Thursday, December 22, 2011

Birmingham-Southern College Presents


January 26-28, 2012- 7:30 p.m.

January 29, 2012 - 2:30 p.m.

College Theatre/Theatre One

This Broadway hit is a composite of Neil Simon and Anton Chekhov, narrated by "The Writer" and told through a series of delightful sketches that are outright hilarious, thoughtful and full of infectious humor.  In one story a vicious, scolding woman storms a bank and upbraids the manager for his gout and lack of money. In another, a father takes his son to a house where he will be initiated into the mysteries of sex, only to relent at the last moment and leave the boy more perplexed than ever. In another sketch, a crafty seducer goes to work on a wedded woman, only to realize that the woman has been in command from the first overture. According to critics, The Good Doctor has "A great deal of warmth and humor in his retelling of these Chekhovian tales." and "There is much fun here. Mr. Simon's comic fancy is admirable."

Fine Arts Society reservations begin Wednesday 04 January

General Public reservations begin Wednesday 11 January

$15.00 general tickets and $10.00 student tickets (regardless of which school you attend)

Autobiography? by Anton Chekhov

Image of Anton Chekhov

YALTA,


October 11, 1899.

... Autobiography? I have a disease--Auto-biographophobia. To read any sort of details about myself, and still more to write them for print, is a veritable torture to me. On a separate sheet I send a few facts, very bald, but I can do no more....

I, A. P. Chekhov, was born on the 17th of January, 1860, at Taganrog. I was educated first in the Greek School near the church of Tsar Constantine; then in the Taganrog high school. In 1879 I entered the Moscow University in the Faculty of Medicine. I had at the time only a slight idea of the Faculties in general, and chose the Faculty of Medicine I don't remember on what grounds, but did not regret my choice afterwards.

I began in my first year to publish stories in the weekly journals and newspapers, and these literary pursuits had, early in the eighties, acquired a permanent professional character. In 1888 I took the Pushkin prize. In 1890 I travelled to the Island of Sahalin, to write afterwards a book upon our penal colony and prisons there. Not counting reviews, feuilletons, paragraphs, and all that I have written from day to day for the newspapers, which it would be difficult now to seek out and collect, I have, during my twenty years of literary work, published more than three hundred signatures of print, of tales, and novels.
I have also written plays for the stage.

PDFs on Anton Chekhov’s Life, Work, and Historical Context


The Wisdom of Anton Chekhov by Walter Moss.
Table of Contents
Chekhov’s Life and Times
            Chekhov’s Early Years and the Women in His Life
            Years of Transition, 1886-1891
            The Melikhovo Years, 1892-1898, and Helping Others
            The Moscow Art Theatre, Olga, and Yalta, 1891-1904
Chekhov and Wisdom
            Chekhov’s Beliefs and Values
            Faith, Hope, and Despair
            Literature, Realism, Comedy, and Tragedy
            Isolation, Women, Love, Sex, and Marriage
            Social and Political Views
            Environmental Views
Conclusion and Legacy

Long Biographical Sketch of Anton Chekhov and
Letters of Anton Chekhov to His Family and Friends Translated by Constance Garnett

The “Vaudevilles” of Chekhov by Marti Maraden from The National Arts Centre English Theatre
Pg. 13-14 Biography of Anton Chekhov
Pg. 15 Chronology of Chekhov’s Life and Chronology of Russian History during Chekhov’s Life
Pg. 16 Russian Arts and Culture during the 19th Century
Pg. 18 Pictures of Russian Folk Costumes

The Cherry Orchard Study Guide from Seattle Repertory Theatre
Pg. 3 Chronology of Russia and Chekhov
Pg. 4 Chekhov’s Youth
Pg. 5 Chekhov and Science
Pg. 5-6 Chekhov’s Politics
Pg. 6-7 Chekhov’s Human and the Awareness of Death

The Three Sisters The Next Stage Resource Guide
Pg. 4-10 Biography of Anton Chekhov
Pg. 18 Annotated Bibliography of Chekov’s Life and Works and Russian Culture and History

The Cherry Orchard Study Guide from Artists Repertory Theatre
Pg. 3 State of Serfdom in Russia
Pg. 5-6 Biography of Anton Chekhov
Pg. 6-7 Timeline of Anton Chekhov’s Life and Work

A Teacher Guide to Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard from the University of South Carolina
Pg. 4-5 About Anton Chekhov
Pg. 6 Chekhov’s Timeline
Pg. 7 Historical Background
Pg. 8 19th Century Drama and the Moscow Art Theater

