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CHINA BEACH
U.S. War Drama
 China Beach CAST
Nurse
Colleen McMurphy......................... Dana Delany Cherry
White (1988-89)............................. Nan Woods Laurette
Barber (1988)............................. Chloe Webb Karen
Charlene (K. C.) Koloski...... Marge Helgenberger Pvt. Sam
Beckett............................ Michael Boatman Dr. Dick
Richard.................................. Robert Picardo Natch
Austen (1988-89)............................... Tim Ryan Maj.
Lila Garreau................................ Concetta Tomei
Boonie Lanier .......................................Brian
Wimmer Wayloo Marie Holmes (1988-89)......... Megan Gallagher
Pvt. Frankie Bunsen................................ Nancy
Giles Dodger.......................................................
Jeff Kober Jeff Hyers (1989).....................................
Ned Vaughn Sgt. Pepper (1989-91)................................
Troy Evans Holly the Donut Dolly (1989-90)....................
Ricki Lake
PRODUCERS
John
Sacrett Young, William Broyles, Jr.
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
ABC
April 1988.................................... Tuesday 9:00-11:00
April 1988-June 1988.............. Wednesday 10:00-11:00 August
1988-September 1988. Wednesday 10:00-11:00 November 1988-March 1990....
Wednesday 10:00-11:00 April 1990.....................................
Monday 9:00-10:00 July 1990-August 1990........... Wednesday 10:00-11:00
August 1990-December 1990........ Saturday 9:00-10:00 June 1991-July
1991.................... Tuesday 10:00-11:00 July 1991......................................
Monday 9:00-11:00
Sitting at the
televisual intersection of the soap opera, medical show, and war
drama, China Beach took the pursuit of serial ensemble dramatism
to a self-conscious, provocative extreme. The program's premise
was the exploration of personal and professional entanglements among
American soldiers and civilians staffing a hospital and entertainment
company during the Vietnam War. But the show's hybridization of
filmic and televisual genres, its rhetorically complex invocation
of popular music, and its pointed modernist-cum-postmodern reflexivity,
eventually shifted the emphasis from the story to the telling. Ultimately
the series approached a convergence of televisual narrative association
with collectively shared cultural remembrance. China Beach's
ensemble, the show ultimately implied, necessarily included the
viewer inhabiting post-Vietnam America.
The program
depicted issues familiar from dark war comedies like M*A*S*H
and revisionist allegories like Apocalypse Now. Story
lines explored the corruption or ineptitude of military authority;
soldiers' inability to function in "normal" interaction; the medical
staff's necessary posture of mordant irony; or the war's sudden
curtailment of friendship or romance.
But the narration
profoundly shifted the usual priorities of such plots by focusing
on the women at the base, an emphasis fundamentally intended to
undermine vainglorious heroism and to portray war instead, through
"women's eyes," as a vast and elaborate conceit. Contemporary critics
divided between those applauding the program's feminine deflation
of war, and those who regarded the characters and their orientations
toward war as wholly stereotypical invocations of femininity. John
Leonard, writing for Ms., anticipated both camps in an early
review: on one hand he identified the show's "war-movie foxhole
principle of diversity-as-paradigm, which is to say that if you're
stuck with all these women, one must be a Madonna, another a whore,
a third, Mother Courage, and a fourth, Major Barbara." On the other
hand, he reveled in the power of such stereotypes to multiply dramatic
possibilities.
Certainly China
Beach's two crucial protagonists amounted to carefully elaborated
formulas. The camp's head nurse was the willful Colleen McMurphy,
a woman proud of her composure and careful in her moral convictions,
compassionate but capable of a scathingly condemning glance. K.C.
was the calculating madam, alluring but hard, for whom the war brought
nothing but higher profits, better contacts, and escalating entrepreneurial
opportunities. These two roles constituted an important dialectic
not primarily in character conflict, but in the orientation viewers
were asked to take at any given time. They were played by exceptional
performers whose portrayals complicated the stereotypes by importing
still other formulas. Rather than a distanced Madonna, Dana Delany's
McMurphy proved to be a passionate woman who--as a feminized, Irish
Catholic version of M*A*S*H's Hawkeye Pierce--found not mere
escape, but potential redemption in relationships. Rather than a
whore with a heart of gold, Marg Helgenberger's K.C. emerged as
chillingly objective, independent, self-isolated and unaccountable--as
formidable and unapologetic as any soap opera bitch. If McMurphy
sought to discover a sheltering and resilient humanity in the ensemble's
reciprocities, K.C.'s continual interest was the manipulation of
the ensemble's pitifully predictable foibles from without. McMurphy,
K.C., and their supporting characters merged the sentimental education
of women's melodrama, the life-and-death ethical discourse of medical
dramas, and the lurid bathos of the apocalyptic war story in an
ambitious format. Here the simultaneous development of serial plot
lines created (as on St. Elsewhere and Hill Street Blues)
an ongoing, organically changing, symbolically charged fictional
world.
