Wednesday, August 30, 2023

The Book Club: Sitcoms Go Back to School


The "Sweathogs" from Welcome Back, Kotter.
Clockwise: Robert Hegyes, Ron Palillo,
Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs and John Travolta.


 by Michael Lyons

The store shelves have replaced that lovely plastic smell of pool floats and beach pails with spiral notebooks and pens. That season that seemed so never-ending in June is now unfurling to its inevitable conclusion with Labor Day.

Summer is ending, and it's back-to-school time. 

Many schools have already started classes this month, and all students will be back by early September. It's always sad to say goodbye to the sweet freedom of summer and return to the weekday grind of textbooks, homework, and cafeteria food.

But, take comfort in the fact that the ups and downs and highs and lows of school life are something that students have grappled with for generations, as seen in a selection of TV sitcoms that examined school and humorously illuminated the life of a student:

 


Freaks and Geeks (1999-2000)

One of the most underrated series of all time, this hour-long comedy was executive produced by Judd Apatow before his movie blockbusters like The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up, examined high school life in the early 1980s.

From its spot-on look at its setting of the early 80s (with perfect pop-culture references) to humor and poignancy highlighting everything from first crushes to trying desperately to fit in at school, Freaks and Geeks deserved better than the one-season run it got and should have, and maybe could have, found its audience.

Even though short-lived, the series did serve as a launching pad for a tremendous amount of talent, such as James Franco, Linda Cardellini, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, and Busy Philipps, as well as writer-director Paul Feig, who would later helm Bridesmaids.

 


Head of the Class (1986-1991)

This sitcom centered on a class of gifted students in an honors program at a Manhattan high school, and the history teacher, Mr. Moore (Howard Hesseman), who serves as their mentor (Hesseman left in the last season and was replaced by Billy Connolly, as Mr. MacGregor).

Somewhat of a Big Bang Theory before its time, Head of the Class examined the "real world" struggles of these more book-smart students as the show tackled issues from stereotypes to cultural barriers.

 


Welcome Back, Kotter (1975-1979)

This hit, iconic 70s sitcom is the opposite of Head of the Class.

It is based on the stand-up routine of comedian Gabe Kaplan, who stars in the lead as Gabe Kotter, a teacher who returns to his tough Brooklyn alma mater, James Buchanan High School, to teach.

His students are the next generation of "delinquents" that he once was part of: The Sweathogs. They include the leader, cocky heartthrob, Vinnie Barbarino (John Travolta in the role that launched him to stardom), Freddy "Boom Boom" Washington (Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs), the smooth-talker, Juan Epstein (Robert Hegyes), a con artist who always had a "note from his mother," and the innocent Arnold Horshack (Ron Palillo) who eagerly knew the answer to any question, even if he didn't.

This show appeared on everything from lunch boxes to board games, with sayings like "Up your nose with a rubber hose" that became a large part of the real-life school lexicon. Welcome Back, Kotter was solidly a part of the 1970s landscape.

While the series wound down in later seasons, with some cast members leaving and others looking a wee bit too mature to still be in high school, there is no denying that Welcome Back, Kotter is still one of TV's most satisfying sitcoms. 



Room 222 (1969-1974)

This "dramedy" took a different look at teachers and schools and was set in a fictional high school in Los Angeles. Room 222, is centered on understanding history teacher Pete (Lloyd Haynes), his girlfriend, Liz (Denise Nicholas), the school's kind guidance counselor, the wise, and sarcastic, principal, Seymour (Michael Constantine), and the overtly-sunny student teacher Alice (Karen Valentine).

From its folk-song-like guitar and flute opening theme to topics tackled like racial tensions and Watergate, Room 222 perfectly fits the changing and more realistic tone of television in the 1970s. 



Our Miss Brooks (1952-1956)

One of the biggest hits from TV's earliest days, the innocence of Our Miss Brooks is the other side of the spectrum from Room 222.

Eve Arden plays the titular character, a sarcastic high school English teacher, in this sitcom that began life as a radio show in 1948. The show's plots usually revolved around simpler situations, like Miss Brooks' dating life, entanglements with the curmudgeon principal (Gale Gordon), or the innocent and gawky student Walter Denton (Richard Crenna, who would later play Colonel Trautman in the Rambo films!).

