Submitted by unitedfan6191 t3_11a8s9q in television
Hi.
Hope everyone’s doing well.
I’ve always thought in order to best connect to a comedic performance, it probably needs at least a little bit of a dramatic tension in the background (or foreground) in order to make the comedy even funnier but also to create a more three-dimensional picture of the character and scene. If it’s just jokes, jokes, jokes, then I think it’s harder to connect and relate to the heart and soul of the character delivering them.
The Office has many examples of this but one is when in the season 4 episode “Money” Michael Scott is very tired, dejected and lacking focus and it’s just a very different Michael Scott and Steve Carell depicts this very well and the conversations seem even more natural and the episode as a whole has less hijinks than usual (aside from Mose Schrute, mainly) and I feel Steve had to carry it more on the dramatic acting side than usual and I felt for Michael and the predicament he and Dwight was in that episode, who, by the way, also shined in that episode.
Dr. Cox’s best friend Ben (played by Brendan Fraser) had a very gut-wrenching three episodes in Scrubs and in My Screw Up in particular was very moving and if that doesn’t make you tear up at least a little, you’re a heartless, soulless monster. “Where do you think we are?”
Will’s father abandoning him again on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air I thought was another very good example of dramatic acting by Will and James, especially in that last scene of that episode. "How come he don't want me, man?" What a tearjerker, sitcom or not.
What are your favorites?
[deleted] t1_j9qi2sn wrote
[deleted]