"Originally as the scene was written by Rick, who has a much bigger heart [than I], it was a very wet, very emo- tional kind of scene." Brickman made some minor changes. He has Valli say- ing,"What happens if they don't like me as a single?" Gaudio replies: "What makes you think they liked you before?" "To me that is a very typical Jewish kind of exchange. What it is is affec- tion, but it's disguised as a kind of hostility. It's emotion buried under the lightness of humor. It gets a warm kind of laugh." Making 'Em Laugh Brickman, 64, was born in Rio de Janeiro. His father emigrated there from Poland to establish residency. His ultimate goal was to get into the United States, and South America had higher quotas than Eastern Europe. Brickman's mother, born and raised on Essex Street on the Lower East Side, met her husband at a Catskills resort. "When my parents died, I was looking through some ancient corre- spondence, where my father wrote he was doing stretching exercises so he would become taller and she would love him. My mother was taller than my father, but my father was louder. He thought women belonged [at] the stove." Marshall Brickman: The unlikely co- creator of Broadway hit Jersey Boys co-wrote Annie Hall but never lis- tened to the Four Seasons. The family moved to the Flatbush section of Brooklyn when Brickman was 2. His father, with whom Brickman had a strained relationship, was a union organizer. He wasn't reli- gious, though he did insist his son learn Yiddish. After graduating with a degree in music from the University of Wisconsin, Brickman hung around the New York folk scene, playing for STAN'S DELI free in Washington Square Park on weekends. He and Eric Weissberg, a friend from a Red Diaper camp, recorded an album for Electra Records called New Dimensions in Banjo and Bluegrass. It sold, by Brickman's account, 35 copies. (More on that later.) He also took a number of show business jobs. He became a writer for Candid Camera, where he shared an office with Joan Rivers and Fannie Flagg and dreamed up embarrassing scenarios. He also sold jokes to comics and joined the Tarriers group. Because, he claims, he tuned his instrument faster than the others, he was the frontman who delivered the comic patter. "To make people laugh, I guess, was a little bit of a drug!' . Meeting Woody One night when the group was play- ing the Bitter End, Brickman met Woody Allen, who was the group's opening act. They shared manage- ment, style and, people suggested, a sensibility. "I started to work with Woody on his standup act. As he got more popu- lar and began to appear on television, that began to eat up material. Then we drifted into television." Ultimately their collaboration yielded Sleeper, Manhattan and Manhattan Murder Mystery (which Brickman directed) in addition to the Oscar-winning Annie Hall. Is there no end to Brickman's good fortune? Apparently not. When Deliverance was released, the promo- tion people used "Dueling Banjos" as part of the film's marketing cam- paign. The public was so taken by the song, the studio released it as a single; it shot to No. 1. The next step was to release a soundtrack album, but there was no soundtrack — just that one song. So Warner Bros., which purchased Elektra Records, looked in the cata- logue and saw the albuin New Dimensions in Banjo and Bluegrass, which no one had ever heard, substi- tuted "Dueling Banjos" for one exist- ing track and released it as the sound- track album. It went on to sell more than a million copies and continues to sell well today. 1-1 Only deli in Detroit serving fresh rotisserie roasted turkey! Please call Stan Snitz. al /IOW /0 fikiCe tc4oadperz0 owlet CARRY-OUT • DINE-1N • MADE "To Go" CATERING FOR YOUR EVERY OCCASION • DELIVERY 32906 Woodward Ave. (S. of 14 Mile) fax: 248.549.3667 248.549.3663 ARRANGEMENTS Berkley Corners 2530 W. 12 Mile Road Berkley, MI 48072 ©2005 on your, order when you mention this ad!* Visit Us And Save $3 *Offer valid on select products. Cannot be combined with any other offers. Offer code must be used when placing the order. Excluding Holidays. Offer expires 02/05/06 • Code: SUPB0206 , Edible Arrangements - - www.edible angemen s. 1.-411t ti 2. i In. 1 CAL S'7 Jersey Boys is playing at the August Wilson Theater, 245 W. 52nd St., in New York City. For tickets, call (212) 239-6200 or go to www.jerseyboysbroadway.com . February 2 • 2006 51