[WJM anchorman Ted Baxter has just told his colleagues that he’s received a more lucrative job offer as a game-show host. He’s been waiting unsuccessfully for someone to persuade him to turn it down, until…]
Lou Grant
[played by Ed Asner]: “Stay.”
Ted Baxter [played
by Ted Knight]: “What? What did you say, Lou? Lou? Did... Did you say
something?”
Lou: “Yeah. I said stay.”
Ted: “Gee. That's one of the
nicest things anyone ever said to me. I'd like to stay, Lou. I-I love it here,
but... but this is my big chance.”
Lou: “For what, Ted? So you
can go to New York and become a quizmaster? Is that what you want people to say
when you walk down the street? ‘There goes Ted Baxter. He's a quizmaster.’”
Ted [chuckles]: “It's
not that bad, Lou. Just the way you say it makes it sound terrible.”
Lou: “Oh, yeah? Then you say
it, Ted. Say, ‘Ted Baxter is... a quizmaster.’” [With greater emphasis now,
practically hissing the words out in contempt]: “Ted Baxter is... a quizmaster.
You see?”—The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Season 6, Episode 5, “Ted’s Moment of Glory,” original air date Oct. 11, 1975, teleplay by Charles Lee and Gig
Henry, directed by Jay Sandrich
When I saw the headline on Facebook yesterday about
the death of Ed Asner, my heart sank. With his demise—the third this
year of an original cast member—one of the last links to one of the favorite
shows of my youth was gone.
The above exchange illustrates how Asner could take the
words in a script and turn it into something sidesplitting. Not even the deadly
repetition of the word “quizmaster” quite does the trick. Rather, it’s in the
way Asner spits the word out, as if he can’t wait to dislodge something so
commercial, so gross before Lou can get to a word he honors: “newsman.”
Asner’s death came 35 years to the day of Ted Knight’s
funeral—the first time that all the stars of the sitcom had gathered together
since the landmark sitcom went off the air, in perhaps TV’s most fondly remembered
finale, in 1977. Let’s hope that Mary, Valerie, Phyllis, Gavin, Ted, Georgia, and Ed
are sharing laughs in a Valhalla of comedy legends even now.
Fans who watched the seven-time Emmy-winning actor
over the years knew that there was far more to Asner than the Lou Grant role he
played for 12 seasons, first on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, then on the
dramedy Lou Grant.
Obituaries I’ve read have cited his voice-over work in
animated series and movies. But much of his one-off work in the Seventies and
Eighties, though perhaps harder to find on video these days, are also worthy of
mention, displaying his dramatic range in Roots (a drunken sea captain
haunted by his role in the slave trade), A Case of Libel (as a lawyer in
the McCarthy Era), Anatomy of an Illness (as editor Norman Cousins), The
Gathering (as a difficult father trying to make amends with his family
before dying), and Tender is the Night (as a tycoon who has sexually
violated his daughter).
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