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TAXI
 Taxi CAST
Alex Rieger.................................................
Judd Hirsch
Bobby Wheeler (l978-1981) ........................Jeff Conaway
Louie De Palma....................................... Danny
DeVito
Elaine Nardo............................................ Marilu
Henner
Tony Banta .................................................Tony
Danza
John Burns (1978-1979)........................... Randall Carver
Latka Gravas ..........................................Andy
Kaufman
"Reverend Jim" Ignatowski (1979-1983)..........................
..........................................................Christopher
Lloyd
Simka Gravas (1981-1983) ...........................Carol Kane
PRODUCERS James
L. Brooks, Stan Daniels, Ed Weinberger, David Davis, Glen Charles,
Les Charles, Ian Praiser, Richard Sakai, Howard Gewirtz
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 111 Episodes
ABC
September 1978-October 1980
Tuesday 9:30-10:00 November 1980-January 1981 Wednesday
9:00-9:30 February 1981-June 1982 Thursday
9:30-10:00
NBC
September 1982-December 1982 Thursday
9:30-10:00 January 1983-February 1983
Saturday 9:30-10:00 March 1983-May 1983
Wednesday 9:30-10:00
June 1983-July 1983 Wednesday
10:30-11:00
U.S. Situation
Comedy
Taxi's
television history is filled with contradictions. Produced by some
of television comedy's most well-regarded talent, the show was canceled
by two different networks. Despite winning fourteen Emmy Awards
in only five seasons, the program's ratings were rock-bottom for
its final seasons. Although it thrives in syndication and is still
well-loved by many viewers, Taxi will be best remembered as the
ancestral bridge between two of the most successful sit-coms of
all time: The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Cheers.
In
the mid-1970s, MTM Productions had achieved huge success with both
popularity and critical appraisal. So it was an unexpected move
when four of the company's finest writers and producers, James L.
Brooks, Stan Daniels, David Davis, and Ed. Weinberger, jumped off
the stable ship of MTM in 1978 to form their own production company,
John Charles Walters Company. To launch their new venture, they
looked back to an idea that Brooks and Davis had previously considered
with MTM: the daily life of a New York City taxi company. From MTM
head Grant Tinker they purchased the rights to the newspaper article
that had initiated the concept and began producing this new show
at Paramount for ABC. They brought a few other MTM veterans along
for the ride, including director James Burrows and writer/producers
Glen and Les Charles.
Although
Taxi certainly bore many of the trademark signs of "quality
television" as exemplified by MTM, other changes in style and focus
distinguished this from an MTM product. After working on the middle-class
female-centered worlds of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Rhoda, and
Phyllis for years, the group at John Charles Walters wanted
to create a program focusing on blue-collar male experience. MTM
programs all had clearly defined settings, but Taxi's creators wanted
a show that was firmly rooted in a city's identity--Taxi's
situations and mood were distinctly New York. Despite MTM Productions
innovations in creating ensemble character comedy, there was always
one central star around which the ensemble revolved. In Taxi Judd
Hirsch's Alex Rieger was a main character, but his importance seemed
secondary to the centrality of the ensemble and the Sunshine Cab
Company itself. While The Mary Tyler Moore Show proudly proclaimed
that "you're going to make it on your own," the destitute drivers
of Taxi were doomed to perpetual failure; the closest any of them
came to happiness was Rieger's content acceptance of his lot in
life--to be a cabby.
Taxi
debuted on 12 September 1978, amidst a strong ABC Tuesday night
line-up. It followed Three's Company, a wildly-successful
example of the type of show MTM "quality" sit-coms reacted against.
Taxi used this strong position to end the season ninth in
the ratings and garner its first of three straight Emmys for Outstanding
Comedy Series. The show's success was due to its excellent writing,
Burrows's award-winning directing using his innovative four-camera
technique, and its largely unknown but talented cast. Danny DeVito's
Louie DePalma soon became one of the most despised men on television--possibly
the most unredeemable and worthless louse of a character ever to
reside on the small screen. Andy Kaufman's foreign mechanic Latka
Gravas provided over-the-top comedy within an ensemble emphasizing
subtle character humor. But Kaufman sometimes also brought a demonic
edge to the character, an echo of his infamous appearances on Saturday
Night Live as a macho wrestler of women and Mighty Mouse lip-syncher.
In the second season Christopher Lloyd's Reverend Jim Ignatowski
was added to the group as television's first drugged-out '60s burn-out
character. But Lloyd's Emmy-winning performance created in Jim more
than just a storehouse of fried brain cells; he established a deep,
complex humanity that moved far beyond mere caricature. The program
launched successful movie careers for DeVito and Lloyd, as well
as the fairly-notable television careers of Tony Danza and Marilu
Henner; Kaufman's controversial career would certainly have continued
had he not died of cancer in 1984.
In its third season ABC moved Taxi from beneath Three's
Company's protective wing to a more competitive Wednesday night
slot; the ratings plummeted and Taxi finished the next two years
in 53rd place. ABC canceled the show in early 1982 as part of a
larger network push away from "quality" and toward the Aaron Spelling-produced
popular fare of Dynasty and The Love Boat. HBO bid
for the show, looking for it to become the first ongoing sitcom
for the pay channel, but lost out to NBC, which scheduled the series
for the 1982-83 season. Ironically, this reunited the show's executive
producers with their former boss Tinker, who had taken over NBC.
Tinker's reign at NBC was focused, not surprisingly, on "quality"
programming which he hoped would attract viewers to the perennially
last-place network. Taxi was partnered with a very compatible show
on Thursday night--Cheers, created by Taxi veterans
Charles, Burrows, and Charles. Although this line-up featured some
of the great programs in television history--the comedies were sandwiched
by dramas Fame and Hill St. Blues--the ratings were
dreadful and Taxi finished the season in 73rd place. NBC
was willing to stick by Cheers for another chance, but felt Taxi
had run its course and canceled it at the end of the season. Had
Taxi been given another year or two, it would have been part of
one of the most successful nights on television, featuring The
Cosby Show (co-created by Taxi creator Weinberger), Family
Ties, Hill St. Blues, L.A. Law, and eventual powerhouse Cheers.
Taxi lives on in syndication, but its most significant place
in television history is as the middle generation between The
Mary Tyler Moore Show and Cheers. It served as a transition
between the star-driven middle-class character comedy of MTM programs
and the location-centered ensemble comedy inhabited by the losers
of Cheers and Taxi. Considered one of the great sit-coms
of its era, Taxi stands as a prime example of the constant
tension in television programming between standards of "quality"
and reliance on high ratings to determine success.
-Jason
Mittel
FURTHER
READING
Feuer,
Jane, Paul Kerr, and Tise Vahimagi, editors. MTM-'Quality Television.'
London: British Film Institute, 1984.
Sorensen,
Jeff. The Taxi Book. New York: St. Martin's, 1987.
Waldron,
Vince. Classic Sitcoms: A Celebration of the Best of Prime-Time
Comedy. New York: MacMillan, 1987.
See
also Brooks,
James L.; Burrows,
James; Charles,
Glen and Les; Cheers;
Comedy, Workplace
Settings; Mary
Tyler Moore Show; Weinberger,
Ed
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