Rest in peace, Mary Tyler Moore.
As thousands of impassioned, personal and emotional memorials pour in, we can agree that Mary Richards was much more than a sitcom character.
She
was a mirror and a walking Rorschach test (with a great set of L’Eggs) for one generation of TV-focused Americans — and the next.
As such, it was a little brutal to see Oprah
monopolize the CBS hour-long MTM remembrance special. The seemingly unending middle portion included a (never-before-seen!) moment from Oprah’s own show back in the 1990s when, after meeting
Mary in the flesh (her producers surprised her), she went backstage and confessed to the camera about her sudden streaming of armpit sweat.
Really, who needed to see or hear that? Not
everything that pours out of Oprah is gold. Nor did we need to re-watch Oprah’s recreation of the “Mary Tyler Moore Show” opening.
That’s because every memorial so far
is in some way a hat toss to that iconic hat (actually, a pom-pommed tam) toss in Minneapolis.
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An inspired opening graphic that at first seemed a little heavy-handed and even corny, it
uniquely embodied the spirit of universal independence and possibility. The opening belongs in the history books, and to us all.
Then again, to be honest, I guess we all want to be the
chewy centers of our own narcissistic reveries over what Mary meant.
What struck me most was that “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” came just four short years after “The Dick Van
Dyke Show.” (It never occurred to me the title and the whole concept of the show could have been intended as a 180 response.)
MTM was just 23 when she started on "DVD," and while she
played a dutiful wife and stay-at-home mother, the show did portray a new kind of marriage: a union of equals who relied on each other, who were not at war, and clearly loved “getting into
mischief” together, as Carl Reiner so charmingly put it.
As such, Rob and Laura were also a mirror image of the sheer, exuberant beauty and style of JFK and Jackie Kennedy, who offered
the country a 180 from Mamie and the General.
An additional corollary: The idea that the culture for women could change so much in one decade is also embodied in Jackie’s own life. In
the famous “Camelot” tapes with a journalist that were the basis of the screenplay for the movie “Jackie,” she confesses to not understanding the need for women to have power
— and seems to abhor those who go in search of it. She talks about wanting to have everything “calm and perfect” for when Jack came home, and not bother him with questions.
Still, after she was widowed, Jackie had her own Mary Tyler Moore years in New York City: single, dating, dressing in perfect, iconic 1970s-flared pantsuits and separates, while working as a
book editor at a publishing house. The visions of her in her iconic shades, with the sweater tied around her neck, hailing a cab, could conceivably pass for an image from the "MTM" show.
As
MediaPost TV blogger Adam Buckman pointed out in a recent post, there’s no doubt that part of the success of the show was due to the surrounding crew of brilliant, pitch-perfect actors,
writers and producers. It was a powerhouse set-up, strong enough to support the spin-offs of Lou, Rhoda, and Phyllis into their own shows. Those met with varying degrees of success.
But no
character was more tied to the moment than Mary.
And, as such, I think part of the profundity of the character was that she evolved week to week before our eyes at a revolutionary and
fractious time for women in the culture. (So fractious that Moore refused to label herself a “feminist.”) With each episode, she grew into the job and her life, doing all that tough and
awkward work, just as the women watching were doing.
When "MTM" debuted in 1970, it was a revolution in itself to base a sitcom around an attractive successful character in her 30s who was not
married or a mother. Looking back, it seems especially preposterous that CBS didn’t want the character’s back story to be a divorce. Instead, it had to involve a “broken relationship
with a doctor” so that Mary could still seem somehow virginal.
Things started slowly, but gradually “you might just make it” turned into “you’re gonna make
it” with every comic, human turn. That included everything from fighting with “Mr. Graaant” for equal pay, to being “liberated” and going on “the Pill,” to
fighting for freedom of the press in her job as news producer. And doing it all with grace, determination, vulnerability and hard-won self-confidence.
Mary was breaking boundaries, but she did
it in a way filled with delicious humor and nuance. As such, she was also the only journalist character who, after being thrown in jail for refusing to give up a news source, worried about not having
a toothbrush.
Speaking of that hat toss to independence and freedom, it is a particular head-scratcher that Moore’s death comes at a time, during the first week of the Trump presidency,
when many of the most revolutionary issues depicted on her show — women’s reproductive rights, equal pay in the workplace, freedom of the press — are being tested again.
But
let’s focus on how the show ended, with that hilarious moving clump of humanity: Mary’s office mates, whom she considered to be her family. They moved in a group to get a tissue, and then
out the door, when a cold corporate merger left them without jobs.
Mary — who had been initially thrilled just to be there, and then grew into her role as uber-producer, never lost her
sense of going the extra mile, being the responsible worker and friend. She went back to turn off the light.
It was a poetic double gesture. Mary Richards was detail-oriented, and could be
counted on to do the job — no matter her title or pay.
But Mary Tyler Moore was also showing that she owned the place — and that it did make a difference.