A Teacher’s Guide to Anton Chekhov: The Major Plays with a Focus on The Sea Gull, The Three Sisters, and The Cherry Orchard

Anton Chekhov Biographical Information

Chekhov's family. From left to right: standing - Ivan, Anton, Nikolay, 
Aleksandr and Mitrofan Egorovich; sitting - Mikhail, Maria, Pavel Egorovich, 
Eugenia Yakovlevna, Ludmila Pavlovna and her son Gorgiy. (1874)

Image Gallery of Anton Chekhov

Biography of Anton Chekhov from the Introduction to the Letter of Anton Chekhov

Biographical Sketch of Anton Chekhov by Marian Fell from the Introduction to Chekhov’s Plays

A-Z Guide of Anton Chekhov

Encyclopedia Britannica Anton Chekhov

Encyclopedia.com Anton Chekhov

Answers.com Anton Chekhov

Biography of Anton Chekhov

Biography of Anton Chekhov from Russiapedia.com

Biography of Anton Chekhov

Biography of Anton Chekhov by Wayne S. Turney

Biography of Anton Chekhov from GradeSaver

Anton Chekhov and Taganrog His Birth City

Anton Chekhov's Legacy
Contemporary Writers on Chekhov

Writing According to Chekhov


List of Works by Anton Chekhov and about Anton Chekhov

Anton Chekhov on Writing

Paper: “Skuchnaia istoriia” as Coda: Isolation and Chekhov’s Prose of the 1880’s by Mark Conliffe

Paper: The Idea of a “Men in the Case” in the Chekhov Art by Veronika Poplavskaya

Chekhov’s Use of Time and Space in His Writings

Chekhov’s Use of Time and Space in His Writings Continued

Original Production Photos of The Seagull at the Moscow Art Theatre

See Picture of Anton Chekhov Reading The Seagull to the Moscow Art Company, 1899

Chekhov’s Legacy

Anton Chekhov. Photo by S. Linden. Yalta, August 1901.

Reminiscences of Anton Chekhov by Maxim Gorky, Alexander Kuprin, and I. A. Bunin, including
“Fragments of Recollections” by Maxim Gorky
“To Chekhov’s Memory” by Alexander Kuprin
“A. P. Chekhov” by I. A. Bunin
Article. “Russian Literature: The enduring popularity of playwright Anton Chekhov.” Jan. 4. 2010.

Writers on Chekhov

Critics on Anton Chekhov

“The Meaning Between the Lines: How Ibsen’s toughness and Chekhov’s tenderness transformed American playwriting and acting.” By Wendy Smith. 2009.

Broadway Production History of Chekhov’s Plays from Internet Broadway Database

Further Reading on Anton Chekhov

How Well Do You Know Chekhov? Test Your Knowledge. Play a Chekhov Crossword.

Buy a Chekhov T-Shirt

Anton Chekhov Quotations

Image of Anton Chekhov aka Badass

People should be beautiful in every way - in their faces, in the way they dress, in their thoughts and in their innermost selves.
Uncle Vanya

Man is what he believes.

Perhaps the feelings that we experience when we are in love represent a normal state. Being in love shows a person who he should be.

We shall find peace. We shall hear the angels, we shall see the sky sparkling with diamonds.

You must trust and believe in people or life becomes impossible.

Audio Files of Chekhov’s Works


Listen to Stories, Plays, and Letters Written by Anton Chekhov and Read by Alan Davis Drake

Audio Recordings of Anton Chekhov’s Short Stories

Audio Recoding of The Death of a Government Clerk a Short Story by Anton Chekhov.
Neil Simon based “The Sneeze” off this story.

16 Audio Recording of Anton Chekhov’s Short Stories. NPR Series.

Listen to an Online Copy of Stories of Russian Life. Anton Chekhov’s Collection of Short Stories.
Click the Speaker Icon at the Top Right of the Screen

Listen to an Online Copy of Anton Chekhov’s Plays
Click the Speaker Icon at the Top Right of the Screen
Contents:
On the High Road
The Proposal
The Wedding
The Bear
A Tragedian in Spite of Himself
The Anniversary
The Three Sisters
The Cherry Orchard

Read Letters, Short Stories, and Plays by Chekhov Online

Anton Chekhov in Yalta, November 1899
Letters

Anton Chekhov’s Letters to His Family and Friends Translated by Constance Garnett

Short Stories

Read Free E-Books of Anton Chekhov’s Short Stories

Read Short Stories by Anton Chekhov Online

Read 201 Short Stories by Anton Chekhov Online

Read Full-Length Short Stories and Plays by Anton Chekhov Online

Read an Online Copy of Stories of Russian Life. Anton Chekhov’s Collection of Short Stories.

