"The Mary Tyler Moore Show" came around about the time I could actually tell the difference between a great television show and a bad one. Smack in the middle of CBS' Saturday night block of the best shows ever telecast together in one single night, MTM, in its own quiet way, raised television comedy writing to a level that has never been achieved since. Forget "Seinfeld" and "Cheers" and "The Office." This was the pinnacle of it all and will never be topped again.
Although I personally try. Because this show has stayed with me so deeply that it cuts into my own work. There are many times when I am working on something with my writing partner and he will chirp "You can't do that line. It was on Mary." Or I will resort to what I call a Ted Baxter moment. You know, somebody says a line about something being stupid and in walks Ted. Big laugh. Ha ha. Then I hear it all over again.
"That's what they would do on Mary."
I usually take out the reference, but now wonder what's so bad about that. Is using "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" as your writing textbook such a negative? Especially these days when one lousy sitcom is a direct and unfortunate copy of another lousy sitcom.
Okay, maybe I have gone too far with my reliance on the MTM world. Actually, I started doing that at a much younger age. Apparently, imitation and borderline plagarism has no age restrictions. I'll splain....and, yes, there I am copying a line from another great comedy.
When I was going to Fordham University in the Bronx, I hung out at the college radio station WFUV which has been previously heralded in this blog. I didn't really have a focus or a concentration there. I did a little celebrity interviewing. I tried baseball play by play. I did some on-air news reporting. None of it provided a solid niche. Some of it I was downright awful at. I was a little lost. I needed something I could take my own personal pride in. And I hit on an idea that was perfect for me.
A radio version of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show."
Well, not really a direct copy. But so many elements of "Diploma City" were lifted from the MTM show that I realize there's a very fine line of difference between heist and robbery. I created characters and locations very similar, but placed them as college students in a Philadelphia college. Character names were derived from the writing staff of the MTM Show. There was a male version of Rhoda and a female version of Lou Grant. I had a girl Murray and a resident advisor like Phyllis. The only non-gender switch was in the Ted Baxter character. My version was named Milton Harper and the buffoon transferred intact. I even mimicked the format of the MTM show. Scenes switched from the dorm to the newspaper office back to the dorm and then maybe to the local college hangout. If anybody from MTM Enterprises had cause to put on their car radio while driving through the Bronx, there would be a certain lawsuit.
Of course, while the TV show had such pros as Valerie Harper, Cloris Leachman, and Edward Asner, my casting coups rotated around my circle of friends. "Hey, you wanna be on a comedy show?" Before long, the weekly party was on. Intially, we would try to rehearse prior to taping. Eventually, we realized that rehearsal didn't really make a difference as that is reserved for professional actors of which I had none. Zip. Nada. Now, several of those cast members are still in my world to this day. A few even post comments here on this blog. They are all dear friends.
And lousy actors. Indeed, revisiting some of these tapes today, I could easily publish a book entitled "When Bad Actors Happen to Good Scripts." On second thought, perhaps that should be "When Bad Actors Happen to Mediocre Scripts." Yeah, I wasn't exactly the comedic hotshot I thought I was.
But, for three seasons of 90 episodes, we sure as hell had a lot of fun. The same merging of talent that happens over time on an ensemble comedy TV show also happened on "Diploma City." The acting and writing did improve the more we did it. And the tapings were great weekly gatherings for a great bunch of friends. Several started to date each other. If somebody in the cast started dating, we'd cast the new girlfriend or boyfriend as...the character's new girlfriend or boyfriend. Nepotism was rampant, just like in Hollywood.
There was one time where we absolutely had no episodes in the can and we needed one for the following week. But there was no studio time booked. We rolled a ton of equipment over to the dorms and actually taped it in somebody's living room. We flew by the seats of our pants. And, at least for me, it was pure exhileration.
In the first year, our little half hour show usually came in a lot shorter than that. No one paid attention to time and I had no concept of how scripts should be paced or moved along. But, eventually, I got my creative chops down and then often had trouble confining the plot and dialogue to 30 minutes. We just got so good at what we were doing that we paid little attention to time constraints, which was fine if you weren't the host of the rock music show that followed. Now, he's also a blog reader here today, but, back when, he was pretty steamed every week as he would interrupt our program continuously in some faux British accent because we were apparently delaying his audience from hearing the latest album by Foghat. Nevertheless, we pressed on undaunted.
