lois-lane33
This show is the great "sacred cow" of the TV entertainment business. Unlike anything that people like Bob Hope and the like did back then-it remains contemporaneous by virtue of its popularity-even today- and even though it was made years and years ago. I'm not much for sacred cows and I believe that credit should go where it is due. Fundamentally I think this show is odd. There are instances when I think the script could have been easily modified to send a better message than it did send. The lead actress is of course someone that everybody knows and probably watched even if they were born in the 1960's since the show ran in syndication until around 1980 and then basically vanished off the grid. The show vanished possibly due to the untimely death of MTM's only son-who died at his own hands in a tragic firearms accident that could have been easily prevented. You don't see any indication that this show even existed anymore even with cable packages that include many older films predating the MTM show by decades. The acting was well done but I think there were 'things' that cropped up on the show-like an episode where MR hides a job listing from her best friend and then the best friend rejects the job whole heartedly as 'crap' even though it wasn't a crap job. Such stuff would wreck most friendships because hiding a job listing is a decidedly unfriendly thing to do-even more surprising was her friends rejection of a job that was basically a sinecure as a 'crap job'-as if to say-'in your face all you artists.' Thats about as funny as a Volkswagen filled to the brim with thousands of baked beans. I found that script coy-impossibly saved by the dry wit of the character of Lou-MR's boss. Sometimes people write about how MTM got started in showbiz-doing "leggy" ads-the thing about that is the one thing you do notice about MTM is that she is skinny-and has very skinny legs. Legs that wouldn't look great in a "leggy" type of ad. That being said-I think the show enjoyed such a high level of 'connectivity' to luminaries of the era the show was filmed in- Presidents of the USA-people like Frank Sinatra-it doesn't allow space for any kind of constructive criticism of it-a show that featured a character that was frequently one of the most annoying characters to watch by way of the characters waffling way of dealing with things generally & then agreeing with anything at all type of attitude. The main character also smiled constantly. The shows best moments were when the character of Ted Baxter messed up his cue-cards on TV. Apparently MTM's real life son didn't like his mothers absorption into working on the show. I can see how a thing like that might be a real problem. It would have bothered me. I prefer the Carol Burnett Show in terms of comedy shows from that particular era. In over 20 of the MTM shows earliest episodes they never once mentioned either the Vietnam War, the NASA space program, or rock music-all things that were always in the news back then circa 1970. It begs the question-who are these people? Anyway-I think there's not much else to say about it. Bare pass only territory generally awarded excellence status.
policy134
It's not the greatest sitcom in the world but it did has it moments. It will forever be associated with having a female character that wasn't married and didn't really pursue marriage.The main story lines in the first 3 or 4 seasons was on Mary's relationships with the other 2 female characters Rhoda and Phyllis. Ed Asner said in an interview that he was a little frustrated that the workplace wasn't really featured in those years and I agree with him. The later years were the best seasons.Still, the stories all through the run were different and more fresh than most sitcoms pre 1970, and the interaction between the characters are better than most sitcoms up to that point.The reason for the feminine point of view is obvious. There were a lot of female writers on this show, more than I have ever seen before. This doesn't affect the shows quality but it is still clear that the male characters are softer than they usually were up to that point.
