Briga Heelan and Andrea Martin in Great News |
30 Rock is dead; long live 30
Rock. Tina Fey’s acclaimed comedy, based on her experiences as
a writer on Saturday Night Live, was one of the funniest shows
on television for much of its seven-season run. Long after its series
finale, its influence remains evident in shows like Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Fey’s recent Netflix collaboration with Robert
Carlock, and NBC’s new (and recently renewed) sitcom Great
News, which in many ways feels like the most obvious heir
apparent. It was created by 30 Rock veteran
Tracey Wigfield and features Fey and Carlock as executive producers,
and the fact that it takes place in a New Jersey news studio makes it
a workplace comedy that functions in much the same way that 30
Rock, with its eponymous setting, did.
It's Martin and Higgins who are, so far,
the main reasons to watch Great News. Their rapport and comic
timing in their scenes together are delightful. Martin applies the
same light, breezy touch that’s made her so enjoyable in recent
series such as Hulu’s Difficult
People, while Higgins manages to inject just the right amount of
pathos – Chuck’s keenly aware of his advancing age, and of the
ruthless attitude that audiences and network executives take towards
someone the moment they appear to be past their prime – into what’s
otherwise a broad, blustering role. Wigfield and her co-writers’
dialogue is predictably funny, but it takes Martin to carry some of
it over the top, such as the moment in which Katie complains of
having been kept in a gilded cage all her life and Carol dismissively
exclaims, “That was one time!” The joke’s structure is
familiar, and it’s meant to be a throwaway line, but Martin’s
offhand delivery makes it funnier than it ought to be.
John Michael Higgins and Nicole Richie |
Speaking of Wigfield, who has an
amusing recurring role on the show as the studio’s eccentric
meteorologist, her writing is generally sharp, although it’s hard
to shake the feeling that this is a show that’s somewhat hampered
by network notes about making the characters relatable and not too
bizarre. You get the sense that Great News could have really
let its proverbial freak flag fly on an outlet like Netflix or
Amazon, and early episodes (I’ve seen the first four) start to hit
similar notes: will Carol’s age and endearing unfamiliarity with
twenty-first century technology and culture lead to disaster and
cause her to give up? Spoiler alert: they will not. There’s a
noticeable shift in tone in the third and fourth episodes (30 Rock
veterans Jack Burditt and Robert Carlock share primary writing credit
for the latter), which start to channel some of the weird energy that
made 30 Rock unique and which also establish The
Breakdown as something of a constant disaster. There’s a
hilarious sight gag – in the most literal sense of that term –
involving Chuck's attempting to soldier through a newscast after
cataract surgery that represents the show’s best effort thus far to
build and maintain a narrative and comic throughline until it reaches
a satisfying (if slightly horrifying) payoff.
Beyond Martin and Higgins, the rest of
the cast is solid, but their characters are still too underdeveloped
to make much of an impression, with Heelan’s Katie being the best
example. She’s the ostensible lead, but the role is primarily a
reactive one which mostly requires her to express exasperation at
Carol or Chuck’s latest antics. There’s little of the oddball
quality that made Liz Lemon much more than a foil for the insanity
unfolding around her. Adam Campbell, who plays Katie’s boss (and,
presumably, future love interest) Greg, and Horatio Sanz as
technician Justin also haven’t fully emerged as complete
characters. Surprisingly, one piece of casting that has already paid
off is former reality-TV star Nicole Richie as Chuck’s oblivious
co-host Portia. She blithely floats past the constant chaos that
engulfs The Breakdown, yet she isn’t really portrayed as an
airheaded bimbo who’s just there to serve as an easy punchline, and
Richie seems to be consciously applying
a deadpan tone that, if used sparingly, may prove to be one of the show’s secret strengths.
The days of NBC as “Must See TV” are past, despite the network’s best efforts to revive them by bringing back older hits like Will & Grace. However, with overall creative successes such as Great News, as well as The Good Place and Superstore, it can now boast of a handful of comedies that, while not nearly up to the standard of The Office or 30 Rock or Parks & Recreation at their peaks, can nevertheless withstand some comparison with their forerunners.
a deadpan tone that, if used sparingly, may prove to be one of the show’s secret strengths.
The days of NBC as “Must See TV” are past, despite the network’s best efforts to revive them by bringing back older hits like Will & Grace. However, with overall creative successes such as Great News, as well as The Good Place and Superstore, it can now boast of a handful of comedies that, while not nearly up to the standard of The Office or 30 Rock or Parks & Recreation at their peaks, can nevertheless withstand some comparison with their forerunners.
– Michael Lueger teaches theatre classes at Northeastern University and Emerson College. He's written for WBUR's Cognoscentipage and HowlRound. He also tweets about theatre history at @theaterhistory.
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