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- <text id=93TT1647>
- <title>
- May 10, 1993: Passing the Sitcom Torch
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 10, 1993 Ascent of a Woman: Hillary Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 59
- Passing the Sitcom Torch
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As Cheers says goodbye after 11 seasons, the Seinfeld era
- is ready to begin
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--With reporting by Elizabeth L. Bland/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Flash forward to the year 2000. Seinfeld, the NBC sitcom
- starring Jerry Seinfeld as one of a quartet of angst-ridden New
- Yorkers, is finally going off the air after 10 acclaimed
- seasons. For the gala final episode, Julia Louis-Dreyfus makes
- a return appearance as Elaine (the movie career didn't work out)
- and meets her successor in the cast, Melanie Mayron. In a
- typically Seinfeldian life-imitates-art riff, George (Jason
- Alexander), now head of network programming, tells Jerry his
- sitcom is being canceled. Kramer (Michael Richards), elected to
- Congress in the eighth season, finds himself involved in a sex
- scandal. Meanwhile, Jerry wonders just what's the deal with
- those little air bubbles in packing crates...
- </p>
- <p> Hold on. One farewell at a time. The Seinfeld gang may be
- the hottest in TV comedy right now, but they are hardly the
- type to horn in on somebody else's celebration. And Cheers, as
- everybody knows, is the show saying the lavish goodbyes this
- month: only three more episodes left, culminating in a 90-minute
- finale on May 20 in which Shelley Long (who left after the fifth
- season) returns as Diane Chambers. And the festivities don't end
- there. Preceding the last show will be a 30-minute special
- featuring clips from past seasons. Following it, the Tonight
- show will originate from Boston's Bull and Finch bar, the model
- for the Cheers pub. It's all part of what NBC is trumpeting as
- "the television event of a lifetime."
- </p>
- <p> Sort of. The end of Cheers may not have the emotional
- resonance of the M*A*S*H finale, but it's a TV milestone worth
- toasting. For a decade, Cheers has represented the gold standard
- of TV comedy writing, directing and acting, having won 26 Emmy
- awards and reigned in the Nielsen Top 10 for eight straight
- seasons. Yet Cheers' departure dovetails so neatly with the
- emergence of the show that will take over its time slot next
- season that the transition seems almost a generational passing
- of the torch. As the Cheers era ends, the Seinfeld era begins.
- </p>
- <p> The shows have a few obvious similarities. Both are
- intelligent, verbally sophisticated sitcoms that focus on a
- group of friends linked by locale rather than family. Both are
- proof, moreover, of the oft-repeated TV adage that good shows
- take time to find their audience. Seinfeld went on the air in
- May 1990 but broke into the Top 10 only two months ago, when it
- was moved to Thursday nights after Cheers.
- </p>
- <p> Cheers too struggled when it first went on the air in
- 1982: in its debut season it ranked dead last out of 75
- prime-time shows. Yet, encouraged by critical acclaim and a slew
- of Emmys, NBC stuck with it. The show would probably still be
- going strong if it weren't for star Ted Danson's decision to
- leave at the end of this season. "Our thinking was, we rolled
- the dice twice, when we replaced Nick Colasanto ((with Woody
- Harrelson)) and Shelley Long ((with Kirstie Alley)), and we
- won," says James Burrows, who created the show with Glen and Les
- Charles and has directed nearly every episode. "We didn't want
- to risk that again. It is better to leave early than to leave
- late."
- </p>
- <p> In most ways, though, Cheers and Seinfeld line up on
- opposite sides of TV's generational divide. Cheers is the
- product of a group of writers and producers who learned their
- craft in the 1970s at the MTM factory and created such hits as
- Mary Tyler Moore and Taxi. Their shows typically revolve around
- the workplace rather than the family, are filled with
- intricately crafted one-liners and feature ensemble casts of
- exaggerated comic types. By the end of its run, the Cheers
- laughpoints had become so familiar--Woody's naivete, Carla's
- surly put-downs, mailman Cliff's out-to-lunch monologues--that
- the show seemed almost to write itself:
- </p>
- <p> Frasier (reading a goodbye letter from Lilith): "Dear
- Frasier: Life in the Eco Pod is wonderful. Gogie and I are
- happier than we've ever been. Please start divorce proceedings.
- Our marriage is..." (He is overcome.)
- </p>
- <p> Woody (dumbly): Made in heaven?
- </p>
- <p> Frasier: "...our marriage is over."
- </p>
- <p> Cliff: That really burns my hide that Lilith sent him that
- mailgram.
- </p>
- <p> Frasier: Well, thank you, Cliff.
- </p>
- <p> Cliff: All of a sudden a first-class stamp isn't any good
- anymore?
- </p>
- <p> Cheers was TV's most well-oiled comedy engine, but that
- machinelike predictability was its major drawback. Regular
- characters came and went, coupled and uncoupled, but the
- relationships seemed inspired less by anything organic in the
- show than by the simple need to open up new gag territory. Gags,
- moreover, that too often depended on the quaint TV fiction that
- people always play out their intimate moments in front of at
- least four other people. Cheers was a bar where everybody not
- only knew your name; they also knew your embarrassing secrets
- and the details of your sex life.
- </p>
- <p> The characters in Seinfeld talk about intimate things too,
- but they at least come across as friends who might really
- confide in one another. Maybe because they are, in a sense, all
- variations on the same person. The series (created by Seinfeld
- with writer Larry David) is, like several other new-generation
- sitcoms, an outgrowth of stand-up comedy material. Episodes spin
- off the sort of trivial incidents and observations that
- Seinfeld dwells on in his monologues. (Jerry feels guilty over
- a gift pen; Jerry's girlfriend thinks he picks his nose.)
- </p>
- <p> Unlike the well-made, two-act structure of Cheers,
- Seinfeld episodes are freewheeling, anecdotal and--paradoxically, for a show based on stand-up material--almost
- devoid of typical sitcom one-liners. Here is George, for
- example, complaining that his new job as a comedy writer is
- going to waste: "Can you believe my luck? The first time in my
- life I have a good answer to the question `What do you do?' and
- I have a girlfriend. I mean, you don't need a girlfriend when
- you can answer that question. That's what you say in order to
- get girlfriends. Once you can get girlfriends, you don't want
- a girlfriend, you just want more girlfriends." Jerry's deadpan
- reply: "You're going to make a very good father someday."
- </p>
- <p> The characters on Seinfeld are more rounded and less
- stereotyped than practically any on TV. Kramer, for example, the
- next-door neighbor with the electric hair and thrift-shop
- wardrobe, could have been a typical sitcom shtick figure.
- Instead he's an impassioned eccentric with endless reserves of
- nuttiness. (After the group orders Chinese food, he shouts a
- final request into the phone: "And extra MSG!")
- </p>
- <p> Seinfeld marks a TV departure in other ways as well.
- Brandon Tartikoff, former president of NBC Entertainment, who
- helped develop both shows, notes the ethnic gulf: "Cheers is the
- most goyish show on TV; Seinfeld is the most Jewish." The
- series, moreover, tackles sensitive subjects with almost brazen
- matter-of-factness. In this season's most famous episode, the
- group bet on which one of them could refrain from masturbating
- the longest. "I compare the show to The Twilight Zone," says
- supervising producer Larry Charles. "It is about behaviors that
- we don't like to admit about ourselves--that we are sometimes
- greedy, sometimes selfish. Jerry is like Rod Serling--a guide
- to take us to those lower depths." Out of those lower depths,
- Seinfeld is starting to soar.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-