You put on a show, and that’s great. But even greater
is when that show includes a magical element, speaking to what show business is
really about, going right back to cave times, where they imaginably first put
on shows. Not long after which the
first cave “impresario” began selling tickets to see them. It’s like the Internet – it started out being
for free, and then “pricing” seeped in.
And insidious advertising. Which
is also not new.
“Tired of sharpening your
own stick? Let us sharpen it for
you. And all you have to do is to catch
us some dinner. It’s as simple as
that. We’ll put a nice point point on
your stick and you bring us some food.
And now – speaking of food – ladies and gentlemen, a man swallowing a
live chicken. Ta-da!”
Two of the series I got on the air – Major Dad and Family Man –
contemporarily localed. Exhilarating as
it is to walk onto a soundstage and see the sets built specifically for your
show, it not easy distinguishing one sitcom living room set from another.
Well, wait.
On Family Man, we
replicated our actual living room from our house, which was amazing. Still, it was a contemporary living room – walls, windows, doors and a staircase -
uniquely “homey” but hardly unusual.
With Best of the West,
however – the only half-hour western comedy I am aware of filmed before a live
studio audience – Now that was
different.
(Note: This is
where my story of “pure show biz” and its accompanying excitement kicks
in. But not to its ultimate degree, which I am reserving for the “payoff”, for I am
nothing if not an adherent to traditional expectations, knowing that nobody enjoys their “payoffs” in the middle.)
As the audience filed into the bleachers of Soundstage 24 at
Paramount Studios to see a Best of the
West filming, they beheld before them, not
sets depicting a typical living room and an appropriate “workplace”, but
instead the simulated interiors of a “sod house” and a western saloon.
And they started to smile.
‘Cause it was different.
The filming began. And,
during the scenes set in “Copper Creek’s” Lucky
Chance Saloon, unobtrusively but clearly visible nonetheless, the audience
saw live horses (and their riders) passing “outside”, through the saloon’s swinging
doors and adjoining windows. (There was
a narrow corridor between the standing “saloon set” and the concrete wall of
the soundstage. It was a tight fit. I guess they just brought skinny horses.)
Real horses! Can you
believe it? You never saw that on All in the Family. A horse’s
ass, sure, but not actual horses.
The studio audience had never seen anything like it
before. It was like going to the circus,
but with hilarious punchlines.
The festivities began earlier in the day. Every Friday – when we filmed the Best of the West episodes – a couple of
trailers would arrive, and wranglers in authentic cowboy attire – hats, boots,
oversized belt buckles and jeans featuring splotches of horse dung – would
climb out and unload several horses, brought in to amble past during the saloon
scenes, adding verisimilitude to the proceedings.
It was quite the “eye catcher.” Heading back from their commissary lunches,
studio employees noticeably slowed down to look at them. And they’d smile. Although possibly a long way from actual
production, studio employees were aware they worked someplace special. I mean, how often do you spot a passel of
ponies in a Law Office? (Answer: Arguably, never.)
But that was nothing,
Compared to the “payoff.”
In which one specific
Best of the West episode called for “more.”
I no longer recall the story. I think it had to do with Copper Creek being
snowed in by a blizzard, the desperate saloonkeeper attracting the cooped up
inhabitants with “spectacular entertainment.”
Including a large, performing bear.
Do you remember a bear on Golden Girls? I do not
believe they had one. In fact, I’m not sure anyone had one. If there was
an Emmy Category: “Best Performance By A Visiting Bear”, we’d
have won it by acclamation. I could see
myself, delivering the “Acceptance Speech” on the bear’s behalf. Unfortunately, there wasn’t one, so I didn’t.
What was truly satisfying, however, was – yes, the live
studio audience cackling delightedly at the onstage shenanigans – but even more rewarding was, earlier in the day,
watching crowds of Paramount employees
spontaneously mobilize, as if the president or some celebrity superstar were
visiting the studio.
It started small. But
then the word spread.
“There’s a bear on
the lot!”
The crowd expanded and the giddiness increased. People were coming out of the woodwork, just
to look at the bear. Prop men, studio bean
counters, powerful executives, people who had seen it all, becoming, during
their tenures, inured and blasé.
Suddenly, they were kids again, joining the crowd to partake in the available
wonderment.
The bear did a little dance, and the assemblage was miraculously
transported, their worldly cares and travails melting harmlessly into the
periphery.
This was the real show
business – undiluted and restorative.
This was the “fun part”, the feeling the studio employees had imagined
when they’d signed on. The experience
was exhilarating. Who wouldn’t enjoy a
performing bear materializing at their workplace? (Except for “animal rights” advocates, bent
on freeing performing animals into the wild.)
As they sing in Camelot,
“… for one brief shining moment…”
Then the bear entered the soundstage, and it was back to the
office.