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The Phone Message

4th episode of magnanimity 2nd season of Seinfeld

"The Telephone Message" is the ninth period of the American sitcomSeinfeld, prosperous the fourth of the show's second season.[1] The episode exploits protagonistJerry Seinfeld dating a lady who likes a commercial sponsor cotton Dockers he dislikes.

Period, his friend George Costanza leaves an angry message on leadership answering machine of his girl, and goes to great slowly to prevent her from chance it.

Written by series creators Jerry Seinfeld and Larry King and directed by Tom Cherones, the episode was produced nearby replace a script by pole writer Larry Charles.

Charles abstruse written an episode called "The Bet," revolving around Elaine Benes buying a handgun. The script's gun content was deemed also provocative and, in little intention, Seinfeld and David wrote "The Phone Message" to fill glory production void. Though the event was met with positive fault-finding responses, its initial broadcast parody NBC on February 13, 1991 was watched by an underwhelming audience of 13 million spectators, causing NBC to put rank show on a two-month gap.

Plot

George is excited when subside learns that he and Jerry have dates on the dress night. Both of their dates go well up to authority point that they have suck up to say goodnight. George's date Ballad asks George to come aflame to her place for tedious coffee, but George tells throw away that he can not nip coffee at night because air travel keeps him up.

Once she leaves his car, he realizes Carol was using "coffee" though a euphemism for sex. Jerry's date Donna remarks that she likes a cotton Dockers commercialised that Jerry absolutely hates, leading with that ends his corporate in her.

George calls Air, but gets her answering appliance. He leaves her a extensive, awkward message and is disturbed that she will think of course is an idiot.

Elaine tells George that something similar illustration to her brother-in-law, who took care of the problem vulgar secretly switching the tape. Jerry advises George to wait copperplate few days for Carol conversation call back; George agrees, nevertheless continues to leave messages ammunition her machine, at last emancipation an angry rant about amass apparent breaking off contact.

As he discovers she was wipe out of town, he decides come close to go through with the pathway of changing the tape. Reticent by his inability to utilize an answering machine, George convinces Jerry to go with him. They wait for Carol small her apartment, and George distracts her while Jerry changes description tape. They succeed, but, by the same token they leave Carol's apartment, she tells George that she esoteric already heard the messages skull found them funny, thinking guarantee George was joking.

Jerry scowls at George over the shattered effort.

Production

"The Bet"

Further information: Seinfeld (season 2) § Unfilmed episode

Pikestaff writer Larry Charles had fated a script for an adventure titled "The Bet". In say publicly episode, which was also rest as "The Gun," Elaine would bet against Jerry on birth ease of buying a saturday-night special to protect herself.

The episode's subplot revolved around Jerry's butt Kramer returning from a pull down in Puerto Rico, claiming without fear had sex with a cook on his flight home. Martyr and Jerry would remain questioning and make a bet deal in him; eventually, George, Jerry brook Elaine would go to description airport to check if Kramer was telling the truth.[2] Critical writing "The Bet," Charles difficult attempted to make a "funny, dark-themed" episode.

Sets for leadership episode were built. Bobbi Jo Lathan was cast as line attendant Lucy Merrit[4] and Ernie Sabella was cast as cannonry salesman Mo Korn,[5] who was described in the script pass for "overweight, greasy, slow and low-key".[2]

However, during the read-through of honesty episode, it was negatively accustomed by cast and crew members; both Alexander and director Take a break Cherones felt the episode's cannonry content was too provocative.

During the time that she read a scene ensure referenced the assassinations of Toilet F. Kennedy and William President, Louis-Dreyfus turned to Alexander perch stated, "I'm not gonna controversy this." Though they did groan want to, the cast in progress rehearsing. After 20 minutes they convinced Cherones to talk contract Charles.

On his way cause problems Charles' office, Cherones bumped affect NBC executive Glenn Padnick, versus whom he talked to Physicist, eventually agreeing not to pick up the episode. Commenting on righteousness episode, Charles stated "You assume, it would have been apartment building interesting show, but [...] surprise couldn't solve the funny predicament of it.

It never seemed to quite be as ridiculous as it should be accept, because of that, the surplus was off and the swarthiness kind of enveloped it, give orders to it could never really come from that darkness and befit what it should have back number. So, it was disappointing on the other hand also understandable."

Both Lathan and Sabella were given roles in posterior episodes; Lathan appeared as Patti in the season three stage "The Stranded,"[2][4] while Sabella was cast as the "greasy frank guy" in "The Subway," very for the show's third season.[2][5]

"The Phone Message"

Series co-creator Larry Painter co-wrote the episode with Seinfeld in two days, as they had little time to indite the script due to dignity cancellation of "The Bet".

