Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Breaks My Heart


We share a birthday. Andy taught me the secret to creating a great sitcom, especially one with your name on it (Seinfeld, Everybody Loves Raymond) and it has become my First Rule Of Sit-Com Success - give the other actors in the cast ALL the best lines, all the laughs. You make it about THEM and not YOU and it will work out more often than it fails. If the star gets laughs, those laughs should be incidental and come from them reacting to the people around them.

You couldn't invent a cast better than the one on the Andy Griffith Show. The whole show is a model for funny, no matter what decade it was made in. There are few thing that make me laugh more than a great Andy/Barney moment.

It's looked so simple but that was the genius of Andy Griffith. On the eve of the Forth of July lets remember his vision of a simpler time, when the power worked even during a heat wave - where life was simple and people could call their neighbors their friends. It's a beautiful dream.

If you want to see Andy at his best check out 1957s A Face In The Crowd, a spectacular drama from Elia Kazan. Andy plays Lonesome Rhodes, a fiery country boy who finds himself and his homespun charm becoming a sensation across America at the dawn of the television era. I didn't know this movie existed but the guy on the radio ranted about it while talking about Griffith's death. I figured I owned it to Andy for all the years of entertainment he gave to me to check him out when he was in his prime.




6 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

Very sad!

Mitchell Craig said...

A Face in the Crowd is the kind of movie that reminds you of the range Andy Griffith had as an actor. He also played a local crime lord in the TV movie Murder in Coweta County opposite Johnny Cash as the sheriff who seeks to bring him to justice.

Wings1295 said...

He was great. How many kids wanted a dad like Sheriff Taylor? How many only had a father-figure who was Sheriff Taylor. He will be missed.

Mike D. said...

I grew up on Andy and Andy altruisms. I watched re-runs of this show daily for years and years with my Dad...we laughed together and learned little life lessons and so on. This show meant as much to me as the time I spent with my own Dad watching it together. My Dad loves Andy and always will...I love Andy. We'll miss you Andy.

Erik Johnson Illustrator said...

I have fond memories from my childhood of The Andy Griffith Show when it ran after school on CBS, and just being mesmerized by its sense of humor and its simple, yet elegant morality plays.

Andy and Barney are easily one of the best double acts this side of Abbott and Costello.

Even an artistic genius like Drew Sturzan who immortalized the likes of Luke Skywalker, Indiana Jones and Marty McFly couldn't resist the charm of the folks from Mayberry:

http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m6lqbaoGoB1qhyb8io1_1280.jpg

Debra She Who Seeks said...

I loved his show when I was a kid. RIP Andy. Gone fishin' in Mayberry forever.