>>>I also see a change in Andy after the B&W epidodes- I think without Don 
>>>Knotts playing a complemenary role, Andy seemed to
feel a sense of frusration and lack of character fulfillment.
Someone on the bulletin board once?characterized the changes in Andy as 1. hick 
Andy 2. the calm voice of reason, and in the 
color episodes 3. angry Andy. I think that sums it up pretty well...<<<

Eric, this issue has been discussed at length at various other times on the 
digest, and it is an interesting thing to ponder.  Now, we know from Andy 
himself that the more clownish, hick characterization of Andy Taylor was 
deliberately changed when Andy realized that he needed to play straight man to 
Don's increasingly comic rendering of Barney.  But the change in Andy's 
character during the color years has, to my knowledge, never been explicitly 
addressed by any of those involved with the show.  (And if it has, I hope 
someone will speak up.)  I think there has to be a lot of truth in the fact 
that Don Knotts's departure from the show had a profound effect on Andy 
Griffith and that the show just wasn't as much fun for him after Don left.  It 
is apparent to even a casual viewer that Andy and Don had tremendous chemistry 
together and played off one another brilliantly.  There have been lots of great 
comic teams in show business history--Abbott and Costello, Laurel and Hardy, 
Martin and
  Lewis, George Burns and Gracie Allen, etc., etc.--but I think Andy Griffith 
and Don Knotts rank right up there with the best, despite the fact that they 
were never considered an official "team."  The writers of TAGS certainly had a 
big part in this, though we also know that Andy and Don often came up with bits 
on their own to add to the script.  So, Eric, your reasoning is, in my opinion, 
quite valid.

But there's one variable that we've never really accounted for, and that is the 
role that the writers played in Andy Taylor's transformation after Don left.  I 
realize that many of the regular writers from the first five seasons didn't 
continue into the color years, so there were different writers at work, which 
could partly explain it.  But what I wonder is, were the writers given specific 
instruction about Andy's character?  Andy Griffith, as an actor, could 
interpret the lines given him, but the lines themselves and the stories also 
contribute to how we see Andy in a different light during the color years.  So 
I guess my question is, was this change to Andy's character as deliberate as 
the change from comic to comic foil early in the show's run?  Or was it an 
evolving of the character that "just happened" due to changing circumstances?  
I'd like to hear others' thoughts on this.


Thelma Lou
(Janet)
_______________________________________________
WBMUTBB mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.mayberry.com/tagsrwc/wbmutbb/

Reply via email to