The Odd Couple was a hit 1965 Broadway play by Neil Simon, followed by a
successful film and television series, as well as other derivative works
and spinoffs, many featuring one or more of the same actors. The plot
concerns two mismatched room-mates, one uptight and the other slovenly.
Sources vary as to the origins of the play. Most sources claim that Simon
was inspired to write the play when he saw his brother Danny Simon and
theatrical agent Roy Gerber living together after recent divorces.
However, in the Mel Brooks biography It's Good to Be the King, author
James Robert Parish claims that the play came about after Simon observed
Brooks, in a separation from his first wife, living with writer Speed
Vogel for three months. Vogel later wrote that Brooks had insomnia, "a
brushstroke of paranoia," and "a blood-sugar problem that kept us a
scintilla away from insanity."
Danny Simon, also a writer, took the first crac
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The Odd Couple,