Chuck and Ann were a highly respected comedy writing
team. I had visited their office. I had worked with them. We had been at the same parties together.
Stipulated: I knew
Chuck and Ann.
One day, I am working on a rewrite with a roomful of
writers, not the boss, but a full-time contributor to the show.
The rewrite is dragging along. We have been in the room easily seven
hours. There’s a pitch, and the show
runner says,
“I think Chuck has a good idea.”
I say,
“Who’s Chuck?”
The writers look at me like I’m out of my mind. But I am totally serious.
“Who’s Chuck?” I
repeat.
Finally, I am directed to an understandably embarrassed comedy
writer sitting at the end of the table, as he has been for the past seven hours.
That man was Chuck. (Not
a different Chuck. It was the same one.)
I apologized profusely.
But it was hardly enough. I
should have bought him a house.
In the heat of the moment – or, more specifically, a seven
hours-plus rewrite – my intensity had gotten the better of me. I was focused, laser-like, on the task at
hand.
And absolutely nothing else.
That’s who I am. Or at
least was. And, given another opportunity,
I would most likely be again.
Once, on The Cosby
Show, we did an episode that was far from the best. Observing my unhidden anguish, Dr. Cosby
consoled,
“Consider it a ‘B.’”
With an almost feral ferocity never displayed before or
since I growled back,
“I want an ‘A’!”
I believe I may have frightened a one-time football player
(turned comedian). I most certainly
frightened myself.
But that was me.
Always single-mindedly striving for an “A.”
And whenever I’m tested, nothing else really matters.
In an unjustly overlooked movie called Mr. Saturday Night (1992), comedian Buddy Young Jr., played by comedian
Billy Crystal, now old, berates his put-upon brother-manager Stan, played by
David Paymer, reminding his subservient sibling of all he had done for him, then
ending his belittling diatribe with,
BUDDY: I didn’t take
your life, Stan. I gave you one.
To which his brother replies,
STAN: Yeah, but you could have been nicer.
I have excuses. I
have rationalizations. I have
explanations. I have justifications.
But despite their validity, at least in my mind, like Buddy Young Jr.,
I too
Could have been nicer.
2 comments:
Hi Earl,
Not that you have enemies, but this quote by Churchill comes to mind when I read your stories about wanting to do better.
"You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life"
You stood up for something you believed in, well done. Most people go by thinking I wish I had stood up more.
Some people would move the point it was just a comedy, who cares?
Well bringing laughter into millions of homes on a weekly basis is a pretty good job and probably saved a lot of people money on therapy.
cheers
Dave.
Too many shows on are just fine to have a "feel" or a "look", or are satisfied with word play that is mildly amusing.
Congratulations for having always strived for an "A", when so many think a "C" is exemplary.
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