Martin Short recalls feeling overwhelmed by the idea of pretending to be happy for Bill Murray's ...
Short once avoided a dinner with Murray, because he couldn’t deal with his success, the comedian reveals in new documentary.
Martin Short recalls feeling overwhelmed by the idea of pretending to be happy for Bill Murray’s success
Short once avoided a dinner with Murray, because he couldn't deal with his success, the comedian reveals in new documentary.
By Raechal Shewfelt
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Raechal Shewfelt
Raechal Shewfelt is a writer at **. She has been working at EW since 2024. Her work has previously appeared on Yahoo and in American *Journalism Review* and *The Shreveport Times*.
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May 8, 2026 6:05 p.m. ET
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Martin Short at 'Marty, Life Is Short' premiere on May 6; Bill Murray at 'Phoenician Scheme' premiere in 2025. Credit:
Alberto E. Rodriguez/WireImage; Gareth Cattermole/Getty
- Martin Short recalls in new doc about his life, *Marty, Life Is Short*, that he once avoided a dinner with Bill Murray, because he couldn't deal with the *Saturday Night Live *star's success.
- The moment was a turning point for Short, who quickly decided to do improv comedy.
- Short himself joined the *SNL* cast for one season in 1984.
Martin Short is a big star now, but he almost quit comedy altogether one night early in his career because of a certain *Saturday Night Live* alum.
The actor and his late wife, Nancy Dolman, were on their way to meet Bill Murray and musician Paul Shaffer, who were both working on *Saturday Night Live* at the time, for dinner, Short recalls in the new documentary, *Marty, Life Is Short*, which premieres on Netflix on May 12. Short lived in Los Angeles at the time, and the men were visiting from New York, where Murray was already a "big hit" on Lorne Michaels' sketch comedy show.
"Nancy and I were walking there," Short remembers, "and I just was overwhelmed with, 'I can't. I can't do it. I can't do it. I can't.' I'm out of work now. Hadn't worked in a couple months. Had no prospects and didn't really know where I was going. And I said, 'I can't go and pretend to be happy for Bill, because I don't know what I'm doing. I need to sit down.'"
Short called the moment "breakdown corner."
At the time, Short had a limited list of credits, with the biggest project he'd worked on being the 1972 Toronto production of *Godspell*, which featured several other future comedy stars, including Gilda Radner, Eugene Levy, and Andrea Martin.
Short didn't know it that night in L.A., but he was hours away from an epiphany.
Martin Short joined by sons at first public appearance since death of daughter Katherine
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Catherine O'Hara to posthumously appear in Martin Short doc
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"We sat there for about 10 minutes and didn't speak," Short says. "Finally, Nancy said, 'How long are we going to stay here?’ I said, ‘I don't know.’"
He continued, "So we went back to the apartment, and I woke up in a funk. And then we saw War Babies, who were an improvisational group. It was so funny. It was fresh. It was inspiring. I felt inspired just witnessing it. It was like the lightbulbs went off. 'Of course, this is what I should do.'"
The following morning, Short called the leader of the Second City improv group and said he wanted to join, which he did. There he worked with other future comedy superstars Levy, Martin, Catherine O'Hara, and John Candy.
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Martin Short on 'SCTV,' or 'Second City Television'.
David Street/TV Guide/Courtesy Everett
Short eventually joined the cast of *SNL *himself, for the 10th season (1984-1985). Murray was long gone from the show at that point, having been part of the NBC series from 1977 to 1980, before hitting it big with movies like 1980's *Caddyshack* and 1984's *Ghostbusters*.
Short, now considered a comedy great in his own right, wasn't far behind him, starring in such films as *Three Amigos*, *Captain Ron*, and *Innerspace* throughout the '80s and early '90s. They weren't all successful from the start, like the *Father of the Bride* movies Short did with Steve Martin in the '90s, but they've since become comedy classics.
"I would say my career has been 80 percent failure, and I would say those are pretty good odds," the *Only Murders in the Building* star says in *Marty, Life Is Short*.
"Show business is talent, luck, and endurance. But you can have talent, you can have tenacity. You can take the hits, but if you don't have the confidence to get up there and fail, then you can't do it."
*Marty, Life Is Short* is available Tuesday, May 12, on Netflix.
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Source: “EW Documentary”