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- <text id=91TT2191>
- <title>
- Sep. 30, 1991: The Way We (Maybe) Were
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 30, 1991 Curing Infertility
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TELEVISION, Page 78
- The Way We (Maybe) Were
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Against conventional network wisdom, three new shows hark back to
- the warm, fuzzy glow of the past
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--With reporting by Deborah Edler Brown/
- Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> The sound track serves up a luscious, Big-Band rendition
- of It's Been a Long, Long Time. On the screen, black-and-white
- photos dissolve one into another: soldiers coming home, couples
- embracing, homey shots from Main Street. "In the autumn of
- 1945," a female narrator intones, "America was invincible. The
- countertops at the soda fountain were still made of marble.
- Sodas cost a nickel. And Coke--well, it only meant cola."
- </p>
- <p> In a nostalgic mood yet? If the opening of ABC's Homefront
- doesn't get you, try CBS's Brooklyn Bridge, a fond look back at
- growing up in Brooklyn circa 1956. NBC's I'll Fly Away,
- meanwhile, paints a moodier watercolor of life in a Southern
- town in the late '50s, just as the civil rights movement was
- gathering steam. In a medium that is usually more comfortable
- with the here and now, the timely issue and the hip wisecrack,
- three of the most ambitious shows of the new season are harking
- back to the past.
- </p>
- <p> Period pieces have never been a TV favorite. True, the
- western was once a network staple (and the genre has made a
- modest comeback recently, with such shows as Paradise and The
- Young Riders), and a small handful of hit series have been set
- in the past. But these shows were mainly interested in using the
- past for its symbolic or mythic value. The Minnesota frontier
- of Little House on the Prairie and the Depression-era South of
- The Waltons were essentially the same locale: an all-American
- Everyplace, where ethical issues and family dramas could be
- worked out against an idealized backdrop, far from the messy
- moral ambiguities of modern days.
- </p>
- <p> In the new crop of nostalgia shows, by contrast, a
- particular period is re-created precisely and dwelt on lovingly.
- In a sense, these shows are about the past--a past, moreover,
- that most viewers personally remember (or, thanks to the media,
- think they remember). And though none of these eras are
- portrayed as totally idyllic, they give off a warm, comforting
- glow. Their problems seem more manageable when viewed in
- hindsight. We know how everything came out.
- </p>
- <p> The sudden popularity of prime-time nostalgia is hardly
- surprising. Oldies radio stations are thriving; TV tributes to
- Ed Sullivan and All in the Family drew blockbuster ratings last
- season; Natalie Cole hit the top of the charts by bringing back
- her father's old songs. For David Jacobs, an executive producer
- of Homefront, the current fascination with the past is
- reminiscent of fin-de-siecle Europe a hundred years ago. "The
- last decades of a century are always reflective," he says. But
- Jacobs and his fellow TV producers insist there is more
- involved. Says Gary David Goldberg, who has based Brooklyn
- Bridge on his own childhood: "If the show is an exercise in
- nostalgia, it will be a brief exercise. The truth of the family
- has to come out."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, Goldberg's autobiographical series cuts closer to
- the bone than any of his previous sitcoms (which include most
- notably the long-running Family Ties). Bridge focuses on
- 14-year-old Alan (Danny Gerard) and his extended Jewish family,
- headed by a nosy, domineering grandmother (Marion Ross). Filmed
- with more attention to detail than most sitcoms (and with no
- studio audience), the show revels in '50s icons, from mah-jongg
- games to Brooklyn Dodgers memorabilia to the inevitable
- rock-'n'-roll oldies on the sound track.
- </p>
- <p> At its best, which is very good, Brooklyn Bridge rings
- with fresh and funny childhood observations. Alan's grandmother
- forces him to choose his dinner from frozen foods in the
- refrigerator even before he finishes breakfast. A school hood,
- taunting Alan and his friends in the rest room, demands to know
- if they are Jewish. "Not if you don't want us to be," one
- replies. Sentimentality gets the upper hand only in the show's
- "big" scenes: when Alan's nine-year-old brother (Matthew Siegel)
- meets his Dodger hero, Gil Hodges, or when Alan has to choose
- between a popular club and his dorky best friend. Grandma, the
- Robert Young of this series, is a bit too refined and
- understanding, and Alan is too much of an obvious winner. Leave
- it to a TV writer to remember himself as the cutest kid in
- class.
- </p>
- <p> The memories are equally warm and fuzzy in Homefront. In
- this postwar soap opera set in a small Ohio town, mothers greet
- their returning soldier boys with "your favorite pie" and chide
- their kids with quaint cliches like, "You move as slow as
- molasses in January." Not that there isn't trouble in this
- paradise. One veteran comes home to a sweetheart who has fallen
- in love with his brother. There are stirrings of race and sex
- discrimination as well. A black veteran applies for work at the
- local factory but is told the only opening is for a janitor. A
- widowed mother is fired from her factory job to make room for
- the returning vets. Her boss's advice: "Find yourself a
- husband."
- </p>
- <p> Homefront is a slick, satisfyingly busy soap opera, which
- suffers mainly by comparison with the show it has replaced on
- ABC's schedule: thirtysomething. Next to that complex and very
- contemporary drama, Homefront seems a throwback in more ways
- than one. The characters are drawn in primary colors and the
- confrontations hyped for melodramatic effect. This is the sort
- of TV drama where a girl puts on her wedding dress, races to the
- train station to greet her returning beau and meets--who else?--the war bride he has brought home but never told her about.
- </p>
- <p> Where Homefront is loud and brassy, I'll Fly Away is quiet
- and relentlessly sober. Sam Waterston, with his somber mien and
- drooping shoulders, plays Forrest Bedford, a liberal-minded
- prosecutor in a small Southern town who is raising three
- children on his own. (His wife has been hospitalized after a
- nervous breakdown; Forrest, meanwhile, is growing friendly with
- a rival lawyer, played by Kathryn Harrold.) The family has just
- hired a new maid, Lily (Regina Taylor), who becomes the focus
- for an exploration of changing race relations at a crucial
- historical time.
- </p>
- <p> The echoes of To Kill a Mockingbird and The Member of the
- Wedding are hard to miss, and the show's two-hour pilot moves
- as slowly as, well, molasses in January. Yet producers Joshua
- Brand and John Falsey (St. Elsewhere, Northern Exposure) have
- created a drama of rich texture, few tricks and much truth. The
- racial issues are sketched in deft, understated strokes, from
- the way Lily quietly eats her dinner separately from the family
- she has just served to her six-year-old charge's innocent
- questions after a bus ride ("How come me and you had to change
- our seats?").
- </p>
- <p> I'll Fly Away rises above mere nostalgia, but it doesn't
- avoid romanticizing the past. The Bedford children are a bit too
- precocious in racial matters (15-year-old Nathaniel is bold
- enough to visit a black juke joint to listen to the music) and
- Lily too poetically noble. The town's first racial protest,
- moreover, is a sit-in that might have been a model for Gandhi.
- To protest the verdict in a case that Forrest has prosecuted,
- demonstrators gather slowly on the courthouse steps. They sit
- motionless, hushed, intense--almost holy. The way it was? Or
- the way TV would prefer to remember it?
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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