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Sit, Ubu, Sit: How I Went from Brooklyn to Hollywood with the Same Woman, the Same Dog, and a Lot Less Hair [NOOK Book]
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In Sit, Ubu, Sit, award-winning writer/producer Goldberg tells the mostly upbeat, sometimes difficult, and frequently hilarious tale of his improbable career and the people who have filled it.
A love story and a rare behind-the-scenes look at the entertainment industry, Sit, Ubu, Sit proves that it is possible to be creative and successful while holding on to your integrity, your family, and your sense of humor.
*with Bill Lawrence
Goldberg, a TV scriptwriter and producer, fondly recalls his rocky, improbable route to Hollywood success, including the people who helped him along the way. Funny, dry and self-deprecating, Goldberg cuts swiftly through the years, from the mid-1950s growing up in a loving extended Jewish family in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, to his scruffy vagabonding in 1972 in Europe with his pregnant girlfriend, Diana, and their canny Labrador dog, Ubu. He sold his first scripts to TV shows in the 1970s, prompting his move from New York to California with Diana, who opened a day-care center. Goldberg took a class with scriptwriter Nate Monaster, who motivated him and helped submit his work to Los Angeles producers. Soon enough, Goldberg's scripts for the Bob Newhart Show, the Tony Randall Showand the MTM empire gave him the clout to start his own company, UBU (named for the beloved dog he eventually gave away, by the by), launching such pilots as Family Tiesfor the networks. Indeed, Goldberg's memoir is a kind of love letter to longtime partner Diana as well as to Michael J. Fox, with whom he later worked on Spin City. His professed guilt for making fistfuls of money while making people laugh renders this work effortlessly likable. (Feb.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationGoldberg used to write for television (from The Bob Newhart Show to M*A*S*H), and it shows. His memoir is not unlike a typical sitcom, oscillating between funny and annoying. At its best, it's a well-written, touching, and humorous reflection on a meandering life that suddenly found direction, but at its worst, it's a cloying showbiz memoir full of name-dropping and anecdotes about apartments on Central Park West and private booths at restaurants in Los Angeles. The book is chronologically all over the place, with consecutive chapters taking place decades apart, only to have later chapters come back to the time in between. This makes for a compelling contrast between the different stages of Goldberg's life, but it can be disorienting and downright frustrating if you just want to know what happens next. On the whole, though, Goldberg (also credited as the creator of Family Tiesand Spin City) delivers, and his book will be checked out by readers who enjoy witty, light memoirs that feature a few celebrity cameos. Recommended for public libraries.
—John Helling
Excerpted from Sit, Ubu, Sit by Gary David Goldberg Copyright © 2008 by Gary David Goldberg. Excerpted by permission.
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Anonymous
Posted March 26, 2008
Such a wonderful tale of the man behind a lot of my favorite tv series. Gary writes with the same ease and grace of his shows. An instant favorite.
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Posted February 24, 2008
I loved this book - I laughed, I cried, I sent some copies to my brothers who I know will love it too!
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Overview
A sports-crazed kid from Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, Gary David Goldberg never imagined he’d end up in Hollywood, let alone make it big there. But as a twenty-five-year-old waiter in Greenwich Village he met Diana, the love of his life; followed her out to Northern California; then moved in and never moved out. He also, without realizing it, put himself on track to found UBU Productions (named after his beloved Labrador retriever) and become a successful creator of such family sitcoms as Family Ties, Brooklyn Bridge, and Spin City.*In Sit, Ubu, Sit, award-winning writer/producer Goldberg tells the mostly upbeat, sometimes difficult, and frequently hilarious ...