Plays

Read Free E-Books of Anton Chekhov’s Plays

Read Online. The Proposal. Comedic One Act Play by Anton Chekhov.

Read Online. The Boor. Comedic One Act Play by Anton Chekhov.

Read an Online Copy of Anton Chekhov’s Plays
Contents:
On the High Road
The Proposal
The Wedding
The Bear
A Tragedian in Spite of Himself
The Anniversary
The Three Sisters
The Cherry Orchard

Download a Free E-Book of Anton Chekhov’s Plays
Contents:
On the High Road
The Proposal
The Wedding
The Bear
A Tragedian in Spite of Himself
The Anniversary
The Three Sisters
The Cherry Orchard

Read a Free E-Book of Anton Chekhov’s Plays Online
Contents:
On the High Road
The Proposal
The Wedding
The Bear
A Tragedian in Spite of Himself
The Anniversary
The Three Sisters
The Cherry Orchard

Read Online. The Cherry Orchard. 4 Act Play.
Anton Chekhov’s Most Renowned Work.

Monologues

Read Monologues by Anton Chekhov Online

Chekhov’s House


The Melikhovo: The Literary and Memorial Museum-Reserve of A.P. Chekhov

How to Visit the Chekhov House in Moscow

Videos on Anton Chekhov


Video on the Life of Anton Chekhov by Jason Burns

Video on Anton Chekhov (Validity Unknown)

Video of the Life and Career of Anton Chekhov

Video on the Life and Works of Anton Chekhov from London’s National Theatre exploring why his works are still relevant

Introductory Video to Anton Chekhov

Video Britannica Classic: “The Cherry Orchard: Chekhov, Innovator of Modern Drama”
(First Video on Left Side of Screen)

State of 19th Century Russian Literature and Theatre

History.com Profile of Russia
Search “Chekhov”

Great Reforms and 19th Century Literature of Realism

Censorship in Russia, 19th and 20th Century

PDF. Pre-Chekhov. The History of Russian Vaudeville from 1800 to 1850.

The Moscow Art Theatre and Realism in Russia

Russian Political History

History.com Profile of Russia
Search “History”

Political Chronology of Russia’s Imperial Period 1689-1917

Short Overview of Russia’s Political History

Political History of Russia 1796-1902

Political History of Russia 1891-1911

Russia’s Path to Revolution

Images of 19th Century Russia


Online Gallery of 19th and 20th Century Russian Paintings

Photos from Late 19th Century Russia

Photos of 19th Century Russian Peasants

Photos of 19th Century Russian Peasants

Photos of Russian Peasants from “Village Life in Late Tsarist Russia”

Videos of Russian Political History, 1533 to Present


4 Minute Video of the Political History of Russia, 1533 to Present


4 Minute Video of the Political History of Russia, 1533 to Present

Videos: Engineering an Empire: Russia


At the height of its power, the Russian Empire stretched across 15 times zones, incorporated nearly 160 different ethnicities, and made up one sixth of the entire world's landmass. What started as a few small principalities was shaped into an indomitable world power by the sheer force of its leaders. However, building the infrastructure of this empire came at an enormous price. As Russia entered the 20th century, her expansion reached critical mass as her rulers pushed progress at an unsustainable pace and her population reacted in a revolution that changed history. From the Moscow Kremlin, to the building of St. Petersburg, examine the architecture and infrastructure that enabled the rise and fall of the Russian Empire.


Video 1/5

Video 2/5

Video 3/5

Video 4/5

Video 5/5

Videos on Russian History 18th-20th Century


This lecture series surveys the history of the Russian Empire from the 18th century, the height of its prominence, until the revolutions of 1917, the time of its collapse. Its topics will include the 18th-century empire of Peter the Great and Catherine the Great, the Napoleonic Wars, which were made famous in Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace, the coming of industrial modernity to a society and culture shaped by autocracy and serfdom, 19th century Russian imperial expansion in Eurasia, and the wars and revolutions of the early 20th century that destroyed monarchical empire and created the world's first communist state. The lectures also consider imperial Russian identity, society, culture, economy and politics, all of which imitated but also differed from cultures found to "the West," an ambivalent relationship that continues to complicate Russian history.

