Murphy Brown: FYI

Photo: popsugar.com

As we wind up our “Work It Out” blog series, we finish with a working crew that was very close on and off the set, a television show about a television show, Murphy Brown.

Created by Diane English, the show aired on CBS in the fall of 1988 and ran for a decade. In 2018, a reboot of the original cast had a one-season run of 13 new episodes when we got to catch up on life with the characters.

Murphy Brown is about an investigative journalist, Murphy Brown (Candice Bergman), who works for the news show FYI. I can’t imagine anyone other than Bergen in the role, but English had to fight hard for her because CBS president Kim LeMasters wanted Heather Locklear to have the role.

She is a recovering alcoholic and has a quick wit. Murphy strongly advocates for the integrity of journalism, the unjustness that can be found in politics, and feminist rights. One of her well-known frustrations is that she was so hard on secretaries, they never lasted long and we saw a long string of them come and go during the ten years. Murphy would have 93 of them during the show. One of the best secretary scenes was when Marcia Wallace who played Carol on The Bob Newhart Show worked for her. Murphy finally found a secretary that she loved and then at the end of the show, Bob Newhart appeared as Dr. Hartley and begged Carol to return to work, so she did. In one episode, Murphy finds out that there is actually a support group made up of her former secretaries.

Photo: tumpik.com

Rounding out the cast was Jim Dial (Charles Kimbrough) who tends to live in the past a bit, Frank Fontana (Joe Regalbuto), Murphy’s best friend, who calls her “Murph.” He is a great reporter but is also a bit insecure. There is a running gag that the producer make him wear a toupee which he hates. Miles Silverberg (Grant Shaud) is that producer; he’s a Harvard grad and overachiever and doesn’t bond with the cast right away. Corky Sherwood (Faith Ford) is a former Miss America. She and Murphy don’t hit it off immediately, but Murphy learns to respect her during the run of the show, and they also become very close. Murphy’s other “person” is Eldin Bernecky (Robert Pastorelli). Eldin is a house painter; he worked around her house for six seasons and he gave her lots of advice and becomes like a brother to her. Then there is Phil (Pat Corley) who owns Phil’s Bar where the crew congregates. The bar is said to be a Washington DC institution and has its share of political knowledge and secrets.

We also get to know (1) Avery Brown (Colleen Dewhurst), Murphy’s mom who is a museum curator. When Dewhurst died in 1991, the producers had Murphy’s mom pass away as well. Murphy named her son Avery. (2) Bill Brown (Darren McGavin), Murphy’s dad, a newspaper publisher. He married a yoga teacher younger than Murphy. Dewhurst won two Emmys for her appearances on this show, and McGavin was nominated in 1990. (3) Audrey Cohen (Jane Leeves) is Miles’ girlfriend for seasons 2-5, but their relationship ended when she took the role of Daphne on Frasier.

Photo: muckrack.com

In 1991, Murphy became pregnant. The father is her on-again, off-again ex-husband. He does not want to get tied down raising a baby, so Murphy becomes a single parent. One fun scene was Murphy’s baby shower which included several famous guests including Katie Couric, Joan Lunden, Paula Zahn, Mary Alice Williams, and Faith Daniels, all well-known news journalists. Baby Avery was played by Haley Joel Osment. Osment would grow up to play roles in more than 100 movies and television series including Forest Gump, The Sixth Sense, and Thunder Alley where he played Harry Turner.

In the revival, Murphy comes out of retirement to go on the air for a show called “Murphy in the Morning.” She brings back her colleagues Frank and Corky and has Miles produce it. Jim meets them once in a while but chooses to stay in retirement. Pat Patel (Nik Dodani) is their social media manager. Murphy’s son Avery (Jake McDorman), who was a baby when the show ended, has his own news show that competes with his mom but the two of them are very close. Murphy is a die-hard liberal and her son is much more conservative. Phil’s bar is still the place to hang out, but it is now run by Phil’s sister Phyllis (Tyne Daly).

Mother and son don’t see eye to eye often. Photo: variety.com

The original show was loved by critics from the beginning, but it took longer to establish an audience. In the third season, it became a top-ten hit and was number three the next year. The show was nominated for 62 Emmys and won 18. After Bergen won five, she declined to be nominated any longer.

By the ninth season, ratings were declining. Shaud left the show and Lily Tomlin took over his role as executive producer Kay Carter-Shepley. For the last season, Murphy is diagnosed with breast cancer. Bergen was presented with an award from the American Cancer Society because there was a 30% increase in the number of women getting mammograms.

Photo: cbsnews.com

Unfortunately, you cannot buy the DVD set to watch. I read that the first season did not sell as well as expected, so they stopped releasing them. However, the music used in the series seems to be the primary reason. The show used a lot of Motown classics that resulted in astronomical licensing fees for every episode and costs were prohibitive for DVDs.

Although this was a well-written show, the then-current political references do date it a bit, but then again, that was part of the show’s mission, so it’s hard to have it both ways. While I appreciate this show, if I’m going to watch a series about a group of coworkers, I would probably gravitate to The Mary Tyler Moore Show or M*A*S*H but Murphy Brown would definitely be in my top ten work shows.

“Mad About You” . . . And Them

Photo: today.com

For our blog series this month, we are looking at some of our favorite duos from the eighties and nineties in “Duos to Love.” Today we will meet Paul and Jamie Buchman and their daughter Mabel. Yep, it’s Mad About You. It’s not about you, it’s about them, but I am mad about you too—very thankful you are on this journey with me learning about the golden, and sometimes tarnished, age of television.

