommons" (they
were actually members of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band). The album was a million
seller. Both albums won Grammys for Best Comedy Recording in 1977 and 1978,
respectively. Steve performed "King Tut" on the April 22, 1978 edition of SNL.
In his comedy albums, Martin's stand-up comedy was clearly self-referential and
sometimes self-mocking. It mixes philosophical riffs with sudden spurts of
"happy feet", banjo playing with balloon depictions of concepts like venereal
disease. His style is off-kilter and ironic, and sometimes pokes fun at stand-up
comedy traditions, such as Steve opening his act by saying, "I think there's
nothing better for a person to come up and do the same thing over and over for
two weeks. This is what I enjoy, so I'm going to do the same thing over and over
and over....I'm going to do the same joke over and over in the same show, it'll
be like a new thing." Or: "Hello, I'm Steve Martin, and I'll be out here in a
minute . . . "
During his frequent SNL guest appearances, Steve popularized the air quotes
gesture, which uses four fingers to make double quote marks in the air.
Steve related that in one comedy routine (used on the Comedy Is Not Pretty! LP)
he denies that he is named "Steve Martin"; his real name is "Gern Blanston". He
said that the riff took on a life of its own, and there is even a Gern Blanston
website, and for a time a rock band used the words as its name.
While on Saturday Night Live, Steve became very close with several of the cast
members. One was Gilda Radner. On the day Radner died from ovarian cancer in
1989, Steve was to host SNL. Instead of delivering the intended monologue, Steve
showed a video clip of him and Radner appearing in a 1978 sketch. He introduced
the clip to the audience and became overcome with grief and started to cry.
Steve has guest-hosted Saturday Night Live 15 times, as of his January 2009
hosting (musical guest: Jason Mraz), breaking his previous record of 14 (now
held by fellow frequent host Alec Baldwin) and retaining his title as SNL's most
frequent host (a record Steve has held since 1989, when he beat Buck Henry's
record of ten).
In a 2005 poll to find The Comedian's Comedian, Steve was voted one of the top
15 greatest comedy acts ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders.
By the end of the 1970s, Steve had acquired the kind of following normally
reserved for rock stars, with his tour appearances typically occurring at
sold-out arenas filled with tens of thousands of screaming fans. But unknown to
his audience, stand-up comedy was "just an accident" for him. His real goal was
to get into film. Martin's first film was a short, The Absent-Minded Waiter
(1977). The seven-minute long film, also featuring Buck Henry and Teri Garr, was
written by and starred Martin. The film was nominated for an Academy Award as
Best Short Film, Live Action. His first feature film appearance was in the
musical Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, where he sang The Beatles'
"Maxwell's Silver Hammer". In 1979, Steve co-wrote and starred in his first
full-length movie, The Jerk, directed by Carl Reiner. The movie was a huge
success, grossing over $73 million on a budget of far less than that amount.

The success of The Jerk opened more doors for Martin. Stanley Kubrick met with
him to discuss the possibility of Steve starring in a screwball comedy version
of Traumnovelle (Kubrick later changed his approach to the material, the result
of which was 1999's Eyes Wide Shut). Steve was executive producer for Domestic
Life, a prime-time television series starring friend Steve Mull, and a
late-night series called Twilight Theater. It emboldened Steve to try his hand
at his first serious film, Pennies From Heaven, a movie he was anxious to do
because of the desire to avoid being typecast. To prepare for that film, Steve
took acting lessons from director Herbert Ross, and spent months learning how to
tap dance. The film was a financial failure; Martin's comment at the time was "I
don't know what to blame, other than it's me and not a comedy."
Steve was in three more Reiner-directed comedies after The Jerk: Dead Men Don't
Wear Plaid in 1982, The Man with Two Brains in 1983 and All of Me in 1984,
possibly his most critically acclaimed comic performance to date. In 1986, Steve
joined fellow Saturday Night Live veterans Martin Short and Chevy Chase in
¡Three Amigos!, directed by John Landis, and written by Martin, Lorne Michaels,
and singer-songwriter Randy Newman. It was originally entitled The Three
Caballeros and Steve was to be teamed with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi. In
1986, Steve was in the movie musical film version of the hit off-Broadway play
Little Shop of Horrors (based on a famous B-movie), as a sadistic dentist, Orin
Scrivello. The film also marked the first of three films teaming Steve with
actor Rick Moranis. In 1987, Steve joined comedian John Candy in the John Hughes
movie Planes, Trains & Automobiles. That same year, the Cyrano de Bergerac
adaptation Roxanne, a film Steve co-wrote, won him a Writers Guild of America,
East award and more importantly, the recognition from Hollywood and the public
that he was more than a comedian. In 1988, he performed in the Frank Oz comedy
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels alongside Michael Caine.
