Charles Shyer, ‘Father of the Bride’ and ‘Baby Boom’ filmmaker, dies at
83
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[December 30, 2024]
By LINDSEY BAHR
Charles Shyer, the Oscar-nominated writer and filmmaker known for
classic comedies like “Private Benjamin,” “Baby Boom” and “Father of the
Bride” that he made alongside Nancy Meyers, has died. He was 83.
Shyer died in Los Angeles on Friday, his daughter, filmmaker Hallie
Meyers-Shyer told The Associated Press on Sunday. No cause was
disclosed.
A son of Hollywood, whose father Melville Shyer was one of the founding
members of the Directors Guild of America, Shyer made an indelible mark
on comedies, mostly of the romantic persuasion, in the 1980s and 1990s.
Born in Los Angeles in 1941, Shyer cut his teeth writing for television,
assisting Garry Marshall and working on shows like “The Odd Couple”
before transitioning to films. He had writing credits on “Smokey and the
Bandit,” Jack Nicholson’s “Goin’ South” and the Walter Matthau drama
“House Calls.” A big breakthrough came with “Private Benjamin,” the
Goldie Hawn comedy about a wealthy woman who inadvertently signs up for
basic training, which he co-wrote with Meyers and Harvey Miller.
It was a script that was initially turned down by every studio in
Hollywood, even with Hawn attached to star and produce.
“We went to a meeting at Paramount after they read the script, and Mike
Eisner was the president of the studio, and we sat in his office with
Mike and (producer) Don Simpson. And Mike said to Goldie, ‘This is a
mistake for you to make this movie,’” Shyer told Indiewire in 2022. “God
bless Don Simpson who spoke up and said, ‘Mike, you’re 100% wrong on
this one.’”
The movie became one of the biggest hits of 1980. It got them an Oscar
nomination and a win from the Writers Guild and also paved the way for
his directorial debut “Irreconcilable Differences.”
That film, which he also wrote with Meyers (they married in 1980),
starred Shelley Long and Ryan O’Neal as a writing-directing duo whose
relationship crumbles after success and an infatuation with a young
actor played by Sharon Stone. It was partially inspired by the tabloid
affairs of Peter Bogdanovich, who left his wife and producer Polly Platt
for Cybill Shepherd.
“Nancy and I just laughed at the same things. We love the same movies,
we kind of educate each other on the movies that each of us loved,”
Shyer told The Hollywood Reporter. “And Nancy really made me laugh. I
think she wrote the best one-liners of anybody I know, except Neil
Simon. And, and we were just always in sync — as filmmakers, we had this
thing.”
They followed with “Baby Boom,” in which Diane Keaton plays a working
woman who suddenly has to care for a baby, and “Father of the Bride,”
which reimagined Vincente Minnelli’s 1950 film for the 1990s with
Keaton, Steve Martin and Martin Short leading the comedic ensemble. It
was successful enough to spawn a sequel.
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This undated photo provided by Hallie Meyers-Shyer shows Charles
Shyer, the Oscar-nominated writer and filmmaker who died Sunday,
Dec. 29, 2024. (Hallie Meyers-Shyer via AP)
Shyer and Meyers' last collaboration
as a married couple before divorcing in 1999 was the remake of “The
Parent Trap,” with Lindsay Lohan, which Meyers directed and Shyer
co-wrote and produced. Their daughters Annie and Hallie, whose names
were used for Lohan’s twin characters, both appeared in the film.
Shyer is also survived by two children, Jacob and Sophia, from a
subsequent marriage that ended in divorce.
While Shyer often found himself doing remakes, he and Meyers never
wanted to do “carbon copies” of the originals and always endeavored
to put their own stamp on their films. But even he was surprised by
the longevity of some of them, remembering an old Billy Wilder quote
that “comedy is not like fine wine, it does not age well.” But, he
said, they tried to avoid the temptation to include too many timely
references.
“You try to write things that are not basically of the moment,
especially in comedy,” he told Indiewire. “Try to write stories
about human beings that will reflect on today and tomorrow and
yesterday.”
Shyer went on to remake “Alfie,” with Jude Law, and the Hilary Swank
period drama “The Affair of the Necklace,” neither of which did well
at the box office. He also directed the Julia Roberts and Nick Nolte
movie “I Love Trouble,” the only film of his that he admitted he
didn't like.
Other films never saw the light of day: He spent a year and a half
prepping “Eloise in Paris” but it was canceled when the production
company suddenly went out of business.
He stepped away from directing for many years but returned in recent
years with two Netflix Christmas romantic comedies: “The Noel Diary”
and “Best. Christmas. Ever!”
“I just gravitated towards stuff I like,” he told Indiewire. “I’ve
never seen a James Bond movie. I’ve never seen one. I never liked
science-fiction movies. … I like movies about people, and I want
them to have substance.”
Shyer had told Indiewire that he was working on a script he'd been
thinking about for decades, since he was hospitalized briefly at 17.
He described the movie as a cross between “The 400 Blows” and “One
Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.” And retirement, he said at the time,
was not in the cards.
“What am I going to do? Garden?” he said. “I just have a lot of
energy. I want to keep going. I actually love the process and I love
the camaraderie. I love what I do. If I drop dead, maybe it will be
holding a camera.”
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