Sunday Sitdown with Willie Geist - EMMY NOMINEES: Steve Martin & Martin Short
Episode Date: September 13, 2024Since starring together in The Three Amigos in 1986, Steve Martin and Martin Short have worked together on the blockbuster Father of the Bride movies, toured the country making relentless jokes at ea...ch other’s expense, and now they’re starring in a hilarious series about three neighbors working together to solve a murder in their New York City apartment building. Willie Geist gets together with the two comedy legends to talk about their series Only Murders in the Building and their friendship lasting more three decades. (Original broadcast date September 12, 2021) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hey guys, Willie Geist here with another episode of the Sunday Sit Down podcast.
My thanks as always for clicking and listening along.
This week marks the Golden Globe Awards.
And we thought it'd be a great time to bring back one of our all-time favorite conversations with two men who are nominated for Globes.
They are Steve Martin and Martin Short, their hit series on Hulu-only murders in the building, nominated as a show for a globe.
And both Steve and Marty are nominated for Best Actor.
We'll see which one of them wins.
It's got to be one of the two of them.
It was one of our best conversations, our favorite conversations of the year.
So we thought with the globes this week, what better time than to spend some time with Steve and Marty right now on the Sunday Sitdown podcast.
Guys, thanks for doing this.
Great to you.
We're happy.
We're happy.
I told you I just got caught up last night.
I'm through episode four.
Yes.
So much fun.
I'm watching it, not only with my wife, but 14 and 12-year-old.
Wow.
And how are they into it?
totally into it. And let me ask you question. Is it bothersome because of the F word?
We've crossed that bridge in our house. We don't use it in the house, but in movies and media
we're good. We've missed that totally now. So Steve, take me back to the sort of genesis of this show,
the idea for it, where it came from, and at what point Marty enters the picture.
Well, it's very hard for me to remember when I had this idea, but it was at least 10 years ago.
And it actually started, because you had this lengthy, I'm going to tell the whole story.
I was at a party with a very good friend of our Sandy Gallen.
And Sandy Gallen was a great guy.
We both knew him.
And he was a manager.
He represented Dolly Parton.
And Frank Sinatra, was it?
No, he represented Dolly, Whoopi, Cher, and Neil Diamond.
You know, this is what I contend with.
It's this kind of memory.
It's unbelievable.
date did we meet? We met
June, July
14th, 1985. Is that
true? Yeah, yeah, absolutely. It's unbelievable.
I do have, I, you know,
I thought I might have H.
Oh, no, no, I'll do one joke, and then we'll
go back to your part and we can snip.
Okay. I thought I had
H. Sam. Do you know what that is?
Oh, right, where you can remember
every date in detail. Yeah. Right.
And I said to someone, I think I have
H. Sam, like, Mary Lou,
I couldn't remember H.
So I knew I didn't have it.
Go ahead.
So I'm at a party at his house.
We love this guy.
He was great.
In fact, he suggested I was writing songs at the time, and I played one of the songs.
He said, Dolly Parton should record that.
Wow.
And he called her, and she said yes.
Yeah.
And Dolly Parton recorded one of my songs.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
And so anyway, so I'm at a party at his house, and we really like the guy.
And there's three older Broadway actors there.
And Sandy came up to me and he said, you know what?
You ought to write something for this.
them and thought, you know, that's actually a good idea. Like, you know, and so I started thinking about
it and came up with this idea of three old guys who, but this is 10 years ago, remember,
who live in a building and they'd like true crime and they decide that they would like to
solve some crimes, but because they're older and tired, they would only solve murders in
the building. They're not going to go downtown. So that's where it came from. And then, you know,
one day I'm telling Marty the idea, and, you know, he liked it, and he said, you know what? I said,
what, we're old.
So that's how we thought, okay, well, maybe we can do this thing.
And is that how you remember it?
Were you, so was Marty, did you have him in mind when you were thinking through this?
No, I had nobody, no, no, I had these three actors in mind.
Okay.
And then it just sort of drift, you know, you don't get, you just think about how much work it is and everything.
And so they asked me when I pitched it to Dan Fogelman and at, what's the name of the company?
Try more.
I'm making that up.
I have no idea.
We'll insert the right.
Try more.
T-R-I-M-O-R is the way I'm seeing it.
Try more presents.