To tighten the MTM connections even further, I hit on a 150 watt light bulb of an idea to promote our show during the station's annual fundraising marathon. What if I got somebody from the MTM Show to be on our show and make a pitch for WFUV? I called MTM's publicist in Hollywood and this was surprisingly easy to set up. Per my specific request, I was given the appropriate time and phone number so I could engage Ted Knight for the task.
We awaited the appointed day and time as if it were Christmas morning. In advance, I fashioned a scene of dialogue that would break the fourth wall between one of our cast members and Ted. Then, Ted would go into his plug for listeners to send dough to WFUV. At the hour of our reckoning, I called Ted and he was incredibly gracious. I essentially explained to him what we were doing and I recited the dialogue so he could copy it over the phone. We rolled tape and it went well. For about a minute. Suddenly, Ted's mind veered off the road as if he was trying to avoid hitting a deer with his car. He started to ramble about WFUV and Fordham, which made virtually no sense in the context of the show. Amazingly, my actor followed Ted down into Confusionville and what resulted was a hilariously funny but impromptu conversation that I ran virtually unedited. Besides, I felt I had no creative license to ask Ted Knight for a second take.
We were very proud of "Diploma City," but I now realize we could never hold a candle to the work they were doing on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show." There are comedic moments in the body of that series that could only be crafted in heaven. Witness below excerpts of perhaps the best written episode in television comedy history. Chuckles The Clown bites the dust.
God, I wish I could write like that. And, as much as I try, I can't.
Dinner last night: Turkey wrap at the Hollywood Bowl.
9 comments:
So when are the loyal readers of your blog going to hear some of Dip City? (I have heard of this show for 30 years, but, strangely never heard any clips of it.) Its time to entertain us again and since this series is winding down, how about a top 25 moments of Diploma City to replace it?
I had a lot of fun at college, but few things were more enjoyable than the weekly taping of Diploma City.
As for MM, the only hing that puzzles me is that it hasn't aged well (unlike, for example, MASH). It took the show a year or so to get the characters past the point of cliche and for people to care about them. From that time until the end of the show, this was the best-written (and acted) show on TV -- a true example of what can happen when talent meets the desire to excel.
As the female Lou Grant character, I think (the second "actor" to handle the role after the first had to abandon it, and I maneuvered Len into letting me on the show), as Kathryn, the college paper editor, I can say that I remember how much I enjoyed our off off off off off off television/Broadway effort, and even if it wasn't MTM, which I too watched religiously and admiringly, it was a seminal time for what was then a shy kid trying to find her niche in the world. That little college show made me want to write comedy for a lot of years afterwards, and still sometimes today, so Len Speaks may not have been Grant Tinker, but well, he was the Bronx version.
"The Bronx version of Grant Tinker"? Is that supposed to be a compliment?
Bronx Native (aka Deluxe Furnished)
Len, You did an amazing bit of magic to produce 90 shows of Diploma City. Your drive and love of well crafted comedies was never more evident. I do recall providing an idea for a script which you managed to cull the one good element and then developed it into a half way decent script. It is never to late for you to be "discovered."
15thavebud
15thavebud---
Did I forget to pay you for that story idea?
I'm guessing "yes."
Dip City represents some of the best times of my life. A regularly scheduled outing each week for great friends to have a great time doing the show. Good or bad (and, jeez, a lot of the early stuff was bad, bad, bad), it still feels like a remarkable achievement to have been a part of generating 90 separate and distinct shows. Lenspeaks will remember one of the highlights... being summoned to CBS Radio for a meeting because somebody there thought we had potential (or perhaps he was just nuts). We found his office empty - he'd just been fired.
Now that I'm looking at all these comments on Dip City, I am sorry I buried it in a blog entry about the MTM Show.
I am smelling a sequel in the making. Everybody's comments have uncorked the jug of memories.
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