ShawnHill1 said:
anotherguy said:
One thing that I used to not think about at the time but bugs me now is how some shows that were done before a live audience will stop everything for applause for a minute or more sometimes when one of the stars comes on stage. That just seems now like it's an interruption in the storyline that wastes several minutes in the show.
Married...with Children (in its later years especially) were notorious for this. David Garrison, and in one of his return appearances as Steve Rhoades, had to sit through a rather-lengthy applause and was seen on camera looking at his watch, looking kind of annoyed. Later episodes of Good Times usually had lengthy applauses for Jimmie Walker whenever he entered the scene, of course, not to mention the long applause that Esther Rolle received when she made return to the show in the first episode of season six...it lasted a maybe a good minute-plus.
Many live audience sitcoms have had this schtick.....think of how The Fonz was always greeted with applause when he made his first appearance each episode of
Happy Days. Or Kramer's entrances in earlier seasons of
Seinfeld. (I believe Michael Richards eventually asked that the audience be instructed not to do that, as he felt it threw his timing off.) In
MWC, not just applause frequently interrupted the show, but the "oohs" and catcalls and such at catty insults and other lines. You even hear Arsenio-like barking sometimes. It is annoying, and I often wonder how much of this sort of thing is spontaneous, and how much is orchestrated by coaching the audience -- methinks much more the latter.
It's a very American practice that you almost never encounter in U.K. sitcoms. Oh sure, the audience might burst into spontaneous applause whenever Mr. Humphries turned up in one of the outrageous costumes/disguises they gave him over the years in
Are You Being Served?, but you generally don't hear applause for normal entrances of everyday characters. One exception was the quirky neighbor character Sonia on
Fresh Fields, whose entrances ("It's only Sonia!") started to be anticipated and applauded, leading to much British hand-wringing over such creeping "Americanization" of their TV shows. <s>