And he said, would you do it, be in it?
And I wasn't thinking of being in it at all.
And I thought, well, I'll do it if Marty does it.
And then he signed up immediately and there we were.
And then somebody had the brilliant idea to bring in Salina Gomez.
Well, that's, I mean, that is really, I talked about my 14-year-old daughter.
That's where the interest is paced.
No. No. We love you guys and my dog says Selena Gomez is in it and boom. And by the way, it's such a perfect
unexpected match. Yeah. You know, it's like there's us doing our thing. And then when the camera comes to her,
it's like it rests on her face and her thinking and her internal acting. It's beautiful for the
triangle of performances. So do you jump always, Marty, at the chance to work with Steve? This idea
comes up, it's going to be the two of us, we'll shoot in New York, we'll have a good time
for a couple of months.
Absolutely. And then, and don't leave out John Good.
Hoffman. No, I was going to say Dan Fogerman. I got mixed up. John Hoffman and Dan Fogerman
are brilliant, brilliant people. So, you know, every element of it seemed like ideal.
You know what? It always goes through that thing where you have managers and they're going
to raise all the flags, and there were no flags. But also, we really did it on our own. We
didn't run by, run it by anybody. Actually, the idea of having, I know this is so boring and you
can cut this out, but the idea of having lunch with Dan. They're not even doing this. I know. I saw
the cameraman walk away while I started this story. They're drinking your tea. And so my agent
called and said, I think you should have lunch with Dan Fogelman and Jess Rosenthal. And I said,
look, I know what these lunches are. They always call up and they say, you should meet West
Anderson. You should meet so-anderson. Well, I love West Anderson. Of course I'll meet with them,
but it's supposed to generate a project. And by the time you've had lunch with the two people
who want to have lunch, they're so over you, you know, that, well, I've done that. So I don't need
to do anything with that guy. But this actually worked. I just had a lunch. I said, I'm not even
going to pitch an idea. You get a turn to talk in a minute. And I said the idea, and I said the idea,
and we kind of had the feeling like, it's not a bad idea.
It's the first time I heard it out loud.
So you saw...
I think it's a fabulous idea.
Really, in a building and make it about New York?
And the characters are just so good.
Did you shape that character, the backstory of Oliver and everything he's been doing?
No, Steve actually wrote the backstory of all that.
I mean, we knew that he was an ex.
The details of Splash.
and things like that. No, but
yeah. Well, I didn't write
Selena Gomez's character. That was written by John Hoffman and the
writers, because that wasn't a part of the
element. And I
feel the cameraman coming back.
I'm talking about Selena.
We have key words
where they come out. Yeah. And
But you are amazing. I was thinking,
you know, just before I was, when I was back in my room
Googling my symptoms, I was thinking about Steve
and he is an unending creative source.
He never gets writers blocked,
no matter how much you pray for it.
He doesn't.
He doesn't.
It's amazing.
And it was just a great idea from the beginning.
Wait, I was going to say something.
I had a joke so I could.
No, no, it was, no, the original idea was that I was an actor from the 90s who had a big hit crime show.
Right.
Because I've always fascinated by people in show business who have these huge,
careers, and then the show ends and it just kind of stops.
Right.
So I wanted to play that, and I thought Marty would be, oh, I didn't write it for Marty.
I just wrote it for a guy who was an off-Broadway director who never quite, you know, made it.
And because even an off-Broadway director can have a huge, huge ego.
Oh, of course.
Who never had a hit.
Exactly.
There is some, if anybody who lives in New York, there's a real familiarity to the building is sort of the Apthorpe and the Ensonia and all those kind of matched together.
And something that happens in New York where people live in a building together, but they don't really know each other.
And the person right on the other side of your wall, maybe you've never met.
Right.
And here comes this event in the case of your show that brings them all together.
Right.
And it's because they're all these true crime podcast.
And it's such a great vehicle.
Because the greatest actors in the world live in either Los Angeles and New York.
They're great actors for up.
But the amount of every time you cast any smaller role or big role in this series,
every actor is like, why isn't he a massive star?
In the city, yeah.
It's filled with actors.
It's amazing.
Good actors.
We've got great, you know, Jane Lynch, Tina Fey.
Yeah?
Sting.
Sting.
I didn't know if we went.
Nathan Lane.
How about Nathan Lane?
