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Time Magazine - November 22, 1976
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Time Magazine (November 22, 1976) |
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The charges against them
are all trumped up, of course, but the three lovely
women could not care less. They are detectives working
undercover to investigate the strange goings-on at a
prison farm, and becoming prisoners of that institution
is the only way they can do their jobs. They are also,
however, nice girls, and their cool quickly disappears
as a matron, dressed SS style, clearly lesbian in sexual
orientation, growls: "O.K., girls, strip down to your
birthday suits." After a mandatory shower, each in turn
must open her towel and submit to the warder's
inspection as she sprays them with disinfectant. That's
only the beginning. Beatings, threats of rape and
enforced prostitution follow, not to mention an imminent
triple murder when they find out too much.
What is this? A report on the latest skin flick? A case
study on the fantasy life of a troubled adolescent?
Nope. Just a plot summary of an episode from the hottest
new television show of the season. Television? That's
right, television.
Everybody knows about the power of a great idea whose
time has come. What often gets overlooked is that the
strength of a mediocre idea whose historical moment has
arrived can be just as awesome. This is especially worth
considering in the weird realm of regularly scheduled
prime-time commercial television, that bargain basement
of American culture, where the very nature of the
environment usually precludes great notions and the
merely good ones are rare. Instead, the insipid and the
tasteless constantly push and shove, tug and haul,
rudely jockeying for position in the ratings that mean
the difference between survival and death for programs.
Financially a couple of points make the difference
between profits that are merely terrific for the network
with a bunch of flops or simply stupefying for the one
with the most hits. Here timing is everything. Whoever
guesses right when mood swing afflicts the customers
becomes TV's merchant king—for a day—while competitors
retreat to a sullen contemplation of their demographics
and a glum reshuffling of their schedules.
This year the aesthetically ridiculous, commercially
brilliant brainstorm surfing blithely atop the
Zeitgeist's seventh wave is a little number called
Charlie's Angels, starring sexy Farrah Fawcett-Majors,
sweet Jaclyn Smith and smart Kate Jackson. The series is
about delicious ladies who get into scrapes that
threaten life and virtue in the course of working as
operatives for a private detective with such a passion
for anonymity that he is never seen on camera. The show
is not just a winner but a certifiable phenomenon.
Seldom has a brand-new entry broken into Nielsen's top
ten in its first week and then stayed there, steadily
improving its position with each subsequent airing.
Generally it takes a half season at the very least for a
show to achieve these heights.
The crowd that collects around the Angels every
Wednesday night at 10 p.m. E.S.T. is truly astonishing.
According to the latest Nielsen rating figures, 59% of
all the television sets in use in the U.S. are tuned to
them. This kind of audience share is usually achieved
only by special events like the World Series. It means
that people in 23 million households choose to get their
weekly fix of girl watching, double-entendre sex jokes
and mild violence here. It is not, apparently, a show
for mental prepubescents only. Angels ranks fourth among
all programs in metropolitan areas, seventh among
college graduates, seventh among viewers with incomes
above $20,000. Most important, it ranks first with adult
viewers regardless of their station in life—which may or
may not say something about the state of adulthood in
the U.S. these days.
It certainly says something about the shrewdness with
which the American Broadcasting Co. has calculated the
mood of the moment. Traditionally the No. 3 network, ABC
has been coming on strong in the past couple of seasons.
This year it has finally taken a firm grip on the top of
the ratings, if not on the hearts and minds of
television critics and the other amateur moral
philosophers who keep outraged eyes on the tube. Happy
Days and Laverne and Shirley, its vulgarly nostalgic
sitcoms, so far this season rank first and second among
regularly scheduled programs, while Baretta, the ethnic
undercover cop, and The Bionic Woman are right up there
near Charlie's Angels among the leading action-adventure
shows.
What distinguishes all these programs is a frank and
total lack of pretense. They all seem to proceed from
the belief that a television series should not aspire to
any greater intellectual or emotional depth than the
comic books that seem to have inspired them. The
dialogue is apparently borrowed from old Batman
balloons. Brightly lit and crudely shot, the visual
style indeed reminds one of comic art at its least
sophisticated level.
Sometimes it is necessary to put the mind in neutral and
let it idle for a while. The uncampy sobriety with which
these shows offer their childlike simplicities can be
curiously refreshing, a time trip back to the simple
pleasures of trash fiction for kids. Wonder Woman, which
ABC so far runs as a recurring special rather than as a
series, is a particularly satisfying show in which Lynda
Carter plays a World War II female Superman,
lap-dissolve costume changes and all. Nevertheless,
after admiring Lynda's sexy little red, white and blue
suit and her golden lasso, one mostly feels that after
decades of painstaking research, much trial and error,
many false reports of success, the ABC gang has finally
found television's Holy Grail—the one, true least common
denominator.
