It's
a Living Season 3 Almost Has it Together
by
Kristin Battestella
The
1985-86 twenty-two episode season of It's
A Living resets
again for the sitcom's first year in syndication – introducing
Crystal Bernard (Wings)
as
transplanted Texas waitress Amy Tompkins alongside Richard Stahl (9
to 5)
as Above The Top's new chef Howard Miller. However, the first
half of the season is somewhat unfocused, ingratiating the new
characters whilst also going for broke for the syndication revival in
a busy, trying to do it all hit or miss. Character personalities are
enough to sustain the crisis, but the restaurant taken hostage
seriousness in “Desperate Hours” jars with out of place humor and
the cat having kittens. There are ambassadors in peril and patrons
having heart attacks, but Michael Richards aka Seinfeld's
Kramer
is the bad guy with a terrible accent. Such laughable in the wrong
place takes away from the reflections, regrets, and dreams the
fearful staff share. Each
lady has a moment to stand up to the villains, and fortunately, the
courage overcomes the unevenness. Rather than focusing on the
whirlwind romance with Richard Kline (Three's
Company),
“Jan's Engagement”
also has a lot happening besides the titular proposal. Thankfully,
this recurring arc is important for one of our characters, showing
what It's A Living can
do when the ensemble is
used to full advantage. “The Prom Show” adds balloons and a dance
floor at Above the Top as the high-rise waitresses provide the
entertainment and problems ensue. Once again, the lead plot is thin
while a more important story takes second place – this time showing
the series' best with strong characters and musical numbers while
illuminating the writing flaws. Likewise “Hail to the Chef”
offers insights into our staff's ambitions, personal lives, and
histories they'd like to forget even if it's via Secret Service
interviews for a stereotypical presidential visit. Anti-war college
rallies in the sixties, mooning a cop, worries over spilling chili –
ironically, the eponymous pun about Howard's record being a middle
initial mistake is the briefest story.
It's
A Living is
very frustrating when
there's no room for A, B, and even C plots in under twenty-two
minutes. Deserving secondary stories suffer as nothing burger sitcom
retreads take the lead. Some shorting may be due to syndication cuts,
but the overcrowded writers room featuring producers Marc Sotkin and
Tom Whedon too often falls back on similarities later seen on their
beloved The Golden Girls.
It's A Living also
reuses the same sets and incidental music, as if even then the same
audience of both shows wasn't supposed to notice. It's uncomfortable
now to see how off the mark “From
Russia with Love” is as well with CCCP defections led by
Christopher McDonald (Happy
Gilmore), and
the women chat about their disturbing worst male encounters in
“The Jerks.” Late night inventory excuses frame flashback
vignettes full of blackmailing and gaslighting assaults played for
laughs. “I won't take no for an answer” and chasings around the
sofa sped up like silent film slapstick ruin the chance to see the
girls after hours. Even in 1985, who thinks “let's do a highlight
show of men assaulting our women” is a good idea? Instead of the
“Oddest Couple” being about Ann Jillian's displaced waitress
Cassie moving in with Marian Mercer's cranky hostess Nancy for an
acerbic twofer, Cassie eventually stays with Paul Kreppel's piano
player Sonny. This immediately follows “The Jerks,” and though
it's the best behaved Sonny has ever been, he still withholds news of
another realty opportunity from Cassie. Somehow, it's all turned
around for his
sympathy – as if It's A
Living doesn't
know what to do with our strong ladies when the First Season was so
progressive. Fortunately
“Gender Gap” comes together with excellent topics and wit despite
two important issues crammed in one. The man turned down by Amy's
hiring files a discrimination lawsuit, so management caves and gives
him a job. The ladies object to men taking the subservient, menial
jobs usually resigned to women but no one can afford to strike or
lose her job. The new guy is a poor waiter, too, a con artist usually
settling out of court. This meaty topic shares time with an early but
mistaken transgender plot, for Nancy's former flame felt she was in
the wrong body and now she's dating Sonny. She doesn't want him to
know, but it's not fair for others to demand she be upfront and tell
him against her wishes before playing
the operation for laughs and again inexplicably making the issue
about Sonny.