It's incredible.
Amy Ryan.
We were in awe.
of Nathan Lane. We would have scenes with them and we weren't acting. We'd just stare at them.
It's like, Nathan Lane is so unbelievable. Then your line would come up and you go, oh, Nathan,
I mean. So when the idea for Selena Gomez comes through, you two guys, I suspect,
are not terribly familiar with her music unless you want to surprise me with that.
Yes. So what did you think when you heard that name?
Well, I thought it was kind of a brilliant idea.
Right away it seemed all generations brought in.
Instantly, I thought it was a good idea.
And I never heard any other name besides Salinas.
That's true.
Yeah.
There was no other name.
I know they probably have lists.
You know, there was always with a list.
But when it got to us, it was only Selena.
Yeah.
And we thought, would she do it?
And then we had one of those Zoom readings.
And that was an audition.
She was hired.
And we hung up, and Marty and I called each other.
And she's fantastic.
She's got this slight,
people are picking of a slight kind of a New York.
accent. I don't know if she's doing it or that's her or what. She's from Texas, so probably not.
Yeah, but she's got that. In a later episode at one point, Steve says to her, I want you to be less
mean. And she just looks at them and says, I know you do. By the way, that was already been off.
Oh, that's good. Yes. You should watch a show or read the scripts.
No, I don't want to. I got other fish to fry. She also has, I think, got the show, but also when I
watch you guys do press together. She has sort of a charming eye roll at the two of them.
Absolutely. Generally speaking, like here they go again. It's surprising. First of all,
people say, is there a regeneration gap? And I say, well, of course. Yeah. It's what you want.
I don't want to be up and talk the lingo of a 29-year-old. So there is that. But I'm always
surprising the word lingo kind of covers that idea. I, you know, I'm always surprised that what she
shocked at us by because it's always something I'm like really you're shocked at that and it's kind of
a fun shock he goes oh you know like we just said something shocking and you know she outshocked us
by you know 10 million yeah and she's got like 300 million Instagram followers it's not
every every week I hear that it goes up it's crazy it started she has 190 million then you start
hearing she got 220 no I think it's now 260 million
She's way up there.
Yeah, she's among the, among the highest.
So something that couldn't have been part of the pitch 10 years ago was this idea of the podcast at the center of it.
No, that came up.
That came new.
Which is so brilliant because, boy, it's so intense right now.
You know, it was almost ahead of the curve because, you know, this would have come up like two years ago.
And I kind of think it was in the last two years that started, you know, these big numbers.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a scene that was already been on.
So, I mean, Tina Fey is hosting a podcast.
And in the middle of our meeting with her, she sells it for $30 million.
She just turns in her chair, closes the deal.
My favorite thing is she turns.
And she's actually killing time.
So we have a scene together.
Yeah.
But she's also twirling the phone line.
You know, with her finger.
It was almost like a 50s secretary movie.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She's closing a $30 million deal.
So it raises the obvious question.
Do either or both of you listen in real life to these crime podcasts?
because you play it well.
I do not.
I do.
No.
I do.
And I've listened to a lot of crime podcasts and watched a lot of true crime shows.
And I think, you know what you're saying.
That guy's sick.
Well, that means the rest of the nation is sick, too.
Yes.
But I like the solving part.
I find that, I like the scientific solving and clues and tracking down and CCTV.
In fact, even now, because of this show and watching these shows,
I'm always thinking, just walk around my life.
life, I think, what's my alibi? If something were to happen right now, could I prove I was in my car?
Yes, I've got the GPS, and there's a CCTV camera, and I wave at it.
What is your crime that you're afraid of?
I don't know. It could be anything.
Are you planning anything?
No, I'm not planning anything. No, it's some other crime, like, God forbid.
But I could always prove, I'd be the first suspect. I would be, you know.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah, it'd be the first suspect. And then replay, you know, my,
eye rolls at you on television when you do
some joke that doesn't work,
which is often. So do you, Steve, do you watch
Dateline and those kind of shows? Are you that
deep into it?
So you're really in it. Why did you read
the news or something? I do read the news.
So are you
principally objected to the crime podcast
or just not interested? You know,
I just feel that there's
so much despair
around that I just don't want to hear
about another person's murder. And first of all,
why should you research a movie
you're working on.
Oh, that would only get in the way.
