Coined by Lesley Owusu in 2006,a '
Comedy-
drama', is a style of
television and
movies in which there is an equal, or nearly equal balance of
humor and serious content.
History
Theatre
Traditional
theatre was divided from its earliest days into
comedy and
tragedy, terms which primarily indicated whether the story had a happy ending. The term "drama" was used to describe all the action of a play. In the early 1800s, as theatrical writing became more subtle and plays were less likely to end with multiple deaths, the term "drama" began to be used to describe plays that were more sober, with "comedy" meaning plays that were funny rather than plays which ended happily. Since then, the terms have remained relatively subjective. Authors such as
Anton Chekov and
George Bernard Shaw famously blurred the line between comedy and drama.
Early television
The advent of
radio drama,
cinema, and particularly television created greater pressure in
marketing to clearly define a product as either comedy or drama. Though in live theatre the difference became less and less significant, in
mass media, comedy and drama were clearly divided. Comedies, especially, were expected to maintain a consistently light tone and not challenge the viewer by introducing more serious content.
By the early 1960s, television companies had adopted a universal practice of presenting half-hour long "comedy" series, or one hour long "dramas." Half-hour series were mostly restricted to
situation comedy or family comedy, and were usually aired with either a live or artificial
laugh track. One hour dramas included genre series such as police and detective series,
westerns,
science fiction, and, later, serialized prime time
soap operas. Programs today still overwhelmingly conform to these half-hour and one hour guidelines.
Beginning around 1969 in the
US, there was a brief spate of half-hour shows that purposely alternated between comedy and drama and aired without a
laugh track. At the time, these were known as "comedy-dramas." Perhaps the best known was ''
Room 222.'' Later, the approach of these early shows influenced better-known series such as ''
M
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One Day at a Time,'' and ''
Eight Is Enough'' (which featured hour-long episodes and a laugh track). These early experiments also influenced general TV comedy, and later series (especially family themed sitcoms) often included brief dramatic interludes and more serious subject matter.
Although elements of comedy were seen in the 1975 police drama
The Sweeney the first UK show to be generally acknowledged as a comedy-drama was the series
Minder, first launched in 1979 (Both shows produced by
Euston Films for
Thames Television, for
ITV).
Drama-comedy on television today
A drama-comedy may be either an hour-long dramatic series with very strong comedic elements, such as ''
Moonlighting'', ''
Northern Exposure'', ''
Auf Wiedersehen, Pet'', ''
Buffy the Vampire Slayer'', ''
Eureka'', ''
Life on Mars'', ''
House'', ''
Desperate Housewives'', ''
Charmed'', ''
Popular'', ''
Skins'', ''
Entourage'', ''
Monk'', ''
Psych'', ''
Gilmore Girls'', ''
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip'', ''
Ally McBeal'', ''
Ugly Betty'', ''
Grey's Anatomy'' or ''
Boston Legal,'' or a half-hour
sitcom with more serious plots and content, shot on a closed set or on location instead of in front of an audience, and without the usual
laugh track, such as ''
M
★ A
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★ H'', ''
Hooperman'', ''
Sports Night'', ''
Early Doors'', ''
Noah's Arc'', ''
Undeclared'', ''
The Newsroom'', ''
The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd'', ''
Scrubs'', ''
Weeds'' and ''
Entourage.
Hour-long comedic dramas have usually proven more successful in the
ratings than half-hour dramatic comedies in the United States. Though the great majority of shows still fall into either one category or the other, the comedy/drama line becomes more and more vague as viewers become accustomed to off-beat series, and as younger viewers who were introduced to genre hybrids at an early age become an older and more market-friendly audience (as well as becoming the television creators of today). The divide is further diminished by the increasing popularity of subscription TV services such as
HBO and
Showtime, where the demands of per-show marketing are not as stringent and viewers are explicitly looking for a product different from traditional television.
External link
★
Comedy-drama at the
All Movie Guide