Video of Frank Wcislo, Dean of The Commons and associate professor of history at Vanderbilt University, leading an Oct. 6, 2010, class at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

Video of Frank Wcislo, Dean of The Commons and associate professor of history at Vanderbilt University, leading an Oct. 13, 2010, class at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

Video of Frank Wcislo, Dean of The Commons and associate professor of history at Vanderbilt University, leading an Oct. 27, 2010, class at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

Video of Frank Wcislo, Dean of The Commons and associate professor of history at Vanderbilt University, leading an Nov. 3, 2010, class at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

Video of Frank Wcislo, Dean of The Commons and associate professor of history at Vanderbilt University, leading an Nov. 10, 2010, class at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

Videos of Russian Imperial History 1721-1917

The Russian Empire (Pre-reform Russian: Россійская Имперія, Modern Russian: Российская Империя, translit: Rossiyskaya Imperiya) was a state that existed from 1721 until the Russian Revolution of 1917. It was the successor to the Tsardom of Russia, and the predecessor of the Soviet Union. It was the second largest contiguous empire the world has ever seen, surpassed only by the Mongol Empire, and the third largest empire the world has ever seen, surpassed only by the Mongol Empire and the British Empire . At one point in 1866, it stretched from eastern Europe, across Asia, and into North America.

At the beginning of the 19th century, Russia was the largest country in the world, extending from the Arctic Ocean to the north to the Black Sea on the south, from the Baltic Sea on the west to the Pacific Ocean on the east. Across this vast realm were scattered the Emperor's 176.4 million subjects, the third largest population of the world at the time, after Qing China and the British Empire, but still represented a great disparity in economic, ethnic, and religious positions. Its government, ruled by the Emperor, was one of the last absolute monarchies left in Europe. Prior to the outbreak of World War I in August 1914 Russia was one of the five major Great Powers of Europe. The empire had lasted ultimately for 196 years, from 1721-1917.


Video 1-5 Part I: The Rein of Ivan IV, The Terrible

Video 6-10 Part II: The Rein of Peter I, The Great

Video 11-15 Part III: The Rein of Elizabeth, then Catherine the Great, then Alexander I, then Nicholas I

Video 16-20 Part VI: Nicholas I, Alexander II, Alexander III, Nicholas II, Lenin, WWI, Bolshevik Revolution

Video 1/20

Neil Simon Biographical Information


Marvin Neil Simon was born on July 4, 1927, the second son of Irving Simon, a Jewish travelling salesman, and his wife Mamie. He grew up in the Bronx in New York City. 



As early as 1948 he was writing scripts together with his brother Danny for radio and television. His sketches for Phil Silvers, Gary Moore, Jerry Lewis etc. contributed to his wide acclaim. He and his brother separated and Neil began writing for the New York theater scene.

Full Name: Marvin Neil Simon
Born: July 4, 1927 in Bronx, NY


The Works of Neil Simon


Come Blow Your Horn (1961)
Little Me (1962)
Barefoot in the Park (1963)
The Odd Couple (1965)
Sweet Charity (1966)
The Star-Spangled Girl (1966)
Plaza Suite (1968)
Promises, Promises (1968)
The Last of the Red Hot Lovers (1969)
The Gingerbread Lady (1970)
The Prisoner of Second Avenue (1971)
The Sunshine Boys (1972)
The Good Doctor (1973)

Neil Simon’s Awards and Honors


1956, 1957
Emmy Award Nomination for Best Writing in a Variety or Situation Comedy
The Sid Carson Show

1959
Emmy Award Nomination
The Phil Silvers Show

1963
Tony Award Nomination for Best Author of a Musical/ Best Musical Play
Little Me

1964
Tony Award Nomination for Best Play
Barefoot in the Park

1965
Tony Award Winner for Best Dramatic Author
The Odd Couple

1966
Tony Award Nomination for Best Musical
Sweet Charity

2006 Mark Twain Prize, Neil Simon Recipient

Neil Simon at the Mark Twain Prize Ceremony
Recorded October 15, 2006
Aired November 20, 2006

Neil Simon, born in the Bronx on July 4, 1927, is America's foremost playwright. For more than four decades, his plays have invigorated the stage with poignant stories and zany characters known for their family-based New York settings. He has authored more than 40 Broadway plays since 1961, ranging from humorous, lighthearted conceits (Barefoot in the Park, The Odd Couple) to deeper, autobiographical works (Chapter Two, the Eugene trilogy featuring Brighton Beach Memoirs, Biloxi Blues and Broadway Bound).
The Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for American Humor was created in 1998 by The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Mark Krantz, Peter Kaminsky, Bob Kaminsky and John Schreiber to recognize the art of humorists who have had an impact on American society in ways similar to the distinguished 19th century novelist and essayist best known as Mark Twain.. Recipients of the Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize have been Richard Pryor (1998), Jonathan Winters (1999), Carl Reiner (2000), Whoopi Goldberg (2001), Bob Newhart (2002), Lily Tomlin (2003), Lorne Michaels (2004) and Steve Martin (2005).



