Entertainment
Judd Apatow on comic genius Mel Brooks: “Probably the funniest person of all time”
At the Golden Globes last week, Judd Apatow cracked up the room: “I’m very honored to be asked to present the award for best director, because I’m pretty sure that means the Globes people think I’m also one of the best directors.”
But Apatow is more at home behind the camera, as a director of comedies like “The 40 Year Old Virgin,” and of documentaries about some of his idols, like comedians Garry Shandling and George Carlin.
His latest subject hardly needs an introduction.
Asked why he decided to do a documentary about Mel Brooks, Apatow said, “Mel is the reason why most of us went into comedy. You know, when I was a kid (I was born in 1967), all these Mel Brooks movies came out while I was a little kid and trying to figure out what the world meant and who I was. And here was this hilarious, tiny Jewish man who was really loud and brash and confident, and seemed like the coolest guy in the world. And I think me and a lot of people thought, ‘Oh, that’s the job you would want. You would want to be Mel Brooks.'”
“Mel Brooks: The 99 Year Old Man” streams this week on HBO Max. Co-directed by Michael Bonfiglio, it’s the surprisingly personal origin story of a comedy legend – a Brooklyn kid raised by a single mom whose four sons went off to war.
In the documentary, Brooks described his wartime experience:
Brooks: “I was sent from a provincial tenement in Brooklyn to France, 1104th engineer combat battalion.”
Apatow: “And the Germans had just left France?”
Brooks: “Yeah.”
Apatow: “And so your job was to make sure they didn’t leave behind booby traps?”
Brooks” “Right. Forty-five degree angle with your bayonet, go through the soil, find, find, find, dink dink. Oh, oh!”
“I said to him, you know, “Did you ever think that you were gonna die?'” Apatow recalled. “And he goes, ‘Only every second of every day.'”
HBO Max
Brooks came home from the war, but he never really stopped fighting the Nazis – lampooning them in “The Producers,” “To Be or Not to Be,” and “History of the World Part I.”
Asked what made Nazis such a frequent target of Brooks, Apatow said, “The fear that it was gonna happen again. And then if you don’t keep pointing out how horrifying this is, then it can, you know, slowly bubble back up, which is something we see right now.”
And Brooks was equally fearless against racism. His 1974 film “Blazing Saddles” is the story of a Black sheriff in a racist town. Critics were divided over the raunchy comedy, but it was a monster hit with moviegoers. And just a few months later, he came out with another monster hit, “Young Frankenstein.”
What did releasing two big hits in the same year do for Brooks’ status? “He just became Beyoncé for a little while,” Apatow said. “I mean, he was a real sensation. And it was kind of shocking, right, that two of the best comedies of all time come out in the same year. And we didn’t talk about this in the documentary, but there was some sense that ‘Blazing Saddles’ was so daring that maybe he made sure to make another movie, so that if they really turned on him with ‘Blazing Saddles,’ he already had another one to show ’em.”
It wasn’t all just for laughs: Mel Brooks also produced dramas, like David Lynch’s “The Elephant Man,” but he did it quietly, refusing to put his name on it. “He thought it was a distraction, and you would think the movie was silly ’cause his name was on it,” Apatow said. “But yet, it said Brooksfilms. So, I think people figured it out. I think he should put his name on there.”
No history of Mel Brooks’ life would be complete without a mention of his best friend, comedy giant Carl Reiner. “It’s one of the great friendships of all time, because they were friends for, I mean, 70 years? Maybe more?” Apatow said. “You know, some people are just magic together. They just fit. And they adored each other more than I’ve ever seen two people adore and respect each other. I asked him, you know, ‘What is the core of this?’ And he said, ‘He’s my father.'”
Reiner was actually only four years older, but Brooks looked up to him, and later in life, as widowers, they leaned on one another. [Brooks’ wife, Anne Bancroft, died in 2005; Estelle Reiner died in 2008.]
Apatow said the loss of Bancroft was very hard on Brooks: “He famously would go eat dinner and watch a movie with Carl Reiner at Carl Reiner’s house, and he did that for many, many years. And they supported each other. And that’s how both of them got through it. And then after Carl died, Mel would go to Carl’s house alone and eat dinner and watch a movie. And I asked him why. And he said, ‘Because it feels like he’s there in some way.'”
Brooks, who will turn 100 in June, has two Oscars, four Emmys, and the Broadway version of his hit movie “The Producers” has 12 Tonys – a record that still stands today. He also won three Grammys, giving him rare EGOT status.
What’s more, he’s lived long enough to see how his work endures, in his films, and in the countless comedians he inspired.
Asked what Brooks thought his legacy was, Apatow replied, “He said he thought he was put on this Earth to make people laugh, and he did that.”
“What do you think Mel Brooks’ legacy is?” I asked.