All that aside, it is actually difficult not to admire
the sheer brilliance of the network's commercial
calculation, its bold strategies in positioning and
promoting its products as it scrambles for an edge in
its battles with CBS and NBC
There is no better example of ABC's business style than
Charlie's Angels, which now sells ad spots for $100,000
a minute. The idea for the show germinated a couple of
years ago in the offices of Aaron Spelling and Leonard
Goldberg, producers who specialize in action-adventure
shows (The Rookies, S.W.A.T., Starsky and Hutch) for
ABC. "Our motivation," says Goldberg, "was the fact that
action-adventure shows were dominated by inner-city
realism starring such gruff types as Colombo and Baretta.
We just thought, 'Why not inject some really stunning
beauty into the genre and see what happens?' "
What happened at first was not very much, with the
network rejecting the producers' first proposal (titled
The Alley Cats). Later, they got a go-ahead on a revised
proposal for a pilot from then ABC Vice President
Michael Eisner. Still, the notion languished on the back
burner until Fred Silverman (see box page 70) took over
last year as president of ABC Entertainment. He was
immediately attracted to the show and ordered
Spelling-Goldberg to get cracking. They made a slick
pilot, which won a place for the series on the fall
schedule.
Silverman had apparently divined a rising public
interest in seeing women more prominently featured on
TV. To be sure, NBC had spun Angie Dickinson's Police
Woman out of its Police Story series two years ago and
had done reasonably well with a show that portrayed a
woman as brave and self-reliant. Then, of course, there
was The Bionic Woman, starring Lindsay Wagner. Silverman
ordered her resurrected after she was erroneously bumped
off at the end of a special appearance on The Six
Million Dollar Man; a heart and a rather engaging spirit
coexist with the electronic circuitry under Lindsay's
lovely skin. The fact that The Bionic Woman consistently
rates in the top ten, country in which Colonel Steve
Austin, the six-million-dollar man, is rarely found, was
surely seen as a sign that there was room for more
strong women in television.
Silverman likes to claim that during his five years as
head of programming at CBS, he pioneered in giving women
more starring roles in variety and dramatic shows. (They
have always been prominent in sitcoms. Mary Tyler Moore
is a realistic girl next door. Maude a tough neurotic,
Laverne and Shirley cheerful bumblers.) But there is
nothing altruistic about this; what interests Silverman
is the "heavy viewer" of the medium. According to Ed
Bleier, executive vice president for television at
Warner Communications, such people are the ones "you
have to reach out for if you want the ratings." He
explains: "They have seen it all—the entire coastline of
California, every inch of Universal Studios. They've
seen every detective plot, every comedic pratfall. To
attract them you have to let them experience sensations
and hazards that have not been dealt with before. What
is left but the evolution of women in society?"
Shows that could at least be touted as exploring—some
would say exploiting—the new role of women may have been
inevitable. To a degree, programming follows the
headlines. When television convinced itself that youth
was in a prerevolutionary state during the late '60s,
shows like Mod Squad tried to cash in on the excitement.
When the blacks and other ethnic minorities asserted a
claim on the nation's attention. Sanford and Son was
sure to follow. Once the feminists started gaining
attention, how could a producer fail to concoct
something like Charlie's Angels?
So far, perhaps, so obvious. But no show that attempted
to follow a social trend has exploded out of the
starting block as this one has. If Angels starts a
programming trend, as most industry sources think it
will, very few imitators can expect to gain the same
instant acceptance. Much of that was obtained by close
attention to programming—sensible scheduling against the
competition and sharp promotion. In these areas even his
competitors agree that Fred Silverman is a master. Says
Mike Dann, former CBS program chief: "He is compulsive
about spots and ads. You can add 15 to 20 share points
to a show by good promotion." Silverman is no less
punctilious about the refinements of scheduling. Says
Dann: "Before I saw Charlie's Angels, I knew it could be
a big success. Pretty girls against The Blue Knight and
Quest. If it was up against Police Woman and M*A*S*H it
would not be a runaway hit."
The show also benefits from the lateness of the hour at
which it airs and by the change in the audience that
occurs around 9 p.m. Kids begin surrendering control of
the dial, and women become the dominant force in program
selection and the largest segment of the audience—60%.
How it is that in all the years this pattern has
persisted no one thought to angle a few of these
shoot-up shows toward women is one of TV's mysteries.
But Silverman, who was placed in charge of daytime
programming at CBS when he was just 25, learned at an
impressionable age to cater to the ladies. Typically,
each Angels episode makes sure at least one co-star
strips down to a bikini in the first ten minutes, the
better to keep males in a state of gape-jawed passivity
and expectation thereafter. But the show also spends a
more-than-usual amount of the weekly $300,000 budget on
things women enjoy observing—"fashions and hair styles,"
as one of its producers says.
If this be women's liberation, make the most of it.