You like going in blind.
I am playing a director.
I know the theater.
I've been on Broadway.
Yes, you have.
Won a Tony, as a matter of fact.
Isn't that unbelievable?
It's incredible.
It's incredible.
He won a Tony Award.
You know.
Well, you won a Tony.
Oh, right.
No.
No, I've won an Emmy, an Oscar,
and a Grammy.
And this guy has won a Tony.
That's the one you want.
That's the one I want.
Well, it's perfect for him because it's the ego.
Yeah.
You know what I'd like to do?
It would really be great.
What?
You'd lend me your Tony for just, you know, like parties and stuff.
Just put it up there.
And then you give me the Oscar.
No, and I need the whole say.
I need the whole set.
You change the plate maybe to put your name on.
I mean, you've been nominated a bunch.
You deserve one.
Tony, I've been nominated.
Yeah.
Soar spot.
You know, I got put up the time.
You should have had it.
Yeah, right.
By the way, is that horrible what I just said?
What did you say?
About my awards.
It is kind of.
But it's horrible.
What do you mean?
Well, somebody else should have said it.
Well, no one is that obsessed with you.
No one cares out of it.
You'd have to have quite an ego to bring that up normally.
The reception to the show has been overwhelmingly great.
Yes.
If you read the reviews and just worry out of the street.
You're 100% on rotten toys.
Oh, now you've ruined it.
Oh, really?
Oh, because now someone's going to go, oh, really?
I'll show them.
Well, so what?
Yeah, you're right.
Takes you on into double digits.
No, we are, honestly, you know, we've had a long career in show business, but a hit is fantastic
because, you know, they're rare.
You know, a real hit is a very, very rare thing.
As long as you've been in show business, they don't, it's not like everything you put out
is a hit.
And so it's, especially at this point in my life, you know, to have a other.
I remember seeing the Tonight Show once with Johnny and Tony Randall was on.
And Johnny said, it was like the 70s, and he was doing the odd couple, and it was now a hit.
And he said, how long do you think you'll stay with the show?
And Tony said, that's the dumbest question I've ever heard.
I'll stay with it as long as it is a hit because hits are rare.
And it's true.
And he's right, yeah.
And also, I mean, it's the two of you, so the expectations are high, but there's never any guarantee that it's going to go well.
But I wouldn't think there's...
Sorry, I didn't think there's high expectations.
It's just like, oh, well, let's see.
I'll check it out.
I think sometimes that can be a detriment.
The expeditions become too high.
Right.
Yeah.
Well, you don't have that problem.
No, no, no.
What's it like for you guys who've seen a lot of different forms of show business to put something into the atmosphere now in this streaming universe where part of the job is to help people find it by sitting with me and doing things like that?
I love it.
Because, you know, when I first started, I was in television as a writer.
Yeah.
And then I sort of became a stand-up.
And then I had specials, television.
This is what you did then in early 80s.
If I had it do all over, I wouldn't do it.
But then you put a special on, and then some monstrous show is up against you and you're wiped out.
Right.
But here, you can do a good show and somebody will find it.
You're not going to be wiped out by competition, you know.
You like it too, Marty?
You like streaming?
I do.
I mean, it's kind of, but it is like all things.
You can make a movie that no one cares about and five years later.
It's a cult classic.
Right.
And so things always find itself.
But this is fascinating because it's, some people, for example, I was told,
are going to hesitate to watch it because they want to watch them all at once.
This is a whole new way of being entertained.
No, I love that.
And I, well, I'm not going to say that because I got, you know,
I got tired of going to movies because the volume was so intense.
I'm really, seriously, it's just way too loud for me to listen to.
You know.
I think it's an age thing, but you think.
No, no, Beaver's going through the same thing.
Beaver.
Beber.
Beber.
I thought you meant like leave it to be.
No, no, no, I don't know what you meant.
Well, that's the age thing.
Do you guys, I mean, this part of working together, okay, we've talked about the show,
but how much fun is it for two buddies who've known each other for 35 years to kind of hit the road together and promote and totally fun?
I wouldn't do it any other way, honestly.
I mean, I tour with a band, but we have it.
We have good camaraderie too.
Sometimes we do that.
But basically, I wouldn't do it.
No, I think the only thing you can really control in a work situation is the hang.
