Griff
Sunday 8th November 2009 3:09pm [Edited]
993 posts
Great first episodes of sitcoms:
Well I nominated Fawlty Towers earlier on, and I stand by it. The first page is genius. Lots of hotel stuff happening - room bookings, breakfast being served. All the characters established with just a few lines. Basil is being snobby. Sybil is bickering with him. There is a great Spanish joke: "Manuel there is too much butter on - those - trays", "No Mr. Fawlty, is uno - dos - tres" and by the end of the first scene we've met Polly and the Major as well.
There is no sense of this being a first episode at all, in that we aren't shown any part of the premise being set up. The first episodes of Father Ted and Peep Show are like this too.
Some sitcom first eps which are all about the setup (some more than others) would be
Frasier - the first ep is all about persuading Frasier to move in with his Dad
Friends - the first ep shows Rachel arriving at the coffee shop having run away from her wedding, meeting the gang for the first time
Phoenix Nights - where it's all about Brian Potter setting up the Phoenix Club
The Black Adder - where the 'alternative history' is established by which Blackadder becomes an heir to the throne.
The Thick Of It - in which we see Hugh Abbott's predecessor getting fired by Malcolm and Hugh Abbott starting at the department
Yes Minister - again the first ep is all about Jim Hacker's first day on the job
Futurama - the first episode is all about Fry ending up in the future.
Rising Damp - we see Rigsby meeting Philip for the first time.
Spaced - we see Tim and Daisy move in together
The IT Crowd - Jen's first day as manager of Moss and Roy
Not that there's anything wrong with any of the above, they are all great sitcoms obviously. But they don't start in medias res in the way that Declan and Simon would like our scripts to.
NB The more I think about this, the more I'm becoming convinced that sitcoms with no setup in the first episode are very much in the minority.