अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThis short-lived comedy dealt with the day to day lives of the staff and (rare) guests in a New York hotel that had fallen on hard times.This short-lived comedy dealt with the day to day lives of the staff and (rare) guests in a New York hotel that had fallen on hard times.This short-lived comedy dealt with the day to day lives of the staff and (rare) guests in a New York hotel that had fallen on hard times.
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"The Nutt House" with Cloris Leachman (Phyllis from "The Mary Tyler Moore Show") and Harvey Korman (from "The Carol Burnett Show") is truly an underrated gem. It was broadcast on ABC for about one month in 1989. If you blinked, you missed it. This show was full of funny and witty dialogue, zany sight gags and screwball antics. I think its humor was way ahead of its time, but unfortunately it was never given a chance to find an audience.
A DVD release would be wonderful. Or maybe a mini-marathon on TV Land. This might help to get the word out on this great, hilarious Mel Brooks series!
A DVD release would be wonderful. Or maybe a mini-marathon on TV Land. This might help to get the word out on this great, hilarious Mel Brooks series!
The Nutt House is an old failing hotel in New York City. Elderly owner Mrs. Nutt calls on her irresponsible grandson Charles Nutt III (Brian McNamara) for help. There is a crazy varied cast of characters working in the hotel. Ms. Frick (Cloris Leachman) is head of housekeeping. Reginald Tarkington (Harvey Korman) is the manager. Sally Lonnaneck (Molly Hagan) is a maid.
I don't remember this show. It was canceled after six half-hour episodes with eleven produced in total. Mel Brooks and Alan Spencer are the creators. The style is broad satire with outlandish situations. In a way, it doesn't fit successful American sitcoms of this era. Also, Charles is set up as the lead character, but he ends up as a secondary character. He can't hold the screen by himself. Korman does the heavy-lifting with Leachman as his powerful second. In fact, Molly Hagan would have a much bigger role as the show continues. This show takes some time to get used to. It finds its legs before the show gets pulled.
I don't remember this show. It was canceled after six half-hour episodes with eleven produced in total. Mel Brooks and Alan Spencer are the creators. The style is broad satire with outlandish situations. In a way, it doesn't fit successful American sitcoms of this era. Also, Charles is set up as the lead character, but he ends up as a secondary character. He can't hold the screen by himself. Korman does the heavy-lifting with Leachman as his powerful second. In fact, Molly Hagan would have a much bigger role as the show continues. This show takes some time to get used to. It finds its legs before the show gets pulled.
First off one of the reviewers suggest that the Nutt House was on ABC it wasn't it was on NBC after Night Court.I would also like to add had it been a sitcom with 3 cameras the jokes/premise of the plots would have worked better.IMy father Harvey Korman who was a exceptional comedian/actor on Burnett worked better with the immediacy of having the audience react naturally.When you do a 1 camera sitcom like say Sledge Hammer another Alan Spencer production the actors are forced to have to take a beat venture a guess how long a laugh would normally take had there been a audience there. Site gags and physical comedy only works when there is a immediate response from the audience.The only thing I can say about my fathers deft comedic talents and Cloris's was they range every laugh they could out of those scripts because they had a inate ability to know how long to wait for a laugh to desolve in their heads because speaking.Again this show would have been more successfull had it been done infront of a studio audience.
Here's an important note. When you see the name Mel Brooks on a film or TV series, you can know that it's going to be a comedy, that it's going to be filled with unexpected, wild and maybe borderline style humor and it will be populated by the most eccentric and unusual characters you never would have imagined yourself, because you're not Mel Brooks.
That's the basics of what you need to know about "The Nutt House," the story of a New York City hotel that has more than its share of problems.
The Nutt House, the name of the hotel, was in financial difficulties and we were informed that was specifically because of its moniker. But that couldn't be changed as it was so named for its owner, Edwina Nutt, played by Cloris Leachman in the pilot episode, and in a dual role, Ms. Leachman also played head of housekeeping, a heavily accented Hungarian sounding Ms. Frick.
The role of Ms. Nutt was taken over by Jeanette Nolan in ensuing episodes. The person in charge was the vain, self-important manager, Reginald Tarkington, played by Harvey Korman. Ms. Frick has an unrequited crush on Tarkington, a point made clear in some way during their every interaction, well past the point of sexual harassment!
