Payne (TV series)


Payne is a 1999 American sitcom adapted from the 1970s British television comedy Fawlty Towers. This adaptation, which was a mid-season replacement on CBS, originally aired from March 15 to April 28, 1999. It costars John Larroquette, who was also an executive producer for the series, and JoBeth Williams. Featured too as regular supporting characters are Julie Benz and Rick Batalla. Despite receiving the blessing of John Cleese, who reportedly agreed to be an "irregular cast member" and perform in a recurring role as a rival hotelier if Payne were renewed, the series was cancelled following the broadcast of its eighth episode. A total of nine episodes were filmed, but one was not aired as part of the series' original presentation on CBS.
Payne is the third unsuccessful attempt by American television producers to adapt and transplant a version of Fawlty Towers to the United States. The first one, developed in 1978, is a 30-minute sitcom costarring Harvey Korman and Betty White. Titled Snavely and directed by Hal Cooper, that production never progressed beyond the completion of a pilot. The second series, Amanda's starring Bea Arthur, was broadcast in 1983 on ABC and lasted 10 episodes before it was cancelled.

Basic description

Payne was a remake of Fawlty Towers, though set in this version at an ambiguous location on the coast of California, as opposed to Torquay, England, in Fawlty Towers. The action takes place at the Whispering Pines Inn, owned and operated by Royal Payne and his wife, Constance. Royal was always trying to improve the quality of his hotel and eventually franchise the place, in search of immortal legendary status as a hotelier, like Hilton or Waldorf.
The pilot episode, "Pacific Ocean Duck", merged the plots of the Fawlty Towers episodes "Gourmet Night" and "The Hotel Inspectors".
Mirroring the opening sequence of Fawlty Towers, each episode begins with a closeup of the "Whispering Pines" sign, which either falls over or a letter or some other piece of it falls off as the scene progresses. In the episode "I Never Forget a Facelift", involving how the hotel deals with a hurricane, the sign is shown lying in pieces, shattered by the storm's heavy winds.

Characters

During its eight-week run, Payne received widespread negative reviews in the American and Canadian media in 1999. Caryn James of The New York Times disliked the series from its outset. "It's enough to say", she writes in her March 15 review, "that this remake of John Cleese's hilarious, farcical 'Fawlty Towers' has been given a hackneyed Hollywood treatment", adding that the comedic talents of Larroquette had been "reduced to delivering hideous lines" from a patently weak script. Tom Shales, television critic for The Washington Post, is also critical of the sitcom in his March 15 review, especially about Larroquette's casting as a much less likeable Basil Fawlty. "Larroquette", states Shales, "is all too believable as an obnoxious boor". After cautioning every potential viewer of the new series to "Spare Yourself 'Payne'", Shales recognizes the production as "barely" an improvement over the 1983 sitcom Amanda's, the previous failed attempt to adapt the British series to American television.
In Florida, Tom Jicha, the television/radio reporter for the Sun-Sentinel, suggests in his review that the comedy should be renamed "Payne-ful". "Let's be clear about this", he writes, "Payne is not a bad show because it doesn't stand up to Fawlty Towers. It is a bad show, period." On the other side of the country, in California, the entertainment critic Kinney Littlefield provides an equally blunt appraisal on behalf of the Orange County Register: "The original 'Fawlty' was wicked fun. 'Payne' is just plain dumb. It is written for morons." Other national and regional newspapers issued disparaging reviews as well, a few being in USA Today, The Atlanta Constitution, The Sun, The Boston Globe, Cincinnati Enquirer, the Chicago Tribune, and the New York Post, which features a bold heading for Michele Greppi's review proclaiming "Original 'Fawlty" Still Towers Over This Clumsy Knock-Off".
Outside the United States, in Toronto, Ontario, the television critic for The Globe and Mail, John Allemang, sums up his opinion of the sitcom in the title of his March 17 review: "TV comedy inflicts Payne and suffering". "Fawlty Towers it's not", he asserts, explaining that Payne's basic structure and its less "dangerous" comedic tone belie any serious comparison of the American series to its British predecessor:
The series did have some supporters in the media. In his assessment of Payne in Variety, syndicated entertainment critic Ray Richmond describes it as an "agreeably over-the-top farce" with performances that make it "more than just another Brit-inspired ripoff". He also refers to Larroquette as "one of TV's comedy treasures" and notes that he and JoBeth Williams display on the show "a surprisingly tasty chemistry" as wisecracking spouses. After watching a preview of the series on March 11, Richmond observes, "Subsequent episodes screened from a review tape slide somewhat in quality and level of laughs, but not enough to dampen the enthusiasm for a sitcom that so enthusiastically embraces its own sense of stupidity and refuses to let go." Manuel Mendoza of the Dallas Morning News was also a fan of Payne, at least of Larroquette's performance after seeing the series' initial broadcast: "John Larroquette strikes just the right balance between Mr. Cleese's unreconstructed near-sociopath and the typical American-sitcom bad boy." Additional positive comments about the show can be found in the Detroit Free Press, the New York Daily News, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, The Tampa Tribune, and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Still, most of those supportive comments register as mild compliments, not avid endorsements. The Detroit Free Press, for example, reports on March 15 that "In moments...'Payne' can be lightly enjoyable", while Walt Belcher of The Tampa Tribune admits in his review that the series is "not as hilarious as 'Fawlty'", but "it shows potential".

Episodes

Episodes aired in the UK on the ITV network soon after the series run. Episode 9 was also broadcast in the UK, unlike on CBS.