I was planning to
write this yesterday, but I didn’t feel like it.
The most satisfying compliments you can receive come from
your peers. So too do the most
devastating critiques.
I am co-running Major
Dad, which I co-created, having been asked by the President of the studio I
was working for at the time, Universal,
if was agreeable to helping a non-comedy-writer develop a series to star Gerald
McRaney, and I respond with a word that sends me both exhilaratingly and screamingly
off the High Diving Board, that word, of course, being “Yes.”
We are heading towards the stage for a runthrough. Walking beside me is a woman named Mia
(except she is actually called something else), a highly talented writer on the
Universal payroll who, having no
current project of her own, has agreed to serve as a one-day-a-week consultant
on Major Dad. Writing consultants adjunct themselves to the
regular writing staff for an agreed-upon period of service – one or two days a
week – where they help rewriting the show.
“Consultant” is my favorite job in television. It’s like being an uncle. You visit, you have fun, feeling no burden or
responsibility whatsoever, and then you go home. And they pay you really well. Plus, you get a free dinner. Oh yeah, and since the show’s staff are
totally exhausted, they are really happy to see you. You’re like the “reinforcements.” They actually cheer when you walk in!
Okay, so I’m walking to the stage with Mia, and somehow…wait. Let me first say that Mia and I have known
each other for some time, going back, I believe to Newhart, Bob Newhart’s second
series, where he owned the inn. We
had the same agent. We always got
along. Mia was smart, funny and candid
in her communications, and that’s the way I like it.
Uh-huhn, Uh-huhn.
Okay.
So I’m walking to the stage with Mia, and somehow we come
around to talking about the show, and, by unmistakable inference, about
me. It is here that Mia expresses the
opinion that the show is good,
“But it’s hardly groundbreaking.”
The thing about the Atomic Bomb is that it is – the massive
devastation and loss of life aside – extremely loud. I do not have a font big enough to duplicate
the “BOOM!” made by an Atomic Bomb. Roughly speaking, it’s what I just typed
times a million.
When a personal bomb
explodes, it makes no sound whatsoever.
Except inside. Where the “BOOM!” rivals the Atomic
Bomb. Also, in contrast to the Atomic
Bomb whose reverberations eventually dissipates, the reverberations of a personal bomb can last forever.
As witnessed by my still thinking about it a quarter of a
century later. And my putting off
writing about it. At least for a
day.
“It – (the show I had
helped create and infused with all the talent and imagination within me) –
is hardly groundbreaking.”
Is it professional?
Yes. Is it commercially
successful? It lasted – four seasons –
longer than any series I had ever been involved in putting together, so again, the
answer is “Yes.” Were the people who
were paying me and the people who were putting it on happy with it, and by
implication with me? They were.
But it wasn’t groundbreaking. Inject the word “hardly” before
“groundbreaking”, implying a standard I had tacitly been counted upon to shoot
for and had failed,
And that was one of the most agonizing walks to the stage I
had ever experienced.
A critique can only “strikes home” if it’s true. (Or if you’re afraid might be true. Though in this case it was.) I had crafted a
serviceable series for a bankable star, it was funnier than it was lame, and,
when aired on Mondays instead of audience-starved Fridays, it was a hit.
From a business standpoint, I was a success. But from a creative, groundbreaking, “Stop
the Presses!”, water cooler conversation standpoint…?
Something more had clearly been expected of me.
I knew
“groundbreaking.” I had written for The Mary Tyler Moore Show (which made a
quantum leap in situation comedy). I had
been knocked out by Barney Miller (where
the writing was consistently funny but unforced.) Later, I would consult on The Larry Sanders Show (where the line
between the storytelling and reality was virtually obliterated.) And I had marveled at the breakthrough of Seinfeld.
I can recognize “groundbreaking” when I see it.
But I could never deliver it myself.
I could venture
into explanations, mentioning issues such as intrepitude, a single-mindedness
of commitment, the ability to think in a truly original manner, to name but
three. But I shall defer instead to a
man undeniably more authoritative on the subject, to wit; Mark McGuire, a
prodigious home run hitter, now serving as the “Hitting Coach” for the Los Angeles Dodgers. (Also a purported steroids user but I shall
eschew such transgressions as irrelevant to the conversation.)
In a recent TV interview, slugger Mark McGuire asserted
that, though you can teach a player to be a better, more consistent hitter, the
certified home run hitters are born.
Ditto, say I, for groundbreaking comedy writers.
I played many years in the Major Leagues. But I am not qualified for the “Hall of
Fame.” Can I live with that?
I am working on it.
3 comments:
Your phenomenological description of the personal bomb was so apt! I feel like I'm still experiencing the aftermath of your walk to the stage. Thank you for giving words to this facet of life.
Sounds to me that Mia was trying to make herself feel better, since she had not apparently created a show, groundbreaking or not, of her own.
That's a dangerous person to have work on your show - someone that's not 100% excited by it. Sooner or later that must have become evident in the writers room.
Sometimes "groundbreaking" depends on the star. The Cosby Show without Bill Cosby wouldn't be groundbreaking either.
I had a moment like that after my (one and only) LP was released. I was talking to a guy I hoped would distribute it in the UK, and as part of saying no, he said, "Well, it's not going to change the world, is it?"
And I thought, rather confused, "Was it supposed to?"
wg
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