In the fall of 1977, television viewers were clued in as to
what became of former WJM-TV news director Lou Grant (Edward Asner), a
memorable character from the Emmy Award-winning sitcom
The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
Sacked from his Minneapolis gig due to the
station’s low ratings, Lou made his way to the City of Angels, where, thanks to
his old pal Charlie Hume (Mason Adams), he was hired to be city editor of the
Los Angeles Tribune—a paper published by
the patrician Margaret Pynchon (Nancy Marchand).
After a brief period of adjustment, boob tube
fans were relieved to learn that Grant was going to make it after all.
(Yeah, I couldn’t resist.)
Lou
Grant was a critically-acclaimed dramatic series that aired on CBS-TV
from 1977 to 1982, winning not only thirteen Emmy Awards (with Outstanding Lead
Actor in a Drama Series trophies going to star Asner in 1978 and 1980) but such
prestigious recognition as a Peabody and two Humanitas Awards.
It’s been acknowledged by television scholars far
wiser than I that Lou Grant remains the only fictional character to have
leading roles on both a popular comedy and dramatic series.
Created by
Mary Tyler Moore
co-creators James L. Brooks and Allan Burns (with an assist from Gene
Reynolds),
Lou Grant earned a reputation for courageously tackling
controversial social issues weekly—essentially functioning as a modern-day
The
Defenders.
I always had a special affinity for
Lou Grant.
The series ran during the time I was in high
school, and at one time I had ambitions of going into journalism as a career—I was
the feature editor for our school paper in my junior year, and co-editor in my
senior.
It didn’t take too long for me
to realize that I lacked the necessary inquisitiveness to be a proper
journalist…but that didn’t dampen my enthusiasm for the profession.
I love good journalism (and movies and TV
shows on the subject), and those people inside my immediate social media circle
are aware that I have a bottomless reservoir of disdain for how it’s practiced
today (with much broadcast media obsessed more with ratings and stroking the
establishment than fulfilling its duty to inform the public).
The news that Shout! Factory was releasing
Lou Grant’s inaugural season to DVD
in May of this year was most welcomed in the House of Yesteryear; my memories
of the show are foggy ones (despite my devotion to it during its original airing),
and the last time I tackled reruns was when they aired on GoodLife TV (or as I
used to refer to it, “the channel where old TV shows go to die”).
That was when Comcast carried it in Savannah,
and we left The State of Chatham back in 2008.
(A cable station that’s used as many aliases as the former GoodLife—it’s
gone by The Nostalgia Channel, American Life, and its latest, Youtoo America—makes
me concerned that someone is on the run from creditors.)
The buzz for
Grant’s first season on
disc must have been tres positive, because Shout! announced that Season Two
would be around the corner in August even before Season One hit the stores.
So after judiciously shopping around for a good price for
Lou Grant: The Complete Season
(I’ve also got Season Two on pre-order), the set arrived and I spent a weekend
soaking in nostalgia (not Palmolive).
How does the show hold up?
Well,
my fondness for the series is going to color my appraisal with a generous
application of the bias crayon…but I still believe it to be one of TV’s finest
dramatic shows.
(Really…whenever you see
that putty tat at the end of the closing credits, you may rest assured you
chose wisely.)
Granted (sorry about
that), it took the program a while to find a solid footing; I discovered that in revisiting those episodes some of them activated my wince reflex.
The best example is an entry entitled “Housewarming,” which features an amazing
performance by
Rhoda’s Julie Kavner
as a battered wife.
Her heartbreaking
tale is paired with a Plot B, in which a
Tribune
reporter (played by Edward Winter, a.k.a. “Colonel Flagg” on
M*A*S*H)
is also guilty of spousal abuse, and at one point during the action makes
creepy sexual advances to fellow
Trib
employee Billie Newman (Linda Kelsey).
Billie is able to convince Kavner’s character to kick her hub to the
curb (a courageous decision, since the woman has kids to take care of and not
much experience in the work arena) but Winter’s character’s fate is that he is
assigned a story on spousal abuse.
It
really does leave a bad taste in your mouth, though I can certainly see the
side of the argument that the issue was kind of in its infancy, coming-to-light
wise.
A few other episodes I’m not too crazy about are “Hoax” (Lou and Joe Rossi
[Robert Walden] are conned by an old friend of Lou’s [Eugene Roche] into a wild
goose chase involving a missing millionaire), “Henhouse” (Lou shows his sexist
side when he feuds with the woman [Claudette Nevins] who oversees the paper’s “Lifestyle”
section), and “Scoop” (Lou is reluctant to pursue a promising lead dug up by
Billie after being burned twice by dicey stories covered by Joe).
“Scoop” allows Rossi to continue working at
the Tribune despite his two f**k-ups…and yet, later on, a college student
working as a stringer/intern in “Physical” is given the heave-ho after pulling
an inappropriate prank in a news article.