In show business, you can have the greatest experience making a movie and that it bombs and the critics hate it.
So the only thing that you can control is, do you have fun while doing it?
And Steve and I, you know, we do shows, live shows together, but we also have a great dinner the night before and we have great glasses of wine afterwards and disgusting.
with the band. That's the fun of it. And you've been doing it, as I said, for 35 years since you
met doing the Three Amigos. Well, people ask me, they say, what's your favorite movie that
you ever made? And I say, well, I don't know, because here's why. There are three things
to a movie. How much fun you had doing it. Was it a hit? And is it any good? Right. And when those
things land together, it's fantastic. But sometimes you can love a movie just because you had such a great
time making it. Right. And was that the case with Three Amigos?
Was it instant for you two guys?
It was not an instant hit.
No, I know with this relationship.
Because it feels like...
Yeah, no, we got along instantly.
Instantly, all three of us did.
And again, you make a movie or you're on location for months,
and sometimes you never see those people again.
So you make a conscientious effort.
I think I'll keep up with that guy.
And it was mutual.
And also, we got lucky because we did other movies together.
Father the Bride, wanted to.
That's true.
Prince of Egypt.
of Egypt. But we were already friends by them. But I'd say Father of the Brides really put us in a,
you know, a comedy frame of mind, you know, to be friends. Would you say that?
No. Okay. Well, I think we were, so it's over. No, we were friends before that.
Well, I know, but. In fact, we've been to Europe. We, but there's so much, I can show you a
photo album and you'd be sick at how ridiculous. No, we went to Europe to promote Father of the Bride.
Yeah, yeah. That was in 96.
In 89.
Remember we went to Ireland and England?
Oh, that.
Yeah, no, I thought you meant on a movie.
That's not Europe.
That's not Europe.
Is it a UK Europe?
Sure.
Wow.
You know what?
If you would give up the...
Who shot who?
Stop tape.
Honest of God.
Do you know that we fought Germany twice?
You know that.
Wow.
I think of Europe as the continent.
Well, that's your problem.
I mean...
When I land...
I think of Venus is...
A lot of the United States.
What I'm insane.
When I land in Ireland, I don't say to the locals.
It's so great being here in Europe.
Maybe you're thinking of Brexit, how they've sort of broken away.
That's it.
I'm trying to help you out.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Wow.
Who's the prime minister of Australia?
Okay, never, next question.
I was ready to say Boris Johnson.
You switched it up at the last minute.
I have a lot of connections in Australia.
You do?
I do.
Name one.
Nick Grinville, the ambassador, a consul general of Australia in New York City.
Let me do Willie's work for him.
The cameraman have walked out again.
No one's here again.
Mention Selena will get them back.
I didn't realize, I guess I should have known this, Marty, that Three Amigos was your first movie.
Because we'd known you on SNL and you were in the bloodstream.
So that was your first movie.
So what was it like to walk in with Steve Martin, who's already Steve Martin, and Chevy Chase,
who's already Chevy Chase?
Well, it was a little bit intimidating, but they were very nice to me.
They're very, you know, we had to play three close friends.
So I had to, the first couple of weeks, do an impersonation of someone really relaxed.
And, but they made it very easy.
We immediately bonded through laughter and scrabble.
And before you knew it, you felt ease at ease and like this is a great thing to be doing.
And the legend has it.
first conversation or maybe one of the first when you came to the house to get the script
was a dig at Steve and so the relationship was set forever. Yes. Do you want to tell him the dig?
Yes, I went to Steve's house to pick up a script for Three Amigos. He wrote it with Lauren
Michaels and Ren Newman. And I walked into Steve's house and his old house in Beverly Hills and I looked
around and there was a Picasso and there was a hopper and I said, how did you get this rich? Because I've
senior work.
And you said.
I toward the end of the meeting,
I said, it was great,
great meeting you. I expected more
charisma. But anyway.
But it was kind of the natural instinct.
And it was overwhelming. And by the way, he really did say that.
Yeah. And I kind of
remember my reaction, which was like a,
kind of a curious side eye.
Like, so is this, you know, that's a daring
thing to say to someone you've never met.
You know, and then you sort of like, am I going with this?
Or am I?
And, you know, it was just comedy, comedy.
We just, we love hanging out with comedians.
Because I think there's a...