Beyond the fact that the Angels do manage to remain
pleasant and feminine while performing roles until now
reserved for men, the show offers very little to please
a woman whose consciousness has been raised even a
degree or two by the movement. Says Journalist Judith
Coburn, a feminist: "Charlie 's Angels is one of the
most misogynist shows the networks have produced
recently. Supposedly about 'strong' women, it
perpetuates the myth most damaging to women's struggle
to gain professional equality: that women always use sex
to get what they want, even on the job." She thinks the
program is "a version of the pimp and his girls. Charlie
dispatches his streetwise girls to use their sexual
wiles on the world while he reaps the profits."
Even people connected with the show seem abashed by its
implicit sexism. In the first few episodes, Charlie
(whose face is never shown and whose voice belongs to
Actor John Forsythe) is seen disporting himself with
spectacular sex objects and cracking leering jokes. As a
pretty snow bunny bounces past him in a ski resort, he
archly informs the Angels (over the speaker phone by
which he communicates with them) that the scenery
reminds him of "the majestic shapes of Switzerland."
Later, after an accident on the slopes, he speaks of his
excellent physical therapist as another cutie slithers
past the camera. He adds that he hopes he can "rise to
the occasion." The show's new producer, Barney
Rosenzweig, thinks such jokes are "terrible." He also
claims that he will make the Angels "more involved in
the key decisions. Why should they merely follow
Charlie's instructions like a bunch of robots?"
Right on, says Farrah Fawcett-Majors, the spectacularly
maned frosted blonde who is first among equals as a sex
object, seen braless on all the shows. She has even on
occasion refused to don a bikini, not because she has an
objection to the costume, but because she felt the only
rationale for it was that they had "reached a quiet
point in the script and needed my body to liven things
up."
These are small battles that she and her co-stars can
often win. Overall it is hard to see how they can win
the war. The show is inherently sexy and therefore, by
some definitions, sexist. Says former Producer Rick
Husky: "What we're talking about is a B exploitation
movie, not even a B. We understood that we needed to
exploit the sexuality of the three girls, and that's an
obvious reason for its success." Indeed it is.
Says one TV executive: "It is S-M [sadomasochism] come
to television." Producer Goldberg chortles, "We love to
get them wet, because they look so good in clinging
clothes"—a fact long ago noted by porn producers for
whom water and mud, and women struggling in same, have
long been a cliché.
What makes all this sexist nonsense just about bearable
is the basic sweetness of the actresses who play the
Angels. In background, they are not so different from
the better-established stars with whom they compete.
Though older than the Angels, Police Woman Angie
Dickinson was just another beauty-contest winner who
financed her acting lessons with a secretarial job until
Director Howard Hawks cast her as Feathers, the
dance-hall girl in his Rio Bravo. Like another Hawks
discovery, Lauren Bacall, she was very feminine but very
much a man's woman, easy to kid around with, pal around
with—and as good as a man with a gun or a deck of cards.
Those qualities have clung appealingly to Dickinson
through two decades of movie work and on her TV show,
which generally gets high marks from feminist viewers.
Neither Bionic Woman Lindsay Wagner nor Wonder Woman
Lynda Carter has, obviously, the mature appeal of an
Angie Dickinson. But Los Angeles-born Wagner, who did a
couple of low-budget features (notably Paper Chase), has
potential. The show's creator, Ken Johnson, says he
modeled her character after an ideal date he had in
mind, someone "truthful, witty and eminently
attractive," and Wagner seems to fill the bill. Says
Wagner: "I'm trying like hell not to be Wonder Woman."
Carter, 24, who is trying like hell to put that
character across, is a former swimming champion and
ballet student with the physical skills to do most of
her own stunts. She is convinced the show has value
because it "shows that women don't have to be
unattractive to be independent." She, of course, has the
hardest row to hoe—trying to humanize a cartoon
character who is located in the never-never land of
nostalgic camp.
As for the Angels, Texas-born Farrah Fawcett-Majors, 30,
is the best known of the three. Off-screen she is
married to Six-Million-Dollar Man Lee Majors and has
starred in many oft-played commercials (Mercury's
Cougar, Wella Balsam shampoo). A warm, giggly sort of
girl, she is a practicing Roman Catholic who has a
clause in her contract that allows her to leave the set
to rush home in time to make supper for her husband. She
has a sense of humor (asked once when she first realized
she was beautiful, she replied, "Just after the makeup
man got here; before that it was touch and go") and a
developing shrewdness about her own power. Her contract
specifies that she may keep any wardrobe items that
strike her fancy, and because she does, her co-stars
have the same privilege, since they are treated with
scrupulous equality.
