And it has been for some time.
Ideas and concepts never seem to totally die. Including the bad ones. But I won’t write about that today. Or possibly ever. Because no matter how bad those ideas are,
somebody thinks they’re terrific and then I’m in trouble. Feel free, however, to think of your own examples of ideas that never totally
die (“Creationism” “Supply-side economics” – just priming the pump) and we’ll
leave it at that.
As for me, I shall focus of attention to television. “Informative yet harmless.”
Let’s go! (Proclaims
a Founding Member of Wimps ‘R Us.)
During the early years of televised sitcomality, half-hour
comedies were filmed like truncated movies – the short story versus the novel,
offering both entities unearned elevation.
(As Mel Brooks emphatically opined when I once interviewed him decades
ago, “Best is a book. Why?
Because a book does not have ‘Herman Shumlin Presents’ in the front of
it. Translation: A book is “all you.”)
“Filmed like a movie” means that a single camera is employed
to record the action, followed by subsequent “takes” – known professionally as
“coverage” – in which the same scene is re-shot from various angles, distances
and points of view. (And probably other
reasons I don’t know anything about.) Depending
on time and budget, you can shoot the same scene dozens different ways, and
then “mix and match” the completed footage later in “Editing”.
This is similarly what they did – at least in a limited
version – when they shot sitcoms. Why
did they do it that way? Because the
half-hour comedies were produced by movie studios and that’s the way movie
studios did things. They already had the
cameras and the expertise, so why not?
(Note: On Best of the West, I had a Director of Photography
who, under more auspicious circumstances, had once collaborated with Alfred
Hitchcock. When I wrote in a script: “Int. Cabin – Dusk”, the gentleman
judiciously set me straight, saying,
“We’ve got ‘Day’ and we’ve got ‘Night’.
That’s it.”)
The “single-camera” format itself did not make the content bland and innocuous. That was the networks’ – and their overseers,
the sponsors’ – handiwork. The primary objective
back then was to please the largest possible viewership, making the controlling
“Corporate Powers” err consistently on the side of “tapioca”. It wasn’t censorship, exactly. (Although, effectively, it was.) Overhanging the creative process was the
admonishing warning, “We’ll get letters.”
(Implying no risk-taking “encouragement letters” saying, “Stop boring us.”)
The consequent result:
Father Knows Best, The Donna Reed
Show, My Favorite Martian, and Mr. Ed (a talking horse who could offend
no one, since, if there was an actual talking horse in the audience, what were
the chances they could not only talk but also write?)
An expanding “wrinkle” in the sitcom filming process was the
introduction of the “multiple-camera” process, purportedly invented by
bandleader Desi Arnaz, allowing his then genius/spouse Lucille Ball could work her
comedic artistry in front of a live studio audience.
You can understandably not include a “live studio audience”
when filming “single-camera”. Shooting
the same scenes over and over in front of them would inevitably dull their enthusiasm,
dampening their willingness to laugh.
That’s if the shows were funny in the first place, which, with the
exception of Leave It To Beaver,
beyond tepid chuckles, they weren’t.
During the sixties, technological advancement delivered videotape,
which was cheaper than film for reasons too tedious to go into, in which,
again, numerous cameras ran simultaneously, the “booth-anchored” director
editing the consequent “coverage” on the fly.
“Tape” was generally the “medium of choice” of independent
production companies: Norman Lear (All In the Family, Good Times, Maude), Witt-Thomas
(The Golden Girls, Blossom), the guys
who produced What’s Happening? Not being film studios, the companies had to rent their equipment, and, their eyes cast
assiduously on the “bottom line”, their “medium of preference” was understandably
tape.
Being the cheaper alternative, videotape threatened to drive
“filmed” comedies out of existence.
Although some independent production companies like “The Mary Tyler
Moore Company” remained loyal to “film”, because that was their original reputation,
and besides, the finished videotaped product “looked like a game show” – The Price Is Right, with punch
lines. Or so they haughtily asserted.
Filmed comedy was given “The Last Rites.”
And it has been for some time.
Ideas and concepts never seem to totally die. Including the bad ones. But I won’t write about that today. Or possibly ever. Because no matter how bad those ideas are,
somebody thinks they’re terrific and then I’m in trouble. Feel free, however, to think of your own examples of ideas that never totally
die (“Creationism” “Supply-side economics” – just priming the pump) and we’ll
leave it at that.
As for me, I shall focus of attention to television. “Informative yet harmless.”
Let’s go! (Proclaims
a Founding Member of Wimps ‘R Us.)
During the early years of televised sitcomality, half-hour
comedies were filmed like truncated movies – the short story versus the novel,
offering both entities unearned elevation.
(As Mel Brooks emphatically opined when I once interviewed him decades
ago, “Best is a book. Why?
Because a book does not have ‘Herman Shumlin Presents’ in the front of
it. Translation: A book is “all you.”)
“Filmed like a movie” means that a single camera is employed
to record the action, followed by subsequent “takes” – known professionally as
“coverage” – in which the same scene is re-shot from various angles, distances
and points of view. (And probably other
reasons I don’t know anything about.) Depending
on time and budget, you can shoot the same scene dozens different ways, and
then “mix and match” the completed footage later in “Editing”.
This is similarly what they did – at least in a limited
version – when they shot sitcoms. Why
did they do it that way? Because the
half-hour comedies were produced by movie studios and that’s the way movie
studios did things. They already had the
cameras and the expertise, so why not?
(Note: On Best of the West, I had a Director of Photography
who, under more auspicious circumstances, had once collaborated with Alfred
Hitchcock. When I wrote in a script: “Int. Cabin – Dusk”, the gentleman
judiciously set me straight, saying,
“We’ve got ‘Day’ and we’ve got ‘Night’.
