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  • Comedy Legend Andrea Martin Releases New Book

    Comedy Legend Andrea Martin Releases New Book

    ARTS | OCTOBER 10, 2014 5:33 PM
    ________________________________

    By Alin K. Gregorian
    Mirror-Spectator Staff


    SAN FRANCISCO -- For anyone who is a fan of comedy, Andrea Martin's
    name is a familiar one.

    >From her early television presence on the Canadian sketch show "SCTV,"
    where a host of insane characters people the headquarters of a
    fictitious television station, to her recent turn on Broadway, Martin
    has gone from strength to strength in her four decades entertaining
    audiences.

    The actress and comedienne, who divides her time between New York and
    Toronto, jokes that she is often thought to be Jewish and Canadian,
    but indeed, she is an Armenian and a Mainer. "I don't think I said I
    was Jewish. It is just that no one knew I was Armenian and it was easy
    for people to assume it," she said.

    Martin, 67, when not donning wigs or prosthetic butts or guts, is a
    beautiful woman. However, she did not always see herself that way. "I
    don't think it was until I was a lot older that I was comfortable with
    how I looked. It was 1995, when I was 47-48, that I believed I had any
    merit looking like myself," that she could be "really sexy and pretty
    and really comfortable with myself."

    Martin often plays over-the-top characters but when speaking in
    person, she is self-effacing, polite, charming and sweet to a fault.
    It is hard to think that Edith Prickly, the brash, bossy and
    aggressive station manager from the Canadian sketch show "SCTV," clad
    in her trademark leopard print outfit and rhinestone-covered glasses,
    has occupied the same body as this elegant, charming woman.

    Martin's Armenian Genocide survivor grandfather changed the family
    name to Martin from Papazian upon arriving in Maine. "I think my
    background really infused a lot of the characters that I did on
    'SCTV.' I wasn't aware of it, but it was cellular, really. There is
    great pride in being Armenian, humility, self-effacement," creating a
    balance. "One kept the other in check," she said.

    Martin has received acclaim in every field she has tackled. She has
    received two Emmy Awards for writing for "SCTV," as well as garnering
    several Emmy nominations for acting and writing on "SCTV" and other
    shows. In addition, she received a Gemini Award in Canada for her TV
    work as well as two Tony Awards for her roles on Broadway, as Berthe
    in "Pippin" and as Alice Miller in "My Favorite Year." She has won a
    host of other stage awards, including the Outer Circle Critics Award,
    Drama Desk Award and the Elliot Norton Award.

    She has appeared in many movies, also, including brilliant roles in
    "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" as Aunt Voula who is puzzled by vegetarians
    and Phyllis Stein in "Hedwig and the Angry Inch," who is Hedwig's
    manager.

    She came up in the world of comedy with several other legends, such as
    Martin Short, who was her former brother-in-law, Eugene Levy, John
    Candy, Joe Flaherty, Rick Moranis, Catherine O'Hara and Harold Ramis,
    among others.It seems it is on stage that she is happiest. "What
    brings me most joy is theater. I love the routine of the theater, the
    camaraderie of the cast, the community of the cast. You are with the
    same people every night."

    She added, "I love doing the part of Berthe in 'Pippin.' It is age
    appropriate. I perform on a trapeze in a corset." She added that at
    age 67, she is "very fit, agile and vital and I feel the part allows
    me to be very expressive."

    A veteran of both comedy and drama, Martin said for sure, it is harder
    to make people laugh in a theater rather than to act seriously. In
    fact, she has done solo stage shows, including "Nude, Nude, Totally
    Nude" and "Final Days! Everything Must Go!!" which she said were
    incredibly rewarding though terrifying.

    Speaking from San Francisco, Martin said that she was in a special
    abbreviated tour of "Pippin" there and in Los Angeles for two weeks.

    "I really love the show," she said.

