Background
Brickman was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to American parents Pauline (née Wolin) and Abram Brickman.
Brickman was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to American parents Pauline (née Wolin) and Abram Brickman.
University of Wisconsin–Madison.
He is also known for playing the banjo with Eric Weissberg in the 1960s, and for a series of comical parodies published in The New Yorker. His family was Jewish. Following the disbanding of The Tarriers in 1965, Brickman joined The New Journeymen with John Phillips and Michelle Phillips, who later had success with The Mamas & the Papas.
He left The New Journeymen to pursue a career as a writer, initially writing for television in the 1960s, including Candid Camera, The Tonight Show, and The Dick Cavett Show.
Brickman directed several of his own scripts in the 1980s, including Simon, Lovesick, and The Manhattan Project, as well as Sister Mary Explains lieutenant All, a television adaptation of the play by Christopher Durang. His script with Allen for Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993) had been put aside some years earlier when the project was later revived.
The two collaborated again in 2009 to write the book for the musical The Addams Family. Brickman"s "Who"s Who in the Cast," a parody of a Playbill cast list, was published in the July 26, 1976, issue of The New Yorker, and drew so much attention that it was republished in the special theatre issue of May 31, 1993.
Other pieces for The New Yorker include "The New York Review of Gossip" (May 19, 1975) and "The Recipes of Chairman Mao" (August 27, 1973).
Ann in Blue (1974) (television)
The Muppet Show: Sex and Violence (1975) (television pilot)
Simon (1980)
Lovesick (1983)
Manhattan Project (1986)
Foreign the Boys (1991) (with Neil Jimenez and Lindy Laub)
Intersection (1994)
Anna Veritiny (2002)
Jersey Boys (2014)
Company-written with Woody Allen
Sleeper (1973)
Annie Hall (1977)
Manhattan (1979)
Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993).
After attending the University of Wisconsin–Madison, he became a member of Folk act The Tarriers in 1962, recruited by former classmate Eric Weissberg.