Comedy-drama, or dramedy (a portmanteau of drama and comedy), is a genre in film and in television works in which plot elements are a combination of comedy and drama.[1][2] It is a subgenre of contemporary tragicomedy.[3][4] Comedy-drama is especially found in television programs and is considered a "hybrid genre".[5][6]
History[]
The advent of radio drama, cinema and in particular, television created greater pressure in marketing to clearly define a product as either comedy or drama. While in live theatre the difference became less and less significant, in mass media comedy and drama were clearly divided. Comedies were expected to keep a consistently light tone and not challenge the viewer by introducing more serious content.
By the early 1960s, television companies commonly presented half-hour-long "comedy" series or hour-long "dramas". Half-hour series were mostly restricted to situation comedy (sitcoms) or family comedy and were usually aired with either a live or overdubbed laugh track. One-hour dramas included such shows as police and detective series, westerns, science fiction, and serialized prime time soap operas.
Arguably, one of the first American television shows to successfully blend elements of comedy and drama together was Jackie Cooper's military-themed series, Hennesey. Although the show featured a laugh track, it also contains many elements of character drama that occurred amongst the re-occurring characters and the guest stars. The laugh track wasn't excessively used in each episode; by the third season, it was eliminated completely from the series.
While sitcoms would occasionally balance their humor with more dramatic and humanistic moments, these remained the exception to the rule as the 1960s progressed. Beginning around 1969 in the US, there was a brief spate of half-hour shows that purposely alternated between comedy and drama and aired without a laugh track, as well as some hour-long shows such as CHiPs in the late 1970s to early 1980s. These were known as "comedy-dramas".
A notable early (1969-1974) example of this genre was the award-winning Room 222, one of the first fully racially integrated television series. The episodes blended comedy with weighty subjects such as race relations, integrity, student smoking and mortality as well as topical issues such as the Vietnam War and the plight of returning war veterans.
The sitcom formula pioneered by Norman Lear in the 1970s in which a half-hour multi-camera situation comedy addressed serious issues in a dramatic format on videotape before a live studio audience is considered another type of comedy-drama hybrid. Examples of this genre include All in the Family, M*A*S*H, and One Day at a Time.[7]
Another example was The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, which aired from 1987 to 1991.[8] In fact, the term "dramedy" was coined to describe the late 1980s wave of shows, including Hooperman,[9] Frank's Place, and Doogie Howser, M.D..[10]
These early shows influenced how general TV comedies and series (especially family themed sitcoms) were developed. They often included brief dramatic interludes and more serious subject matter. An example of a successful comedy-drama series that distinguished this genre in television was the series Moonlighting. It generated critical acclaim and was a highly rated series worldwide. Another example of a successful comedy-drama was the television series Eight Is Enough. The show was distinct, because it was not a comedy-drama in the traditional sense. It was an hour-long series that used a laugh track, which was very unusual, but is considered a comedy-drama for the fact that it alternated between drama and comedy.[11]
In the United Kingdom, the format first appeared successfully in 1979 with the long-running series Minder, along with other notable comedy-dramas such as Auf Wiedersehen, Pet and Big Deal.
In addition, comedy-drama series have been associated with the single-camera production format.
See also[]
- List of comedy-drama television series
- Black comedy
- Dramatic structure
- Melodrama
- Seriousness
- Tragicomedy
References[]
- ↑ "Dramedy". Cambridge Dictionary. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Dramedy". Oxford Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Joel D. Chaston (January 2001). "Baum, Bakhtin, and Broadway: A Centennial Look at the Carnival of Oz". The Lion and the Unicorn 25 (1): 128–149. doi:10.1353/uni.2001.0002. http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/lion_and_the_unicorn/v025/25.1chaston01.html.
- ↑ J. L. Styan (1968). The Dark Comedy: The Development of Modern Comic Tragedy. ISBN 0-521-09529-8. https://books.google.com/books?id=w1DNaVCV2YgC&pg=PA1#v=onepage&q=seriousness%20comedy. Retrieved 2012-07-30.
