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- TELEVISION, Page 55THE BEST OF 1992
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- 1. Johnny Carson's Farewell (NBC)
-
- TV's late-night king had grown tired and predictable in
- the past few years. But when his retirement from the Tonight
- show finally loomed, Carson revved himself up for a memorable
- parting. On his final show, he appeared alone onstage,
- introduced some well-selected montages of memorable Tonight
- moments and said goodbye with understated grace. But the Tonight
- episode that best summed up the Carson era came the night
- before, when Robin Williams made Johnny crack up and Bette
- Midler made him choke up: two of Carson's favorite entertainers
- paying tribute in the way he most appreciated -- by
- entertaining.
-
- 2. Prime Suspect (PBS)
-
- Helen Mirren, looking more haggard and unglamorous than
- any comparable American actress would dare, played a London
- chief investigator faced with a baffling series of murders and
- a lot of resentful male colleagues. Rare is the drama that works
- so well on two levels: as a crackling whodunit and as a finely
- tuned character study of a strong but insecure woman trying to
- prove herself in a man's world.
-
- 3. The Water Engine (TNT)
-
- Docudrama realism has become so entrenched on TV that this
- flight of paranoid fantasy -- an adaptation of David Mamet's
- play about an inventor who runs afoul of sinister capitalist
- forces -- was largely ignored or misunderstood. Too bad:
- director Steven Schachter and a terrific cast headed by William
- H. Macy created the most stylish and haunting TV movie since
- Twin Peaks.
-
- 4. Andy Kaufman: I'm from Hollywood (Shanachie Home Video)
-
- The stand-up comic and former Taxi star was TV's most
- daring put-on artist. Near the end of his career, however, his
- obsession with pro wrestling (he began by challenging women and
- wound up getting smashed to the mat by 250-lb. bruisers) seemed
- to get out of hand. This skillfully produced video is more than
- just a routine career recap. It's the startling account of a
- comic pushing the boundaries of satire and possibly of sanity.
-
- 5. Rodney King's Appeal
-
- Hour after hour, TV brought the horror of the Los Angeles
- riots to a nationwide audience. Finally, the man at the center
- of it all stepped before the cameras and nervously tried to
- restore calm: "Can we all get along?" Only a man so totally
- unsophisticated in the ways of the media could produce the
- year's most emotional TV moment.
-
- 6. The Ben Stiller Show (Fox)
-
- With In Living Color slumping and Saturday Night Live
- grappling with the loss of George Bush, Fox's new sketch comedy
- series is the place to turn for savvy media satire. Ratings are
- low and the show is uneven, but at its best (a mock documentary
- on U2's early days playing the bar mitzvah circuit; The Bride of
- Frankenstein remade as a Woody Allen film) it's hilarious.
-
- 7. Bill Clinton on MTV
-
- In a campaign waged largely on TV talk shows, the
- President-elect proved a master of the Q&A format. Nowhere was
- he more engaging or quicker on his feet than in this lively
- studio encounter. We learned his favorite painter (El Greco),
- an early Supreme Court choice (Mario Cuomo) and one reason he
- beat Bush in the debates (he practiced more).
-
- 8. Seinfeld (NBC)
-
- Four New Yorkers sitting around griping: after a couple of
- seasons, this yuppie sitcom has finally established its
- idiosyncratic, laid-back tone. Comic Seinfeld has adapted to the
- sitcom form with surprising ease, and his three co-stars --
- Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Jason Alexander and Michael Richards -- are
- spinning very happily in their own quirky orbits.
-
- 9. A Doll's House (PBS)
-
- Remember Masterpiece Theater? Sometimes it still does
- uncover a masterpiece, as in this impeccable British production
- of Ibsen's feminist classic. Stars Juliet Stevenson (as the
- subjugated housewife), Trevor Eve and Geraldine James
- illuminatingly stressed psychology over polemics.
-
- 10. The Donner Party (PBS)
-
- Ric Burns produced this harrowing account of the famous
- group of settlers who got stuck in the Sierra Nevada on the way
- to California and resorted to cannibalism in order to survive.
- The artful mix of letters, diaries and archival photos created
- more gripping drama than all the year's fact-based TV movies put
- together.
-
-
- ...AND THE WORST
-
-
- The Youth Explosion
-
- Fox's hit high school show, Beverly Hills 90210, begat a
- doleful dormful of knock-offs, all vying for the young audience.
- Melrose Place (right), The Heights, The Round Table and others
- tried to pass themselves off as hip and happening, but they
- actually represented TV at its most stale and imitative. Even
- the kids seemed to agree: ratings have been largely
- disappointing.
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