Thank God I wasn't from Ireland, where you would have said,
Have you ever thought of going to Europe?
So you're from, so your family goes back to Ireland.
Uh-huh.
You know, I'd love to take on a trip to Europe sometimes.
But that seems to be.
to me that first moment form the basis for your the foundation at least for your friendship.
If you watch your tour, if you watch the Netflix special, even the two of you acting in
only murders in the building. I mean, I'm sure you have lifelong friends. Oh yeah. And a big
connection has been humor. That's it. I think it's, is that true? Yeah. Oh, sure. Absolutely.
But I would say like you're, I'm guessing, you probably have friends in the business who do the same
thing as you. Or do you have rapport with them? Yeah. Because you know what it is. And that's
We have that with comedians of all stripes.
Yeah.
You know.
But there's also something about a person you're comfortable with enough that can insult them constantly.
Oh, yeah.
That means you're really close.
And you know, I mean, we're often asked, do we ever go too far?
Do we ever have to apologize?
And it's never.
By the way, that's not the only thing we do.
We actually have conversations.
Sure.
You know.
Or we talk about how the show went or, you know, things to improve.
Like, if we do a live show, we walk off and go, we don't be, right after.
the bow, we say, I think we should cut that one thing, or move it up to the front or this.
Or I'll say to him, you know, we'll just be having comment. I'll say, what do you think of
Angela Merkel and you'll say, who? Yeah. You know what? It'd be great as if she lived in Europe.
That's where she should be. Yeah. You're going to regret that comment for a long time.
I think, I don't think of the UK as Europe. I'm sorry. That's, so it's an opinion.
angry.
That's right.
No, it's a fact.
It's a fact that I don't think that.
I want it to be separate.
Yeah.
You mentioned Father of the Bride when you guys did that in 91,
30-year anniversary coming up, by the way.
That's crazy.
Obviously, a great movie, great script, great characters,
but you never could have imagined how well it would do.
And commercially.
And through time.
Yeah.
And it's held up.
You know, I always thought, I don't know what your questions would be.
I'll wait.
No, go ahead.
Okay.
I've always thought, this, you know, we did a remit.
And now they're doing another remake.
And at the time, I thought, this movie, this subject will be remade through time as the
times change because it's a universal subject, a father and his daughter, and getting married.
I mean, what could be more fundamental?
So I already knew they were headed for another remake and probably another remake after that,
because times change and the core heart of it will always remain.
Well, it's also a perfect title.
Yeah, right, right.
It's like first wives club.
You knew that had to be a...
Yeah, right.
Perfect title.
And how did you shape and create Frank, one of the great characters in movie history?
Wow.
Really?
I heard them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I heard it.
I didn't want it.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it was written that way that when they meet Frank, that Diane Keaton and Kimberly
Williams' mother and daughter would understand it, but Steve couldn't understand him.
And so it symbolized his isolation from the process.
And so we just did a million takes, variations.
And the director and producer were a little apprehensive of this idea, too, because it was a sincere film.
And this is this heightened character.
But I kept thinking, as long as I didn't wink into the camera and say, aren't I funny, we'd be fine.
And then I went to a wedding after we stopped shooting.
I won't tell you who, but I'll tell you a little.
And it was a big, fancy wedding with a wedding.
planner and he had his initials embroidered on his shoes.
Wow.
We missed that.
So, you know, you can't life is broader than any character.
Was it based on anything you'd seen?
No.
Just a kind of person.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
And Steve, what did you think when that movie exploded the way it did?
I mean...
Here's actually what I thought.
I thought, because I've watched movies come out,
movies that I've done, and then there'll be massive hits at Christmas or something like that,
other people's films.
And then when that came out and it opened just before Christmas, and it was doing so well
and building, I thought, oh, it's my turn.
There you go.
You felt it was just justice, really.
Yeah, I really did.
It was like, yeah.
European justice.
What is it called Irish justice?
Yeah, yeah.
It's your next film.
Irish justice.
Ooh, that's a good title.
Ooh, that is a good title.
Liam Neeson.
This might be an uncomfortable question for either of you to answer.
But why do you both think this relationship works so well?
Steve, what is it about Marty?
Marty, what is it about Steve?
There's definitely a yin and a yang thing that goes on here.
But why do you think this has endured, this friendship and this professional partnership?
