Maude: Season 1 (2007)
Release Date: Mar 20, 2007; With: Bea Arthur,
Adrienne Barbeau and Bill Macy
B+
By Ken Tucker
Ken
Tucker is critic-at-large for EW
Watching
old TV sitcoms on DVD can be disappointing: The best jokes that once
were fresh have been recycled so frequently in later series that they
seem now, unfairly but undeniably, stale. The shows that dealt with
topical matters fare even more poorly — who wants to guffaw
about Richard Nixon or leisure suits now?
Maude, whose first, 1972-73 season is now on three DVD discs
with no extras, is a glorious exception. Here, every episode, taped
in front of a studio audience, is like a complete play clocking in
at a little over 20 minutes. The laughs generated by Beatrice Arthur's
Maude are sometimes so loud and long that the actress has to do that
stage-freeze thing, standing motionless until her next line can be
heard.
A spin-off of All in the Family (Maude was Edith Bunker's
liberal, upper-middle-class cousin — i.e., the anti-Archie),
Maude was a prime example of producer Norman Lear's comedy
empire of that era, with old-fashioned gag structures juiced by timely,
often controversial references. Like Archie Bunker, Maude is an intimidating
powerhouse: She's brayingly noisy, not to mention taller than her
husband, Walter (the breezy Bill Macy), and her grown daughter, Carol
(the stiff but charming Adrienne Barbeau).
Maude's topical humor retains its bite. Other '70s TV shows
dealt with the rise of black power, but only on Maude would
the title character host a fund-raiser for ''one of the most important
black militant leaders in the country.'' And Maude is now
startlingly un-PC: She calms her rattled nerves in that episode by
downing ''two Miltown, the greatest tranquilizer known to man,'' and
following them with a Valium and a glass of scotch.
By far the most controversial episodes of Maude occur in
this first season: the two-parter ''Maude's Dilemma.'' When it aired
in November 1972 — months before the Roe v. Wade ruling
— Maude was the first TV character to choose abortion (it was
then legal in New York, where Maude resided). The teleplay by Susan
Harris, who would go on to create Arthur's next sitcom, The Golden
Girls, is a fascinating mixture of frankness and fudging. While
Carol, the show's mouthpiece for feminism, argues for the procedure
and points out that for Maude at age 47, pregnancy could be risky,
''Maude's Dilemma'' spends most of its time on comic subplots such
as Walter's fear of getting a vasectomy. The decision is made in the
final moments of the second episode. Walter reassures Maude she's
chosen the right option. They hug and credits roll. The subject is
never referred to in the next episode. It's one of the few times Maude
is vulnerable; it's also one of the few times Maude is so
subtle it seems timid. B+
Article from Entertainment Weekly, March
2007