Steve starred in the Ron Howard film Parenthood, with Moranis in 1989. He later
met with Moranis to make the Mafia comedy My Blue Heaven in 1990. In 1991, Steve
starred in and wrote L.A. Story (a romantic comedy, in which the female lead was
played by his then-wife Victoria Tennant) and was a member of the ensemble
existentialist tragedy Grand Canyon that were both about life in Los Angeles. In
a serious role, Steve played a tightly wound Hollywood film producer trying to
recover from a traumatic robbery that left him injured. In contrast to the
serious tone of Grand Canyon, Steve also appeared in a remake of the comedy
Father of the Bride in 1991 (followed by a sequel in 1995). He also starred in
the 1992 comedy film HouseSitter, with Goldie Hawn and Dana Delany. Steve also
starred with Eddie Murphy in the 1999 comedy Bowfinger.
In David Mamet's 1997 thriller, The Spanish Prisoner, Steve played a darker role
as a wealthy stranger who takes a suspicious interest in the work of a young
businessman (Campbell Scott). He appeared in a version of Waiting for Godot as
Vladimir (with Robin Williams as
Estragon and Bill Irwin as Lucky). In 1998, Steve guest starred with U2 in the
200th episode of The Simpsons titled Trash of the Titans. Steve provided the
voice for sanitation commissioner Ray Patterson. In 1999, Steve and Hawn starred
in a remake of the 1970 Neil Simon comedy, The Out-of-Towners. By 2003, Steve
ranked 4th on the box office stars list, after co-starring in Bringing Down The
House and starring in Cheaper By The Dozen, each of which earned over $130
million at U.S. theaters. Both were family comedies.
In 2005, Steve wrote and starred in Shopgirl, based on his own novella. Steve
played a wealthy businessman who strikes up a romance with a Saks Fifth Avenue
counter girl (Claire Danes). He also starred in Cheaper by the Dozen 2 that
year. Steve also starred in the 2006 box office hit The Pink Panther, standing
in Peter Sellers' shoes as the bumbling Inspector Clouseau, a role which he
reprised in 2009's The Pink Panther 2. His other most recent work to date is the
2008 comedy Baby Mama, where he plays a holistic and self-absorbed founder of a
health foods company.
Throughout the 1990s, after Tina Brown took over The New Yorker, Steve wrote
various pieces for the magazine. They later appeared in the collection Pure
Drivel. In 1993, Steve wrote the play Picasso at the Lapin Agile, which had a
successful run in several American cities. In 2009, after the La Grande, Oregon
school board refused to allow the play to be performed after several parents
complained about the content, Steve offered to pay to ensure that the students
could put on the production off-site.
In 2002, Steve adapted the Carl Sternheim play The Underpants, which ran
Off-Broadway at Classic Stage Company.In 2008, he produced and wrote the story
for the dramatic thriller Traitor, starring Don Cheadle.
Steve has also written two novellas, Shopgirl and The Pleasure of My Company.
Shopgirl was later turned into a film (see above). In 2007, he published a
memoir, Born Standing Up. Time magazine's Lev Grossman named it one of the Top
10 Nonfiction Books of 2007, ranking it at #6, and praising it as "a funny,
moving, surprisingly frank memoir."
In 2001, Steve hosted the 73rd Annual Academy Awards; he hosted it again in 2003
for the Academy Awards.
In 2005, Steve hosted a film along with Donald Duck, Disneyland: The First 50
Magical Years, which was intended to show at Disneyland until the end of
Disneyland's 50th anniversary celebration in September 2006, but it is
continuing to run indefinitely.
In 2001, he played banjo on Earl Scruggs' remake of "Foggy Mountain Breakdown".
The recording was the winner of the Best Country Instrumental Performance
category at the following year's Grammys. Steve released his first all-music
album, The Crow: New Songs for the 5-String Banjo exclusively to Amazon.com on
January 27, 2009, with a wider release scheduled for May 19, 2009.
Steve has been involved with artists Allyson Hollingsworth and Cindy Sherman,
and the actresses Helena Bonham
Carter, Anne Heche,
Maureen McCormick and Bernadette
Peters. He was married to actress Victoria Tennant from November 20, 1986 until
1994.
On July 28, 2007, Steve married Anne Stringfield (born 1972) at his Los Angeles
home. Former Nebraska Senator Bob Kerrey presided over the ceremony. Lorne
Michaels, creator of Saturday Night Live, was his best man. Several of the
guests, including close friends Tom Hanks, Eugene Levy, comedian Carl Reiner,
and magician/actor Ricky Jay were not informed that a wedding ceremony would
take place. Instead, they were told they were invited to a party, and were
surprised by the nuptials.
Along with the other writers for The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, Steve won an
Emmy Award in 1969.
In 1978 Steve won a Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album for Let's Get Small, and
in 1979 for A Wild and Crazy Guy. He also shared a 2001 Grammy Award for Best
Country Instrumental Performance with Earl Scruggs (and others) for his banjo
performance of "Foggy Mountain Breakdown".
In August 1989 Steve received the first honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree
from California State University Long Beach, where he studied philosophy 1964 to
1967 before transferring to UCLA for theater.
On October 23, 2005, Steve was presented with the Mark Twain Prize for American
Humor.
Steve was honored in 2005 with a Disney Legend award, acknowledging Martin's
early career at Disneyland and connections with The Walt Disney Company
throughout his career.
Steve was honored at the 30th Annual Kennedy Center Honors on December 1, 2007.
This Steve Martin Biography Page is Copyright © 2004 - 2009 Chuck Ayoub