- ↑ O'Donnell, Victoria (2017). "5. Television Genres". Television Criticism (3rd ed.). SAGE Publications. pp. 101–102. ISBN 978-1483377681. https://books.google.com/books?id=gXtZDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT137&lpg=PT137#v=onepage&q=comedy-drama%20hybrid. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
- ↑ Kopcow, Chris (October 23, 2014). "Is the Future of Comedy the Comedy/Drama Hybrid?". Vulture. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ O'Dell, Cary (October 25, 2013). "One Day at a Time". Encyclopedia of Television. Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Brinkmoeller, Tom (September 3, 2010). "Classic "Molly Dodd" Series Remains Locked Up, Awaiting 'Bail'". TV Worth Watching. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Kelley, Bill (September 23, 1987). "The Best And The Brightest Abc`s Hooperman -- The Hands-down Winner Of The Best New Show Of The Year -- Introduces A New Format, ``dramedy,`` While Slap Maxwell Reintroduces Dabney Coleman". Sun Sentinel. http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1987-09-23/features/8703150300_1_hooperman-lewis-erlicht-brandon-stoddard. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
- ↑ Hill, Michael (August 6, 1989). "Bochco gives dramedy another go with 'Doogie Howser, M.D.'". Los Angeles Times. http://articles.latimes.com/1989-08-06/news/tv-7_1_doogie-howser. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
- ↑ "Eight is Enough". https://fiftiesweb.com/tv/eight-enough/. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
Comedy | ||
---|---|---|
Topics | Comedian • Comedic device • Comedy festival • Comic timing • Farce • Humorist • Humour • Impersonator • Impressionist • Irony • Joke • Prank call • Punch line • Satire • Visual gag • Wit • Word play | |
Film | Country | American • British • French • Italian |
Genre | Horror • Parody • Remarriage • Romance • Science fiction • Screwball • Sex (Italian) • Silent • Slapstick • Stoner | |
Theatre | Country | Europe (Ancient Greek comedy • Comédie-Française • Comédie-Italienne • Corral de comedias • Theatre of ancient Rome) • Asia (China (Xiangsheng • Mo lei tau) • Japan (Kyōgen • Manzai • Owarai • Rakugo • Sarugaku)) |
Genre | Boulevard theatre • Comedy-drama • Comedy of errors • Comedy of humours • Comedy of manners • Comedy of menace • Commedia dell'arte • Double act • Farce • Improvisational • Macchietta • One-person show • Pantomime • Restoration comedy • Sentimental comedy (Comédie larmoyante) • Shadow play • Shakespearean comedy • Sketch comedy • Spex • Stand-up comedy • Street theatre • Theatre of the Absurd • Tragicomedy • Vaudeville | |
Music & dance |
Ballad opera • Cabaret (Café-chantant • Café-théâtre) • Comédie-ballet • Comedy club • Light music • Music hall • Musical theatre • Opéra bouffe • Opera buffa • Opéra comique • Operetta • Revue | |
Media | Music (Album • Rock) • Novel • Radio • Television (Roast • Sitcom) | |
Subgenres | Alternative • Black • Blue • Character • Christian • Clown • Cringe • Deadpan (dry humor) • Documentary • Gallows • High / low • Horror • Insult • Observational • Physical • Prop • Shock • Sick • Slapstick (Topics) • Surreal • Zombie |
Film genres | |
---|---|
By style | Action (Arthouse • Heroic bloodshed • Hong Kong action) • Adventure (Survival) •
Art • Biographical • Christian • Comedy (Black • Commedia all'italiana • Commedia sexy all'italiana • Bromantic • Dramedy • Gross out • Horror • Parody • Mo lei tau • Thriller • Remarriage • Romantic • Sex • Screwball • Silent • Slapstick) • Documentary (Animated • Docudrama • Mockumentary • Mondo • Pseudo • Semi • Travel) • Drama (Dramedy • Historical • Legal • Melodrama (Korean) • Erotic (Commedia sexy all'italiana • Pink • Sexploitation • Thriller) • Educational • Social guidance • Epic (Sword-and-sandal) • Experimental • Exploitation (see Exploitation film template) • Fantasy (Comic • Contemporary • Dark • Fairy tale • Fantastique • High • Historical • Magic realism • Science) • Film noir (Bad girl • Neo-noir • Occult detective • Pulp noir • Tech noir) • Gothic (Romance • Southern • Space • Suburban • Urban) • Horror (Body • Cannibal • Comedy • Eco • Fantastique • Found footage • German underground • Ghost • Giallo • Japanese • Korean • Mumblegore • Natural • New French Extremity • Occult detective • Psycho-biddy • Psychological • Religious • Science Fiction • Slasher • Splatter • Satanic) • Mumblecore (Mumblegore) • Musical (Backstage • Jukebox • Musicarello • Operetta • Sceneggiata) • Mystery (Giallo • Occult detective) • Pornographic (Hardcore pornography • Softcore pornography) • Propaganda • Reality • Romantic (Comedy (Bromantic)) • Gothic • Paranormal • Thriller) • Science fiction (Comic • Cyberpunk • Fantastique • Fantasy • Gothic • Horror • Military • Mundane • New Wave • Parallel universe • Planetary romance • Space opera • Steampunk • Western) • Thriller (Comedy • Conspiracy • Erotic • Financial • Giallo • Legal • New French Extremity • Political • Psychological • Romantic • Techno) • Transgressive (Cinema of Transgression • New French Extremity) • Trick |
