Chuckles Bites the Dust

"Chuckles Bites the Dust"
The Mary Tyler Moore Show episode
Episode no. Season 6
Episode 7
Directed by Joan Darling
Written by David Lloyd
Original air date October 25, 1975 (1975-10-25)

"Chuckles Bites the Dust" is an episode of the television situation comedy The Mary Tyler Moore Show which first aired October 25, 1975. The episode's plot centers on the WJM-TV staff's humorous reaction to the absurd death of Chuckles the Clown, an often-mentioned but seldom-seen character who starred in an eponymously titled show at the station.

Plot

News anchor Ted Baxter is hired as the grand marshal for a circus parade, but is ordered by Lou Grant to turn down the "honor." Ted is upset and tries to rally Mary to his side. Mary agrees that Lou was perhaps too hasty in his order, but then tells Ted that Chuckles the Clown had been asked in his place and has accepted the honor as grand marshal.

The next day, as Mary and Murray are watching Ted deliver the live newscast, Lou rushes into the newsroom in shock and tells the staff that Chuckles has been killed during the parade. He had dressed as the character Peter Peanut, and a rogue elephant tried to "shell" him, causing fatal injuries. During a commercial break, Lou orders Ted to adlib a eulogy for Chuckles, with disastrous results.

The next day at the studio, the unusual circumstances of Chuckles' death provoke a wave of workplace jokes, especially by Lou, Sue Ann Nivens, and Murray Slaughter (e.g., "You know how hard it is to stop after just one peanut!" and, "He could've gone as Billy Banana and had a gorilla peel him to death"). They continue in helpless laughter, with the exception of Mary, who is appalled by her co-workers' apparent lack of respect for the deceased. They try to assure her that they mean no disrespect for Chuckles. Their reaction is simply an emotional release, a response to humankind's fear of death: "Everyone does it." Mary shames them into uncomfortable silence by answering, "I don't."

At the funeral, the jokes continue until the services are about to start, at which time a final scolding by Mary encourages all of the attendees to become properly somber. However, Mary alone begins to giggle uncontrollably as the minister recounts Chuckles' comedy characters and comic routines. She tries to stifle her laughter, but cannot contain herself as Reverend Burns delivers the eulogy:

"Chuckles the Clown brought pleasure to millions. The characters he created will be remembered by children and adults alike: Peter Peanut; Mr. Fee-Fi-Fo; Billy Banana; and my particular favorite, Aunt Yoo-Hoo. And not just for the laughter they provided — there was always some deeper meaning to whatever Chuckles did. Do you remember Mr. Fee-Fi-Fo's little catchphrase? Remember how, when his arch-rival Señor Kaboom hit him with a giant cucumber and knocked him down, Mr. Fee-Fi-Fo would always pick himself up, dust himself off, and say, 'I hurt my foo-foo'? Life's a lot like that. From time to time we all fall down and hurt our foo-foos. If only we could deal with it as simply and bravely and honestly as Mr. Fee-Fi-Fo. And what did Chuckles ask in return? Not much. In his own words, 'A little song, a little dance, a little seltzer down your pants.'"

Mary's co-workers and the other attendees are shocked by her laughter. The minister, however, asks the mortified Mary to rise, and assures her that her laughter is actually in keeping with Chuckles' life's work. "He lived to make people laugh. Tears were offensive to him; deeply offensive…So go ahead, my dear: laugh for Chuckles." Mary then bursts into helpless, heartbreaking sobs.

After the funeral, Mary and her co-workers discuss how they envision their funerals back at her apartment; Sue Ann says she just wants to be cremated and have her ashes thrown on Robert Redford, Lou says he doesn't want anyone to "make a fuss" about his death, explaining "When I go, I just wanna be stood outside in the garbage with my hat on" and Mary says she just doesn't want "an organ playing a lot of sad music" at her funeral, to which Murray asks her "What do you want them to play, 'Everything's Coming Up Roses'"? Finally, Ted envisions "a nice, fancy funeral" for himself, but only if he's going to die. After being questioned on what he means by "If", Ted then explains if he gets real sick to where he's going to die, he wants someone to "take him away and freeze him" and then in "200–300 years when they find a cure, to just un-freeze him". Mary then asks Ted to do her a favor when they freeze him; "Could you take this with you?" and takes the "food mobile" Sue Ann gave her at the beginning of the episode out of her refrigerator, to which everyone laughs as the credits roll.

Reception

In 1997, this episode was ranked #1 on TV Guide's "100 Greatest Episodes Of All Time".[1] In 2009, TV Guide ranked the episode #3 on "TV's Top 100 Episodes of All Time".[2] Written by David Lloyd, this episode earned him an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series."[3]

Splitsider said that the episode "found a way to even make death funny, and that’s what makes it one of the most human—not to mention hilarious—episodes ever."[4]

The funeral scene was directly parodied in the "It's the Great Pancake, Cleveland Brown" episode of The Cleveland Show.

References

  1. Jim. "The 100 Greatest TV episodes of all time". aol.com. Archived from the original on 28 October 2007. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  2. "TV's Top 100 Episodes of All Time: #10-1". TV Guide. 2009-06-19. Archived from the original on 2011-03-10. Retrieved 2009-08-19.
  3. "1975–1976 Emmy Awards". infoplease.com. Retrieved 2009-11-10.
  4. "30 Rock vs. Community and Roseanne vs. Mary Tyler Moore". Splitsider. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
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