BPS 137: The Art & Craft of the Romantic Comedy with Charles Shyer

BPS 137: The Art & Craft of the Romantic Comedy with Charles Shyer

We have on today, one of the best rom-com and comedy writers and filmmakers of all time a master at visual storytelling. I've been a fan of many of his films growing up, specifically, Father of The Bride. Now that I have two daughters of my own, it is...
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vor 4 Jahren
We have on today, one of the best rom-com and comedy writers and
filmmakers of all time a master at visual storytelling. I've been a
fan of many of his films growing up, specifically, Father of The
Bride. Now that I have two daughters of my own, it is fondly scary
to rewatch it.

Charles Shyer is an award-winning director, screenwriter, and
producer whose work includes some of the best fuzzy-feel good films
of all time. Shyer grew up in the film industry where his father
worked with D.W. Griffith and was one of the founders of the
Directors Guild of America. 

He is the director and writer of the 1991 comedy film, Father of
the Bride starring Steve Martin, Diane Keaton, Kimberly Williams
(in her film debut) in this remake of the Spencer Tracy classic,
George (played by Steve Martin) and Nina Banks (played by Diane
Keaton) are the parents of young soon-to-be-wed Annie (played by
Kimberly Williams-Paisley). George is a nervous father unready to
face the fact that his little girl is now a woman. The preparations
for the extravagant wedding provide additional comic moments.
Martin, a businessman, and owner of an athletic shoe company finds
out his daughter is getting married, he finds himself reluctant to
let go and goes on a spiral. It is one of those movies with a lot
of smiles and laughter in it, and a good feeling all the way
through. The film grossed $129 million and has had two sequels of
it made in 1995 and 2020.

He wrote and co-produced one of the most pivotal films in Lindsey
Lohan’s career, The Parent Trap (1998). It captured the story of
identical twins Annie and Hallie (played by Lohan), separated at
birth and each raised by one of their biological parents, later
discover each other for the first time at summer camp and make a
plan to bring their wayward parents back together.

People fell in love with the movie and Lohan’s exceptional
performance, leading to an instant box-office success with a $92.1
million gross. 

There are but few writers who are able to master the craft of
romantic comedy, and Charles Shyer is one. His films include
Private Benjamin (1980), Irreconcilable Differences (1984), Baby
Boom (1987), the Father of the Bride sequels, The Affair of the
Necklace (2001), etc.

Shyer directed Baby Boom and co-wrote it with his long-time writing
partner, Nancy Meyers in 1987. It stars Diane Keaton (a
super-yuppie J.C) who discovers that a long-lost cousin has died,
leaving her a fourteen-month-old baby girl as an inheritance. Like
most of his films, this too was a box office success. Her life is
thrown into turmoil.

J.C. Wiatt is a successful New York businesswoman known around town
as the "tiger lady." She gets news of an inheritance from a
relative from another country and off the bat she suspects it's
money. Well, it's not money, it's a baby girl. At first, she
doesn't accept until the lady that gives the baby to her has to
catch her flight. J.C. is now stuck with an annoying baby girl. Her
boyfriend doesn't like the idea of a baby living with them and he
leaves her. J.C. has enough of it and takes her to meet a family
ready to adopt her. She leaves but hears the baby cry while walking
away and has to go back. The baby is too attached to her now and
won't let her go. Later, her baby gets into mischief which causes
her to get fired. Now, she sets her eyes on an old two-story
cottage in Vermont to get out of New York life. When she arrives,
the house needs more help than originally thought. She gets bored
one snowy day and decides to make apple sauce. Her baby loves it
and she decides to sell it. Pretty soon everyone wants some of the
baby apple sauce. J.C. hits it big and falls in love with a local
veterinarian.

All this happened after he made the switch at the start of his
career in the industry, from pursuing directing to writing and
landing a gig on the 1970 TV series, The Odd Couple. Where Shyer
eventually worked his way up to head writer and associate producer,
writing about twenty-four episodes of the show. 

The sitcom, The Odd Couple was formally titled onscreen as Neil
Simon's The Odd Couple. It was broadcasted on ABC from September
24, 1970, to March 7, 1975, starring Tony Randall as Felix Unger
and Jack Klugman as Oscar Madison.

In our conversation, Shyer tackled the making of some of his
well-known films and the changing writing culture in Hollywood.
It’s always a good fun day at the office when I can chat up with
folks like Charles. 

Enjoy my chat with Charles Shyer.

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