The Career and Awards of Neil Simon, Recipient of the Mark Twain Prize


Videos

Video at the Mark Twain Awards on Neil Simon’s Plays and Movies. Oct. 15, 2006.

Video of Paul Reiser’s Comedic Monologue on Neil Simon’s Career and Writing Process at the Mark Twain Awards. Oct. 15, 2006.


Articles

USATODAY Report on Neil Simon Winning the Mark Twain Award. Oct. 16, 2006.

CBSNEWS Article on the Life and Works of Neil Simon, Recipient of the Mark Twain Prize. Feb. 11, 2009.

Neil Simon Collaborating with Anton Chekhov


The Good Doctor, of course, is not a play at all. There are sketches, vaudeville scenes, if you will, written with my non-consenting collaborator, Anton Chekhov. Not the Chekhov of The Sea Gull and The Three Sisters, but the young man who wrote humorous articles for the newspapers to pay his way through medical school. It was a pastiche for me, an enjoyable interlude before getting on to bigger things. It was, to digress for a moment, a joyous experience for me. I met my wife doing this one. Some of the scenes worked; others didn't. The marriage, I'm glad to say, did.

Neil Simon
Los Angeles, Nov. 7th, 1977 (McGovern, 1979)


Taken From: https://www.msu.edu/~pelowsk1/neilsimon/plays/doctor.html

The Good Doctor: The Facts

Image of Front Cover of Script

Title: The Good Doctor

Playwright: Neil Simon

First Published: 1974

Original Language: English

Characters: 2 Male; 3 Female

Genre: Comedy

Structure: 2 Acts

Setting: Russia Early 1900s

Description from Back Cover of Script:
This Broadway hit is a composite of Neil Simon and Anton Chekhov. In one sketch a harridan storms a bank and upbraids the manager for his gout and lack of money. In another, a father takes his son to a house where he will be initiated into the mysteries of sex, only to relent at the last moment and leave the boy more perplexed that ever. In another sketch, a crafty seducer goes to work in a wedded woman, only to realize that the woman has been in command from the first overture. Let us not forget the classic tale of a man who offers to drown himself for three rubles. The stories are droll, the portraits affectionate, the humor infectious and the fun unending.

Controlling License: Samuel French, Inc.

Royalty Fee: $125 per performance

Mandatory Music Fee: $15 per performance

Sheet Music: $12.50 per copy

Site for Details on Samuel French Royalties: http://www.samuelfrench.com/store/product_info.php/products_id/691

Source:


Read Excerpts of the Script on Google Books:

Physician, Heal Thyself


Physician, Heal Thyself:

Neil Simon's The Good Doctor

© 2011 by Eileen Warburton, Ph.D.

 If there is a godfather to modern literature, it is this shy, dapper, work-driven good doctor [Anton Chekhov]. His godchildren are James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Ernest Hemingway (who was very surly about his debt), Franz Kafka, Katherine Ann Porter, Katherine Mansfield, Sherwood Anderson, and a great host of other writers around the world-including the playwright Neil Simon. While Chekov was acclaimed and very popular in late 19th century Czarist Russia, he was distinctly in the shade of those giants of moralizing, Tolstoy, Turgenev, and Dostoyevsky. Chekhov's spare objectivity and ability to portray the real psychology of his characters while refusing to pass judgment was much at odds with the current literary standards of principles and preaching. ("A writer should be as objective as a chemist," he wrote.) It was, posthumously, after World War I, when his work was translated into English, that the master was discovered by a new generation seeking an appropriate voice for their ironic, less idealistic vision of the world.

Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860-1904) was born in the Ukraine and raised by a tyrannical father who was both religiously fanatical and physically abusive. The mother of the six children, however, was an imaginative, cultured, well-read woman with a gift for story-telling. In 1875 the father's grocery business failed and he moved to Moscow. In his absence, the mother lost her house to a conniving family "friend," the kind of upwardly mobile, serf-turned-bourgeoisie that Chekhov would make the villain of The Cherry Orchard. Mother and younger children followed the father to Moscow, while Anton remained behind to finish medical school. He began writing sketches for newspapers to pay his tuition and to support his family. His output was prodigious and he applied the same skills to his sketches and stories that he used to become a caring physician-keen observation of small details, an ability to listen carefully, and the unsentimental pragmatism to see the situation as it actually was. Part of Dr. Chekhov's medical practice was to treat the poor without charge, with peasants lining up at his door before dawn. He was also well acquainted with the airs and ambitions of the petty bourgeoisie and the obsequiousness and petty tyrannies of government officials. As a result Chekhov's early comic stories are gentle, ironic satires populated with wholly convincing characters who often work at cross-purposes. Responding to the limits of the newspapers that first published him, he developed a spare, economical style and became the master of the compressed psychological moment, a revelation that actually comes to substitute for traditional plot and resolution.

Chekhov suffered from chronic tuberculosis, struggled to keep his family solvent, married late, and lived in increasingly turbulent times. As he matured as a writer, his work darkened and he produced longer stories that examined emotional hypocrisy and or featured characters stifled by despair. He also, by the late 1880s, was writing for the theatre where the discontinuities, broken conversations, and understated subtext of his four great plays (The Seagull (1896), Uncle Vanya (1898), Three Sisters (1900), The Cherry Orchard (1904)) helped to revolutionize Western theatre.

The Good Doctor, however, showcases those light, tongue-in-cheek, sunny sketches written early in Chekhov's career. While slight, they all feature the wry surprise as dénouement, the slightly skewed perspective on a character--like the sly characterization of the consummate seducer who finds that the lady in question is two steps ahead of him, or the portrait of the man who bargains over the price of a theatrical drowning, or the complicated intertwining of an unexpected faux pas of a sneeze with a rising bureaucrat's ambitions. These appealed to author Neil Simon at a critical moment of his writing life.

Neil Simon (1927- ), the most produced, successful (and richest) playwright in America, surely was drawn to Chekhov for so many reasons. He pays obeisance to Chekhov as a godfather of modern theatre, a consummate dramatic craftsman, the inventor of subtle psychological realism in characters. All of these must have registered with Simon, himself a highly skilled theatrical maker whose everyday, plebian characters ring emotionally true. Chekhov is also a deft comedian and Simon, a wizard of comic timing, cut his teeth writing for the likes of Goodman Ace, Phil Silvers and Sid Caesar and continues to be America's great serious comedic playwright.

But one has to feel that there is a kind of biographic affinity as well. Both writers grew up in struggling families during hard times, Neil Simon as a child of the Great Depression. Both were the sons of unloving, absent fathers and turned to writing, with remarkable productivity, both as a source of family support and as a place of solace, to make sense of their own lives. Both are observers of the failures and foibles of their characters, even as they treat them with a kindly objectivity. Both took as wives actresses rehearsing in their plays: Chekhov marrying Olga Knipper, while Simon's second wife was actress Marsha Mason. Anton Chekhov, like an understanding elder uncle or the father he wished he had had, must have felt like family to Neil Simon. And so in the worst moment of his life, he turned to Chekhov's early comic sketches to create The Good Doctor.

In 1973, Simon had been married to his first wife, dancer Joan Baim, for twenty years. In this extraordinarily successful early period, he had produced Come Blow Your Horn, Little Me, Sweet Charity, Plaza Suite, Promises, Promises, The Star-Spangled Girl, The Odd Couple, Barefoot in the Park, The Last of the Red Hot Lovers, The Out-of-Towners, The Prisoner of Second Avenue, and The Sunshine Boys. He had nabbed a bushel of awards, including an Emmy and a Tony. In 1973, his wife died and the experience shredded him.

Writers find their strength and inspiration in other writers. One must feel that in turning to Chekhov, Neil Simon was seeking the comfort of that writing soul-mate from Czarist Russia, that "good doctor" who would understand and help him heal. And, simply put, it worked. After The Good Doctor, Simon was able to return to writing, especially writing out of his own experience and biography, mining his own youth and upbringing in plays like Brighton Beach Memoirs, Biloxi Blues, and Lost in Yonkers, which won him the Pulitzer. So, for author, as well as for audience, there is in these deft little sketches as in the portrait of the artist as the constant observer driven to write, the restorative medicine of humor and reassurance.

For further reading:
Donald Rayfield. Anton Chekhov. A Life (NY: Henry Holt, 1998).
Neil Simon's memoirs are out, both published by Simon & Schuster: 
Rewrites (1996) and The Play Goes On (1999).