I had forgotten it happened.
And then it happened again.
(That’s an enticing
opening, isn’t it? You’re right. We’ll see.)
Okay.
I was watching Maverick
the other day on The Westerns Channel,
featuring Beau Maverick, who is my third
favorite “Maverick.” (Maverick provided a series of leading
men during its run, all of them hailing from the same gambler family.
I watch the reruns, hoping for “Bret”, feeling let down when
I get “Bart”, and wondering what I’d done to deserve “Beau”. Had they gone one more “Maverick” away from
“The good one” – perhaps, Bob Maverick – I might have seriously considered
not watching.)
Anyway, I get Beau.
(The words, “for my sins” implicitly understood.) I tune in, with the show already in progress. Beau enters his hotel room, cheerfully
whistling.
What exactly is he whistling?
It is the theme song to Maverick.
“Bum ba-da bum bum,
bum bum bum…”
“Maverick is the
name…” he’d continue if he could whistle and sing and the same time. (I believe there was a performer in
vaudeville who could do that.)
Think about that. A
character on Maverick whistles the
theme song to Maverick.
You’re not supposed to be able to do that.
I am reminded of the words of my MTM boss Ed. Weinberger who twinklingly observed,
“The characters on
this show – meaning The Mary Tyler
Moore Show – are the only people who
have never seen ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show.’”
He was exaggerating, of course. Someone
was watching the competition. But, even they, at least, knew it existed.
The characters on Mary
did not.
That’s a bizarre
hole-in-the-universe concept, isn’t it?
Even though the Mary show took
great pains to hew to “experienced reality” – as compared, say, to a “talking
horse” sitcom or a show with a visiting Martian uncle – these are actual shows,
kids; you can look it up – “Mary Richards” never watched or even mentioned the highly regarded half-hour
comedy.
You would think the show would be right up her alley, being
smart and funny, and all about her. Plus, she is often home Saturday nights when
it’s broadcast, nine o’clock Eastern Time, eight P.M. in Minneapolis.
No.
The Mary Tyler Moore
Show is the one “blind spot” in “Mary’s” televiewing itinerary. She can watch the show before Mary.
She can watch the show after it.
But she cannot watch Mary. It just can’t be done. Like seeing the back of your head in a
mirror.
Yet here’s “third choice” Beau, whistling the theme song to Maverick.
Come on, now. A guy
from a show set in the 1870’s whistles a tune written in 1957? Maverick’s an unusual western. But it isn’t The Twilight Zone.
Okay.
Cut to the final episode of the ‘80’s sitcom Charles In
Charge, the other time I saw this
unreality-breaking phenomenon.
I was no great enthusiast of Charles in Charge, but my daughter Anna liked it and I liked her, so I watched it. Plus, it was the final episode of the
series. Who knows what crazy shenanigans were in store? It seemed worth sticking around to find out.
I do not recall the episode’s story. I assume they were wrapping up loose ends. Okay, I’ll research it.
-----------------------------------------
I didn’t find much. “Charles prepares an interview to get into
Princeton.” But it doesn’t matter,
because nothing unusual happened.
Until the very end of the episode.
When, heading towards the finale, the fictional characters burst
into a spirited version of the Charles In
Charge theme song.
You know what?
I cried.
It was the last episode.
What can I tell you?
From an “Artistic Success” standpoint, this musical gambit
remains one-for-two – one effort bringing a middle-aged Jewish man to tears,
the other, making me wonder if Maverick’s
Executive Producer had opted to play golf that day and the unsupervised “children”
decided “Let’s have some fun!”
A blast for them. A
shameful disgrace to a heartsick viewer with high standards.
“The Rule of Threes” decrees a culminating third example. I seriously hope that’s not true. I no longer watch Law & Order SVU. But if I
heard a detective came into the squad room going, “Chung! Chung!”,
3 comments:
Brent Maverick.
Funny! TV was pretty young then so there were not many ground rules.
Maverick was usually humorous so why not?
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