However, Our Miss Brooks was groundbreaking in many ways, not only for having a female lead but also for that lead being a strong, competent character who would wind up solving challenges for others (including her male peers and the principal).

 

So, pack that lunch, complete that homework assignment, and be grateful for your teachers daily. As these sitcoms show through their humorous moments, teachers are among those who shape us into who we become, which we realize years later when school days are like these shows: part of our fond memories.

Wishing everyone a Happy Labor Day Weekend and a wonderful school year!


Looking for another book as you head back to school? Check out mine: Drawn to Greatness: Disney's Animation Renaissance, which is available at Amazon  , and signed and personalized copies are available at my website: Words From Lyons !

 

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Sorry For The Delay: Late Summer Movie Season Entries that Helped Make the Dog Days Just a Little Cooler

by Michael Lyons

 

The musical group Bananrama said it best in 1984: "It's a cruel, cruel summer."


This year, Hollywood, unfortunately, knows that too well. The summer movie season's legacy of adventure-fueled, popcorn-chomping movies held so much promise in May. Then, sadly, many of the most eagerly anticipated films of the summer underperformed. Layered on top of this was a writers' and an actors' strike. Then, everything was saved by a woman named Barbie and a man named Oppenheimer.


The past few months were rough, whether it was "franchise fatigue" or the encroaching world of streaming services, movie theatres weren't what they once were.


But could there be a late summer savior?  A movie released in the waning dog days that surprises both audiences and critics? Could be. It's happened before.


As Screen Saver has done the past several summers, what follows below is a look back at some late-summer movie entries that were true seasonal surprises:




Blade (1998)


Twenty-five years ago, an adaptation of a Marvel comic hit theaters not in early May to kick off the summer but instead at the end of August to end summer with some...bite. This tale of the title character, a half-human/half-vampire (played by Wesley Snipes) who turns out to be humanity's protector, turned out to be an action-packed, stylish surprise that spawned two sequels.


The character of Blade has remained such a favorite that a "re-boot," starring Mahershala Ali, is slated for 2025.




Clean and Sober (1988)


One year before he would utter, "I'm Batman," and change the summer movie season forever, Michael Keaton embarked on his first dramatic film, which bowed in August of 1988.


In it, he plays Daryl Poynter, a real estate agent who has found himself way over his head with his drug and alcohol addiction and winds up in a rehabilitation facility.  Keaton's performance, worthy of an Oscar nomination he never received, is raw, real, and emotional.


Clean and Sober also featured an outstanding supporting cast, including Kathy Baker, Morgan Freeman, and M. Emmet Walsh, in a completely compelling film that, unfortunately, has faded in many moviegoers' memories through the years. Celebrating its 35th anniversary this summer, Clean and Sober is most definitely worthy of a watch if you've never seen it.





Easy Money (1983)


Forty summers ago, in his first movie since his film debut with Caddyshack, Rodney Dangerfield plays Monty Capuletti, who has to agree to give up drinking and gambling to inherit his mother-in-law's fortune.


Can he do it? That's all the fun and humor in this very funny vehicle, perfect for Dangerfield's iconic, twitchy, "no respect" style.




Piranha (1978) 


In the years after Jaws soared to box-office history, filmmakers scrambled to make their own "nature attacks" horror films. Most have faded from memory, except this B-movie from director Joe Dante (his solo debut) about the titular fish gobbling up swimmers in the waters of a summer resort.


Forty-five years later, Piranha is a beloved cult classic, spawning two sequels (including one in 2010 that starred Jaws' own Richard Dreyfuss).


 

As we look back at these late summer movie surprises from years past, here's a hope that the 2023 season can follow suit, with a movie or two more to rescue the box office, before Labor Day leads us into all the promise of something new...like the fall and holiday movie season.


Hoping everyone is having a wonderful summer!



For more of my articles, podcasts and to learn more about my book, Drawn to Greatness: Disney's Animation Renaissance, head over to my websiteWords From Lyons !