You want to tinker with the format because, by definition –
meaning because the format was in place before you arrived – it is somebody
else’s way of doing things, and you want to develop a way of doing things of
your own. Understanding that writers are
notorious rebels.
“We like to write about things rather than risk actually doing them.”
All right, there’s that.
But within the realm of the imagination, we are exceedingly bold.
Anyway…
I am thinking of three situation comedies that tinkered with
the traditional format – but just tinkered,
you do not want to reinvent the wheel; it is virtually impossible to sell an
entirely different-looking wheel. Three
experiments in tinkering, two that succeeded, another that didn’t. I will begin by chronicling the experiment
that didn’t.
Oh, wait. That was the one I tried. Well, at least it
has the honor of going first.
I made mention not long ago, possibly yesterday, that
comedies shot without an audience have the creative advantage of storytelling
flexibility, while comedies filmed in front of a studio audience gain the
heightened intensity of the immediate presentation. But there are tradeoffs. To be delineated forthwith.
In a sitcom I created called Family Man, I decided to eschew the live studio audience, because I
wanted them to take out the audience bleachers so there would be more room on
the stage for more sets, thus providing an expanded number of storytelling
locations. In the Family Man pilot, I used seven locations rather than the regulation
three, which was then the maximum number of locations (because of space
limitations) available to live audience shows.
By eliminating the audience, I was also free to write more nuanced
and naturalistically, unencumbered by the insistent imperative to earn audience
guffaws. It is incredible how
comedically freeing that is.
Unfortunately, my experiment did not work. Though I unquestionably gained in range of
storytelling and laugh-inducing flexibility, lacking the audience-infused
electricity, the finished product projected the recessive energy of an amusing
soap opera.
(Note: It was
only after Family Man’s production
when two completed episodes were screened in front of an audience that the
show’s star, Richard Libertini, realized, from their enthusiastic reaction,
that the show he was participating in was actually funny.)
I had tried something and it failed. But at least I tried something.
Seinfeld, on the
other hand, tried something and it was wildly successful.
Having no sitcom-writing experience whatever, the Seinfeld creative team was blissfully
liberated from the restrictive indoctrination of “The Rules.” Also, Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld are
incredibly talented, each of them possessing a distinct and hilarious comedic
“Voice.”
Their original “Voice” pervaded the series from its opening
episode, where an in-no-way-story-advancing conversation concerning the importance
of the location of the second-from-the-top button on a man’s shirt tagged Seinfeld as a series that was definitely
going to be different.
From the tinkering standpoint, although they retained the
live studio audience, Seinfeld told
its stories employing, I don’t know, twelve to fifteen scenes of greatly
varying lengths, situated in multiple locations.
This expanded canvas was accomplished by “going outside”, like
on that “New York” street (in quotes, because it was actually a set next to the
soundstage), by locating sets on the stage itself
whose action, resulting from advanced technology, the audience could not directly
see but could follow via a monitor – when shows like Taxi were produced, there was nothing to see, because the film had
yet to be developed –, by pre-filming certain scenes and showing them to the
audience fully edited, and by later in its run expanding to two soundstages,
allowing room for even more indoor
locations.
The result, complementing the more naturalistic dialogue,
was a more naturalistic (meaning less “theatrical”) manner of unfolding the
story, their narrative options no longer restricted to two or three standing
sets. (Note: In our day, we were also instructed to limit
the number of scenes so that the live audience experience would be less
fragmented, and inevitably take less time. For some reason, every time you “Cut” a scene,
the actors disappear into their dressings rooms and call up their business
managers. An increased number of scenes
triggers a commensurate number of delays.)
Finally – I am just skimming here because we all have lives
outside of this exercise… except, perhaps me… there is the sitcom Mom, out of the Chuck Lorre stable of
comedies (The Big Bang Theory, Two and
a half Men, Mike and Molly),
delivered in full-out “Throwback Mode” – unrelenting “setup-punchline” format
and a live studio audience. But it’s different.
Mom’s courageous
innovation is that, while telling its story via the traditional format, it will
abruptly stop to acknowledge the less than humorous realities of the
characters’ existence – their history of addiction, and financial uncertainty –
not just once, near the end of the episode as shows of the past have done in
their often excruciating "MOS" (the professionally denigrated ‘Moment of Shit’) interludes, but
interwoven organically throughout the episode.
Rather than being a downer, this balance of lightness and
darkness makes Mom feel more like
actual life than a structural skeleton to hang formula jokes on.
As you see, these innovations are not earthshaking. But they uniquify the product by delivering a
welcome humanity into the proceedings.
And that’s what we’re looking for.
A sitcom with a pulse.
2 comments:
You were ahead of your time!
Other reasons MOM is good: Allison Janney, Anna Faris, Mimi Kennedy, Octavia Spencer, Kevin Pollak (till they killed him off); excellent, experienced writers who realize that a comedy should have jokes, jokes, jokes. I have nothing against lots of jokes as long as they're good. Their serious interludes are usually poignant and proper. Tonight's show I thought was especially poignant but I'm too lazy to insert the plot.
Seinfeld was ground braking not only because of what you mentioned, but of the 4 main players, none were very likeable in social contexts.
Richard Libertini is funny in everything I've seen him in, incl. a Barney Miller episode that was just on last week. He's still with us according to IMDB, but no cast credits since 2011.
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