You know, one thing I say is, you know, first of all, we don't talk every day.
It's not like 8 a.m.
You know,
even when we talk, I don't necessarily listen.
No, he puts the phone down.
And so there's that, that we have other lives.
Sure.
You know, this is like a fun thing.
We get along on a humor level.
I don't know.
And, you know, humor is very superficial.
I mean, you can joke and we can joke and we can joke
without ever getting to the core of anything.
So it's just up here in fun.
Like I said, I never.
say to Marty, are you okay? You know, which, you know, a real friend would do.
Well, no, you would if you really thought of it. But I don't think, I think that we both,
first of all, we work very similar.
Lee.
In a very, we like a loose, happy set, joking, all that. And it makes us better. So there's that.
And then, why else are we friends?
I think it's a very hard thing to explain.
It's like ask any friends.
He has more money, and that's a seductive thing.
He's like, to me, like an older brother's older brother.
What do you think it's so funny about Steve?
Why is he so great as a comedian?
Oh, my God.
I mean...
Nothing?
No.
I mean, it's...
You always feel self-conscious of the story, but in 1980, I didn't know Steve.
And I'm watching the Grammys.
And Steve comes out to present the best album of the year.
And he's in tails and a shirt and studs and no pants.
Boxer underwear garters up to here.
And he makes no acknowledgement of it.
The audience is hysterical.
And he starts reading the nominations.
And by the third nominations, a little bold man comes out running with a pair of pants on a hanger.
And Steve looks at him and says,
well it's about time
and then he puts the pants on and continues to read
and I thought that is the most brilliant
joke I would pay a
billion dollars if I could have done that joke
and I didn't even know him then
so I think his mind is hilarious
and he's deeply kind
you know I think if you were that talented
but a bit of a jerk there would be no relationship
you know there wouldn't be
I find you know first of all we just have a
You know, we're going to talk ourselves out of a friendship.
That's what's going to happen.
I can't believe you said that.
No, no, we just have a kind of an ease.
But in terms of his comedy, whenever I look at his old specials and things, I go, that's outrageous.
That's, I can't believe you're doing that.
And the ears and the big head and all kinds.
By the way, it's my head, but thank you.
Yeah, I know.
And I find the characters are completely.
so big. Jackie Rogers Jr.
It's just...
An albino
pop star.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
How about Jiminy?
Jiminy? I mean, you've been interviewed
by Jiminy. I'm shocked
that he gets away with
it. I mean, it's
so devastating
to the person you're interviewing.
Yeah, but they were all
joined my friends. But you're playing an idiot.
No, I know. But when I...
My favorite lines was to Mel Brooks when I said,
What's your big beef of the Nazis?
And he said, what's my big beef?
What's my big beef?
I don't know.
I think they're rude.
So it worked out.
It's brilliant.
Oh, it's so good.
And do you have a favorite character of Steve's through the years?
I played the same thing.
Something he's done.
Or a favorite special or a moment that stuck with you.
I think Roxanne is my ultimate favorite.
I mean, I love, you know, the first four comedies.
love that. But Roxanne seemed to combine it all and great, great acting. So I would say that's your
high water mark. That was a long time ago. Yeah, I killed for you to hit that mark again.
That's why I like only murders at the building. Yeah. Remember, I once said to him, it was like
the 90s and I was at my cottage and I said, you know, all my two sons and all their friends are
obsessed with the best of Steve Martin, S&L on DVD.
And Steve went, it's a resurgence.
I'm back.
But it was with the weak, exhausted arm, too.
You've said Marty, too, beyond the funny and all this connection, is that Steve was a
great friend to you when Nancy passed away.
Right.
And that meant the world to you to have somebody who you had somebody laughs with, be there.
He wrote a song in honor of her, a brilliant song, The Great Remember.
What did that mean to you to have them at your side?
Well, I, you know, listen.
By the way, everybody was, you know, Marty has a lot of friends.
But, of course, it was magnificent to have those kind of friends in those tough situations.
I'm telling you, Marty has a lot of friends.
And there's a lot of demand on his time because he gets, you know, invited to parties of things,
because he's really fun at a party.
And I've told this before, but I say if I'm hosting a dinner party
and I'm going to invite, you know, three or four couples, whatever,
and I invite Marty, you know, and somebody else and somebody else.
