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My So-Called Life

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The young cast of My So-Called Life.
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The young cast of My So-Called Life.

My So-Called Life was an American television teen drama created by Winnie Holzman and produced by Edward Zwick and Marshall Herskovitz that aired on ABC from August 25, 1994 to January 26, 1995. The critically acclaimed show was short-lived and ended in a cliffhanger with the expectation that it would be picked up in an additional season. Only 19 episodes were produced before it was cancelled on May 15, 1995 due both to low ratings and to the reluctance, expressed behind the scenes, of star Claire Danes to return for its second season. However, in the time that it has been off the air, the show has gained a substantial cult following which has led many to wish it had been able to go on for many more seasons, especially given the nature of the cliffhanger in the final episode. This groundbreaking series is often thought to have been "too smart for TV."

Themes

My So-Called Life brought up issues that were usually not mentioned in family series in the mid-nineties, when it was aired. These include child abuse, homophobia, teenage alcoholism, homelessness, adultery, kinky sex, same-sex parenting, censorship, and drug use, among many others. While a lot of shows would bring up these themes as a one-time issue (a "very special episode") that would be brought up as a problem at the beginning of an episode and resolved as the end, in My So-Called Life, they were just a part of the world. The very title of the show emphasizes how the perception of meaninglessness that many teenagers experience is the main theme of the series. The show depicts teenage years as difficult and confusing as opposed to a light fun-filled time of pranks and jokes, as it would be in sitcoms like Parker Lewis Can't Lose or Saved by the Bell or in movies like Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

Style and legacy

The world of My So-Called Life was devoid of last-minute miracles, of simple resolutions and instant revelations. Instead, the least surprising and least shocking thing usually happened. Jordan ignores Angela and no "final revelation" instantaneously justifies his past behavior. Graham considers cheating on Patty, but no spectacular revelation scene happens. Graham simply decides not to do it. A great and iconoclastic teacher, apparently fired due to his defiance of censorship, turned out at the end of the episode to have a very dark side. The students opposed to censorship failed to prevent it. This style inspired shows like Six Feet Under and Boston Public [[Citing sources citation needed]] which try to be realistic and non-sensationalistic in a similar way, as well as the equally short-lived (and similarly praised) Freaks and Geeks.

The interior voice-overs in My So-Called Life come, with two exceptions, from Angela's point of view. Yet they illustrate all the intertwining plots of the episode. Often, at the end of an episode, Angela will enumerate items or principles that parallel the main points of the episode. For example, at the end of episode 10, "Other People's Mothers," Angela lists the name of a few Tarot cards. For each card's name, a character of the episode is shown to illustrate the role he or she has played in the story. Graham is "The Magician" as a reference to his talent as a cook in this episode, and Patty is "Strength" because that is the quality she showed in this episode. This style is often used (albeit with less emotional subtlety) at the end of the show Scrubs. Scrubs is also driven by an interior monologue and is also realistic in that there are no medical miracles in the show (though some are presented as fantasy sequences to a humorous and satirical intent).

In contrast to its realism, the show has small elements of potential supernatural elements, such as ghosts or foreshadowing, and dreams which act as metaphors for hidden desires. A lot is left unsaid, for the viewer to interpret the meaning.

My So-Called Life was also the basis for Mein Leben & Ich, a popular German television program.

Filmmaker Cameron Crowe was a fan of the series and included a shot in his film Jerry Maguire (of Jerry and Dorothy talking on a residential street at night) that was an homage to a similarly framed shot in the pilot episode of My So Called Life. The show's creator, Winnie Holzman, was also invited to appear in the film. She is one of the support-group women sitting in the living room during the "You had me at hello." scene near the end of the film.

Characters

My So-Called Life had an unusually large and diverse cast of characters for a family-themed series. Most characters presented an expected archetypal aspect and a hidden unexpected side to their personality.

Production

Preparation

Winnie Holzman, an award winning television and stage writer, spent time at Fairfax High School in Los Angeles (through a program with the Writer's Guild in which writers could guest teach) as research for writing the show. Her brother Ernest Holzman had been working as a cinematographer with producers Zwick and Herskovitz on their hit show Thirtysomething when he introduced his sister Winnie to the producers who grudgingly agreed to look at her "spec" script for what would become the pilot of 'My So Called Life'. They were pleasantly surprised that the draft pilot was brilliant and worked with Winnie to shape the show. Ernest Holzman went on to work as Director of Photography on several episodes of 'My So Called Life'. Zwick and Herskovitz, in many ways pioneers of the type of naturalistic television characters that distinguish the shows they have produced, had worked on a series called Family in the mid-seventies and had struggled to develop a young female character that was played by Kristy McNichol on the show. They have said that in some ways, the character of Angela Chase on My So Called Life was a "spiritual descendant" of the earlier character and that the chance to portray a young woman honestly in a television drama drew them to the project.

