Grapevine (TV series)

Grapevine, created by David Frankel, premiered on June 15, 1992 on CBS.

Grapevine
Created by David Frankel
Starring Jonathan Penner
Lynn Clark
Steven Eckholdt
Country of origin USA
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 6
Production
Running time 30 min.
Production company(s) Paramount Network Television
Distributor CBS Television Distribution
Broadcast
Original channel CBS
Original run June 15, 1992 – July 27, 1992

1992 Series

Plot Synopsis

David owned a restaurant in Miami Beach on Ocean Drive. His girlfriend Susan worked for a cruise line. His brother Thumper was a sportscaster. The series was a 1990s take on Love, American Style in its couple-of-the-week format. Each episode presented the story of a couple, as told through short scenes interwoven with the regular characters, the couple, friends, associates talking to the camera about the couple as if speaking to an unseen interviewer. Editing allowed for jokes to be set up by one "interview" with the punch line delivered by another character, sometimes completely unrelated. Example: A husband who had sex with his estranged wife's sister says to the camera, "What we did wasn't a crime?" Quick cut to "People have been shot for less," in a medium Hispanic accent from a middle-aged City of Miami police officer first heard from earlier in the episode discussing a bizarre jewelry heist that ended with the female thief shot dead. The background music ranged from quiet jazz piano to, for outdoor scenes of relaxation and imbibing, a wailing saxophone.

Stories were contained within a half hour. Sometimes the couples stayed together, and other times they broke up.

Realism was heightened by the show making full use of actually being shot in Miami, instead of the common practice of shooting establishing shots in a locale then shooting the rest in Los Angeles. All of David's interviews and the scenes in his restaurant used Ocean Drive's Cafe Milano as it was at the time, without set dressing (at the start of The Billy and Lisa Story episode, the green awning with the Cafe Milano name is visible and legible for several seconds). Thumper, allegedly based on creator David Frankel's brother John Frankel, then working in Miami television for the ABC affiliate, worked for the CBS affiliate and some of his interviews used the affiliate's studios. The Katie and Adam Story involved two of Thumper's employees having an affair, so the station's actual trucks, offices and news sets were used (when the philandering pair leaves one set, the camera follows them until it lingers on the background for a popular consumer news segment called "Shame on You.") Susan's interviews usually put her in her office with a view of Biscayne Bay or the MacArthur Causeway behind her. Other characters were shot in front of notable Miami buildings or South Florida-style establishments.

The series aired for six episodes as a summer replacement series and enjoyed popularity among critics[1] and many in their 20s, especially in Miami. CBS, with what was famously and infamously the oldest audience on television, opted not to pick up the show. Fox Network was rumored to be interested. Years later, when CBS revived the show, creator David Frankel told the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel [2] that Fox asked him to create the same show but with a different title.

Cast

Actor Role Episode
Jonathan Penner David Klein
Mariska Hargitay Katie Episode: "The Katie and Adam Story"
Steven Eckholdt Thumper Klein
Lynn Clark Susan Crawford

2000 Series

The original Grapevine's interview style was cited as an influence on HBO hit Sex in the City. Barry Jossen produced both Grapevine and the first season of Sex in the City. As the former Big Three broadcast networks scrambled to find their own Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Sopranos or Sex in the City—shows whose popularity with both critics and the young audiences brought cultural impact and advertisers—CBS brought back Grapevine in February 2000. This time, David was played by Steven Eckholdt, Susan by Kristy Swanson, Thumper by George Eads, and a hotel manager, Matt, was played by David Sutcliffe.

Where the show once seemed cutting edge with the interviews, music and subject matter so racy even some critics blushed, it now struck most critics as dated.[3] What also didn't help is the editing, so snappy in the 1992 version, seemed to move about two seconds slower in 2000, often ruining a punch line. Also, the talking head interviews literally were talking heads—the heads filled the entire screen, unlike the 1992 version that allowed the setting around the interviewee to create some atmosphere. This version lasted only five episodes.

References

External links