That’s it.”)
The “single-camera” format itself did not make the content bland and innocuous. That was the networks’ – and their overseers,
the sponsors’ – handiwork. The primary objective
back then was to please the largest possible viewership, making the controlling
“Corporate Powers” err consistently on the side of “tapioca”. It wasn’t censorship, exactly. (Although, effectively, it was.) Overhanging the creative process was the
admonishing warning, “We’ll get letters.”
(Implying no risk-taking “encouragement letters” saying, “Stop boring us.”)
The consequent result:
Father Knows Best, The Donna Reed
Show, My Favorite Martian, and Mr. Ed (a talking horse who could offend
no one, since, if there was an actual talking horse in the audience, what were
the chances they could not only talk but also write?)
An expanding “wrinkle” in the sitcom filming process was the
introduction of the “multiple-camera” process, purportedly invented by
bandleader Desi Arnaz, allowing his then genius/spouse Lucille Ball could work her
comedic artistry in front of a live studio audience.
You can understandably not include a “live studio audience”
when filming “single-camera”. Shooting
the same scenes over and over in front of them would inevitably dull their enthusiasm,
dampening their willingness to laugh.
That’s if the shows were funny in the first place, which, with the
exception of Leave It To Beaver,
beyond tepid chuckles, they weren’t.
During the sixties, technological advancement delivered videotape,
which was cheaper than film for reasons too tedious to go into, in which,
again, numerous cameras ran simultaneously, the “booth-anchored” director
editing the consequent “coverage” on the fly.
“Tape” was generally the “medium of choice” of independent
production companies: Norman Lear (All In the Family, Good Times, Maude), Witt-Thomas
(The Golden Girls, Blossom), the guys
who produced What’s Happening? Not being film studios, the companies had to rent their equipment, and, their eyes cast
assiduously on the “bottom line”, their “medium of preference” was understandably
tape.
Being the cheaper alternative, videotape threatened to drive
“filmed” comedies out of existence.
Although some independent production companies like “The Mary Tyler
Moore Company” remained loyal to “film”, because that was their original reputation,
and besides, the finished videotaped product “looked like a game show” – The Price Is Right, with punch
lines. Or so they haughtily asserted.
Filmed comedy was given “The Last Rites.”
Now look what’s back. In format, if not in content.
Owing to “digital” technology, which is ostensibly – what do
I know? – as cost-effective as “tape” was, the maligned and abandoned “single-camera”
comedy has returned with a vengeance. Videotaped production, which once threatened
to “run the table”, is history. As, with
pockets of exceptions, is “multiple-camera” filming, which is both
stylistically out of fashion and more expensive. (Renting one
camera costs less than renting four of them.)
You might believe – and I have – that the popularity of “single-camera” can be understood as being
more in sync with today’s show runners’ heroes deriving less from the theater (videotape, in particular, was more amenable
to “proscenium-like” presentation) than from cinema. (Think: Judd Apatow and his self-savvy
roster of characters.)
But the “single-camera” preference could just as easily be
explained by “What’s cheapest?”
It’s interesting, don’t you think? The nature of an entire genre of
entertainment being determined not by
“creative enthusiasm” but by financial advantageousness? (In America?
Really?)
An added bonus with “single-camera” over “multi-camera”
productions:
Reduced network interference.
Why? (In contrast to
network executives attending numerous “multi-camera” runthroughs, offering
subsequent “script notes.”)
NETWORK EXECUTIVE: “We’d like to talk to you about Page 15.”
“SINGLE-CAMERA” SHOW
RUNNER: “We shot that
yesterday.”
Thank you, “digital technology”.
I may not know how it works.
But I know what it prevents.
2 comments:
I think everything has its fashions and pendulums swing. Cameras are plummeting in price because when they became digital they became subject to Moore's Observation (widely misnamed Moore's Law) that computer processing power doubles roughly every two years. At some point, the biggest cost of multiple cameras is people to operate them, and they may find ways around that, too. Given that the top comedy on TV is still multi-camera, I'm not convinced it's as dead as all that. If it's quicker to shoot multi-camera, and you'd think it has to be, doesn't that compensate somewhat for the added camera costs?.
In film/TV production, though, haven't budgets always called the shots to some extent? These are commercial enterprises, after all. ago, I remember reading something John Sayles wrote about preferring novels because no one could come in and say you didn't have the budget for that scene. (As Mel Brooks told you.) What's great at the moment is the things people can now afford to make that would have cost many millions and taken armies of people to produce only a decade or two ago. At Roger Ebert's film festival in 2011? I think it was notable that there were several films on the program that had been made by just one or two people and whose biggest cost was clearing copyrighted music - SITA SINGS THE BLUES was one such; also MY DOG TULIP (which I think you'd enjoy), and another whose name was the zip code the brothers who made it lived in and that I can never remember correctly.
If someone comes up with a creative project that they feel will benefit from multi-camera, they'll invent the technology to do it if they have to!
wg
I have a question. You said "Overhanging the creative process was the admonishing warning, “We’ll get letters.” (Implying no risk-taking “encouragement letters” saying, “Stop boring us.”)"
Is that still the case? Not being in Show Business, I get confused about some saying that there is no bad publicity and others being worried about complaints. I guess you worry about complaints that rise to the level of alarming the FCC but I would think that with modern shows, the networks would welcome letters pouring in no matter what they say. The more letters, the more people watching your show.
A related question (I hope) is how do the networks tell how many people are watching their shows versus how many are watching their competitors on cable or streaming or satellite or ... There are so many ways to watch shows. It must have been a lot simpler when you could rely on Nielsen or those little diaries you would get in the mail.
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