View Full Version : "Bump Up The Lights" Article


jterry
05-15-2004, 09:48 PM
I just found this.......Thought you might enjoy it!






COVER STORY; CAROL BURNETT, BACK WITH ALL THE ANSWERS; CBS OFFERS A SPECIAL OF HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE UNSCRIPTED Q&A SPOTS THAT OPENED THE COMEDIAN'S VARIETY SHOW.; Jacqueline Cutler
Los Angeles Times 05-09-2004

Cover Story
Carol Burnett, back with all the answers
CBS offers a special of highlights from the unscripted Q&A spots that opened the comedian's variety show.

Sunday May 09, 2004
By Jacqueline Cutler, Special to The Times
Home Edition
Section TV Times, Part TV, Page 3

Decades before scripts became superfluous with the advent of reality TV, Carol Burnett and her band of comics pulled off unscripted sessions that set the tone for the longest-running comedy-variety show in television history.

"The Carol Burnett Show" opened with question-and-answer segments, and the best of those are in CBS' "The Carol Burnett Show: Let's Bump Up the Lights" Wednesday.

Before Burnett, Harvey Korman, Tim Conway, Vicki Lawrence and Lyle Waggoner performed their skits, Burnett had the house lights turned up, and the audience asked questions. Since the show went into reruns, most of those sessions have not been seen.

One of the funniest and most embarrassing moments, Burnett recalls, came "when someone asked whether or not I had a sex change, and the very next question was, 'Did you?' " She lets loose with a great laugh, and remembers another favorite.

"One woman got up, and she kind of looked like Bea Arthur on 'Maude,' and she said, 'You know, I sing.' And I said, 'Oh, you do? Come on up!' She came up on stage and she really took the stage, and I said, 'What do you want to sing?' She turned to the band and said, ' "You Made Me Love You" in the key of G.' And she was hysterical."

Burnett sang with her. "And at the end we petered out because I had a different thought on how it should end," Burnett says. "She stopped and looked at me and said, 'You screwed up.' "

For years, comedians joked with studio audiences before a show, priming them to be in the mood to laugh. When "The Carol Burnett Show" began its 11-year run in 1967, a producer asked Burnett to give it a shot. "Oh, my God. I don't think the audience will believe this is off the cuff," she says, vividly recalling her jitters.

Burnett is not sure if she was the first headliner to do this, but television authority Tim Brooks, coauthor of "The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present," is. Naturally, there were talk shows, but nothing along the lines of the star interacting with the audience, he says. "It was a very endearing and humanizing factor," Brooks says.

It was also a scary one to those on stage, Lawrence says. "I used to be petrified going out during the questions and answers because you are on your own and have to wing it."

For Waggoner, that often meant puckering up, as women wanted to buss the resident hunk. "He came out one night with a table and two chairs and a candle, and he played a romantic scene with" a woman from the audience, Burnett says.

Burnett says the special keeps with the unscripted theme: "We just talk with each other. You never know what Conway or anyone else will come up with."

Burnett does not expect this special to trump her 2001 "The Carol Burnett Show: Showstoppers," CBS' top ratings magnet in that time slot for a nonsports show in a decade. She did not want to re-mine that material.

"We had chosen the funniest ones, so doing it again would be the second funniest," she says. "This is at least more original."

"If we do half as well as that one did, I will still be totally surprised," Burnett says. "I just hope the audience has a good belly laugh or two. That's a very healing thing, and you can forget your troubles for a minute or two."

Jacqueline Cutler writes for Tribune Media Services.

"The Carol Burnett Show: Let's Bump Up the Lights" airs on Wednesday at 10 p.m. on CBS and is rated TV-G (suitable for all ages).

Cover photograph by Tony Esparza.

PHOTO: TOGETHER AGAIN: Harvey Korman, left, Tim Conway, Carol Burnett and Vicki Lawrence on stage for the "Let's Bump Up the Lights" special. "I just hope the audience has a good belly laugh or two," Burnett says.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Tony Esparza
PHOTO: (no caption)
PHOTOGRAPHER: Cover photograph by Tony Esparza.

Copyright 2004 / Los Angeles Times

jterry
05-15-2004, 09:52 PM
And yet another.............

Carol Burnett is as ready as ever with the quick answer; JOHN PETRICK; The Record (Bergen County, NJ); Hackensack; New Jersey; May 11, 2004; F08;



Carol Burnett is as ready as ever with the quick answer
JOHN PETRICK
Date: 05-11-2004, Tuesday
Section: ENTERTAINMENT
Edtion: All Editions.=.Two Star B. Two Star P. One Star B

THE CAROL BURNETT SHOW:

LET'S BUMP UP THE LIGHTS

10 p.m. Wednesday, CBS

Carol Burnett took the concept of Q&A to a whole new comedic level during her hit variety show series that ran from 1967 to 1978.

A signature of "The Carol Burnett Show" was the opening segment, in which Burnett would stand onstage before her studio audience and ask the crew to bump up the house lights so she could field questions. The spontaneous results were often as hilarious - if not more - than the scripted portions of the sketch comedy program.

And thus comes "The Carol Burnett Show: Let's Bump Up the Lights," an hour-long television special. . The show reunites the entire original cast and features never-before-seen clips from the question-and-answer segment of the program. A current-day studio audience then gets a crack at questioning Burnett and cast mates Harvey Korman, Tim Conway, Vicki Lawrence, and Lyle Waggoner.

"It was very fly by the seat of your pants," says Burnett via teleconference.

"Twelve years ago, we did a reunion where we showed a lot of the classic sketches and elaborate musical productions we did. Then a couple of years ago, we did the outtake special," she says, referring to "The Carol Burnett Showstoppers," airing in 2001 and taking in a phenomenal 29.8 million viewers. It was the most-watched special in the 2001-2002 season. "This special kind of winds up the trilogy."

Burnett says the question-and-answer segment just evolved organically during the beginning of the show's run, and it soon became a permanent fixture. "It was just a matter of fielding questions, and I started to like it and have fun because it was all ad-libbed. You never knew what was going to happen. It's improvisation, and it keeps your brain clicking."

The appeal of the show - and Burnett's over-the-top comic performances - might be attributed to her accessibility, she says. "One lady came up to me at a restaurant and said, 'I just love you because you're so common,'-" she says, bursting into laughter.

"Our comedy was never cynical. We just tried to go for the belly laughs."

Illustrations/Photos: PHOTO - CAROL BURNETT
Keywords: TELEVISION
Copyright © 2004 Bergen Record Corp. All rights reserved.




Volume:
Issue:
Start Page: F08
Hits: 2


ISSN:
Date: 2004/05/11
Size: 3K
Reading Level: 7

Subject Terms:

I Love Carol Burnett!
05-16-2004, 03:32 PM
COOL :cool: Thanks for shring those articals. I wish they would tell how many viewers were attracted.

Penny Lane
05-17-2004, 07:16 PM
Carol is just too darn cool! What a class act she is!:) :cool: