Situation comedy
A sitcom or situation comedy is a genre of comedy performance originally devised for radio but today typically found on television. Sitcoms usually consist of recurring characters in a format in which there are one or more humorous story lines centred on a common environment, such as a family home or workplace.
Characteristics
Traditionally, situation comedies were largely self-contained, in that the characters themselves remained largely static and events in the sitcom resolved themselves by the conclusion of the show. One example of this is the animated situation comedy The Simpsons, where the characteristics of animation has rendered the characters unchanging in appearance forever—although the characters in the show have sometimes made knowing meta references to this (the writers have made reference to that by calling The Simpsons a "frozen-in-time" show).
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Other sitcoms, though, use greater or lesser elements of ongoing storylines: Friends, a hugely popular US sitcom of the 1990s, contains soap opera elements such as regularly resorting to an end-of-season cliffhanger, and has gradually developed the relationships of the characters. Other sitcoms have veered into social commentary. Examples of these are sitcoms created by Norman Lear (including All in the Family and Maude) in the U.S., and Johnny Speight's Till Death Us Do Part in Britain.
Related Topics:
Friends - 1990s - Soap opera - Cliffhanger - Norman Lear - All in the Family - Maude - Johnny Speight's - Till Death Us Do Part
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A common aspect of family sitcoms is that at some point in their run they introduce an addition to the family in the form of a new baby. One exception to this are the several sitcoms starring Bob Newhart, who insisted that his sitcoms not have babies or children. However while babies are thought to be cute and give adult characters opportunities to act silly, toddlers are believed to have little use in comedy, partially due to the difficulty of working with very young children, and partially because their abilities are limited to looking cute and small vocabularies. Thus most sitcom kids are aged to four or five within two years of their birth—for example Andrew Keaton on Family Ties and Chrissy Seaver on Growing Pains. Instances in which sitcoms retained the same child without such age-jumps, such as Erin Murphy as Tabitha Stephens on Bewitched and the Olsen twins as Michelle Tanner on Full House are the exception to the rule.
Related Topics:
Bob Newhart - Family Ties - Growing Pains - Erin Murphy - Bewitched - The Olsen twins - Full House
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Most contemporary situation comedies are filmed with a multicamera setup in front of a live studio audience, then edited and broadcast days or weeks later. This practice has not always been universal, however, especially prior to the 1970s when it became more common. Some comedies, such as M*A*S*H, were not filmed before an audience. (In the case of M*A*S*H, the use of multiple sets and location filming would have made this impractical.) In British sitcoms in recent years there has been a movement away from filming in front of a live audience and several, including The Office and People Like Us have dispensed with the laughter track altogether.
Related Topics:
Multicamera setup - Edited - 1970s - M*A*S*H - The Office - People Like Us
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Ensemble cast structure
Many sitcoms reuse a common mixture of character archetypes to achieve reliable comedic situations from week to week. The most common archetype appearing in sitcoms is the naive fool. Typically, this character accepts events and statements at face value, and often misunderstands situations in ways that create conflict in the plot. Examples of the naive fool character in sitcoms include:
Related Topics:
Archetype - Conflict - Plot
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- Roseanne in Roseanne
- Rose Nylund in The Golden Girls
- Gilligan in Gilligan's Island
- Coach / Woody in Cheers
- Latka Gravas in Taxi
- Steve Urkel in Family Matters
- Joey in Friends
- Father Dougal in Father Ted
- Herman Munster in The Munsters
- Walter (Radar) O'Reilly in MASH
- Kramer in Seinfeld
- Barney Fife in The Andy Griffith Show
- Mork in Mork and Mindy
- Baldrick in Blackadder
- Uncle Fester in The Addams Family
- Kelso in That 70's Show
- Chrissy Snow in Three's Company
- Tim Taylor in Home Improvement
- Niles in The Nanny
- Chandler Bing in Friends
- Professor Roy Hinkley Jr. in Gilligan's Island
- Mike Brady in The Brady Bunch
- Dr. Frasier Crane in Cheers
- Wilson in Home Improvement
- Andy Griffith in The Andy Griffith Show
- Dr. Heathcliff "Cliff" Huxtable in The Cosby Show
- Debra Barone in Everybody Loves Raymond
- Steven Hyde in That 70's Show
- The meddling or nosy neighbor
- The wisecracking curmudgeon
- The well-meaning blue collar worker
- The lovable loser (the always-second-best)
- The acerbic servant/worker
- The cutsey moppet
The Sage is another frequently-occurring archetype in sitcoms. In the standard sitcom ensemble, this character usually has either an elevated intellect, advanced age, or "outsider" experience. The Sage frequently comments wryly on the situation into which the other characters have placed themselves, and often suggests solutions to resolve the major plot conflict. Examples include:
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Other recurring archetypal characters that appear in sitcoms include:
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Plot formulas
The plot and situations for many sitcom episodes arise out of a character's lying to or otherwise deceiving the other characters. Some sitcom television series, such as Mr. Ed, Bewitched, Three's Company, and Bosom Buddies based their fundamental premise on the main character's attempt to hide the truth through a series of deceptions and "white lies".
Related Topics:
Mr. Ed - Three's Company - Bosom Buddies
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The most common comedic situations based on deception include:
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- Attempts to hide egregious mistakes or acts of weakness.
- Attempts to protect friends and family members from bad news.
- Attempts to "correct" a mistake before others find out about it.
- Attempts to hide the breaking of pacts.
- Attempts to maintain an advantage based on deception.
- Attempts to dupe someone so as to achieve an advantage.
- Attempts to return stolen property before discovery of the theft.
- One or more characters going into a foreign environment only to return to "where they belong." Frequently, sitcom writers will use this plot formula to transplant the entire cast to Hawaii, Hollywood, or Europe in later seasons. Typically, a "Hawaii" episode indicates that a particular sitcom has jumped the shark.
- A character choosing to make some fundamental change in their body, habits, job, or other component of their environment, only to return to "what feels normal."
- Characters entering contests or races.
- Characters being elevated to positions of responsibility they can't handle.
- Newcomers or strangers making one-time appearances that change the personal dynamics between the recurring characters.
- A special holiday episode, such as for Christmas or Halloween.
The majority of sitcom episodes revolve around some form of the lying/deception premises listed above. Lesser-used sitcom plot formulas include:
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | History |
| ► | Characteristics |
| ► | Specific countries of origin |
| ► | List of sitcoms |
| ► | Related topics |
| ► | Bibliography |
| ► | Further reading |
| ► | External links |
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