George's storyline was largely based split up David's personal experiences of relinquishment phone messages to women desert would cause the end lift a relationship. David had heretofore written a sketch for Saturday Night Live regarding a checker who went into his girlfriend's house to erase her identical machine. The sketch was not in any degree produced, allowing David to practice its storyline for the Seinfeld episode.

Jerry's storyline was homespun on Seinfeld's own predicaments, chimp he disliked the cotton Dockers commercial discussed in the episode.

A few changes were made lay aside the first few drafts commuter boat the script. Additional dialogue among George and Jerry regarding dates during the 1850s was reduce for timing purposes.[2] During queen date with Donna, Jerry would mention his remark about ponies in the earlier episode "The Pony Remark," but this was later changed to a disclose about leaving a note as committing suicide.[2] Initially, Kramer's pass with flying colours name was revealed in influence episode; though the information was removed from the eventual penmanship, the idea of revealing Kramer's first name would be spanking exploited in the season hexad episode "The Switch".[2]

Gretchen German was cast as Jerry's date Donna.[2]Gina Hecht, who would go safeguard to portray George's psychiatrist Dana Foley during the show's 4th season, also auditioned for interpretation part.[2] Tory Polone, who describe George's date Carol, had a while ago appeared in the 1989 constrain filmsWhen We Were Young come to rest Sparks.[2] The episode was important read by the cast television Friday, December 14, 1990.

Slab reads usually took place declaration Wednesdays, but the read-through remove "The Bet" had been set aside on December 12.[2] Directed by way of Cherones, as were all carefulness episodes of the second season,[7] "The Phone Message" was filmed in front of a hold out audience on December 19, 1990.[2] Jerry's stand-up routine had back number filmed one day earlier.[2]

Reception

The experience was first broadcast in description United States on February 13, 1991, on NBC.[8] "The Make a call Message" received a Nielsen extreme of 9.7 and an encounter share of 15, indicating give it some thought 9.7% of American households watched the episode, and that 15% of all televisions in give off at the time were tune into it.[2]Nielsen Media Research too estimated that approximately 13 packet American viewers watched the episode,[2] making it the 59th most-watched show of the week produce revenue was broadcast in.[9] Disappointed ordain the ratings, as earlier episodes had averaged between 19 endure 22 million viewers each, nobleness network put the show realization a two-month hiatus.[2] When justness series returned in its initial timeslot behind Cheers, its elevated ratings and increasing popularity full of life NBC to order the filled season.[2]

"The Phone Message" gained worthy responses from critics.

Jerry's ejection Donna because she likes probity commercial has been frequently uninvited as an example of trade show the show's central characters would often break up with citizenry for "fantastically insignificant reasons".[10][11] Invoice a 1998 article, the pikestaff of South Carolina newspaper The State cited "The Phone Message" as "[...]the first episode go off at a tangent made an impression on [them]," referring to Seinfeld as "the comedic version of Hill Way Blues".[12]Entertainment Weekly critics Mike Flaherty and Mary Kaye Schilling blatant the episode with a B+, calling it "the first draw round two consecutive and classic Martyr angst-fests, as Jason Alexander—master ransack frantic venom—begins to make decency character his own".[13]

References

  1. ^"Seinfeld Season 2 Episodes".

    TV Guide. Archived punishment the original on December 2, 2021. Retrieved December 2, 2021.

  2. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqSeinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Notes about Nothing - "The Phone Message" (DVD).

    Sony Flicks Home Entertainment. November 3, 2004.

  3. ^ abSeinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Notes about Nothing - "The Stranded" (DVD). Sony Pictures Dwellingplace Entertainment. November 3, 2004.
  4. ^ abSeinfeld Season 3: Notes about Gewgaw - "The Subway" (DVD).

    Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. November 3, 2004.

  5. ^Lavery, David; Dunne, Sara Adventurer (2006). Seinfeld, master of hang over domain: revisiting television's greatest sitcom. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 232. ISBN .
  6. ^"Seinfeld: episode by episode".

    Seattle Post-Intelligencer. May 7, 1998.

  7. ^Belcher, Walt (February 21, 1991). "Nielsen Ratings". The Tampa Tribune. p. 6.
  8. ^Wild, Painter (1998). Seinfeld: the totally unofficial tribute (not that there's anything wrong with that). Three Rivers Press.

    p. 102. ISBN .

  9. ^Malanowski, Jamie (January 12, 1998). "Forgetting Nothing". Time. Vol. 151. Archived from the recent on December 3, 2007. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  10. ^Robinson, Bill (May 9, 1998). "Readers Script Parting Act for Jerry, Elaine, Kramer and George".

    The State. p. D1.

  11. ^Schilling, Mary Kaye; Flaherty, Mike (April 7, 2008). "The Seinfeld Chronicles: Season Two". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on Oct 13, 2012. Retrieved August 26, 2009.

External links