glaikit
Thursday 4th December 2008 5:42pm [Edited]
Newcastle Upon Tyne
159 posts
Taking your first question "What defines a traditional British sitcom?", then I would first compare British sitcoms with sitcoms from America and Australia. In comparision, British sitcoms mostly fit to some or all of the following characteristics:
- Losers, underachievers or lowly types as the main characters. (There are often characters in US shows that are supposed to be losers, but they differ from UK shows. It is often suggested that, for example, Chandler in Friends is a loser, but he is good looking, has loving friends, a high-paying job, a spacious Manhattan apartment, a quick wit and later in the series a beautiful wife. Compare that to Rodney, Rigsby or David Brent and you see the difference. When British shows do losers, we REALLY do losers.)
- Downbeat storylines. (US shows generally have uplifting, aspirational storylines, or at least end on high notes. The characters might face troubles but they do so with snappy one-liners.)
- Comic monsters. Captain Mainwaring, Rimmer, Basil Fawlty. Awful people who do awful things but we love them for their flaws. It's a very British thing to do. (The Americans are almost completely incapable of portraying genuinely flawed monsters in their sitcoms. They've tried to remake Fawlty Towers several times but can never get to grips with the character of Basil. Larry David is the only exception I can think of.)
There will be more, but these are the main ones I can think of.
And in answer to your second question, I believe that, in one respect, Peep Show is very much a traditional British sitcom. Two losers. Jeremy is a monsterous character who does awful things but we love him. Horrible things happen to both of them. It's all very downbeat.
On the other hand, it is filmed in a different way to other sitcoms, which gives the writers the added dimension of being able to vocalise the characters' thoughts. This distinguishes Peep Show from other British sitcoms.
Hope that was of some help and not just me blabbering.