Mark Harris is the author of Pictures at a Revolution- Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood, which was a New York Times notable book of the year, and Five Came Back- A Story of Hollywood and the Second World War. A graduate of Yale University, Harris lives in New York City with his husband, Tony Kushner.
“A pleasure to read and a model biography: appreciative yet
critical, unfailingly intelligent and elegantly written . . . a
shrewd, in-depth reckoning of the elusive man behind the polished
facade. . . . [Harris’s] marvelous book makes palpable in artful
detail the extraordinary scope and brilliance of [Nichols’s]
achievements.” —Wendy Smith, The Washington Post
“Wonderful . . . [Harris] is in top form here. His command of the
theater world and the film industry and his smart and engaging
writing (he calls the profligate Nichols ‘a rich man who enjoyed
living like an even richer man’) make the book a pleasure to read.”
—Christian Science Monitor
“Hugely entertaining . . . Harris is a talented storyteller.”
—Louis Menand, The New Yorker
“Immersive . . . a book to savor, full of juicy industry details,
nonstop name-dropping and insights from scores of Nichols’ famous
friends. It truly feels like stepping into Nichols’ world.”
—NPR’s 2021 Books We Love
“Gleaming . . . fortified with a wealth of interviews that make the
acknowledgments a red carpet roll call (Candice Bergen, Robert
Redford, Meryl Streep…), Mike Nichols: A Life is a midcentury fairy
tale of right place-right time-right crowd . . . the rare
large-scale biography without boring bits.” —James Wolcott, The New
York Times Book Review
“Enthralling, extensively researched . . . Especially moving is
Harris’s chronicling of the relationships and creative partnerships
that helped Nichols develop his preternatural skills, most
significantly with his first comedy partner Elaine May . . . Harris
paints a rich, nuanced portrait of a brilliant man and a legendary
career.” —TIME’s The 100 Must-Read Book of 2021
“Terrific.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“Anyone with an abiding love for film or theater will be fascinated
by Mike Nichols, but even those with only a passing familiarity
with his work are likely to find themselves taken in by this
engrossing biography. Harris' book is a masterwork, endlessly
engaging, and one of the best biographies of an American artist to
be published in recent years.” —NPR.org
“A superb new biography.” —Chicago Tribune
“Meticulous, deeply engrossing.” —Variety
“May be the best biography of an artist in a very long time.” —The
Wrap
“Harris, a proven scholar of Hollywood, writes brilliantly and
gathers momentum with deeply researched, fascinating forensic
passages about the challenges and conflicts of Nichols’ great
projects.” —USA Today
“Fascinating, exhaustively researched, and utterly absorbing . . .
a roller-coaster life that, no matter how challenging it might have
been for Mike Nichols. makes a thrilling tale for the reader.”
—Vogue.com
“A monumental tribute to a singular talent . . . a cinderblock of a
book whose weight is never felt in the reading. . . Getting
[Elaine] May on the record stands as one of the book’s major
accomplishments, one that calls out for a full-fledged follow-up
and affirms this most crucial of connections.” —AV Club
“Magnificent.” —The Nation
“I read this because I was such a fan of Mark Harris’s first two
books and wound up being fascinated by Mike Nichols. I found the
book incredibly relaxing, in the same way going to the movies can
be relaxing. I felt entertained and taken care of. It was an
enormous treat.” —Ann Patchett, via Instagram
“Harris has produced a biography that transcends the prodigiously
reported facts and wild-ride circumstances of Nichols’ lives. The
book pulses with a narrative energy equal to its subject. When was
the last time you read a biography that also was a page-turner?”
—Theater News Online
“Dazzling . . . A superb and definitive biography that Nichols and
his fans deserve. Harris (Pictures at a Revolution) is part film
historian, theater buff and investigative reporter, which makes
this rich, compassionate and candid biography soar with fresh,
first-hand anecdotes from Nichols's co-workers and Harris's astute
observations about the director's work. . . . the ideal gift for
anyone interested in the creative arts.” —Shelf Awareness
“Sprawling yet intimate . . . Candid, colorful and chock-full of
detail, Mike Nichols: A Life is the biography that Nichols well
deserves.” —BookPage (starred)
“A Mike Nichols credit always made the heart race with
anticipation. So does Mike Nichols: A Life, an epic biography of an
epic creative life . . . engrossing.” —Associated Press
“Mark Harris’s biography is a must for every film and theatre buff.
Every moment in Nichols’ life and career comes vividly alive. . . .
