Nora Ephron: She Did It All With Style

In introducing Screenwriting award winner Nora Ephron at a Hollywood Film Awards ceremony a couple of years ago her good friend and admirer Steven Spielberg said, “Nora knows how so easily to make us laugh and to make us cry and embrace the human comedy of it all. And she does it without any bathroom humor.”

That was the great thing about this multi-talented writer/director/author who clearly had a knack for writing about men and women, particularly the latter, without ever trivializing them or reaching for the lowest common denominator in what passes for many studio-bred movie comedies today. And she did it all with so much style, sophistication, flair and wit. It’s the end of an era. The Hollywood in which Nora Ephron excelled seems to be passing quickly before our eyes.

Related: Nora Ephron Dies At 71

It’s interesting to note that in 1983 when she got her first feature film script produced, Silkwood (directed by Mike Nichols), there were hardly any women in real power positions in the studios. Slowly, but fortunately that changed because it enabled Nora Ephron to be able to make movies her way in the studio system, and for that we are eternally grateful.

Nora Ephron Sleepless In SeattleIn her greatest screen successes as a writer of  her Oscar-nominated script for When Harry Met Sally (1989) and later sitting in the director’s chair as well for such huge hits as Sleepless In Seattle (1993), You’ve Got Mail (1998) and her final film 2009′s Julie And Julia, there was at the core of each one a strong woman both women and men could learn to understand and love, well at least understand. In fact strong women were at the center of so many Ephron scripts from  Silkwood to 1986′s biting and  thinly-veiled autobiographical Heartburn (which she adapted from her book about her short-lived marriage to Carl Bernstein), and even the sparkling little-seen 1979 ABC-TV movie Perfect Gentlemen, featuring Lauren Bacall and Ruth Gordon pulling off a heist, that served as a launching pad for what would turn into an enormously successful film career.

The concepts of so many Ephron scripts kept us on the edge of our seats, guessing where these relationships would be going. In three of her best films Meg Ryan co-starred, and in her she found the perfect actor to be her muse. All of those films, When Harry Met Sally, Sleepless In Seattle and You’ve Got Mail  remain three of the best examples of romantic comedies, the Ephron specialty, in the last 50 years. All of them set up characters who resisted the traditional path to love we often see in the genre and instead made us root for them as they slowly realized what the audience already knew: they were right for each other. But Ephron was too smart to lay it on or fall into the normal traps. When Harry Met Sally, directed by Rob Reiner, endures to this day, because it was a total original posing the question right at the beginning, “Can men and women ever be friends?”  It was a simple question that still resonates and doesn’t have any easy answers. Ephron movies often resisted the ”easy answers”.  The film won Ephron an Original Screenplay Oscar nomination but somehow she lost to Dead Poet’s Society, a good movie that hasn’t nearly passed the same test of time of a classic like When Harry Met Sally. You wuz robbed, Nora.

With Sleepless In Seattle, an enormous hit which she directed as well as wrote (with Jeff Arch and David S. Ward), it wasn’t so much a traditional movie romance as it was about romance in the movies themselves and our never-ending search for that almost unobtainable ideal. And You’ve Got Mail was a contemporized new version of The Shop Around The Corner (1940)  that used email instead of letters in chronicling the romantic longings of its two main characters played so well by Tom Hanks and Ryan who also co-starred in Sleepless In Seattle (which by the way is finding new life as a musical set to premiere next summer at the Pasadena Playhouse).

What I always loved about Ephron was she somehow managed to seem the quintissential New Yorker even though she was a Hollywood kid right from the start, graduating from Beverly Hills High School before heading off to Wellesley. Her parents, of course, were Phoebe and Henry Ephron, a great screenwriting team responsible for such quintissential 20th Century Fox films of the 50′s like Desk Set, Carousel, Daddy Long Legs and There’s No Business Like Show Business. Ephron and her sister Delia (and sometimes collaborator including You’ve Got Mail) obviously had the tremendous advantage of growing up in the shadow of the business  and saw first hand what to do – or not to do  – to survive. One of those key lessons for Nora, a born writer, was to protect her words. That was really the key reason she turned to directing in the first place 20 years ago with the Julie Kavner comedy, This Is My Life  (yes, another strong female lead). But she hated being called a successful “woman director”.  In her eyes that was marginalizing things. She was a director, and a good one. She also hated the term “chick flick” saying, and rightly so, that men liked coming to her movies too. I  certainly did.

