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MAUDE
 Maude CAST
Maude
Findlay........................................ Beatrice Arthur
Walter Findlay................................................
Bill Macy Carol.................................................
Adrienne Barbeau Phillip (1972-1977)...................................
Brian Morrison Phillip (1977-1978).................................
Kraig Metzinger Dr. Arthur Harmon ......................................Conrad
Blain Vivian Cavender Harmon...................... Rue McClanahan
Florida Evans (1972-1974)........................... Esther
Rolle Henry Evans (1973-1974)..............................
John Amos Chris (1973-1974).......................................
Fred Grandy Mrs. Nell Naugatuck (1974-1977)....... Hermione
Baddeley Bert Beasley (1975-1977)........................
J. Pat O'Malley Victoria Butterfield (1977-1978).............
Marlene Warfield
PRODUCERS
Norman Lear, Rod Parker, Bob Weiskopf, Bob Schiller
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 142 Episodes
CBS
September 1972-September 1974
Tuesday 8:00-8:30 September 1974-September 1975 Monday
9:00-9:30 September 1975-September 1976 Monday
9:30-10:00 September 1976-September 1977 Monday
9:00-9:30 September 1977-November 1977 Monday
9:30-10:00 December 1977-January 1978 Monday
9:00-9:30 January 1978-April 1978 Saturday
9:30-10:00
U.S. Situation
Comedy
Maude,
the socially controversial, sometimes radical sitcom featuring a
strong female lead character played by Bea Arthur, ran on CBS from
1972 to 1978. Like its predecessor All in the Family, Maude
was created by Norman Lear's Tandem Productions. Maude Findlay was
first introduced as Edith's liberal, outspoken cousin from suburban
Tucahoe, New York on an episode of All in the Family in 1972
before spinning off later that year to her own series set in upper
middle-class Tucahoe where she lived with her fourth husband, Walter
Findlay, her divorced daughter Carol, and Carol's young son Phillip.
The Findlay's also went through three housekeepers during the run
of the series, the first of whom, Florida Evans, left in 1974 to
her own spin-off, Good Times. These three shows, among others,
comprised a cadre of 1970s Norman Lear urban sitcoms that raised
social and political issues and dealt with them in a manner as yet
unexplored in television sitcom. Maude enjoyed a spot in
the top ten Nielsen ratings during its first four seasons despite
being subjected to day and/or time changes in the CBS schedule that
continued throughout the entire run of the program.
Like
many of Lear's productions, Maude was a character-centered
sitcom. Maude Findlay was opinionated like Archie Bunker, but her
politics and class position were completely different. Strong-willed,
intelligent and articulate, the liberal progressive Maude spoke
out on issues raised less openly on Lear's highly successful All
in the Family. While questions of race, class and gender politics
reverberated throughout both, certain specific issues, like menopause,
birth control and abortion were more openly confronted on Maude.
In a two-part episode that ran early in the series, the 47-year-old
Maude finds out that she's pregnant and decides, with her husband
Walter, that she would have an abortion which, had just been made
legal in New York state. Part two of the double episode also dealt
with men and birth control as Walter considers getting a vasectomy.
Thousands of viewers wrote letters in protest of the episode because
of the abortion issue. In other episodes Maude gets a face-lift,
Walter's business goes bankrupt, and he deals with the resulting
bout with depression; in yet another Walter confronts his own alcoholism.
The realism of Maude, though conforming to the constraints of the
genre, made it one of the first sitcoms to create a televisual space
where highly charged, topical issues and sometimes tragic contemporary
situations could be discussed.
Maude
represented a change in television sitcoms during the early 1970s.
Many 1960s sitcoms reflected the context and values of white middle
America, where gender and family roles were fixed and problems encountered
in the program rarely reached beyond the confines of nuclear family
relationships. Despite variations on that theme in terms of alternative
families (Family Affair and My three Sons) and an
added supernatural element (Bewitched and I Dream of Jeannie),
the context was middle to upper-middle class, mostly suburban, and
white. However, cultural upheaval in the 1960s, the political climate
of the early 1970s, shifting viewer demographics and the maturing
of television itself were responsible for a departure from the usual
fare. By the early 1970s a growing portion of the viewing audience,
baby boomers, were open to new kinds of television, having come
of age during the era of Civil Rights, Vietnam protests and various
forms of consciousness raising. However, the changing tastes of
the audience and the social climate of the early 1970s cannot by
themselves account for the rise of socially conscious television
during this period. The sitcom had also matured and producers like
Norman Lear, familiar generally with American humor and specifically
with the rules of television sitcom, decided to make television
comedy that was more socially aware. Like All in the Family,
Maude set out to explode the dominant values of the white middle-class
domestic sitcom with its traditional gender roles and non-white
stereotypes by openly engaging in debates where various political
points of view were embodied in the sitcom characters.
Such
debates were the staple of Maude throughout its six-year
run. In an early episode Maude hires Florida Evans, a black woman,
to be housekeeper. Maude goes out of her way to prove her progressive
attitude to Florida by insisting she become like one of the family.
Florida, along with Walter and Carol, points out to Maude the foolishness
of her extreme behavior. In the end Maude recognizes her underlying
condescension towards Florida who, as witty and outspoken as Maude,
retains her dignity and decides to remain as Findlay housekeeper
on her own terms. The interaction between Maude and Florida in this
episode was a comment on the issues and attitudes about race that
stemmed from the Civil Rights efforts of the 1960s. Maude's attitudes
and behavior were indicative of white liberal politics during a
time when race relations in the United States were being reconfigured.
Another reconfiguration was taking place within the arena of women's
rights. In one of the final episodes of the show, Maude is given
the opportunity to run for New York state senate and Walter refuses
to consider the possibility. He offers Maude an ultimatum, and after
mulling over her decision, she decides to let Walter leave. This
episode, like many others, reflected a feminist sensibility emerging
within the country, and can be viewed as a platform for discussions
about the changing roles of women and the difficulties they encountered
as they were faced with new challenges and more choices. Maude's
character agonized over the conflict between tradition and her own
career aspirations.
The
show's ratings began to fall after its fourth season, and by 1978
Bea Arthur announced that she would leave the show. The end of Maude
marked another shift in the domestic sitcom, away from open political
debate and towards a renewal of the safer, more traditional family-centered
sitcoms of an earlier period in television history.
-Kathryn
Fry
FURTHER
READING
Cowan, Geoffrey. See No Evil: The Backstage Battle Over Sex and
Violence on Television. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979.
Feuer,
Jane. "Genre Study and Television." In, Allen, Robert C., editor.
Channels Of Discourse: Television and Contemporary Criticism.
Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press,
1987.
Hamamoto,
Darrell Y. Nervous Laughter: Television Situation Comedy and
Liberal Democratic Ideology. New York: Praeger, 1989.
Himmelstein,
Hal. Television Myth and the American Mind. Westport, Connecticut:
Praeger, 1994.
Marc,
David. Comic Visions: Television Comedy and American Culture.
Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989.
See
also All
in the Family; Arthur,
Beatrice; Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Family
on Television; Gender
and Television; Lear,
Norman
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