Broadway and Hollywood songwriter Marc Shaiman looks back with pessimistic humor in memoir

By MARK KENNEDY
AP Entertainment Writer
NEW YORK (AP) ā Some people see the glass as half full and some as half empty. Marc Shaiman is something else entirely.
āIām not even happy with the glass,ā he says with a laugh.
The award-winning Hollywood and Broadway composer and lyricist cheerfully likes to call himself an āEeyoreā and āa card-carrying pessimistā despite many of his biggest dreams coming true.
āJust as soon as something good happens, something badās going to happen,ā he tells The Associated Press. āI am always waiting for that other shoe to drop, and it inevitably drops.ā
His career and personal ups and downs are on full display this winter with Tuesday’s publication of his memoir, āNever Mind the Happy: Showbiz Stories from a Sore Winner,ā which is filled with funny stories from a man who has helped fuel popular movies and musicals for decades.
āIāve been lucky enough to do a lot and Iāve been lucky enough to have an outrageous longevity. I thought, āLet me write it down, finally,āā he says.
Tales of Bette Midler, Stephen Sondheim and the āSouth Parkā guys
The memoir charts the New Jersey-born musical prodigy’s rise from Bette Midler’s musical director in his teens to scoring such films as āSleepless in Seattleā and āMary Poppins Returnsā and Broadway shows like āHairsprayā and āCatch Me If You Can.ā
He’s worked with Billy Crystal, Martin Short, Luther Vandross, Raquel Welch and Rob Reiner, sparred with producer Scott Rudin and had a spat with Nora Ephron (āIām certain sheās in heaven, telling all the angels she doesnāt like harps,ā he writes). He also played at the White House and was a force in the early days of āSaturday Night Live.ā
There was the time in 1999 that he got legendary composer Stephen Sondheim so high on pot at a party in his apartment that the iconic composer collapsed three times. āI’ve killed Stephen Sondheim,ā he thought to himself. (Sondheim asked him to tell the story only after he died.)
He tells the story of hearing Meryl Streep repeatedly working on a song for āMary Poppins Returns.ā Moved, he and his writing partner, Scott Williams, knocked on her door to say how impressed they were by her dedication to rehearse. āWell, guys, fear can be a powerful motivator,ā she told them.
āIām mostly just trying to show how human everyone is ā even these bold-faced names,ā Shaiman, a two-time Grammy winner and two-time Emmy winner, says in the interview.
Shaiman isn’t above mocking himself, as he does for becoming an inveterate pothead and cocaine user. āI should go into the Guinness Book of World Records for being the only person who put on weight while being a cocaine addict,ā he writes.
There are stories about how a misunderstanding over an unpaid bill with Barbra Streisand left him shaken for days and the time he insulted Harry Connick Jr. (Both would later reconcile.)
Then there was the time he found himself dressed in an ostentatious powder-blue suit and feather boa alongside Matt Stone and Trey Parker on a red carpet for āSouth Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncutā ā they were dressed as Gwyneth Paltrow and Jennifer Lopez.
One lesson from Shaiman: āShow upā
One lesson Shaiman hopes to teach aspiring artists is to go for it: āWhat you can do is show up. Show up to everything. Say yes to everything because Iām a good example of that.ā
He tells the story of Midler organizing a world tour and offering his services but being told she was only hiring local Los Angeles people. So he withdrew all his money from the bank, hopped on a flight from New York and called her from a phone booth: āI’m in L.A. Where’s rehearsal?ā
āEven if you donāt get the job, keep your spirit up because someone in that room is going to remember you for another thing. Thatās the thing I think to really learn from the book,ā he says.
As a sign of Shaiman’s pull on Broadway, the audiobook will feature performances by Crystal, Short, Matthew Broderick, Megan Hilty, Nathan Lane, Katharine McPhee and Ben Whishaw, among others.
āI had included a lot of lyrics in the book and then I suddenly realized, āWhat, am I going to sing them all or speak them all?ā So I started calling friends, some who had sung those songs and some who had sung the demos,ā he says.
Crystal met Shaiman at āSaturday Night Liveā and quickly hit it off. In a separate interview, Crystal called his friend funny and quick to improvise, with an almost photographic memory of music.
āLook at his range: From āMiseryā to the beautiful score from āThe American President.ā And I brought him in on ā61(asterisk)ā and then the āMr. Saturday Nightā score,ā Crystal says. āHeās just so uniquely talented as an artist.ā
Despite being a Tony Award winner in 2003 with āHairsprayā and earning two other nominations for āCatch Me If You Canā in 2011 and āSome Like It Hotā in 2023, Shaiman is flustered by Broadway.
His last two shows ā āSmashā and āSome Like It Hotā ā earned great reviews but closed early, a victim of high costs and fickle audiences.
āI wish the shows kind of stunk and I could go, āOh, man, that really stunk. People are really not liking this,āā he says. āBut when theyāre enjoying it?ā
Shaiman really has nothing else to prove and yet he laughs that his skin has gotten thinner ā not thicker ā over the years. He’d like to take it easy, but that’s not what Eeyores do.
āI donāt know how well Iāll actually do with retirement, but Iād like to give it a try.ā