    HarperCollins Publishers in September released her autobiography, Lady
    Parts. The book is by turns hysterically funny, observant, empathetic,
    confessional and somber. So much of it revolves around her two sons.
    She is brutally honest about the challenges she faced as a single
    parent after she divorced her husband when her boys were young. She
    speaks about her anxiety which sometimes would cripple her, her
    battles with alcohol and bulimia, as well as her work ethic.

    Martin admits in the book that she has been flying regularly to
    Atlanta for the one hairdresser in the world that can manage her wild
    mane. (On the day of our interview, a delighted Martin in San
    Francisco her eyes had misted over when a young hairdresser had shown
    just the right touch with her hair, the day before.)

    She added, "I'm a hair diva and bitch."

    Martin also freely discusses sex, her dependence on one particular
    psychic in New York and the effects of age on various parts of her
    body.

    She has a light touch that can make the reader chuckle or bring tears
    to one's eyes when she talks about her childhood friend with whom she
    had stayed in touch all their lives, who lost her battle with cancer.

    Martin also writes extensively on her own private demons, including
    anxiety. She said that for her, speaking openly about mental illness
    and banishing stigmas was important. "It is how we think about
    anxiety. It is taboo to talk about the illnesses of the mind. There
    are afflictions that I thought were particular to me. Many of us deal
    with what I have dealt with. I don't think we talk about it enough."

    The process of writing the book was "grueling," Martin said. "You
    think of every reason not to write," she said, but once she got
    started, she said, "I loved it. I loved the storytelling aspect of it.
    I love entertaining audiences [albeit] in another genre. It was really
    gratifying."

    And entertaining it is.

    She has some great reviews from fellow comic geniuses. Says Tina Fey,
    "I have loved Andrea Martin from afar for many years, but now, after
    reading this funny and heroically honest book, I would like to take
    things to the 'next level' and marry her."

    Steve Martin calls the book "A lovely, bawdy and emotional memoir from
    one of our finest comedy artists."

    And Martin Short says, "Andrea's genius at combining hilarity and
    poignancy is breathtaking and will break your heart. From the first
    page, you know this is going to be a brilliant and joyous ride with
    one of the truly great, funny originals."

    It is clear both from the book and from conversations that Martin
    dotes on her sons. "They are my biggest fans. They love to laugh. They
    are proud of me and are an amazing audience."

    She noted, "They have grown up around show biz and are not intimidated
    by it or are in awe of it."

    As for the key to her success, Martin, in typical style, downplayed
    her genius. "I'm a hard worker. Talent is overrated. I have been
    lucky. I think there was less competition [when I started]. I don't
    know where I would be if I started out now. It is all luck, talent and
    perseverance, never being bored at what I do. The idea of retirement
    is not even in the realm."

    When Martin speaks, it is hard to believe that she has spent decades
    in a competitive business. In fact, she calls herself "enormously
    naive" and says that she has always had difficulty with
    self-promotion. If she had a bit more of that, she said, "It would
    have propelled me to be a household name. It is not something I do
    very well. I just put it out there."

    Martin said she has been pleasantly surprised by the different people
    that she has reached with her book. "I thought I was writing it for my
    demographic. It has been so gratifying, particularly when young women,
    or gay men come up to me, crying. I learned the most powerful
    connection is honesty."

    People, she said, "feel compelled to connect with someone so authentic."

    Martin has advice for young people just starting in their path in show
    business. "It's a business. Take nothing personally. Hone in on your
    own voice and exploit that for all its worth. That is what people want
    to see and hear. Don't be shy."

    She concluded with this humorous appeal to Armenian-American readers:
    "If you are a good Armenian, go to Amazon.com and take $20 and make me
    a best-selling author. Chris Bohjalian can't be the only
    Armenian-American author on the New York Times Bestseller List!"

    Lady Parts is available at amazon and at all major bookstores.

    http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2014/10/10/comedy-legend-andrea-martin-releases-new-book/



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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