By theme | Animals • Beach party • Blaxploitation • Body swap • Bourekas • Buddy (Buddy cop • Female) • Cannibal • Chicano • Colonial • Coming-of-age • Concert • Crime (Gentleman thief • Gong'an • Heist • Hood • Gangster • Mafia • Mafia comedy • Poliziotteschi • Yakuza • Gokudō) • Dance • Disaster (Apocalyptic) • Drug (Psychedelic • Stoner) • Dystopian • Economic • Ethnographic • Extraterrestrial • Food and drink • Funny animal • Gendai-geki • Ghost • Goona-goona epic • Gothic (Romance • Southern • Space • Suburban • Urban) • Ecchi • Girls with guns • Harem • Hentai (Tentacle erotica) • Lolicon • Kaitō • Magical girl • Mecha • Shotacon • Yaoi • Yuri • Homeland • Jidaigeki • LGBT • Luchador • Martial arts (Bruceploitation • Chopsocky • Girls with guns • Gun fu • Kung fu • Wuxia) • Mecha • Mexploitation • Monster (Giant monster • Jiangshi • Kaiju • Vampire • Werewolf • Zombie) • Mountain • Mouth of Garbage • Muslim social • Nature (Environmental issues) • Opera • Outlaw biker • Ozploitation • Partisan film • Pirate • Prison (Women) • Race • Rape and revenge • Road • Rubble • Rumberas • Samurai • Sexploitation (Bavarian porn • Commedia sexy all'italiana • Mexican sex comedy • Nazi exploitation • Pornochanchada • Nunsploitation • Sex report) • Shomin-geki • Slavery • Slice of life • Snuff (Crush) • South Seas • Sports • Spy (Eurospy) • Superhero • Surfing • Swashbuckler • Sword-and-sandal • Sword and sorcery • Travel • Trial • Vigilante • War (Anti-war • Euro War • Submarine) • Western (Acid • Florida • Meat pie • Northern • Ostern • revisionist • Space • Spaghetti • Weird) • Zombie (Zombie comedy) |
By movement or period |
Absolute • Australian New Wave • Auteur films • Berlin School • Bourekas • Brighton School • British New Wave (Kitchen sink realism) • Budapest school • Cannibal boom • Cinéma du look • Cinema Novo • Cinema of Transgression • Cinéma pur • Commedia all'italiana • Documentary Film Movement • Dogme 95 • Erra Cinema • European art cinema • Film gris • Free Cinema • French New Wave • German Expressionist • German underground horror • Nigerian Golden Age • Grupo Cine Liberación • Heimatfilm • Hollywood on the Tiber • Hong Kong New Wave • Iranian New Wave • Italian futurist • Italian neorealist • Japanese New Wave • Kammerspielfilm • L.A. Rebellion • Lettrist • Mumblecore • Neorealist • New French Extremity • New German • New Generation • New Hollywood • New Nigerian • New Queer • No wave • Nuevo Cine Mexicano • Parallel Cinema • Persian Film • Poetic realist • Polish Film School • Poliziotteschi • Praška filmska škola • Prussian film • Pure Film Movement • Remodernist • Romanian New Wave • Spaghetti Western • Socialist realist • Social realist (Kitchen sink realism) • Soviet Parallel • Structural • Surrealist • Sword-and-sandal • Telefoni Bianchi • Third Cinema • Yugoslav Black Wave |
By audience | Chick flick • Children's • Cult (midnight movie) • Guy-cry • Teen • Woman's |
By format, technique, approach, or production |
3D • Actuality • Animation (anime • cartoon • computer • stop-motion • traditional) • Anthology • Art • B movie • Black-and-white • Blockbuster • Bollywood • Cinéma vérité • Classical Hollywood cinema • Collage • Color • Compilation • Composite • Database cinema • Docufiction • Ethnofiction • Experimental (Abstract) • Feature • Featurette • Film à clef • Film noir • Film-poem • Found footage • Grindhouse • Hyperlink cinema • Independent (Guerrilla filmmaking) • Interstitial art • Live action (animation) • Low-budget • Major studio • Making-of • Masala • Message picture • Meta-film • Mockbuster • Musical short • Mythopoeia • Neorealist • No budget • Paracinema • Participatory • Poetry • Postmodernist • Sceneggiata • Semidocumentary • Serial • Shinpa • Short • Silent • Socialist realist • Sound • Underground |
Television genres | |
---|---|
By style | Drama (Action-adventure • Comedy-drama • Fantasy • Horror • Legal drama • Medical drama • Police procedural • Political drama • Science fiction • Serial drama • Supernatural • Thriller) • Comedy (Mockumentary • Parody • Satire • Sitcom • Sketch comedy) |
By theme | Adult • Artistic • Educational • Music • Public affairs • Religion |
By movement or period |
|
By audience | Animated • Anthology series (CGI • Puppetry • Stop motion) • Award show • Animated_cartoon#Television • Factual television (Docudrama • Documentaries • Fly on the wall • Reality) • Game shows • Infomercials • Instructional television • Miniseries • News programs (Current affairs • News magazine • Tabloid television) • Serial (Soap opera • Telenovela • Dizi) • Talent shows • Talk shows (Tabloid talk show) • Television movies • Sketch comedy • Stand-up comedy • Variety show |