I thought it was just
me. (But that’s nothing new. I always think it’s just me.)
Pilot Season – 1981.
Rehearsals for the first series I had ever created (Best of the West) had gone smoothly. The reading got laughs. The actors we’d selected lived comfortably up
to expectation. The rewrites during
“Production Week” were not substantial.
I had made certain guesses about what would be funny, and
they were generally paying off. It
appeared like I actually knew what I was doing.
(Despite the fact that, to the concern of my bosses, much of the script’s
comedy emanated directly from the situational “moment” rather than, as was
traditional in sitcoms, from setups and punch lines, which was good, because I have
little or no aptitude for setups and punch lines.)
On the Wednesday evening before the Friday “Shoot Night”
(when the pilot would be filmed), we had what they call a “Camera
Rehearsal.” In order to reduce the
possibility of mistakes, the cameramen (running three cameras, all filming at
the same time) were given an extra opportunity to go through their moves,
rolling the massive machinery from one pre-marked-by-masking-tape position to
the next as the action played out in front of them. You noticed those “marks” on the floor
indicating where to go next, and it looked like a remedial school for hopeless
dancers.
“Forget about the steps.
Just move your feet to the next mark.”
The cameramen were amazing.
They had to learn dozens of moves in an extremely short time. I don’t know how they did it. Probably because they were professionals.
“Normally, we move furniture. Today, it’s television cameras.”
It was nothing like that.
They did one thing. And they did
it impeccably.
It was decided that we would bring in an audience to watch
the camera rehearsal. A live audience would
give the actors a chance to find out where the laughs were, and would energize
their performance. Nobody “phones it in”
when people are watching. One of them
could be considering them for their next job.
I do not recall where the audience came from. Some of them were members of the show’s
office staff. Others were low-level
network and studio employees. Some were…
I don’t know. Better that disclaimer
than theoretical conjecture. I just know
the bleachers were three-quarters full…of somebody.
And I also know this.
The Wednesday run-through was “through the roof.”
Everything worked.
The actors were “letter perfect”, their timing and delivery thrillingly
“on the money.” As a result, the laughs came
loud and long and often, sometimes accompanied by applause. And then it pinballed. The more they responded, the better the
actors performed, flying on the fumes of audience acceptance.
Even a pessimist like me had trouble finding something to
complain about. Of course, I
managed. I was sorry the Wednesday show
had not occurred on the actual “Show Night.”
Everyone else was elated. Truth
be told, though I didn’t show it, so was I.
The next day, there was another camera rehearsal, but without
an audience.
And it was….
Horrible.
The energy was down. The
timing was off. The confidence-level
diminished.
And the shock set in.
Maybe the show wasn’t funny after all. Maybe Wednesday had been just a fluke. It was a stomach-churning feeling. The pilot would be filmed the next
night. And nobody knew if it was great
or an enormous stinkeroo.
Then, on “Show Night”, the “magic” mercifully returned. About eighty-two percent of it. The audience seemed to really appreciate what
they saw. Of course, they had not
witnessed the “Miracle Of Wednesday Evening.”
The abiding question is, “Wha’ hoppin’?”
Wednesday – “Brilliant!”
Thursday – “Death.” Friday – a
resurgent “Very Good.” (Good enough to get us picked up as a series.)
At the time,
I thought it was just
me.
And then I read Mary
And Lou And Rhoda And Ted, by Jennifer Keishin Armstrong, a book
chronicling the trials and triumphs of the all-time classic, The Mary Tyler Moore Show. A show the network originally hated.
Check this out.
Page 77.
CBS had asked the
producers to stage a preliminary taping, and a lot was riding on it. The network wanted the producers to test some
new cameras, and the run-through would also allow them to prove that their
pilot was better than executives thought it would be.
Page 78-79.
Sometimes what works
in rehearsal doesn’t connect with the audience… Nary a chuckle escaped the
bleachers, and the less the audience reacted, the less sure the actors were… Post-show
polling indicated that Rhoda…was indeed universally hated. Phyllis, also, was “too abrasive”, according
to audience feedback. Mr. Grant didn’t
fare better; he came off as humorless and bullying when he grilled Mary about
her religion and marital status at her job interview, then ended by telling
her, “I hate spunk!”
That was the Wednesday rehearsal. And then on “Show Night”…
This time, the
audience roared… The atmosphere lightened like it was filling with helium,
taking the studio up higher and higher.
Mr. Grant asked her
about her religion and marital status; the audience laughed this time. “You know what?” Asner finally said as Mr.
Grant. “You’ve got spunk.” Mary nodded in agreement, then he delivered
the punchline, “I hate spunk!”
Asner saw the audience
take off like a guided missile…
Two performances – two reactions; one – “outhouse”; the
other – “penthouse.”
How does that happen?
I am not at all certain.
But the good news is…
It didn’t just happen to me.
Jerry Seinfeld was asked by an interviewer (I think it was Larry King) why a joke might work one night and not the next.
ReplyDeleteJerry's response: "It's because you told it wrong"
(wish I could find the clip, but I can't)
Camera rehearsals were always death, because the actors spent the day being moved around like furniture.
ReplyDeleteThey were exhausted, no one was there to perform to,
and they were very tired after a long day.
Never knew a show where it happened any differently.