The good news is older actors are working all over the
place, if by “all over the place” you mean CBS.
The bad news...
Let’s start with the good
news. Because in this context, there are
only three choices – working, not working and dead. And the other
two are depressing.
I shall stick to comedies, which I dipped my toe into
recently as I occasionally do to see what is happening without me. I will not be
doing that again soon. Because my personal “Laugh Meter” watching
those shows recorded, “I think my personal ‘Laugh Meter’ is broken.”
(On the one-hour drama side, there is Tom Selleck (72), who
is beginning to resemble Mount Rushmore.
Not literally, but they are approaching
the same weight. I do not know whether
Tom Selleck has had Botox treatments, but I dare him to wiggle his eyebrows Magnum P.I.-style to prove he hasn’t.
And that’s it - two gratuitous insults, and “out.” Serves him right; the man kicked his once
competitor Best of the West into
oblivion. End of retributive diatribe.)
And now back to the subject at hand.
Judd Hirsch – 82
– Attaboy, Judd! – co-stars in Superior Donuts, respectably holding his
own against a formidable comedy foil, Jermaine Fowler.
Elliot Gould – 79 – add (at least) five years for
being married to Barbra Streisand – appears in 9JKL. As does
Linda Lavin –
Holy Cow! – 80?
George Segal – 83
– appears on The Goldbergs.
James Brolin – 77
– add (at least) five years for being married to Barbra Streisand – although
not at the same time as Elliot Gould – appears in Life in Pieces.
Selecting just five
venerable actors, still trodding the televisional boards.
(Note: Not all
of these shows are on CBS, most likely
because there was not sufficient room on their schedule, and the actuarial
tables called for a sensible “amortizing the risk.”)
I have seen all of
the above-mentioned actors do better work – except for Judd Hirsch, who remains
startlingly consistent, having, improbably, not lost a discernible “step”, either
in timing or in “attack.” (Edging out Linda Lavin by a nose, which she
may possibly have had worked on and now regrets it, if just in this narrow competitive
context. Boy, I’m just a regular “Mr. Snarky
Pants” today.)
Still, all of those Senior thespians – and I dare you to say
that three times fast – provide professional
performances, nobody “phoning it in”, everyone commendably giving their all, although
the material they have been provided to work with is unilaterally beneath the
capacities they have previously exhibited.
(Except for, perhaps, Brolin, who, save for his excellent “cameo” in Pee Wee’s Great Adventure, reached the
top of his abilities co-starring in Marcus
Welby M.D., where his most demanding ”stretch” as an actor was riding a
motorcycle. I’ve got to stay out of
these brackets. I am losing my
reputation as “a real ‘Sweetie Pie.’”)
Now…
Employing older actors in TV series – great!
But…
Okay.
I just sighed.
Because it is simply “the way it is”.
And I don’t like “the way it
is.”
That being…
Fictional portrayals, in every
aspect of actual life…
As my old grandpa might say:
“Feh!”
As an analyst, Dr. M cannot bear watching a show where psychotherapy is depicted – with the
exception of The Sopranos; there are
exceptions to everything – because,
as she inevitably explains –
“It’s not like
that.”
Police officers, watching televised “procedurals” –
“Yeah, like you could get a subpoena in an hour, and an
autopsy in a day.”
You get what I’m drivin’ at, right?
Dentists:
“Nobody gets numb that fast. If I
‘went in’ that quickly there’d be screaming, and suing.”
Plumbers: “Where do they get ‘butt cracks’?”
Member of Any Ethnicity You Can Imagine: “I don’t know one person who talks like that.”
Similarly…
Real old is not close to how they portray it on
television.
Claims a, now, certified expert on “old.”
Old people are working.
But they are playing buffoons.
(What a fascinating word – “buffoon.”)
With TV-“old” you get “types.”
You get “warm.” You
get “distant.” You get “gruff.” You get “cuddly.” You get “regularity” jokes. You get, “We’re still doin’ it” jokes. You get
“dithery.” (“Where’s my glasses?” –
“They’re on the top of your head.”) You
get “philosophical”, but it’s annoyingly shallow. (Of the less than Platonic “You gotta role
with the punches” variety.) You get
manipulatively passive-aggressive.
(Often emanating from Jewish mothers.
Which, by the way, my “people” are hardly immune to the “Cliché Epidemic.” And with so many Jewish comedy writers…
JEWISH COMEDY
WRITER: “We’re kind of actually
more assimilated.’”
No. Or maybe. But what they are really doing is going for “easy laughs.” Earning, from me, none, with this dubious strategy.
Maybe they need old writers, to deliver “the genuine article.” Or maybe they don’t. Because there are too many “What’s that’s”,
as in “What’s that bump on my nose?” – featuring precautionary visits to specialists.
Bottom Line: But
whoever writes it needs to internalize this:
From a personality standpoint, old people – like all people – are everything. Sitcoms lazily
“scratch the surface” of that “everything.”
Leaving wincing stereotypes in their wake, explaining, if younger
audiences buy into those stereotypes,
the painful paucity of visits.
Reliable “Rule of Thumb”: Whatever people were like when they were
younger is essentially what those people are like when they are older. Only heavier, and with less hair.
Old people are people.
Not single-attribute
caricatures.
Sure, it’s great to see these talented actors still
working. It would be spectacular, however, if they portrayed
“old”, and not “TV old.”
But to get “funny” from that, the writers would have to assiduously
“go deeper.”
No need to do research.
Just ask the performers on the show.
Right on every count, Earl... and the problem won't change until the studios and networks start hiring old writers to write on their so-called "comedies"... which means it will never change because that isn't going to happen. Studio and network execs are morons but they are also YOUNG morons so they see no value in older writers. Perhaps if the studios and networks were to start hiring OLD morons as their execs, we old writers might have a chance.
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