In 1992, NBC aired Mad About You. The series was about newlyweds Paul (Paul Reiser) and Jamie (Helen Hunt) Buchman, He was a documentary filmmaker and she worked in public relations. They lived in Greenwich Village for seven years until they were canceled. Both Teri Hatcher and Valerie Bertinelli were considered for the role of Jamie. It’s hard to imagine anyone but Helen in the role. I think the critics agreed; Hunt was nominated for six Emmy Awards for Best Actress in a Comedy Series. In 1993, she lost to Roseanne Arnold for Roseanne; in 1994 and 1995, she lost to Candice Bergen for Murphy Brown; in 1996 and 1997 and 1998 she won. Overall, the show won thirty-four nominations, with twelve wins.

Photo: decider.com

For seasons one through six, the two top stars received $250,000 per episode but in season seven they got a nice raise, landing $1,000,000 per episode.

Before Mabel (Alyssa and Justin Baric) came along, their “baby” was Murray their dog. Paul met Jamie while he was on a walk with Murray. They meet at a newsstand when they are both looking for The New York Times. In real life, the two stars met because Hunt was sharing a house with a good friend of Paul’s wife, Paula. After reading Reiser’s pilot, Hunt changed her mind about concentrating on her film career and wanted the role.

When Reiser pitched the idea to NBC he said it was about the life of a couple in their private moments. He compared it to a couple going to a party but this show was more about what happens when they leave the party and it’s just the two of them in the car talking on the way home. Reiser also compared it to the successful thirtysomething but “shorter and funnier.”

Carol Burnett Photo: deadline.com

The rest of the cast included Lisa Semple (Anne Ramsay), Jamie’s older sister; Fran Devanow (Lelia Kenzle), Jamie’s best friend; Ira Buchman (John Pankow), Paul’s cousin and friend; Sylvia Buchman (Cynthia Harris), Paul’s mother-in-law who is not in the running for Best Mother-in-Law according to Jamie; Burt Buchman (Louis Zorich), Paul’s father; and Dr. Mark Devanow (Richard Kind), Fran’s ex-husband who is a bit eccentric but not too odd because he wins her back as his wife during the show’s run.

There were a lot of recurring characters on this show. Several showed up more often than others: Debbie Buchman (Robin Bartlett), Paul’s sister; Dr. Joan Golfinos (Suzie Plakson), Debbie’s life partner; Nat Ostertag (Hank Azaria), the Buchmans’ dog walker; Mr. Wicker (Jerry Adler), the apartment building superintendent; Dr. Sheila Kleinman (Mo Gaffney), the Buchmans’ therapist; Maggie Conway (Judy Geeson), their neighbor; Jay Selby (Tommy Hinkley), Paul’s college friend; and Sid (George O. Petrie), Paul’s colleague.

Lisa Kudrow Photo: biography.com

However, there were also a few very famous recurring characters. Mel Brooks showed up as Paul’s uncle Phil in four shows. Cyndi Lauper was Ira’s on/off again girlfriend Marianne in five episodes. Jamie’s mom was in 15 shows but played by three different women: Carol Burnett (10), Penny Fuller (4) and Nancy Dussault (1). Another interesting recurring character was Lisa Kudrow. She was Ursula Buffay, the waitress at their favorite restaurant, Riff’s. She appeared 24 times and when Friends was created, her twin sister Phoebe was written into the show. In one episode after not seeing Ursula much, Paul asks her where she has been and she says “I’ve been hanging out with friends.”

You can imagine how huge the guest star list is for this series. Get ready for auctioneer speed and I will list some of them; just know I am leaving out a lot of famous and fun people. Here goes: We have Ed Asner, Kevin Bacon, Christie Brinkley, Garth Brooks, Sid Caesar, Tim Conway, Ellen DeGeneres, Jamie Farr, Barbara Feldon, Al Gore, Seth Green, Billy Joel, Nathan Lane, Jerry Lewis, Yoko Ono, Regis Philbin, Carl Reiner, Jerry Seinfeld, and Bruce Willis.

Paul Reiser also composed the theme song, “Final Frontier,” with Don Was. Both Andrew Gold and Anita Baker versions of the song were used during the eight-year run. Reiser also played the piano for the theme recording.

Mabel grows up. Photo: parade.com

In 2019, a twelve-episode revival series debuted. Both Reiser and Hunt returned for the sequel. The Buchmans are now empty nesters after dropping Mabel off at college. Other veterans returning included Ramsay, Pankow, Kind, Harris, Adler, Gaffney, and Carol Burnett. Abby Quinn was Mabel.

This was a popular show that was always discussed around the water cooler. It’s first year on NBC it aired Wednesday nights against In the Heat of the Night and Coach; Coach was in the top twenty. The next season it was moved to Thursdays nights and oddly was still up against In the Heat of the Night but was also on against The Simpsons. Season three found it with little competition and it was ranked eleventh place for the year. As networks do, now that it had a dedicated audience, it was moved to Tuesday nights where it dropped out of the top forty. The show remained in the Tuesday slot, still up against Roseanne but its audience returned and it crept into the top twenty again. It remained in the same spot for its final two years, one year competing with JAG and the next year against Home Improvement which was a top-ten show. I know this was a lot of detail, but I think it helps to think about how much the schedule moving can potentially hurt a show. Fans get used to a certain night and sometimes clear their schedule for that evening and when shows continue to move around, it is frustrating for everyone. Now, we can just DVR shows and it’s not such a big deal.

Photo: tvseriesfinale.com

This was a well-written show, and the producers and writers spent a lot of time on character development. It had some quirky moments and did some fun plot twists that kept it fun and fresh. Of course, both Hunt and Reiser were amazing actors and went on to great success in the movies. I did not see much about how the 2019 reboot was received by viewers. Considering the competition that the show faced as the network moved it around, it did very well for its seven years. The critics loved it and it was certainly recognized by the Emmy committee every year. I am hoping it will come to Antenna or ME TV soon and we can again spend some time with the Buchmans.