Louise Lasser on the phone as Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman
Calling
for Help
On
a Land Line
by
Jamie Jobb
This
is the caption for a video that runs here
on
The Internet Archive, the library of the Internet.
(the
scene runs eight minutes, 17 seconds)
"Mary
Hartman, Mary Hartman" was a broadcasting breakthrough created
by Norman Lear and his team in the 1970s for a late night network
that snubbed the three-network rule of the time. Lear's "network"
had only one show, five nights a week for 30 minutes each night.
Lear
relied on word-of-mouth to create an audience that understood the
sensational absurdly satiric sendup of daytime soap operas. But the
show wasn't always funny as it played out slowly through each scene.
Some scenes were brutally futile fare for the tame late-night home
entertainment of this time before VCRs and HBO.
Louise
Lasser played Mary Hartman and her reputation as Woody Allen's costar
and soulmate helped build a loyal audience. But what propelled
the word-of-mouth were the ridiculous story lines.
Woeful
as Mary's plight seems as presented in this scene, it fails to
account for further woes involving her neighborhood teenaged mass
murder, slaughtered goats and chickens, getting tied up with a cop in
a Chinese laundry, overtures to open marriage and S.T.E.T., getting
the brushoff from the Lackawanda Institute and an eight-year-old
evangelist, not to mention Coach Fedders and the chicken soup!
No
... Mary's troubles are so overflowing she barely knows where to
begin seeking help. Fortunately, Mary had a land line in her kitchen
which connects her to the Help Line Lady.
Veteran
tv actor Beverly Sanders plays the Help Line Lady in this scene.
Sanders was born in Hollywood and destined for a long career as a tv
actor herself. This is a nice scene for young actors to study, if
only for clues of comic timing.
Also
note each actor is acting without another actor present in her shot,
so it's a different kind of "listening"
...
For further research, see Sanford Meisner:
http://hhsdrama.com/documents/07WebSanfordMeisneronActing.pdf
This
episode, No. 106, aired on 31 May 1976.
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