The genesis of Angela Chase's signature voice-over was in Winnie Holzman's struggle to write. She and the producers encouraged Holzman to write in the voice of a character as if she was writing a diary. Much of what was written for this exercise was used in Angela's voice-over dialogue in the pilot for the show.

Casting

Fourteen year-old actress Alicia Silverstone was one of the actresses who read for the lead part of Angela and was very good but was deemed to be too polished and too self-possessed to effectively play a character that they wanted to project a sense of doubt and anxiety about her place in the world. A thirteen year-old Claire Danes had appeared only in one small part on the show Law & Order but on the strength of her appearance was noticed by casting directors and was brought in to read for the part of Angela Chase while she was in Los Angeles reading for a Steven Spielberg project. The producers and casting director were blown away by the depth of Claire Danes' audition and knew she was the one to bring the character of Angela to life. But they had grave concerns about having a thirteen year-old actress in the lead on an hour-long drama shot on film as her working hours would be so restrictive as to make production very challenging. To that point, most shows about young teenagers were played by actors over eighteen. The producers argued about this issue and eventually decided to take a risk and cast Danes in the lead. The limits of Danes' working hours turned out to serve the show as the producers were forced to expand the screen time of the ensemble actors, making a richer dramatic structure. The producers settled on a four act formula in which there would be at least two major scenes in which Claire Danes' character would not appear. This challenged the writers to expand and develop additional characters, like Rickie Vasquez, played by Wilson Cruz. The alienation felt by the character of Rickie only mirrored and added depth to that felt by Angela, brilliantly adding to the complexity of the show.

During the production of the show, the producers were routinely impressed with Danes' natural acting talent and some of her co-stars were intimidated by it. Danes' audition was a scene that appeared in the pilot in which Angela Chase confronts her best friend Sharon Cherski (later played by Devon Odessa) in the bathroom at school. The producers said that when Danes read the part, her face flushed red and her eyes filled with tears as she read the scene. They were impressed by the physical reaction and authenticity she was able to conjure. Danes repeated the exact reaction when she read a second time for the producers, a third time for network executives, and then when they shot it numerous times during the actual production of the pilot. They were astonished with her talent at such a young age.

Cancellation Controversy

Low Ratings

For its original run in the United States, it aired on Thursday nights at 8 p.m. against four top ten hit sitcoms -- Mad About You and Friends on NBC, as well as the popular Martin and Living Single on FOX, undoubtedly contributing to the series' low ratings.

Cancellation

The cancellation was in large part due to the show's low ratings, but it became rumored shortly before the cancellation that star Danes and her agent had contacted ABC and used what leverage was available to be sure the show would be cancelled, so that Danes could concentrate on a movie career.

These rumors strongly divided fans of the show as flame wars raged across the Internet[link], especially after Steve Joyner of Operation Life Support (the group that worked hard to save the show), as well as some cast members, confirmed the rumors -- angrily themselves, in some cases. Joyner's letter was entitled "Claire Danes Brings Death to 'Life'."[link] Fans were sharply divided between those who believed or disbelieved the reports, and those who thought it was forgiveable in any event for a teenage actress to find a way out of a long contract, with others believing it was not acceptable, especially given the secretive nature and Danes' feigned support for the movement to save the show, feeling betrayed due to having spent significant time and money to save the show when its star was secretly working against them.

In a September, 2004 edition of Entertainment Weekly, Danes admitted her role in the show's demise, while insisting that she didn't have enough power to cause the cancellation by herself. [link] It is generally accepted that ABC seriously considered bringing it back for a second season and may have even intended to -- as then-executive Ted Harbert claims -- because of its devoted fanbase, its quality, and its critical acclaim. However, the low ratings combined with Claire Danes' reluctance to return ended the series.

Novelization

Catherine Clark, author of a novelization of the series, wrote a book entitled My So-Called Life Goes On taking place after the events of the series. This cannot be considered canon, though, as Winnie Holzman in interviews has refused to speculate on what would have occurred in the second season, stating that, while various plot situations had been set up, she never wrote that season and therefore has no way of knowing where it would have gone.

Music

My So-Called Life is also the name of a song on The Ataris' album Look Forward to Failure. The song refers by name to the TV show's lead actress, Claire Danes.

External links

 


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