"HOME IMPROVEMENT"
Production Notes
Ask Tim Allen how he came to star in his own series, and he's likely to answer,
"I saved Jeffrey Katzenberg's daughter's life. He owes me badly."
A typical comic's remark. The actual truth is not nearly as dramatic, although
Katzenberg, chairman of Walt Disney Studios, has been instrumental in bringing
Allen's off-beat sense of humor to television audiences on a weekly basis with
"Home Improvement", Touchstone Television's new family comedy for ABC-TV.
According to Matt Williams, one of the executive producers of "Home
Improvement," Katzenberg invited Williams over to his office last fall to see a
tape of Tim's 'Men Are Pigs' SHOWTIME special. "Jeffrey said, 'Tim is a
talented guy, we just made a deal with him, and I think the two of you would
click,'" remembers Williams. Allen had recently signed a series development
deal with the studio, and Katzenberg felt Williams would be a good match for
Allen's talents.
When Williams and colleague David McFadzean had a "get-acquainted" lunch with
Allen, they not only clicked, they felt like brothers under the skin. "What
happened at this lunch that absolutely sealed it for me," says Williams, "is we
started talking about our backgrounds -- we all come from Midwestern families.
We swapped stories about growing up with our brothers, and by the time we got
into the territory of 'you know what really bugs my wife?,' I knew we all
thought the same way. This is who I am, this is who David McFadzean is, this is
who Tim is: a man who really wants to be a good father, a good husband, and a
good man, in the societal sense. But no one ever taught us how to do these
things, so we've learned by trial and error."
By the time lunch was over, they were already throwing out story ideas for the
series.
From there, Allen, Williams and McFadzean, working with colleague Carmen
Finestra, fine-tuned the show's concept.
"Tim said to us, 'My act is power tools and fix-it stuff and male improvement,'"
recalls McFadzean. "So we wanted to give him a forum in which his act could be
incorporated into the show, without just having it be suddenly -- bang -- his
stand-up." Allen threw out the suggestion of having his own home improvement
show. "But," Allen said, "let's make it more than fixing a house. It's fixing
men."
Jumping on that idea, Williams added that the series really needs to be about
that nagging feeling men have inside of them that they're going to get caught.
"Someone's going to come up and say, 'You really don't know what you're doing,
do you?' And all of us said, 'Oh, gawd, yes, that's in there!,'" sayd
McFadzean. "From that developed the idea that Tim Taylor hands out male advice
on his show, but when he gets home and tries to live it out, it's easier said
than done."
Around the same time, both Williams and McFadzean had been reading Deborah
Tannen's book on male-female communication called "You Just Don't Understand,"
which McFadzean says should be every sitcom writer's guide to humor, because of
the way it explains the different languages men and women speak.
On the flight to Detroit to visit Allen's hometown, McFadzean remembers, "Matt
and I were both reading the book. He was only at about page 30, and he looked
at me and said, 'I know now why I have had every fight I've ever had with my
wife.' We realized that a major theme of the series needed to be that men and
women shouldn't live together. So that was the final pin in this show -- it's
the real behaviour of men and women trying to work out a life together."
In casting the character of Jill, Tim Taylor's wife, Williams says, "We said
all along, we need to find a female John Goodman for him, an 'Edith' for
'Archie.' We had to find a balance, because we didn't want him to just
overpower the series." After a long and involved search, casting director
Deborah Barylski found Patricia Richardson, a strong comedic actress known for
her feisty roles in series like "FM" and "Eisenhower & Lutz."
"With Pat," continues Williams, "we found someone who is strong and funny, and
who happens to be a real mom with theree kids. Those are all pluses, because
she's drawing from real-life experience rather than writer's lines. She just
embodies that role."
The three boys who play the Taylor's sons, and Earl Hindman, who portrays Tim's
guru-like neighbor Wilson, were found outside of Hollywood. Hindman makes his
home in Connecticut, Zachery Ty Bryan ("Brad") is from Denver, and Taran Smith
("Mark") and Jonathan Taylor Thomas ("Randy") both live in Northern California.
With all these elements in place, Williams, McFadzean, Finestra, and the entire
cast and crew of "Home Improvement" set out to make a series that's both
entertaining and true-to-life, week after week.
Says Williams, "The biggest challenge for us is to take absurd situations, or
extreme points of view or actions, and root them in some kind of truth. For
example, when Jill is desperate to find a baby-sitter because Tim screwed up
and didn't get one, she hires a magician who entertains at children's parties
-- as a baby-sitter. It's sort of an extreme solution to a problem, but it
makes sense. If we do our job correctly, those are the things the audience will
never think twice about, because we've rooted them in some kind of behavioral
truth."
Thanks to Touchstone Television for providing the information.
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Date last modified: 16:15:36 Sunday 9 October 2005