The
misunderstandings are better handled in “Jealous
Wife” as missing ingredients and the titular accuser have everyone
coming and going in the kitchen. It would be fun to see an entire
episode just set in kitchen, and the mistaken identities, public
confrontations, and truths will out have It's
A Living firing
on all cylinders as the multiple happenings work together. Bemusing
standout Danny Thomas is supposed to operate on Nancy's hernia for
“The Doctor Danny
Show,” but Sorkin's episodes are often the thinnest derivative
“the” and “show” entries rising only on the cast's charm.
Nancy both wants sympathy yet doesn't want the staff gossiping about
her fears, but the gals are there for her with strength and humor
showing what It's A Living
can
do. Messy friends
staying with Barrie Youngfellow's Jan, her taking the kids to a child
psychologist, and Amy asking for the sentimental ladies to donate for
a church auction are again told for locker room angst rather than
seen as a Valley Girl turned princess repeats the hostages and
terrorists alongside anti-Asian jokes in “Jewel Heist.”
Thankfully, busboy switches, fake hotel doctors, and medication side
effects combine for a fun if swift resolution. Likewise “Jump”
isn't so much about the rejected actor on the restaurant ledge as it
is driving dilemmas, no tip customers, and IRS audits. Everything is
strong – underpaid waitresses hassled over $32 owed would be a
statement unto itself – but we don't get to the eponymous
seriousness via Cyrano
until the last eight minutes. A blind date with a goofy cartoonist
leads to a relationship played out in the comic strip for “America's
Sweetheart.” The medium's dated but a woman not wanting her
personal life public is something we struggle with today in what not
to share or overshare online. It's another fine nugget not completely
explored because It's A
Living feels
the need to cram everyone in every episode when realistically
rotating pairs may have allowed more time. Our waitresses apparently
work sixteen hours a day seven days a week when there are count 'em
six empty lockers in the lounge!
The
season finale “Mann
Act” devolves into a clip show wrapped with Sonny's drunken
interjections, and it's
an infuriating end
framing the series as about the wannabe cool piano player not
the dynamic waitresses. So many more deserving plots were cut short
when It's A Living also
knew Ann Jillian was departing the series and could have given her a
proper send-off. Jan's
family life is also strangely unseen with her daughter only appearing
once despite an intriguing hear tell B plot where Ellen shares
secrets with babysitter Cassie but not her mother. Barrie Youngfellow
is effectively the mom of the group, so her realistic romance and
blended family shouldn't be relegated to all talk subplots. Jan's
courtship deserved two or three episodes – the whirlwind timing,
their not being able to have kids together, her relationship with her
stepson, how her still going to college effects the family. However,
it's all just there to give Jan something to say in the lounge rather
than truly exploring the character changes. Meddling mothers, no
judge, and an Above the Top reception gone awry fortunately set off
“The Wedding Show” where our Jan finally gets to have it all come
together in the kitchen of all places. In “Dinner with Deedee”
competitive Jan avoids a former school rival now married to a wealthy
executive. Jan insists there's nothing wrong with being a waitress,
but she pretends to be a fancy customer and is angry at her
embarrassment before realizing she has everything she wants. Such
service industry hesitancy, hard working honesty, and character
reflections showcase the best of It's
A Living. As Cassie
Cranston, top billed Ann Jillian can convince any customer to sample
the succulent roast beef when they are out of steak. She takes Amy
under her wing, donates the men's clothes left in her closet, and
secretly volunteers at a senior home – she has to keep her wild
dating reputation! A famous billionaire reserves Above The Top –
Cassie included – in “Cassie's Cowboy,” and despite her cool
facade, Cassie falls easily, happy to make a fool of herself and take
a chance. We've seen this plot with her before, but Cassie dislikes
becoming a snob and ultimately won't let a man no matter how rich
walk all over her. She also accidentally starts dating twins unaware
and tells them she has a twin sister and
we do not see this plot! I
protest.
Gail
Edwards' ditsy Dot is always a bridesmaid with typical “Dot's
Puppy” half an episode hi-jinks under-utilizing her failing actress
when her outlandish lies should be It's
A Living's
go-to comic relief. Dot
decides she must pretend to be a good waitress to become a better
actress, but steals food from the kitchen to feed the homeless and
shows up early when she's burned out on making excuses. Dot's
visiting mother is exactly like her, and they drive each other crazy
because neither tells the truth. Dot wishes Above the Top was a
dinner theater, and she puts her skills to good use reenacting the
crime in “Eleven Angry Men and Dot.” She teases Nancy with jury
duty being the best reason for being absent, but deliberation drags
on while the shorthanded staff struggles in one of this season's rare
outside of the hotel plots. Crystal Bernard's Amy debuts in the
season opener “Harassed” with an anonymous caller who says he's
been watching her alongside roses, saucy notes, and piano requests.
