Lookwell

Lookwell

Title screen featuring Adam West
Written by Conan O'Brien
Robert Smigel
Directed by E. W. Swackhamer
Starring Adam West
Ron Frazier
Todd Field
Bart Braverman
Brian Bradley
Country of origin United States United States
No. of episodes 1
Production
Producer(s) Lorne Michaels
Running time 22 minutes
Release
Original network NBC
Original release July 1991

Lookwell was a television pilot written and produced by Conan O'Brien and Robert Smigel, the latter of whom would become a primary creative voice for O'Brien's late night show.[1] It starred Adam West. The pilot was broadcast on NBC in July 1991 but was not picked up as a series despite being a "personal favorite" of NBC chairman Brandon Tartikoff.

Plot

A washed-up TV action hero—who at the peak of his career was ceremonially deputized by local law enforcement—falsely believes he can solve crimes in real life. His student Jason (played by Todd Field) becomes his sidekick.

Cast

Production

Development

Adam West was enthusiastic for the part of protagonist Ty Lookwell

The pilot was filmed as a single-camera comedy, which was uncommon for the time it was being developed. Writer Robert Smigel expressed doubt that the project could sustain itself as a full-fledged television series, questioning if "viewers would really want to view that every week? I'm not so sure they would have."[2]

Smigel recollects main star Adam West being enthusiastic for the role, despite poking fun at his acting style:

I remember one day he ran into our office, and he was wearing shorts and a straw hat—but not as a gag. [...] And he announced, "I've got it!" He was dancing on air. He told us that he had been walking on the beach and he'd thought about everything and he finally understood the part. He had cracked the code, kind of like Batman would. He knew exactly what we wanted to do and he was exuberant. He was like a kid.
Robert Smigel, And Here's the Kicker: Conversations with 21 Top Humor Writers on Their Craft, p. 255

Initial reception

The pilot was scrapped, despite NBC chairman Brandon Tartikoff taking interest in developing the pilot. O'Brien jokingly stated that when the pilot aired, it "was the second-lowest rated television show of all time. It’s tied with a test pattern they show in Nova Scotia."[3] Nielsen rated it 92nd out of 92 shows (2.3 million homes) for the week July 22–28.[4]

Smigel expressed his opinion on pitching for television in an interview with The A.V. Club, in that a "pitfall that you always face when you do any project for television, or in movies ... [in that] if it takes any amount of time to develop, there's a good chance that the person who put it in motion is going to get fired, or quit, and the next person isn't going to want to do it."[5] West expressed disappointment with the network's decision, and would bring up resurrecting the pilot over the years.[2] In an interview with Seattle Post-Intelligencer, West said that he has done "like 12 pilots, and Lookwell is really my favorite ... It’s the funniest pilot that never got sold."[6]

Cult status

The episode has been described as having an "underground following" over the years,[7] and was popular on eBay for a time before being made available as a video file, due in part to the resurgence of cult popularity for Adam West. The version in general circulation on the Internet is not the original as-aired episode. It comes from a later showing on Trio (a cable station) which, for unknown reasons, has a few cuts and a few alternate jokes/takes inserted. One major difference may be due to music rights issues. A version of the original episode as aired on NBC was known to be circulated by tape traders. However, due to the age, high-quality copies are difficult to find.

Comedian Bill Maher has also expressed how much he liked Lookwell.

Live screenings

Smigel's preferred version of Lookwell (with Adam West busting through the police tape at the beginning) has also screened at The Other Network, a festival of un-aired TV pilots, featuring live and taped intros by Smigel and an extended interview with O'Brien, produced by Un-Cabaret.[8]

Notes

  1. Rabin 2004, par. 1.
  2. 1 2 Sacks 2009, p. 255.
  3. McNerthney 2013, par. 18.
  4. "List of Week's TV Ratings". Nexis UK. Associated Press. 1991-07-30.
  5. Rabin 2004, par. 12.
  6. McNerthney 2013, par. 21.
  7. Sacks 2009, p. 255, 258.
  8. Johnson, Steve (2003-09-01). "Network uncovers more unseen pilots". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2013-08-26.

References

Books

Interviews

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.