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#1 |
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Butter Pie
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Join Date: Jul 03, 2001
Location: Beneath the blue suburban skies
Posts: 51,027
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Sherwood Schwartz dies - did 'Gilligan's Island'
Anita Gates, New York Times Sherwood Schwartz, who created "Gilligan's Island" and "The Brady Bunch," two of the most affectionately ridiculed and enduring television sitcoms of the 1960s and '70s, died Tuesday in Los Angeles. He was 94. His death was announced by the Archive of American Television. Mr. Schwartz weathered dismissive reviews to see his shows prosper and live on for decades in syndication. Many critics suggested that they were successful because they ran counter to the tumultuous times in which they appeared: the era of the Vietnam War and sweeping social change. Give or take a month or so, the original network run of "The Brady Bunch" coincided with two major upheavals in U.S. society. The show, about a squeaky-clean blended family in California, began in 1969, shortly after Woodstock, and ended in 1974, soon after President Richard Nixon's resignation following the Watergate scandal. Mr. Schwartz's work may have been seen as lighthearted entertainment, but some scholars of popular culture took it very seriously. David Marc and Robert J. Thompson, authors of "Prime Time, Prime Movers," in which they advance an auteur theory of television, considered Schwartz an innovator who made a "surgical strike into the national psyche." Describing the advent of "Gilligan's Island," which told the story of seven very different castaways stranded on a desert island, they wrote, "Schwartz was pioneering a dramatic matrix built upon the emerging cultural concept of the 'support group': a collection of demographically diverse characters thrown together by circumstance and forced to become an ersatz 'family' in order to survive." In a 1996 interview, Mr. Schwartz said he had always planned the series as a social statement, the message being, "It's one world, and we all have to learn to live with each other." Once or twice a year, he added, he received word of an academic paper whose author claimed to have uncovered the "real meaning" of the series, also stating that its creator probably had no idea what he was really saying. Not so. Mr. Schwartz remembered describing the idea of "Gilligan's Island" to William S. Paley, then chairman of CBS, as a microcosm. Paley, he recalled, blanched and replied, "Oh, God, I thought it was a comedy show," to which Schwartz quickly answered, "But it's a funny microcosm!" Sherwood Charles Schwartz was born in Passaic, N.J., on Nov. 4, 1916. He grew up in Brooklyn and was a premed student at New York University. After receiving his bachelor's degree, he moved to Los Angeles to attend graduate school at the University of Southern California, but the master's he earned in biological sciences was never put to use. After World War II, during which Mr. Schwartz wrote for Armed Forces Radio, he became a writer for "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet," which was then on the radio. He made the transition to television in the 1950s with the sitcom "I Married Joan" and "The Red Skelton Show," for which he became head writer. In 1961 he shared an Emmy Award with his brother, Skelton and two other writers for the show. Mr. Schwartz's survivors include his wife, Mildred; three sons, Donald, Lloyd and Ross Schwartz; and a daughter, Hope Juber. ---Thank you Mr. Schwartz for giving us these great "cheesy" sitcoms! "The Brady Bunch" and Gilligan's Island". C'mon admit it people! You love these shows! RIP Sherwood!
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Vulgarity is no substitute for wit- Lady Violet Crawley |
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Mansions, limousines & H-ween
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Not a big surprise, being 94. Still sad, though.
I saw him in person at a TVLand autograph show about 6 or 7 years ago. |
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God Bless Val
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Join Date: May 29, 2006
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"Jesus loves you and He approves this message." "I'm alive. I'm feeling good. I'm trying to live every moment as much as I can." - Valerie Harper, March 2013
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#4 |
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Member
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Join Date: Apr 07, 2006
Location: California
Posts: 3,180
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RIP Sherwood Schwartz. Re: Gilligan's Island. The show was brilliant. it was mentioned on the news how critics had ripped it, but the public loved it. That's the problem with critics sometimes. It was just a show, a very funny and entertaining one at that, and in my opinion one of the best, classic sitcoms there ever was.
One of my dad's friends, a really serious guy, a retired cop and he also did my dad's taxes--this guy was, as I said really serious and one not given to levity. He had mentioned, that, every afternoon to relax, he'd enjoy sit down and watch a rerun of GI. Now that's real balance in your life. Have serious work, and yet take time to laugh. If it's true that laughter is good for you, the guy lived a long time. I know this is not a thread specifically about Gilligan's Island, but because Sherwood Schwartz died, I thought I'd relate that story. That is one of the reasons I like sitcoms. They provide some fun and relaxation in our lives.
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"The true meaning of America, you ask? It's in a Texas rodeo, in a policeman's badge, in the sound of laughing children, in a political rally, in a newspaper...In all these things and many more, you'll find freedom. And freedom is what America means to the world. And to me." --Audie Leon Murphy June 20, 1924-- May 28, 1971 |
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Member
Forum King
Join Date: Feb 15, 2005
Posts: 133,383
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RIP Sherwood - and thanks for all the wonderful entertainment you brought us!
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