bboswell wrote:Does anyone know if that is actually Jack playing his violin on the show whenever it is played for laughs? (e.g. during his lessons.) I personally doubt it because it would be impossible to hold a script and play too. If not, who does it? Or if so, how did they work out the script problem, and did someone hand the violin to him, and then take it away again?
LLeff wrote:bboswell wrote:Also, I don't think the audience reaction would be nearly as good if Jack himself wasn't playing the violin. The visuals of that create at least half of the laugh...just watch it on television.
LukeJB wrote:I actually agree for both. There is a possability that the audiance was fake. A Laugh track. There was a apart of one show I listened to recenly where one of mel's characters called Don fat and it got a huge laugh, but it wasn't really that funny. It seemed like the audiance was laughing too long. Like they did in old sitcomes. But then again the sounds of the violin do seem to sound like Jack's forced mistakes, same as on the TV show. I have to agree both ways...
Maxwell wrote:Which leads to a question that I don't know the answer to. Did they use laugh tracks on radio shows? I seem to remember running across a quote once that came from an article about some early TV show describing the use of a laugh track as if it were something new.
Maxwell wrote:Parenthetcially: One of the more annoying laugh tracks I recall was the one on "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet." Every laugh was EXACTLY the same.
LLeff wrote:As far as I know, there was never a laugh track on the radio shows. Even the prerecorded ones had a live audience. This is further borne out by Mary's stand-in fluffing a line, and Mary needed to do the same fluff so as to match with the audience's reaction to the fluff (and, sometimes, Jack's subsequent commentary).
Roman wrote:I have to disagree with Maxwell's comment about the "lack of success of comedy shows that dare go without a laugh track." I don't think any comedy today uses a laugh track. Of course, the comedies that are filmed before an audience don't use a laugh track. But the many comedies that aren't done with an audience (The Office, Scrubs, The Simpsons, Family Guy, Everybody Hates Chris, My Name is Earl, etc.) all film without a laugh track. As far as the success of these laugh track-less comedies, well, it's hard to beat The Simpson's record of nearly 20 years and still going strong.
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