“The main one is probably the funniest person of all time, and the creator of some of the best films of all time, one of the great Broadway musicals of all time, who had the courage to make comedy, both about unimportant things and the most important things, and he did it longer than anybody,” Apatow said.
To watch a trailer for the documentary “Mel Brooks: The 99 Year Old Man!,” click on the video player below:
For more info:
Story produced by John D’Amelio. Editor: Steven Tyler.
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Entertainment
Britney Spears contacted by people close to her after DUI arrest
Britney Spears has spoken to both her mother and her two sons following her DUI arrest earlier this week, with those closest to her now rallying around the singer in the aftermath of what sources describe as an deeply emotional night.
According to TMZ, Lynne Spears called her daughter as soon as she heard about the arrest, with the conversation between the two described as “positive” and “hopeful.”
Britney also spoke to her sons Sean Preston, 20, and Jayden James, 19, after being released from jail on Thursday morning, though she has not yet seen any family members in person.
The outreach comes at a particularly raw moment.
Spears was pulled over near the Borchard Road off-ramp in Newbury Park, Ventura County, at around 9:28 p.m. on Wednesday after officers reportedly observed her driving her black BMW “erratically at a high rate of speed.”
She was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of a combination of drugs and alcohol, and an insider told Page Six that officers also found an unknown substance inside her car at the time.
Her chemical test results remain pending and the investigation is ongoing. She was released at 6:07 a.m. Thursday.
Sources paint a picture of a woman who was visibly distressed throughout the process.
Spears was “crying and very tearful” while being booked, according to Page Six.
“She was incredibly emotional,” a source told the outlet. “It’s been a very hard couple of months.” The same insider said Spears “felt ashamed and embarrassed” and is “very sorry” for what happened.
“She doesn’t want to let anyone down, including her fans. The last thing she wants is to be judged publicly all over again.”
Her manager, Cade Hudson, was blunt in his public statement, calling the incident “completely inexcusable” while expressing hope that it might mark a turning point.
Entertainment
Maisie Peters surprises fans in Australia with Ed Sheeran
Maisie Peters gave her Melbourne audience an unexpected treat on Wednesday night when Ed Sheeran walked out on stage to join her for a surprise duet, a moment that clearly meant a great deal to both of them.
Sheeran, 35, appeared at Peters’ show on 4th March during her Before the Bloom Tour in Australia, performing his 2017 hit Castle on the Hill alongside the 25-year-old singer.
Peters shared a clip of the performance on Instagram, captioning it with heartfelt warmth. “Thank you @teddysphotos for singing the best song ever with me at my show in melbourne tonight,” she wrote.
“Still remember watching you play this one all 60 something gigs we did together, and it was so magical getting to join you on it for one. The best to ever do it.”
Sheeran is currently in Australia as part of his own Loop Tour, which will next take him to the Dominican Republic on 9th May before wrapping up in November.
Peters, meanwhile, is gearing up for a busy year.
Her third studio album, Florescence, is due for release in May, following her 2023 sophomore record The Good Witch.
Entertainment
Savannah Guthrie visits “Today” studio, says she intends to return to show
Savannah Guthrie stopped by the “Today” show studio to see colleagues on Thursday, NBC News said in a statement shared with CBS News. It was the first time Guthrie had been in the studio since her mother, Nancy Guthrie, disappeared over a month ago.
NBC said that Guthrie plans to eventually return to “Today.” The network did not specify when that might happen.
“Savannah Guthrie stopped by the studio this morning to be with and thank her TODAY colleagues,” the company said. “While she plans to return to the show on air, she remains focused right now supporting her family and working to help bring Nancy home.”
During her visit to Studio 1A, Guthrie embraced staff and crew, according to “Today.” She reportedly thanked her colleagues for “caring about my mom as much as I do,” the show said.
“I wanted you to know that I’m still standing, and I still have hope, and I’m still me,” she said. “And I don’t know what version of me that will be, but it will be.”
Courtesy NBC/Today/Handout via Reuters
“I have every intention of coming back,” Guthrie also said, according to the show. “I don’t know how to come back, but I don’t know how not to. You’re my family. And I would like to try.”
Guthrie’s last appearance on “Today” was January 30, 2026, two days before Nancy was reported missing. Guthrie has spent most of the past month with her siblings and their families in Arizona, where her mother and sister live.
Law enforcement have said they believe the 84-year-old was taken from her Tucson home overnight in the early morning hours of Feb. 1. No suspects or motive have been publicly identified. Law enforcement is continuing to analyze forensic and digital evidence related to the case.
Guthrie has shared search updates on her social media and recently said that while the family understands they may not find Nancy alive, they “still believe in a miracle.” Guthrie has offered a $1 million reward for information about her mother’s disappearance.
Possession of Nancy Guthrie’s home was recently returned to her family, and the FBI moved its command post from Tucson to Phoenix. A law enforcement source told CBS News the investigation was still continuing at full speed and that the move would allow for law enforcement to operate more efficiently for the long-term.
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