Neil Simon, the prolific and Pulitzer Prize-winning US playwright celebrated as the king of comedy who won more Oscar and Tony nominations combined than any other showbiz writer, died on Sunday (Aug 26). He was 91.
The brains behind more than 30 plays, 20 screenplays and five musicals, Time magazine dubbed him the “patron saint of laughter.”
Many of his works are classics of 20th century American theater and Simon has been credited with playing a seminal role — along with film director Woody Allen — in re-crafting US humour in the 1960s and 1970s.
Longtime friend Bill Evans announced his death early on Sunday in a New York hospital of complications from pneumonia.
His wife, a daughter and grandson were at his bedside, Evans told AFP. He had represented Simon for three decades from 1976 to 2006.
Simon was the author of critically acclaimed and commercial hits such as Barefoot in the Park (1963) The Odd Couple (1965) The Sunshine Boys (1974) and Lost in Yonkers (1990).
Much of his work, peppered with witty one-liners, explored the everyday struggles of the middle-classes and inter-family conflict, influenced by his troubled upbringing during the Great Depression.
“The good mechanic knows how to take a car apart; I love to take the human mind apart and see how it works. Behaviour is absolutely the most interesting thing I can write about. You put that behavior in conflict and you’re in business,” Simon told The Paris Review in 1992.
Barefoot in the Park turned Robert Redford into a star. Redford also appeared in the 1967 hit movie version opposite Jane Fonda.
Other plays that went on to become major Hollywood movies included The Goodbye Girl in 1977 that won Richard Dreyfuss an Oscar for best leading actor and The Odd Couple in 1968 about two friends sharing an apartment starring Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon.
Born on July 4, 1927 in the Bronx, Simon grew up in northern Manhattan, the son of a skirt-chasing salesman who left the family home multiple times, forcing his mother to rent out her room to make ends meet.
Simon served in the military and then worked with his older brother Danny on producing jokes for television and radio scripts.
Barefoot in the Park, about a bickering couple inspired by his first marriage, and The Odd Couple that followed, were credited with capturing the zeitgeist of the 1960s.
In the 1960s, at the height of his success, with four plays running on Broadway, Simon was earning about $60,000 a week and easily double that thanks to royalties, The New Yorker reported in 2010.
In 1991, Simon achieved the highest honour in US drama, winning the Pulitzer Prize for Lost in Yonkers, an autobiographical comedy about a mother and her daughter that was his last big splash on Broadway.
Such was his wealth that he produced many of his plays and in 1983 he was given the rare accolade of having a New York stage, the Neil Simon Theatre, named in his honour.
In addition to his Pulitzer, he won a Golden Globe and three Tonys. He chalked up 17 Tony nominations and four Oscar nods.
He was married five times to four different women — he married his third wife twice — and had three children.