Recently, regular reader Wendy M. Grossman noticed a mistake
I made concerning what she called a “data point” from a movie I was writing
about called All That Jazz. This post is a sincere and public “Thank-You
Note” to Wendy for that astute and accurate observation.
I try hard to get things right. But I am not always successful. In this case, just like there’s a word you
think you know how to spell so you don’t look it up in the dictionary and you
write it wrong, I thought I knew what I was talking about in this case so I didn’t double-check and I,
consequently, wrote it wrong.
The point of that post, entitled “We Have Liftoff”, centered
on a reminder (to myself, as well as anyone else interested) to go further (and
dig deeper) when executing one’s imaginatorial efforts. To demonstrate what I was talking about, I
used, as an example, a sequence from All
That Jazz in which the film’s lead character, Joe Gideon (stand-in for the
film’s director and co-writer Bob Fosse) elevated a creative assignment from
the acceptable to the sublime.
That part happened,
that wasn’t my mistake. (Or
an hallucination. I have been known to
imagine things that aren’t there, unofficially rewriting what I am looking at “on
the fly.”) My mistake involved describing the creative assignment as a commercial
for an airline rather than what it in fact was, which was a proposed dance
number for a Broadway musical.
It may be (and I am hoping it is) instructional (to myself
as well as to anyone else interested) to examine why I got this “data point” wrong. Primarily, it has to do with certain reflexive
connections that I made in my head generated by my personal experience.
That’s the way memory works, as least for me. I remember something a certain way, and once
it gets fixed in my head, that is forever the way it is.
Until somebody corrects me.
My mistake, I believe, was instigated by the fact that the originally-presented
serviceable version of the dance number (accompanied by some chorus-sung
cheesy, jingle-sounding lyrics) felt like
a television airline commercial.
This misperception was then reinforced by the fact that,
during the time All That Jazz was
released, 1979, I was toiling in a television environment in which network censorship
was frustratingly oppressive. So when
Joe Gideon presented his alternative version of the choreography, involving
suggestive gyrations and female toplessness, my TV-trained brain the immediately
computed the shocked and dumbfounded responses of the onlookers, generating the
conclusions that their hostile reactions were the consequence of “You can’t do
that on television.” (Rather than on
Broadway, where a decade earlier actors had appeared onstage naked in Hair.)
My factual error, it would appear, was a byproduct of my
conditioning. Still, I regret making it,
and I apologize for having done so. But
here’s what I regret even more.
Disconnected from Wendy’s observation, other than by time, the
evening I received her correcting comment, I returned to an already scheduled
but as yet unpublished post, to rework some miniscule phrasing, after my mind,
in its spare time, came up with an improvement.
In the process, however, I found myself rewriting the entire
paragraph!
Do you see what I am telling you here? It is one thing to make a factual error. That is admittedly unacceptable. But even more
unacceptable is writing what I believed to be the best I could deliver, only to
discover that it was in serious need of radical improvement.
There is only one word to describe that.
Yikes!
When I worked on half-hour comedies recorded in front of a
live studio audience, such as Taxi, Cheers and The Cosby Show, there were ample opportunities to, first, hear the
script read at the “table readings”, and later to see it performed “on its
feet” during runthroughs, for the shows’ writers to determine what was working and
what was not. And then we’d fix what was
not. This process proceeded continually,
to the point where we were still rewriting jokes that didn’t work on the stage during
the filming itself, so that the following “take” would include a replacement joke
that we hoped would work better.
(By the way, in mine ‘umble opinion, this is the reason that
“single-camera” sitcoms not filmed in
front of a live audience are not as funny.
For the most part, the material is not heavily tested; it is generally simply
written and then filmed.)
For me, Wendy M. Grossman’s comment served not as a
criticism but as a “Wake-up Call.”
I write these posts.
I rework them and rework them until I believe they are as good as I can
possibly make them. Then I schedule them
for publication, and, except for rare exceptions, I leave them alone.
Lacking the outsider feedback that was so helpful in
television, it appears that here, I may have to just train myself not be so
easily satisfied with what I have written and apply myself more diligently in
the future.
I am committed to doing that. And I appreciate the person who provided the incentivizing
message that I should.
1 comment:
My, uh, pleasure. :)
I've wondered a few times what needs to happen to get you more people making comments. I suspect acknowledgements (not necessarily as spectacular as this one) and responses would help. I think the Friday questions thing Ken Levine does has been very good for the activity on his blog in that regard - though it's not really your style.
wg
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