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LOU GRANT
 Lou Grant CAST
Lou Grant................................................
Edward Asner Charlie Hume ..........................................Mason
Adams Joe Rossi..............................................
Robert Walden Billie Newman McCovey.............................
Linda Kelsey Margaret Pynchon................................
Nancy Marchand Art Donovan..............................................
Jack Bannon Dennis "Animal" Price............................
Daryl Anderson National Editor (1977-1979).........................
Sidney Clute National Editor (1979-1982).....................
Emilio Delgado Foreign Editor (1977-1980)...................
Laurence Haddon Financial Editor (1978-1979)........................
Gary Pagett Adam Wilson (1978-1982)........................
Allen Williams Photo Editor (1979-1981)................................
Billy Beck Carla Mardigian (1977)..........................
Rebecca Balding Ted McCovey (1981-1982)...............................
Cliff Potts Linda (1981-1982)........................ Barbara
Jane Edelman Lance (1981-1982).....................................
Lance Guest
PRODUCERS
Allan Burns, James L. Brooks, Gene Reynolds
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 110 Episodes
CBS
September 1977-January 1978 Tuesday
10:00-11:00 January 1978-September 1982
Monday l0:00-11:00
U.S. Drama
Created
by executive producers Gene Reynolds with James L. Brooks and Allan
Burns, this series drew on the comedy character of the executive
producer of TV news in the long-running Mary Tyler Moore Show.
But it transformed that comic persona into a serious, reflective,
committed newsman at a major metropolitan newspaper.
As
he developed the concept for the series, Reynolds drew on his experience
with researching the TV series M*A*S*H. He haunted Toronto
newspaper offices to learn first?hand how they operate, how principals
interact, procedures for processing news stories, what issues trouble
professional newsgatherers, how they thrash out the daily agenda
to be distributed to the mass public. From tape-recorded interviews
came the seeds of storylines and snatches of dialogue to capture
the flavor and cadences of newspeople in action.
The
series sought weekly to explore a knotty issue facing media people
in contemporary society, focusing on how investigating and reporting
those issues impact on the layers of personalities populating a
complex newspaper publishing company. The program served as a vehicle
for dramatic reflection, analyzing sometimes bold and sometimes
tangential conflicts in business practices, government, media, and
the professions. Topics treated dramatically included gun control,
invasion of privacy, confidential sources, child abuse, Vietnamese
refugees, news reporting vs. publishing economics. Mingled with
each episode's issue was interplay of personalities, often light-hearted,
among featured characters.
Reynolds
risked undercutting issue-oriented themes by importing Ed Asner
from the long-running comedy about a flaky TV newsroom to act as
city editor of a daily newspaper. Asner not only effectively adapted
the original comedic character to the serious role of Lou Grant;
off-screen the actor spoke out increasingly about social and political
issues possibly causing some audience disaffection in its final
years.
The
series (1977?1982) received critical acclaim for exploring complicated
challenges involving media and society. It received a Peabody award
in 1978, Emmy awards in 1979 and 1980 for outstanding drama series,
plus other Emmies for writing and acting during its five years on
the air. Yet it never ended any season among the top-20 most popular
prime?time programs. First scheduled the last hour of Tuesday evenings
(10:00 P.M.), in the second and following seasons it was aired on
Mondays at that time. It enjoyed strong lead-in shows M*A*S*H
and One Day At a Time; but competing networks scheduled Monday
night football (ABC) and theatrical movies (NBC), both at mid-point
when Lou Grant came on. Scheduling was thus probably a "wash"
as a factor; audiences were perhaps deterred more by the substantive
issues explored which called for attentive involvement, unlike more
passive TV entertainment.
Lou
Grant is also significant in the history of MTM Productions as the
"bridge" program between comedies such as The Mary Tyler Moore
Show and later, more complex dramas such as Hill Street Blues.
Few independent production companies have had such visible success
in crossing lines among television genres. The transformation of
Asner's character, then, and the focus on serious social issues
pointed new directions for the company and, ultimately, for the
history of American television.
-James
Brown
FURTHER
READING
Feuer,
Jane, Paul Kerr, and Tise Vahimagi, editors. MTM-"Quality Television."
London: The British Film Institute, 1984.
Gitlin,
Todd. Inside Prime Time. New York, Pantheon, 1983.
Schatz,
Thomas. "St. Elsewhere and the Evolution of the Ensemble Series."
In Newcomb, Horace, editor. Television: The Critical View.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1987.
Schudson, Michael. "The Politics of Lou Grant." In Newcomb, Horace,
editor. Television: The Critical View. New York: Oxford University
Press, 1987.
Tinker,
Grant, and Bud Rukeyser. Tinker in Television: From General Sarnoff
to General Electric. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1994.
See also Asner, Ed;
Brooks, James
L.; Mary
Tyler Moore Show; Reynolds,
Gene; Tinker,
Grant
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