My thanks to NetGalley and Black Dog and Leventhal Publishers for an advance copy of this new book that offers a retelling of how one of the most creative, meanest, funniest and most uncomfortable comedies came to be, as told by the creator, the people who worked on it, and the actors who brought it all to life.
I loved TV as the babysitter it was for me, but by the 90's except for X-Files and the occasional Star Trek I was pretty done with it. Cable was expensive, so my television was as basic as one could get. This was a habit that lasted quite a while. I was over at some friends and his wife put on the television, saying she had a show on TiVo that seemed to be a reflection of my life. The character was thin, which I was not, bald, which I am still fighting now, and successful, which will never be. The character was offered a house tour, and he passed, with a long conversation about why he didn't care. It was me. As the show went on, I felt like I had found a brother, or a tribe I didn't know existed, and that I was a part of. Larry David has many of the same ideas that I had, and the same skill at embarrassing ourselves. The show was Curb Your Enthusiasm, and honestly the only reason I kept going over to my friends was to watch the show. It was funny, irreverent, mean, and again funny. This book No Lessons Learned: The Making of Curb Your Enthusiasm as Told by Larry David and the Cast and Crew by Lorraine Ali, tells the story of the show, from its humble beginnings to a 24 year run with.
The book begins with the origins of Larry David, his birth, his undramatic childhood, and the lost years where David wandered trying to find out who he was, and how to make a living. David began to do stand-up, which his mother thought impossible, as he was never funny. David had an interesting antagonistic relationship with the crowds of comedy shows, half wanting to laugh the other half wanting to hit him. This made him a hit with other comedians, and small offers appeared. Writing for Fridays a Saturday Night Live clone forged a few relationships, as did a job writing for SNL later on. An old friend Jerrry Seinfeld asked David to write for his new show, a show about nothing, which became a powerhouse, and a money maker. After leaving David had the idea of making a mockumentary about returning to stand-up. The show did ok, but the name Curb Your Enthusiasm came from it. As did an idea for a show that was different than anything on television. And 20+ years later that still holds true.
The book does a good jo of making Larry David likeable, something he knows he is not good at. The author has a nice style, with lots of photos, interviews and comments from people on various episodes. This is a book made with HBO's help, so don't expect any stories about certain cast members and their problems. There is a deep look at the season featuring the return of the Seinfeld cast, which gives a look at how the show was created, how the improv parts worked, and the outlines that made the episode what they were. The interviews are quite good, with a lot of insight into the show making process, and how everyone seemed to get along.
Fans will find a lot to enjoy her. There is an episode guide, a lot of lines, and words that have entered the pop culture vernacular. Plus a lot on Larry David, a man who plays a curmudgeon, is a curmudgeon, but made one of the funniest and uncomfortable shows ever to be shown on television.