Hlao-roo
03-19-2009, 09:58 PM
Unlike previous comments that have been posted here and elsewhere, I'm not referring (directly) to Tina Yother's increased girth as she began wending her way through puberty.
I'm referring to the decreased role her character began to play in key scenes starting around the third season of Family Ties. Yes, this predated the arrival of even the infant version of Andy Keaton. If you watch the earlier seasons, particularly the debut season, it's striking to how many more lines Jennifer got. There would be lengthy scenes between just her and Alex. As the show progressed into the middle and latter seasons, however, her character receded to the background, and she would be reduced to occasional one-liners, or lines that existed merely for the sake of exposition or moving the plot along. It's as though, for whatever reason, Jennifer fell out of favor with the writers. I'm not quite sure why.
One can perhaps speculate that looks had something to do with it. It's at least arguable that, of all the Keaton actors, Yothers was the least telegenic. Fox and Bateman were typical teen/young adult heartthrobs, while Gross and Baxter made for a rather attractive television couple. Yothers, unfortunately for her in our society, had always been chubby -- a trait that would work against her as she approached womanhood. It's possible that the producers, consciously or not, did not want to give her as much screen time because, let's face it, many of us watch television partly as an excuse to gawk at the handsome and the beautiful.
Another possible reason is that Jennifer was, in a manner of speaking, supposed to the "normal" child of the family. While Alex and Mallory took to some of the extremes of '80s culture (political conservatism, rampant materialism) and represented different ends of the spectrum as far as academic achievement went, Jennifer was always seemed to subsist somewhere in the middle. Sure, she was a supposed tomboy in that she liked sports, but she also liked dolls and playing Cinderella. Yes, she was precocious and seemed to display a predilection for philosophy, but she was at heart a little kid (as we saw when the River Phoenix character tried to court her). She was smart and did well in school, but she wasn't the hyperdriven overachiever that Alex was. In sitcoms, at least, the "normal" characters tend to be ones that engage us to least, even as their existence helps to ground the show somewhat.
The final observation is that Tina Yothers did not seem to fulfill the promise she displayed as an actress during her early years on the show. Sure, she was just regurgitating words phonetically, but she did it convincingly, and I really think there are scenes throughout the first and second season in which she displays great poise and stage presence. Unfortunately, these elements began to disappear as she aged. Watching the fifth season, the difference in the quality of her performance is remarkable. Her line reads are stiff and wooden, and she doesn't seem to fully inhabit her character the way the other actors do. If you watch her when she's on camera but not saying anything, she tends to look lost and isolated from what's happening around her.
(On this last point, one can only speculate as to whether her abilities as an actress led to her reduced screen time, or whether it was partly the other way around. When you're not given much to do, and when you're given little to say that's meaningful, it's hard to be enthusiastic about your part.)
What do you guys think?
I'm referring to the decreased role her character began to play in key scenes starting around the third season of Family Ties. Yes, this predated the arrival of even the infant version of Andy Keaton. If you watch the earlier seasons, particularly the debut season, it's striking to how many more lines Jennifer got. There would be lengthy scenes between just her and Alex. As the show progressed into the middle and latter seasons, however, her character receded to the background, and she would be reduced to occasional one-liners, or lines that existed merely for the sake of exposition or moving the plot along. It's as though, for whatever reason, Jennifer fell out of favor with the writers. I'm not quite sure why.
One can perhaps speculate that looks had something to do with it. It's at least arguable that, of all the Keaton actors, Yothers was the least telegenic. Fox and Bateman were typical teen/young adult heartthrobs, while Gross and Baxter made for a rather attractive television couple. Yothers, unfortunately for her in our society, had always been chubby -- a trait that would work against her as she approached womanhood. It's possible that the producers, consciously or not, did not want to give her as much screen time because, let's face it, many of us watch television partly as an excuse to gawk at the handsome and the beautiful.
Another possible reason is that Jennifer was, in a manner of speaking, supposed to the "normal" child of the family. While Alex and Mallory took to some of the extremes of '80s culture (political conservatism, rampant materialism) and represented different ends of the spectrum as far as academic achievement went, Jennifer was always seemed to subsist somewhere in the middle. Sure, she was a supposed tomboy in that she liked sports, but she also liked dolls and playing Cinderella. Yes, she was precocious and seemed to display a predilection for philosophy, but she was at heart a little kid (as we saw when the River Phoenix character tried to court her). She was smart and did well in school, but she wasn't the hyperdriven overachiever that Alex was. In sitcoms, at least, the "normal" characters tend to be ones that engage us to least, even as their existence helps to ground the show somewhat.
The final observation is that Tina Yothers did not seem to fulfill the promise she displayed as an actress during her early years on the show. Sure, she was just regurgitating words phonetically, but she did it convincingly, and I really think there are scenes throughout the first and second season in which she displays great poise and stage presence. Unfortunately, these elements began to disappear as she aged. Watching the fifth season, the difference in the quality of her performance is remarkable. Her line reads are stiff and wooden, and she doesn't seem to fully inhabit her character the way the other actors do. If you watch her when she's on camera but not saying anything, she tends to look lost and isolated from what's happening around her.
(On this last point, one can only speculate as to whether her abilities as an actress led to her reduced screen time, or whether it was partly the other way around. When you're not given much to do, and when you're given little to say that's meaningful, it's hard to be enthusiastic about your part.)
What do you guys think?