soul of blessed memory Neil Simon, Celebrated Jewish-American Playwright, Dies At 91 GERRI MILLER JEWISH JOURNAL OF GREATER L.A. A Neil Simon ward-winning playwright and screenwriter Neil Simon passed away on Saturday, Aug. 25, 2018, in New York, due to complica- tions of pneumonia. The Tony, Emmy, Golden Globe and Pulitzer Prize winner had worldwide success with such enduring plays as The Odd Couple, Barefoot in the Park, The Sunshine Boys, Plaza Suite, Lost Marsha Mason and Richard Dreyfuss in a scene from the 1977 film The Goodbye Girl. The movie received a total of nine Academy Award nominations, and Dreyfuss won an Oscar. 76 August 30 • 2018 jn in Yonkers, and the trilogy based on his Jewish childhood and early career, Brighton Beach Memoirs, Biloxi Blues and Broadway Bound. Simon adapted many of his com- edies for the movies and also wrote original scripts for films, including The Out-of-Towners, The Goodbye Girl and Murder by Death. Simon was born in the Bronx, New York, to Irving Simon, a garment salesman, and Mamie (Levy) Simon, a homemaker. He got his start in televi- sion, writing in the late 1950s for Sid Caesar’s Your Show of Shows and The Phil Silvers Show, winning Emmys for both. His 1997 autobiography, The Play Goes On: A Memoir, was a best seller. His last play was Rose’s Dilemma in 2003, and in 2006, he won the Mark Twain Prize for Humor at the Kennedy Center. Simon, who lived in Manhattan, was married five times. His first wife, dancer Joan Baim, whom he married in 1953, died of cancer in 1973. He met actress Marsha Mason at an audition and they were married four months later. He wrote about their relation- ship in the play Chapter Two, which was made into a movie starring Mason and James Caan. “It’s my favorite play for many rea- sons,” Mr. Simon once said of Chapter Two. “It was cathartic for me. In the two years Marsha and I were married, I gave her a rough time — still trying to hold on to my relationship with Joan. Marsha is beautiful and talented, and I found ways to find fault with her. One night in California, everything erupted into a terrible fight. I realized then what I was doing. That’s how I wrote the play.” After his divorce from Mason, he married the actress Diane Lander in 1987. They divorced a year later but remarried in 1990, then divorced again. Simon married the actress Elaine Joyce in 1999. She survives him, along with his daughters Ellen Simon and Nancy Simon from his first mar- riage, and his daughter Bryn Lander Simon from his marriage to Lander. He is also survived by three grand- children and one great-grandson. Neil Simon’s older brother, Danny Simon, died in 2005. •