10 Biggest Reveals From Netflix’s ‘Marty, Life Is Short’ Documentary

From a hilarious Steven Spielberg home video to the brutal realities of showbiz, here are the most fascinating takeaways from the new Martin Short documentary now streaming on Netflix


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What We Learned Netflix Marty Short Doc

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MAY 06: Martin Short attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Netflix’s “Marty, Life Is Short” at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on May 06, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Brianna Bryson/FilmMagic)

In Marty, Life Is Short, Lawrence Kasdan lets Martin Short get his long-overdue spotlight for making us all laugh with his great character acting in countless movies, TV shows, and even plays over the years. In the portrait, told from the source and his star-studded longtime friends, Kasdan reveals a wealth of fascinating facts about the beloved 76-year-old Canadian entertainer and the expansive career he’s led. Here are 10 things we learned from Marty, Life is Short.

Marty, Life Is Short is now available to stream on Netflix, so we’d recommend watching the enlightening doc before reading below.


1. Martin and his late wife Nancy Dolman hosted their actor/filmmaker friends at their Snug Harbor cottage in Ontario

Life is Short‘s archival footage includes a significant amount of home video footage of Short and his late wife, Nancy Dolman, entertaining their friends and their families at their cottage in Ontario. The guests included Eugene Levy, Steve Martin, Andrea Martin, the late Catherine O’Hara, Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg, and their kids. They would have cookouts during the summer and host annual Christmas parties that became more extravagant throughout the years, like they were a holiday special. Steve Martin, at one point, recalls it took about a year to learn how to play “Auld Lang Syne” on the banjo in preparation to perform at the Christmas get together.


2. It took some time for Short to accept that people love Three Amigos

The doc uncovers that John Landis’ Three Amigos, starring Martin, Chevy Chase, and Martin Short in a major breakout role, was moderately unsuccessful in the box office and received mixed critical reception. Even Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel famously panned it in front of Chase on the Johnny Carson Show. But according to John Mulaney, when he first met Short and told him about how much he loved Three Amigos, he bluntly responded, “Oh, but it didn’t open; it lost to Golden Child.” But then more people, including Justin Timberlake, gushed to Short their fondness for the film, and only now is he willing to embrace the love it received among, as Short puts it, “men in their 40s”.

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3. Spielberg directed a Forrest Gump x Ed Grimley crossover

In one of the most delightful home video footage scenes, Spielberg shares some stories from his time on Snug Harbor and playing with the video camera. It shows how in the 90s during a Snug Harbor excursion, he directed Martin Short and Tom Hanks on a yacht as they reenacted a scene from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. However, there is a twist: Hanks plays Forrest Gump as Butch, and Short plays his SCTV character Ed Grimley as the Sundance Kid.


4. Nancy and Marty were the couple all their friends envied

Life of Short tremendously highlights how vital Nancy Dolman was to Marty’s entire being. They were two peas in a pod whose synchronicity made their other friends what they wanted to strive for. Steve Martin raises a point he heard from a shrink where couples relate either directly to each other or relate through things. Dolman and Short were of the latter, and the footage heartily expresses it. Early on, the late Catherine O’Hara shared how when she and her husband, director Bo Welch, had a rough patch in their marriage and their therapist asked them what couple friends they wanted to emulate, they responded with “Marty and Nancy.” The therapist responds, “I can’t tell you how many couples have said this.” The two were literally the blueprint.


5. Martin Short helped break the reality of show business to John Mulaney during his early solo career

When John Mulaney’s short-lived Fox sitcom simply titled Mulaney got panned and received low ratings, Short, who co-starred with him, broke showbiz truth to him straight. Mulaney shares how Short grabbed him and told him, “John, this is what it is. 98% of it is failure. This is what the job is,” imbuing him with the sincere lesson that, as Mulaney summarizes, “Nothing works, and then something works.”


6. All of Nancy’s and Martin’s children were adopted

Short revealed that to help her conceive, Nancy was taking medicine to treat her endometriosis. However, her heightened emotions were a side effect, and a funny incident involving her reacting to his messiness in making a sandwich led them to stop. Martin goes, “You have to stop taking the drugs, and we will adopt,” and in his reenactment of the story, she tearfully goes, “Can we?” The two ended up adopting three children: Katherine (who tragically passed away via suicide last February), Oliver, and Henry.


7. Martin Short called his time on SNL grueling

Martin reflects on his short stint on SNL from Season 10 (1984–85) and detested his experience from its weekly concentration and him being away from his family. Post-SCTV, he discussed his switch from writing and collaborating with other writers and the freedom to improvise and the 180-degree turn when having an isolated office at SNL. Short’s effective charm was so well known that when he told producer Dick Ebersol how he wanted to quit, Short recalls him saying, “But this must be a pretty goddamn tough place if a good guy like you wants to leave.”


8. Selena Gomez picked up on Martin’s insult comic style

Steve Martin shares how when working with Martin on Only Murders in the Building, the two would exchange their inside baseball insult comedic banter in between setups. It was something Short started while they did their joint tour show, and he picked up on doing it as well. It became their rapport. But after a few years, their co-lead Selena Gomez started doing it. The short insult disease, it’s widespread.


9. Martin has a contact photo of Steve Martin in his phone—yes, it is a silly picture of him

During his interviews, Steve calls Martin, and he shows the camera his photo. And it looks to be something like a passport/DMV coded pic, completely zoomed in on his face. It is very funny.

Steve Martin On Phone Marty Documentary


10. Nancy Dolman kept living her last day like every day was going to be far from her last

Several close friends who talked about Nancy’s death after she was diagnosed with and treated for ovarian cancer remember how she lived freely every day as if it were nonexistent. Actress and SCTV co-star Andrea Martin describes Nancy’s resilience and Martin’s determination to not obstruct her from living her life as she desired as extraordinary. And the doc suggests that Nancy’s free spirit inspired Martin to continue working for it would’ve been a disservice to her to wallow in grief, despite losing his other half.