PrometheusTree64
It's hard for people to remember what American TV was like at the time (even for people who were alive and conscious then) in the hugely formulaic post-PETTICOAT JUNCTION era.And I've known a lot of people who today look at the first season of "MTM" where the jokes are broader and don't always quite work and the acting is a bit too "loud" and stagey, and they wonder why this show was so well-regarded, then and now --- often to the point that they can't make it thru to later seasons.I guess that's understandable. It's hard to believe very-very early episodes of "MTM" about Mary and Rhoda joining a divorce club and its strained humor was actually looser and freer and more amusing than what other sitcoms of the day had to offer. But it's true.Although the first year of the show may be only sporadically humorous, it makes up for it in that "MTM" did one of the best jobs of capturing that weird melancholy of the era --- that mood that kind of defined the '70s, and was even more intense at the very start of the decade: this sort of lost, disillusioned, bittersweet, post-60s flavor which made everybody immediately seem as if they had a "past" from the moment they appeared on screen...For anybody looking to see what it actually felt like living in the world at that particular moment in time -- at the cusp of the '60s and '70s -- it's captured vividly by such period montage sequences as the urban street scenes in MIDNIGHT COWBOY (1969) or the snow angels/ice skating sequence in LOVE STORY (1970) or the "MTM" show opening theme design from Season 1, even Mary and little Bess going shopping in a Minneapolis mall, etc...The world actually felt that way at the time. It's not just a Hollywood construct.To me, Season 1 of "MTM" is kind of a portal to 1970. I regarded it as such even as early as the late-70s (when the show was first in syndication) and it still hits me the same way whenever I see very early installments--- the look of the show and the forlorn music score... No, the comedy isn't quite as hilarious by the slick standards of sitcoms from more recent decades (or even compared to later episodes of the same show) but I still find the mood almost heart-breakingly captivating. It is so evocative of the era.As the seasons rolled on, the comedy got sharper (by the standards of the day) even though that '70s somberness was gradually mitigated as it lessened in real life.So it's a time capsule of sorts... One would think every show and movie filmed in a particular era would be, but that just isn't true. Clothes and cars from a period don't sell or convey the past to the present --- something has to be good, or at least right-minded, in order for the zeitgeist of the era in question to stick to celluloid. And "MTM" was one of those shows that did so.It was also one of the rare series then to proceed in "real time" which gave the show a life, an energy, that most didn't have, even though it didn't delve into the then-shocking, in-your-face politics that ALL IN THE FAMILY soon would.Folks who weren't around then probably aren't able to grasp how fresh this "MTM" show seemed back in 1970, given where TV was at the time. Or understand why all the terribly broad (some might even say groan-inducing) comedy directed at, and derived from, Ted Baxter during Season 1 -- which predominantly focused on his dumbness and inability to pronounce basic words -- could possibly ever have been once seen as "funny".In fact, it was, however briefly, fall-off-the-couch funny. TV in the 1960s had fervently ignored the social changes of that decade (including the questioning of establishment authority) so seeing a revered image like the silver-haired newsreader held up as a buffoon was actually considered edgy, even though that context doesn't really "read" today. (That's not revisionism, I swear. And at least the writers realized they would soon have to write to Ted's narcissism and density in a more layered, sophisticated fashion, and they quickly did so.)That says more about where the media culture was circa 1969 or 1970 than it does THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW.For all of the above reasons, Mary Richards became metaphorical for the early-to-mid 1970s, almost by accident: TV changed more between 1970 and 1975 than any other five year period in its history, in terms of content, and the television sitcom genre had literally become an agent for social change. And Mary Richards likewise grew during the seven years of the series from the quivery, vulnerable, lanky girl with the long, raven hair who let herself be gently bullied into giving up her family holiday visit at Christmas to cover for her co-workers in that 1970 episode (so wistfully forlorn for reasons hard to explain, except that it, too, captures the poignant atmosphere of the time precisely) into the almost cocky, seasoned professional who didn't pause to deliver a zinger to Ted or SueAnn when circumstances demanded it, and could grab and kiss her latest boyfriend in a public restaurant and then fluff her hair tauntingly at her voyeuristic co-workers as she sauntered out the front door.Mary had grown up with us, or at least with the television medium, during it's most significant period of progression.And then there's the actress herself, Mary Tyler Moore, whose own personal melancholia seemed to parallel that of the earlier part of that decade. Even with the same writers and co-stars, the show would never have felt the same without Moore and her intrinsic sense of haunted, detached nostalgia wrapped in winter's chill.
earlytalkie
This was my favorite show of the 1970s. I loved this series from the first time I saw it in 1970. This was a show that had it all. Humor, pathos, great scripts and great direction. The initial cast was one of the best in television history. Along with incomparable Mary we had Valerie Harper, Gavin MacLeod, Ted Knight, Ed Asner and Cloris Leachman. Each one of these performers put a unique spin on characters which were allowed to be three-dimensional and grow. After a few seasons, when several of the main characters were spun-off into their own series, new characters, such as Georgette and Sue-Ann were introduced. Geogia Engel as Georgette was sweet and adorable, and Betty White, as memorable man-trap Sue-Ann were marvelous in their parts. A true classic that bears multiple viewings.