Joe really must have been a great reporter to have Lou looking out for
him (well, in the same episode we learn he’s in the running for a Pulitzer for
his reporting); my mother used to derisively refer to me as “Rossi” while I
attended high school because I was a bit obnoxious and full of myself like my
namesake.
Rossi does figure in the some of the best episodes of
Lou Grant’s premiere
season.
“Psych-Out” (the episode
features the story for which Joe gets his Pulitzer nom) finds Rossi going
undercover as a patient in an asylum to investigate questionable practices
after Lou chews him out for “phoning in” his stories.
This one nicely balances out the grimness
with a little dark humor; towards the end, when Lou and some of the other members
of the
Trib staff track down Joe’s
whereabouts he’s higher than a kite on medication…and a query is made as to
whether they can take some of it to go.
I’m also a big fan of “Poison,” in which a friend of Joe’s (Guy Boyd) has
information that a nuclear power plant in a small town is playing fast and
loose with regulations and jeopardizing the safety of not only its workers but
the townspeople as well.
Joe’s pal is
killed in a hit-and-run accident, and there’s an amazing moment when Rossi—portrayed
as a bit of an asshole despite his journalistic talents—breaks down in grief on
the phone while conversing with Lou.
(Having grown up in a one-industry town, I also identified with the
locals in “Poison” who are reticent to talk to Joe, not wanting to rock the
boat.)
Many of my favorite first season episodes feature nice guest star turns.
I really like “Judge,” which features Barnard
Hughes as the titular character—a magistrate who appears to have outlived his
usefulness on the bench (the issue is whether his erratic behavior jeopardizes
his rulings).
He jails Lou on contempt
charges, and the reaction of his co-workers once he’s sprung is uproariously
funny.
I also enjoyed “Sports”;
TDOY fave John Randolph is a veteran
sports columnist who spikes a young reporter’s (David Ackroyd) exposé on an
NCAA investigation into recruiting violations by a local college coach (Keene
Curtis).
“Spies” is a seriocomic tale of
the discovery that there’s a CIA operative working on the
Tribune undercover (a practice not uncommon on real newspapers at
that time)—only no one knows who it is.
I liked this one because character actor Michael Strong (whom I have
seen in many things, but his performance as a hood who rules a tiny burg in
The
Fugitive episode “A Clean and Quiet Town” always stands out in my mind)
plays the spook who tips Lou off as to what’s going on in the newsroom.
In addition to great writing,
Lou Grant boasted of one of TV’s
finest ensemble casts.
I knew of Mason
Adams’ old-time radio history (he was the titular hero of
Pepper Young’s Family,
and “Atom Man” on
The Adventures of Superman…but you can hear him in many other
vintage broadcasts as well [
Suspense,
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar,
etc.]) and as the pitchman for Smucker’s (every time I see him or listen to his
voice I get a craving for a PB&J) but he was pitch-perfect as the
Tribune’s managing editor.
Adams’ Hume is a solid family man, and gets
nice showcases in “Airliner” (Charlie’s daughter [Laurette Spang] is flying
back from Paris when her plane experiences trouble) and “Sect” (his son [David
Hunt Stafford] becomes a Hare Krishna).
My ClassicFlix compadre
Rick Brooks asked
me to make special mention of his favorite character, assistant city editor Art
Donovan (Jack Bannon).
I remember reading
a
TV Guide article once on Bannon,
where it was revealed that he was the son of Bea Benaderet and Jim Bannon, both
OTR veterans.
(I was very impressed by
this.)
Donovan always reminded me of a
guy I went to high school with who was quick with a wisecrack (he didn’t dress
as stylishly as Art, probably because we were still in high school).
The beauty of the Donovan character is that
although he was primarily there for comic relief, he had a human side (shown to
nice effect in “Airliner,” when he worries about the woman he’s currently
dating…though not her grotesque son, played by a no-longer cute Robbie “Cousin
Oliver” Rist) that was nicely developed in later episodes.
(I’m glad the Billie-Art romance was nipped
in the bud early on, though—that kind of weirded me out.)
There are so many wonderful moments in the episodes on this set, particularly
those involving the starchy Margaret Pynchon: I like the small talk she makes
with staff photographer Dennis “Animal” Price (Daryl Anderson) at Lou’s
get-together in “Housewarming” (Animal is clearly “herbed” up, and loving
everyone who crosses his path), and the nice bit when she gives Lou an
emotional hug after he undergoes thyroid surgery in the season closer, “Physical.”
At the center of it all is Ed Asner, who
masterfully made the Grant character a living, breathing individual; the
inaugural episode, “Cophouse,” allowed him to transition from the sitcommy
version of Lou to the more realistic Grant of this long-running series (truly
one of the best pilot episodes in TV history).
I’m counting the days, hours, minutes, and seconds before Season Two arrives in
the mailbox outside Rancho Yesteryear.