And then if Marty says, I'm sorry, I can't come, I cancel the party.
Is that true?
Well, it's not really true.
Because what's the point?
Well, yeah.
But it's like not going to be as much fun, you know.
I think you called him the perfect person.
I did.
Well, actually, it was when Carl Reiner died,
and I wrote a piece for the New York Times,
It's kind of a memoir of his life.
And the opening paragraph was, I said,
I've known two perfect people in my life.
One is Carl Reiner, and the other is that son of a bitch, Martin.
Take it as a compliment.
I'll take anyone I can get.
I know you've got to go catch a plane, so I'll let you go.
But, Steve, I'm interested in what else.
Your sort of portfolio of creativity is sort of astounding,
whether it's, you know, playing music or Broadway or film or anything you've done.
What else do you see out there?
Well, there is something.
You know, first of all, this is what I'm dedicated to this show.
I love the show.
Only Murders in the building.
It's perfect.
It's perfect for us.
It's fun.
It's in New York where I live.
It's all kinds of things.
But I, when people ask me, how do you do all this stuff?
And I say, well, you know, I don't have a job.
I just wake up and there's nothing to do.
So I've come up with stuff.
But I am working on, I've done some cartoon book with Harry Bliss, who's a great, great cartoonist.
And we wrote a ton of cartoons.
And now we're working on a book called A Memoir of the Movies, which we're going to do cartoon strips of stories and anecdotes that I remember from the movies.
Oh, from your movies.
Because they didn't want to write a big book about it because it's just like, just anecdotes.
But this is perfect for the cartoon format.
But Steve's creative output, he thinks, is normal because he doesn't have a job.
It's not normal.
It's massive.
And it continues.
And that's what's so amazing about it.
So there's books and there's movies and there's plays and there's...
What's that line we do in our show.
What an honor it is for me to be standing next to a man who's a playwright,
a musician, a composer, and a world.
class comedian.
No, you say, it's an honor for me.
Did you say that?
Yep.
And then I say, and let me say what an honor it is for me to be standing next to the man
who is standing next to that man.
One of our favorites.
What about for you, Marty?
What else do you see out there?
You've proven you can do it all too.
You were just nominated for awards for the morning show.
Yeah.
Or, you know, I kind of, you know, through the years I've been asked, like, to direct things.
Yeah.
And I've always thought, you know, people like Steven Spielberg had a camera when they were nine and they were filming everything.
Right.
I was up in my attic going, weather wise, it's such a cuckoo day, you know, with a fake mic.
And so I think that, you know, you go by what you've been told by life.
And that is, I like being in front of the camera.
I love to perform.
I love, I'd love to do another Broadway show someday.
I'd love to do all those things.
But I've no real interest in behind the scenes or anything.
like that that would be cool to talk about.
Just keep doing what you're doing.
Just keep doing what you're doing.
Hey guys, thanks for listening to the Sunday Sit Down podcast.
Stick around to hear more from Steve Martin and Martin Short right after the break.
Welcome back to the Sunday Sit Down podcast.
Now more of my conversation with Steve Martin and Martin Short.
You've been out on tour together.
Yes.
You have the big Netflix special.
How do you put those together?
You're not stand-ups out in the club trying material.
How do those come together to make that tight hour, hour tent?
We'll use a little echo show thing and we'll talk and we'll have less sessions for our half.
We work with writers.
Yeah, we're with writers.
We write.
But also we, because we have a structured show that, say it works, we can put in a new bit that might be one minute out of a show that works.
And if it works, that's good.
And if it doesn't, it hasn't harmed the show.
So we do it.
I do it.
I've always done it incrementally.
right what's great about the show is you have music you have the ability to insert music into it so it becomes a full almost variety oh it's a classic
and begins naturally with 10 minutes of insulting each other exactly it's very important guys thanks so much congratulations
it's a blast thanks man oh man that was fun my big thanks again to steve and marty for a great conversation
you can catch new episodes of their series only murders in the building streaming
every Tuesday on Hulu. And my thanks, of course, to all of you for tuning in again this week.
If you want to hear more of the conversations with my guests every week, be sure to click
subscribe so you never miss an episode. And don't forget to tune in to Sunday today every
weekend on NBC. I'm Willie Geist. We'll see you right back here next week on the Sunday Sitdown
podcast.
