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Alexandra Heller-Nicholas
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Figures and Tables vii
- Notes on Contributors viii
- Acknowledgments x
- Introduction: Who’s Kidding?—Approaching Elaine May 1
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Part 1 Beginnings
- 1 Teenagers on Stage—The Comedy of Elaine May and Mike Nichols 23
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Part 2 Critically Situating Elaine May
- 2 Hollywood Can’t Wait: Elaine May and the Delusions of 1970s American Cinema 41
- 3 Dangerous Business—Elaine May as Existential Improviser 63
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Part 3 Elaine May’s Films as Director
- 4 Kneeling on Glass—Elaine May’s A New Leaf (1971) as Screwball Black Comedy 85
- 5 “Don’t Put A Milky Way in Someone’s Mouth When They Don’t Want It”: A Contemporary Feminist Rereading of Elaine May’s The Heartbreak Kid (1972) 104
- 6 Mikey and Nicky (1976)—Elaine May and the Cassavetes Connection 119
- 7 Cartographies of Catastrophe—Elaine May’s Ishtar (1987) 139
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Part 4 Collaborations/Revelations
- 8 In/Significant Gestures—Elaine May, Screen Performance, and Embodied Collaboration 165
- 9 Otto É. May(zo)—Elaine May’s Screenplay of Otto Preminger’s Such Good Friends (1971) as Affirmation that Hell is Other People 181
- 10 Spectral Elaine May—The Later Mike Nichols Collaborations and the Myth of the Recluse 202
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Conclusion
- 11 When in Doubt, Seduce: An Interview with Screenwriter Allie Hagan 221
- Bibliography 234
- Index 244
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Figures and Tables vii
- Notes on Contributors viii
- Acknowledgments x
- Introduction: Who’s Kidding?—Approaching Elaine May 1
-
Part 1 Beginnings
- 1 Teenagers on Stage—The Comedy of Elaine May and Mike Nichols 23
-
Part 2 Critically Situating Elaine May
- 2 Hollywood Can’t Wait: Elaine May and the Delusions of 1970s American Cinema 41
- 3 Dangerous Business—Elaine May as Existential Improviser 63
-
Part 3 Elaine May’s Films as Director
- 4 Kneeling on Glass—Elaine May’s A New Leaf (1971) as Screwball Black Comedy 85
- 5 “Don’t Put A Milky Way in Someone’s Mouth When They Don’t Want It”: A Contemporary Feminist Rereading of Elaine May’s The Heartbreak Kid (1972) 104
- 6 Mikey and Nicky (1976)—Elaine May and the Cassavetes Connection 119
- 7 Cartographies of Catastrophe—Elaine May’s Ishtar (1987) 139
-
Part 4 Collaborations/Revelations
- 8 In/Significant Gestures—Elaine May, Screen Performance, and Embodied Collaboration 165
- 9 Otto É. May(zo)—Elaine May’s Screenplay of Otto Preminger’s Such Good Friends (1971) as Affirmation that Hell is Other People 181
- 10 Spectral Elaine May—The Later Mike Nichols Collaborations and the Myth of the Recluse 202
-
Conclusion
- 11 When in Doubt, Seduce: An Interview with Screenwriter Allie Hagan 221
- Bibliography 234
- Index 244