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Culture

Greek-American Tina Fey’s Latest Sitcom, Mr. Mayor, Stars Ted Danson

LOS ANGELES – Greek-American writer, producer and actress Tina Fey, best known for 30 Rock and Saturday Night Live, has a new sitcom, Mr. Mayor, on NBC starring Ted Danson. Fey co-created the show with her creative partner Robert Carlock. The Emmy Award-winning Fey and Carlock are also the brains behind 30 Rock and the Netflix series Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.

Danson stars in the sitcom as the title character, Los Angeles Mayor Neil Bremer, and spoke with the Associated Press about the show, “If you consider politics, the headlines in the papers, and the breaking news on CNN, that ain’t us. We point out the foibles and silliness, and wonderfully lovable, pathetic, lame side of humanity but we don’t stop and preach. We never are preaching.”

The 30-minute comedy takes over the 8 PM anchor slot in NBC’s Thursday comedy block starting Thursday. Danson considers the show more an office or family comedy.

Danson plays a businessman who made a fortune on billboards and then retired. He ran for mayor just to impress his daughter, a sophomore in high school played by Kyla Kenedy from The Walking Dead.

The new mayor is not a very polished political figure, prone to mangling Spanish and saying things like “I’m very open to a robot police force.”

His staff members include a trio of comedians- Bobby Moynihan, Vella Lovell and Mike Cabellon- and a chief rival in Holly Hunter, who plays an ultra-liberal councilmember. “Like underwear bought in a drug store, you’re not going to last two months,” her character warns the mayor.

In the first episode, the mayor, hoping for a winning issue, steals the idea of a plastic drinking straw ban from his daughter and it blows up in his face. Hunter’s character offers to help — but only if he will rename coyotes as “mini-wolves.” There is satire, but nothing that might pit red states against blue ones.

“Immediately, I think the audience is alerted to the fact that we’re not going to be dissecting the Trump administration,” said Hunter. “This is not some new angle on a political conversation.”

Danson is a veteran TV star of such shows as Cheers, Becker, and The Good Place. Hunter won an Oscar for her performance in The Piano and is the star of the TNT drama series Saving Grace.

The cast and crew have endured a lot during the pandemic. They shot three episodes until production had to shut down for nine months. The cast kept in contact during the hiatus, even going over scripts virtually.

“We had jam sessions Zooming together and I think in a way that created a certain feeling of tightness,” Hunter said. “We would just read a new script just to hear it between us. You know, it formed a different kind of bond.”

When they all reunited, a TV set designed for a fast-paced, whacky comedy now had real-world boundaries — face masks and shields, social distancing, daily COVID-19 tests and van rides that held only one actor.

“It’s all very different. They’re a little bit sad, a little bit lonely because the kids don’t get to rush into the playground and embrace each other because we’re so happy to be working,” Danson said.

“The first day or two, it’s weird. And then all of a sudden you get used to the new normal,” he added. “After years of doing this, when they say ‘Action!’ and you’ve taken the masks all off, it comes back.”

But Danson is quick to put it in perspective. “It’s tricky as actors to talk about sacrifices,” he said. “We came back after nine months of the pandemic where the whole world saw who the heroes were, who the celebrities really were, who the people were that really, truly put their lives on the line.”

The time off might actually have helped the show, giving the cast time to digest the rat-a-tat scripts, which are stocked with Carlock and Fey’s astute cultural observations and sometimes absurdist flights of fancy.

“It’s practice, practice, practice, practice, practice, practice before you show up so that those words can come trippingly off your tongue,” said Danson. “You have to play the music and you have to play Tina and Robert’s music.”

Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.

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