Both melodramatic
sentiment and the psychic dislocation of war were conveyed not only
through juxtaposed storylines and generic recombination, but through
the show's evocative use of Vietnam-era soul, blues, and rock. China
Beach frequently used such nostalgic music to frame the show's
events as remembrances, laden with a sense of moral revisitation.
Even more ambitiously, the program consistently invoked the audiences'
feelings of nostalgic distance from the period in which the songs
originated. That separation served as an analog for the feelings
of distance which the protagonists, immersed in a war, were likely
to feel from the society producing those songs. The viewer, like
the dislocated combatant, was asked to yearn for the consolations
of everyday 1960s American civilization (an invitation which drew
on already prevalent revivals of 1960s counterculture among baby
boomers and late 1980s youth).
In its final
season, the show's convergence between the viewing audience and
the protagonists took a considerable leap. The program now followed
the characters into their post-war lives, reconstructing key events
at China Beach--and the end of the war itself--through flashbacks.
In an especially melodramatic plot, the show's narrative is controlled
by the investigative efforts of K.C.'s dispossessed baby, now a
film student whose hand-held video camera (an instrument of 1980s
culture) becomes the show's eye as she interviews her mother's acquaintances
in an attempt to find where K.C. has gone. In this season, the original
ensemble has dispersed geographically, historically, and socially.
Their separation exacerbates the multiplicity of vantages which
gestated at China Beach during the war, and places the characters,
sometimes disconcertingly and tragically, in situations which seem
approachably contemporary with the viewing audience. Screen time
became equally divided between fictive "past" and "present," making
the entire narration an uprooted historical rumination. The viewer
became implicated, not just in a Rashomon-like reconstruction of
the war, but in an equally segmented and self-conscious sense of
present American society, and its shared reflections.
Formal complication
was not confined to music or narrative. China Beach used
self-conscious, often expressionist lighting, sets, sound, and camera
movement, which could vary dramatically from subplot to subplot.
The military company's role as an entertainment unit was sometimes
exploited to set characters in ironic plays-within-the-show, or
to frame the allegorical dimension of musical performances.
For some critics,
China Beach comprised, at its moment in the history of television
production and viewership, a remarkable case of intrinsically televisual
fiction. Others, however, regarded the program's overwrought televisual
rhetoric differently. It was seen not as an exploration of the ethical
and aesthetic possibilities of one of American culture's key sites
for the fictional production of touchstone sentiments; rather, it
was a conceited diminishment of history. Richard Zoglin of Time
(a considerable forge of collective memory in its own right), accurately
perceived the show's postmodern efforts to collapse wartime tragedy
into contemporary viewers' casual nostalgia. But he seemed to think
he was indicting the show by suggesting it reflected "the way dissent
[against Vietnam] has become domesticated in America; what were
radical antiwar views in the '60s are now mainstream TV attitudes."
His assessment was accurate but not necessarily lamentable. China
Beach demonstrated the historical war's continuing ability to open
special sentiments among contemporary audiences.
Zoglin and others'
questionable worries over television's historical license were based
in the assumption that China Beach's version of the war would
remain exclusive, definitive, and unrecognized as fiction. But television,
with its multiple representations in fiction, documentary and news
programs dealing with Vietnam, clearly continues to deny that assumption.
-Michael
Saenz
FURTHER
READING
Auster, Albert. "'Reflections of the Way Life Used To Be': Tour
Of Duty, China Beach, and the Memory of the Sixties." Television
Quarterly (New York), Fall 1990.
Ballard-Reisch,
Deborah. "China Beach and Tour Of Duty: American Television
and Revisionist History of the Vietnam War." Journal of Popular
Culture (Bowling Green, Ohio), Winter 1991.
Hanson,
Cynthia A. "The Women of China Beach." Journal of Popular Film
& Television (Washington, D.C.), Winter 1990.
Leonard,
John. "Networking: A Not-So-Frank Assessment of Prime-time Women."
Ms. Magazine (New York), October 1988.
Morrison,
Mark. "China Beach Salutes the Women of Vietnam." Rolling
Stone (New York), 19 May 1988.
Rasmussen,
Karen. "China Beach and American Mythology of War." Women's
Studies In Communication (Los Angeles), Fall 1992.
Schine,
Cathleen. "TV's Women in Groups: They Work Together, They Sweat
Together, They 'Care' Together." Vogue (New York), September
1988.
Vande
Berg, Leah R. "China Beach, Prime Time War in the Postfeminist
Age: An Example of Patriarchy in a Different Voice." Western
Journal of Communication (Salt Lake City, Utah), Summer 1993.
Zoglin,
Richard. "War as Family Entertainment." Time (New York) 20
February 1989.
See
also Vietnam
on Television; War
on Television
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