Amy's fears and the maternal protection from the veteran ladies
endear her to viewers immediately. Rather then letting their worries
on if the stalker is in the restaurant get to them, the girls take
action with a few good trips and copying speeches they saw on Miami
Vice. Amy's
saving herself for her husband and is a terrible gift giver, but
asking Sonny to help her rehearse for the church choir means we get
to hear Bernard sing, too.
Amy
does repeat several ingenue plots from the earlier seasons – her
father wants her to return home in “Amy Big Girl Now” and we
didn't need this repetitive story as the third episode once she has
already been introduced. She wants to stay at Above the Top, but two
episodes before she wanted to leave, and the claustrophobic elevator
confrontations compete with a mishandled overweight conference story.
They're cranky, the waitresses yell at them for wanting more, and the
staff both admire their efforts yet mock them. By the next episode,
Amy yearns for home again, and her wild Snyder, Texas tales are “Back
in St. Olaf” precursors about pigs and ditching work to go to a
rodeo with her friend Billy Bob. Most of her characterization comes
in fish out of water humor like having to take a California driving
test, and each of these could have been their own plots rather than
just throwaway moments. Amy learns to be assertive, standing up to
Nancy over her not being paid to be bossed around on her own time –
a surprisingly relevant moment for our current always accessible
lifestyle.
Although
It's A Living does
Mercer a disservice in
these Dynasty 1980s
meets 1890s football player looking sleeves, waterbed owning,
man-eater Nancy insists it's her nature to be unmerciful. She lauds
Dot as a bad actress with the chance to be a successful waitress but
insists she'll take true praise to the grave. Nancy won't break bad
news just so she can see the staff squirm. She dreams of being the
First Lady's social secretary but is overwhelmed when having to wait
on tables herself, preferring instead the unpopular responsibilities
no one else wants. Chef Howard, on the other hand, objects to any
substitutions or food being sent back. He takes unsatisfactory dishes
off the menu and sides with the understaffed ladies amid the magic
tricks and mail in ordinations up his sleeve if the plot requires.
Howard's
gruff banter with Nancy is superb,
but her behavior is clearly sexual harassment right down to the
overnight kit she gifts him complete with a perfume called “Pillage.”
Only male writers would think it's funny because the genders are
reversed, and It's A Living
didn't
need to lay the crossing the line come
ons so thick when the evenly matched twofers do so well. In
re-watching It's A Living,
Sonny
Mann is also in very poor taste – saying he's tired of men preying
on young girls...while trying to get a drugged woman up to his
apartment. The staff
hates him and the customers clap when he leaves, so Sonny's piano
slapstick is purely for the audience. He
sings terribly rude songs to the overweight group, grovels in a
crisis, and hides behind the bar. I'm glad when people slam the piano
lid on his fingers.
In “I Write the Songs” Sonny gets a record contract and
immediately ditches Above the Top with the titular spectacle before
obviously crawling back. If It's
A Living must
have musical episodes, the ladies could do variety larks a la Dick
van Dyke
and Maude.
Their singing is better, and if we already have Nancy's antagonism,
we don't his annoying, inappropriate behavior.
Of
course, It's A Living's
print
remains downright fuzzy like the days of yore when luxury dinners at
Above The Top cost $50 plus the $10 tip. The repeated wardrobe is
also steeped in short skirts with chunky belts, big perms, bigger
shoulder pads, tight jeans with tall boots, one earrings, and
colorful but ridiculously baggy pantsuits. There are sport coats with
the sleeves rolled up on men and women, too, and a terrible off the
shoulder, one-off uniform before a red option similar to the standard
black ensemble. Although J.D.
Lobue (Soap)
would go on to be the series' most prominent director, these
twenty-two episodes cram in much too much – both under-utilizing
the embarrassment of riches and overflowing every act with crowded
stream of conscious plots.
Season Three has a bumpy start, great middle, and weak back half with
uneven writing even within a fine episode. Sometimes I wonder if it
is worth reviewing It's A
Living thanks
to the lack of streaming options, but modern frustrations
and dated obnoxiousness aside, It's
A Living is
a breezy marathon with
moxie.