Like everyone else in her position not everything was the success she envisioned at the start. Somehow her take on the 60′s TV sitcom, Bewitched (2005) with Nicole Kidman and Will Ferrell fizzled when it should have fizzed. And there were other disappointments, but she came back strong and was justifiably proud of still turning out successful and smart adult comedies,  even being a woman in her late 60′s (A Hollywood no-no),  which she did with Julie And Julia in 2009, another great collaboration between Ephron and her other muse, Meryl Streep who won an Oscar nomination playing Julia Child to Amy Adams’ Julie, a young wife who became obsessed with cooking all of Child’s recipes. It also allowed Ephron to dabble in her other great love. In fact she once said, “writing is what I do. It’s like breathing to me at a certain point but if I couldn’t write, I do like cooking”.

Much as I would have loved to have shared one of your legendary meals, Nora, I for one am glad the writing thing worked out so well for you. And for us.

Comments (20)

  • Heartbroken to lose such an amazing woman and a brilliant voice. Do we really need to knock Dead Poets Society? It might not stand the test of TBS, but it has certainly held up.

    Comment by Anonymous — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 5:51pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Totally agree. We can mourn Nora’s passing without taking a swipe at Dead Poet’s Society, which I think holds up extremely well after all these years. “Harry” was fine, unless you compare it to any Woody Allen movie. Sad to hear this news, but the Academy voted correctly all those years ago.

      Comment by jarlerguy — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 10:22pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • RIP Nora Epron?…. OMG … I knew just by the tone of this article…that she has left us. As I read this article, my mind was saying “tell me it’s not true… it can’t be… it’s too soon.
    So sorry to hear this sad news.

    I’ve always admired and loved your work… as you were such an inspiration to all women in this sometimes harsh business. God Bless You. My condolensces to your family.

    I’m very very sad right now. You were GREAT in all that you did, achieved, and I ALWAYS admired you for your courage. RIP. You will be missed but NEVER forgotten. That’s for sure.

    Comment by Sylvia Marie Llewellyn — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 5:55pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Well said. I loved watching her interviews on the Charlie Rose show. She just had a great way of discussing the world around her and expressing her opinions without pushing them on you.

    Comment by Fan — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 5:58pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Very sad. Have lost a talent of sense and sensibility. Her perspective on life will be missed.

    Comment by Glenn — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 6:14pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Peter, thank you so much for your beautiful piece on Nora. I loved her in ways that I can’t even begin to share. She was my first true fan: She sent me a fan letter on my review of her book “Scribble, Scribble” when I was an entertainment reporter at the Daily Cardinal in Madison, Wisconsin. That was 1979 and we remained friends ever since. What a disaster it is to lose such a beautiful loving smiling gorgeous brilliant woman. GOD BLESS YOU, DEAR NORA. We love you :(

    Comment by JOHN CAMPBELL — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 6:17pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Mr.Campbell, your comments just brought tears to my eyes. I wish I had been as lucky as you to have known her. Jim

      Comment by Jim Jenkins — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 7:24pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Dead poets Society was a predictable overwrought bore! I thought it was overrated from the beginning. Considering some if the dreck we worship nowadays….I am doubly sorry she didn’t win the Oscar. What a talent.

    Comment by Sara — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 6:32pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • INT. HEAVEN – DAY

    NORA enters, smiling.

    Comment by A Writer — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 6:54pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • +1

    She taught me how to write the modern woman.

    RIP

    Comment by Tommy — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 7:52pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Feeling sad…really sad that we have lost such a monumental talent as Nora Ephron. RIP Nora. And thanks Pete for this heartfelt and honest tribute.

    Comment by Nancy Belle Fuller — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 8:02pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Wonderfully expressed tribute to a true legend who brought wit, intelligence and smarts to the Hollywood rom com, articles, memoirs and whatever she penned. A class act, Ms. Ephron will be missed. “I’ll have what sne’s having!” is one of the more memorable scenes of contemporary cinema. Rest in peace

    Comment by Beth Cone Kramer — Tuesday June 26, 2012 @ 8:11pm PDT  Reply to this post
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