• How "The Facts of Life" Broke One of TV's Most Taboo Topics

    From Ubiquitous@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 7 07:44:13 2016
    XPost: rec.arts.tv, alt.support.cerebral-palsy

    TV sitcoms of the 1980s were often about teaching viewers a lesson.
    Sometimes subtly, usually overtly. Whether the message was moral or
    ethical in nature, the gist was one of acceptance: body image, race,
    sexuality, ability. And The Facts of Life , the longest-running
    sitcom of the decade, covered them all, breaking new TV ground for
    taboo and uncomfortable topics.

    Like having cerebral palsy and cracking jokes about it.

    In the ’80s, that was enough to tighten the sphincters of the
    politically correct across the country. Poking fun at a serious
    condition, an obvious physical challenge? The Facts of Life said
    sure, let’s do it.

    It came in the form of the feisty comedian Geri Jewell , who hailed
    from the standup world — and also happens to have cerebral palsy.
    Her character makes a visit to the boarding school where her cousin
    Blair lives, along with a group of girls who deal with the trials
    and tribulations of female adolescence.

    Jewell, now 57, broke the small-screen barrier for actors with
    cerebral palsy, becoming the first person with a disability to be
    featured in a regular role on primetime TV (a group that now
    includes, among others, RJ Mitte from Breaking Bad). Geri was a
    regular on the show from 1980 to 1984, almost half of the sitcom’s
    nine-year run. When Geri first arrives, walking into a room of
    girls who seem unsure how to react to a person with a disability,
    she quips, “Don’t worry, I’m not drunk. I have cerebral palsy.”
    Then, cracking a wry smile, “When I’m drunk, I walk perfectly
    straight.” She proudly displays the same message on her T-shirt.
    Blair — the vain, self-centered “daddy’s girl” — appears especially
    distressed. We are led to believe that she’s embarrassed by her
    cousin’s disability, but it turns out she’s just jealous of Geri’s
    success. And Geri’s stream of one-liners soon has everyone laughing
    and no longer seeing the difference. Lesson learned.

    https://youtu.be/1PexIgjsfD8

    The actress and writer has performed on other TV shows, including a
    well-known stint on Deadwood . And on a recent episode of Glee,
    Jewell made a cameo as an L.A. TV producer (curiously, a few weeks
    after character Sam develops an obsession with reruns of The Facts
    of Life ).

    But that debut appearance, back in 1980, when we were first finding
    out how to live better lives via the boob tube , still stands out as
    a groundbreaking moment in TV history.

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