Ms. Nutt's handsome and ne'er do well son was Charles Nutt III and portrayed by Brian McNamara, and Charles was developing a relationship with Sally, the heavily put upon but always well intentioned concierge, played by Molly Hagan.
This show was filmed without a studio audience and with a laugh track, so there are times that the scenes are free of any audience reaction and others where you hear big laughs. In a way, that fits the oddity of the program, which was typical Mel Brooks: filled with sight gags, puns and schlocky physical humor.
New York plays a part because even the worst hotel in town has guests and this one is clearly one of the worst, especially with an elevator operator who is apparently legally blind and never stops the car correctly, leaving people to have to climb up or slide down to enter or exit their floor, just as one example of the humor.
Mel Brooks is Mel Brooks! You got the same style of humor from him in everything he did, from his movies like "Blazing Saddles" and "Young Frankenstein" to his sitcoms like "Get Smart" and "When Things Were Rotten" (his ORIGINAL take on the Robin Hood legend). But, by 1989, it seems like many in the audience had become too sophisticated for that form of lowbrow humor than they were in the 1960s and 70s when Mr. Brooks had his biggest successes. It's Mel! If you like him, you LOVE him and if he's not your cup of tea, you're watching something else.
I don't know if anything could have improved "The Nutt House" except maybe sending it in a time machine to 1974.
That's the basics of what you need to know about "The Nutt House," the story of a New York City hotel that has more than its share of problems.
The Nutt House, the name of the hotel, was in financial difficulties and we were informed that was specifically because of its moniker. But that couldn't be changed as it was so named for its owner, Edwina Nutt, played by Cloris Leachman in the pilot episode, and in a dual role, Ms. Leachman also played head of housekeeping, a heavily accented Hungarian sounding Ms. Frick.
The role of Ms. Nutt was taken over by Jeanette Nolan in ensuing episodes. The person in charge was the vain, self-important manager, Reginald Tarkington, played by Harvey Korman. Ms. Frick has an unrequited crush on Tarkington, a point made clear in some way during their every interaction, well past the point of sexual harassment!
Ms. Nutt's handsome and ne'er do well son was Charles Nutt III and portrayed by Brian McNamara, and Charles was developing a relationship with Sally, the heavily put upon but always well intentioned concierge, played by Molly Hagan.
This show was filmed without a studio audience and with a laugh track, so there are times that the scenes are free of any audience reaction and others where you hear big laughs. In a way, that fits the oddity of the program, which was typical Mel Brooks: filled with sight gags, puns and schlocky physical humor.
New York plays a part because even the worst hotel in town has guests and this one is clearly one of the worst, especially with an elevator operator who is apparently legally blind and never stops the car correctly, leaving people to have to climb up or slide down to enter or exit their floor, just as one example of the humor.
Mel Brooks is Mel Brooks! You got the same style of humor from him in everything he did, from his movies like "Blazing Saddles" and "Young Frankenstein" to his sitcoms like "Get Smart" and "When Things Were Rotten" (his ORIGINAL take on the Robin Hood legend). But, by 1989, it seems like many in the audience had become too sophisticated for that form of lowbrow humor than they were in the 1960s and 70s when Mr. Brooks had his biggest successes. It's Mel! If you like him, you LOVE him and if he's not your cup of tea, you're watching something else.
I don't know if anything could have improved "The Nutt House" except maybe sending it in a time machine to 1974.
I think this ran for 6 or 7 episodes, and I laughed through all of them. As good as Cloris Leachman is as the head of housekeeping she is even better as old Mrs. Nutt. The character is kind of similar to Tim Conway's old man routine from Carol Burnett, but that routine never made me laugh, the Cloris version cracked me up. I vaguely remember her jumping her support hose. Whenever I see Gregory Itzen as President Logan on 24 I remember him as the Dennis the player bell hop, and smile. Harvey Korman is good as well. I'd love to see the 3 or 4 episodes that did not air in the U.S. (the U.K. aired all of them), and I wish this was available on DVD.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe set of the sitcom (the lavish Nutt Hotel) was actually the set built for the movie Big Business (1988). The producers of the movie couldn't get the rights to film inside the actual Plaza Hotel in Manhattan, so had it recreated on sound stages, and built "The Nutt House" around it to try and recoup construction costs. Unfortunately, it proved an expensive flop.
- कनेक्शनReferenced in That's Showbusiness: Holiday Special (1989)
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- How many seasons does The Nutt House have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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