Mike Nichols: A Life is an invaluable contribution to the history
of American theatre and film since World War II as well as a
colorful portrait of one of its most celebrated and at times
denigrated practitioners.” —John M. Clum, New York Journal of
Books
“[A] crisp new biography . . . [Harris has] a gift for
scene-setting. He’s at his best in Mike Nichols: A Life when he
takes you inside a production. His chapters on the making of three
films in particular — ‘The Graduate,’ ‘Silkwood’ and ‘Angels in
America’ — are miraculous: shrewd, tight, intimate and funny. You
sense he could turn each one into a book . . . [Nichols] was a man
in perpetual motion, and Harris chases him with patience, clarity
and care.” —Dwight Garner, The New York Times
“Judicious and superbly well-written . . . [Nichols’s] peculiar
gift was for making [actors] feel safe being precarious. The
essence of life is that it unfolds chronologically and according to
no script. Actors must capture this essence, then somehow transfer
it into highly artificial situations. If Nichols played taskmaster,
it was only to remind them that what is happening here has never
happened before; you have no idea what others will say or do next,
you must stay spontaneous and reactive—all while subordinating
yourself to a larger story. That was, finally, the great,
impossible neither/nor of his genius, as it is, too, of Mark
Harris’ wonderful book.” —Stephen Metcalf, Los Angeles Times
“Can’t-put-it-down biography . . . Like his subject, its humor is
sidesplitting, its behavioral insights keen and its wit
double-edged. . . . Harris’ strength as a writer is not merely
giving the reader a window onto how his subject put together a
sketch, a play, a movie, a career, and a life, but putting her in
the rooms where it happened. . . . like all great biographies,
Harris’ book is a double-portrait of an artist and his era.”
—Carrie Rickey, Forward
“Such a wide-ranging professional life is the stuff of a major
biography, and Mark Harris, author of Pictures at a Revolution and
Five Came Back, two of the best books about film to come out in
recent years, has delivered the goods. Mike Nichols: A Life is as
fine a portrait of anyone in the performing arts as I have ever
read . . . Mark Harris’s wonderful book, which comes seven years
after [Nichols’] passing, will serve as his monument.”
—Commentary
“Fascinating for its exploration of a great artist’s inner
workings, as well as for its chronicling of an industry’s
evolution.” —O Magazine, Most Anticipated Books of 2021
“The book is as smart and well-paced as if Mike had directed it.
It’s Virginia Woolf brutal and Birdcage funny. I devoured the
details of Mike’s fascinating life, but I also marveled at Mark
Harris’s ability to lead us through it. The shaky wooden
rollercoaster of collaboration, the serpent-tongued antihero’s path
to love, an artist’s guide to not being trash, ten pounds of movie
stars in a five pound bag—this book has it all!” —Tina Fey
“Mike was many things to many people, a multi-talented man of many
parts, who lived several lifetimes during his long, complicated
roller-coaster of a life. But above all else, Mike was a great
director, and Mark Harris has produced a clear-eyed, honest,
enormously entertaining, deeply moving and thought-provoking
account of what a director’s life is like and of what being a
director means. His particular gifts, demonstrated in each book he
writes, of combining objectivity with empathy and seriousness with
delight are precisely what make him Mike Nichols’s ideal
biographer. I can’t think of any praise higher than to say that
this book is worthy of its subject.” —Steven Spielberg
“There are so many lessons in Mike's nine-act tragedy and triumph
of a life: the joy of collaboration, the thrill of finding
collaborators and soulmates; the ups and downs of the creative
process. Mark Harris introduces us to every version of Mike
Nichols, and shows us how each one prepared the way for the next.
It's an incredible achievement. Required reading.” —Lin-Manuel
Miranda
“The rise and rise of Igor, the bald refugee kid from Berlin, is a
Technicolor dream—a dazzling only-in-America story like something
out of Horatio Alger. In this exciting biography, Mark Harris never
loses sight of the sharper edges of Mike Nichols’s success or the
price he paid for it. But his deep love of his subjects—Nichols and
the American performing arts—makes this an essential work for
understanding our culture in the last century through one of its
most outstanding, and most unlikely, protagonists.” —Benjamin
Moser, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Sontag
“Mike Nichols, born Igor Michael Peschkowsky, was something between
a man and a self-made myth. Mark Harris’s magnificent, mesmerizing
biography honors both sides of the Nichols persona, conjuring his
charismatic brilliance while probing the human complexity behind
the impish grin. Virtuosic in style, deep in insight, at times
convulsively funny, at times piercingly sad, this tour-de-force of
reporting, storytelling, and analysis stands as a clear-eyed homage
to an artist who willed his own golden age.” —Alex Ross, music
critic of The New Yorker and author of Wagnerism
“Harris’s (Five Came Back) engrossing, pull-no-punches biography .
. . sweeps readers up into the whirlwind of Nichols’s life. Likely
to become the definitive book about Nichols, Harris’s exhaustive
take should have widespread appeal, especially given the dearth of
currently available literature about this important and influential
entertainment icon.” —Library Journal
“Harris follows two outstanding works of film history (Pictures at
a Revolution, 2008, and Five Came Back, 2014) with this robust
biography of legendary director Mike Nichols. Harris' skill as a
storyteller is on full view . . . with a novelist's feel for
narrative . . . Like the best biographies, Harris brings his
subject's life and work together in a perfectly unified whole.”
—Booklist (starred review)
“Harris (Five Came Back) delivers an entertaining portrait of
actor, director, and producer Mike Nichols in this bracingly candid
biography. . . . a joyously readable and balanced account of a
complex man.” —Publisher's Weekly
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