Jaclyn Smith, 28, who plays Kelly, the most streetwise
of the Angels, is also out of Texas and commercials. She
won an audition for Angels because she was dating
Producer Husky at the casting time. On the set, she is
not considered an easy person to get to know. She lives
alone in a Beverly Hills mansion she bought largely as
an investment and tends her career and her earnings
carefully. But she also has a romantic streak. The
twelve-room mansion is a replica of Tara, and Jackie is
proud of it.
Sabrina, cast as the most intellectual of the Angels and
their unofficial leader, is played by Kate Jackson, 27,
who is the only one of the three women who had real
acting experience before the show. From Birmingham, she
studied acting at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.
Then came a four-year run in Spelling-Goldberg's The
Rookies. When that show was canceled last spring, she
was promised the lead in another series, which accounts
for her top billing on Angels. She insists that "I'd
rather share the glory of a hit than star by myself in a
flop," but observers find her the tensest and toughest
of the Angels on the set. Says an executive: "At times
Kate makes me feel like Kissinger negotiating between
the Israelis and the Arabs. She ain't easy." Says a
crewman: "She's got to be clever to make an impact on
the screen. All Farrah has to do is smile; Jackie can
just walk by in a bikini. Kate has to get to the
audience by strength of personality—a much harder role."
Angels fans are curious about whether the three beauties
can coexist on one sound stage. The answer is obvious:
they get along well because their futures depend on it.
There is some restrained competition. After Jackie began
bringing Albert, her poodle, to work each day, Kate
appeared with her Husky, Catcher, and before long Farrah
was toting a Pekingese called Pansie. When a script
called for a dog, the atmosphere on the set became so
tense that the part was finally written out.
In general, good manners come easy when each actress
counts her money. Kate gets $10,000 a show, the other
two, $5,000. With Kate's Rookies residuals and the big
commercial fees that Farrah and Jackie still collect,
the Angels' robes are lined with something like $500,000
annually.
But there is a toll. Says Kate: "I've stopped smoking
and drinking and staying out late. My love life ain't
what it used to be. I've just got to discipline myself
or the work would just kill me."
Actually, it would kill almost anyone. Like most series
performers, the Angels must put in a twelve-hour day on
the job. But because their beauty is so important to the
show, they have to rouse themselves around 5 a.m. to
give the hairdressers and makeup artists time to work
their magic. They also stay late to try on and approve
the next day's costumes. Even so, they are cosseted and
primped all day long so that in every shot their looks
err on the side of the fantastic rather than the
realistic. "We treat them as if they were American
Jewish princesses," says one crewman, "and they aren't
even Jewish."
All this leaves little scope for drama. Scenes are
staged with all the complexity of the fourth-grade class
play, and everyone is expected to say her lines
correctly first time out if possible. Says one director:
"I've printed scenes that made my stomach turn. But
extra minutes eat into profits, and unless you have an
obvious flub, you keep grinding."
It shows. But no one really cares. As a producer told an
editor when refusing permission for overtime retakes,
"Aw, what the hell, it's only television." The main
thing is that on some primitive level the show is
working. Fans mob the girls when they go into the
streets for location work. The mail runs to 18,000
pieces a week—even more after something as raunchy as
the prison show. The fact is that, for the moment
anyway, ABC has stumbled onto something big. Charlie's
Angels might be called family-style porn, a mild erotic
fantasy that appeals about equally to men and women. The
show has been launched at a moment when there is franker
discussion of sexual needs and wishes and when women, in
particular, are beginning to reveal their sexual
fantasies. Though hardly a credible treatment of these,
Charlie's Angels seems to speak to and for them.
Nobody could have calculated all that. Producer Goldberg
admits that he was already deep into production before
anyone had "a real handle on the characters. We were in
the process of searching for answers when the big
ratings hit. Now we are all afraid to tamper with
success." He adds, a little wistfully: "Maybe it's best
to leave it all amorphous."
Maybe he's right. But Fred Silverman, knowing that the
best and longest-running television shows (M*A*S*H, Mary
Tyler Moore) have been the ones with sharply defined
characters who catch at viewers' minds and offer them
something to identify with, has been pressing for shows
that are less job oriented and that give viewers an idea
of how the Angels live off-duty.
The initial results are not promising. Lately no Angels
have been tied up or stripped down, and there have been
fewer dumb sex jokes. Dullness has been increased, but
with no real gain in intelligence—and at the expense of
the antic badness that sometimes enlivened the initial
episodes.
It is possible, therefore, that the show will turn out
to be just another passing fancy and not the shape of
things to come. Or that it will merely settle into a
prosperous rut, another gimmicky private-eye show with a
following that keeps it safely anchored somewhere in the
middle of the ratings. About all that, it is too early
to speak. Right now, the last word must belong to
Producer Spelling, in whose voice can be heard
television's truest, bottom-line tones. Refusing to
argue with the show's detractors, he utters what
television people all believe is the unassailable
defense of the indefensible: "The people out there love
it, and we have the numbers to prove it." | |
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