Betting on Branson
PAUL H. WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
BRANSON -- As any failed country comic can tell you, there are no safe bets in
Branson, the Mall of America of all things kitschy. Bill McFetridge is willing
to gamble that Branson has the makings of a hit television sitcom, with
hillbilly laughs over the antics of the city's newest punch line: Joey Riley, a
putty-faced comic who is causing a ruckus in Mickey Gilley's Theater.
"Joey," McFetridge says, "is a unique entity. He's young and he just took the
place by storm." As the president of Ozark Film & Video in Springdale,
McFetridge has spent years making commercials and informational pieces. Now, he
is producing a pilot for a situation comedy starring Riley, based on his act in
Gilley's Theater. Gilley -- known outside country music circles for his huge
Houston night spot, a key setting in the John Travolta vehicle Urban Cowboy --
will have a part in the new show. So will fellow Branson mainstay Mel Tillis.
.
In the TV sitcom, titled Life of Riley, Mickey Gilley isn't Mickey Gilley, and
Mel Tillis isn't Mel Tillis. But Joey Riley is pretty much Joey Riley. According
to McFetridge, the post-Seinfeld sitcom blurs real people and real settings with
fictional characters and humorous circumstances. It is directed to look
something like The Beverly Hillbillies taking a left on Mayberry R.F.D., and
ending up backstage in their own sound studios.
McFetridge first met the young star of the show about two years ago when
producing videos of Branson stage performances. Like the audiences, he was taken
with Riley's presence and the quick comic mind of his stage persona. Last year,
Riley's act won him the Headliner Comedian of the Year at the Branson Music
Awards.
McFetridge, Minnesota native, broke into television broadcasting in the 1970s.
He started with news broadcasts and worked his way into producing and directing.
By 1983, he was convinced that there was an opportunity for independent film and
video production in the area. He created Ozark Film & Video to fill the niche.
His experience in professional video production was a far cry from creating a
sitcom, however. He knew that in order to make a show of prime-time quality, he
had some homework to do." I spent about 18 months researching how to do the
show, " McFetridge says." If we were in New York or L.A., we could have just
pitched the concept to producers." Producing the show in Branson, far removed
from Hollywood's critical mass of talent, only stiffens the odds against his
project's success. Just a handful of successful shows, such as The Life and
Times of Grizzly Adams, have managed that feat.
His enthusiasm aside, why would McFetridge want to pony up $450,000 on the
chance? "The rewards," he says, "are like the risks -- pretty substantial."
He had, by his own admission, almost everything to learn: financing, marketing,
distribution. But one thing everyone told him was: Start with a writer.
COUNTING ON THE PILOT
Enter Karyl Miller, a veteran television writer-producer and showrunner with an
impressive resume. She began in the early '70s writing for The Mary Tyler Moore
Show. Later, she was one of the writers on the pilot episode for the The Cosby
Show and staff wrote and produced the first season's huge hit episodes. Among
her credits is an Emmy Award for writing for Lily Tomlin. Miller is also a fan
of country and western music. She spent considerable time in Nashville, Tenn.,
while married to songwriter Gary Geld -- whose country hits included "He Says
The Same Things To Me," and "Getting Married Made Us Strangers," written for
Dottie West.
The award-winning writer calls Gilley and Tillis "two of my music heroes." So
when McFetridge contacted her earlier this year about writing a sitcom that
would include the two country stars, Miller was "more than a little interested."
She arrived in Branson in June, met with McFetridge, Riley and the others. Then,
in her words, "It was a done deal."
For the writer, however, the hard work was just beginning. Making a TV pilot is
a daunting task. In 22 minutes, it must introduce characters and situations that
demonstrate the potential for as many as 100 episodes. In this case, much
depends on being able to do that with a relatively unknown star.
Riley is a physical comic, with a mobile face and wayward limbs. He exudes the
kind of naive decency that marks him as a direct descendant of Gomer Pyle. But
as an actor, he is a raw talent. So it was decided, McFetridge says, to base the
concept "loosely on Joey's life."
His character will be an aspiring musician/comedian in Branson, with the focus
on his comic tribulations behind the scenes, which will all be filmed in
Branson. Gilley's theater will be the backdrop for the performance sequences.
The rest of the filming will be done in and around Tillis' theater, and
locations around Branson will provide the exterior shots.
A RILEY YOUTH
Using Riley's life as an approximate paradigm for his character also gives the
writer and producer a lot of usable material.
As with many "overnight sensations," Riley's success has been years in the
making. He was born in 1969 and grew up virtually onstage. His family operated
the local Opry in Wylie, Texas, where he began performing at age 9, showing an
aptitude for the fiddle. Along the way, he also discovered that he could make
people laugh, pulling funny faces and wisecracking on stage.
Before he was 17, Riley toured with Capitol Records artist Gene Stroman and
played dates in Nashville where his parents allowed him to attend his last year
of high school. They installed a toll-free 800 number to make sure he was up
each morning in time for class.
But Nashville was not the land of milk and honey.
"I was starving to death," Riley says of that time. "I just wasn't making it
there."
He returned to Wylie for a while and met Summer, his wife-to-be, while playing
in Dallas. Shortly thereafter, he found work with the touring company Warren
Stokes Country Revue out of Eureka Springs, and eventually settled in Branson in
the '90s, just as it was morphing into the new Mecca of country music.
Still, things were not up to Riley's ambitions. He felt he would never make
enough as a musician to support a family. He had put his instruments up for sale
and was ready to go to college in preparation for a new career when Gilley saw
him on Jim Owens' Morning Show and snapped him up.
"No one ever took a chance on me that big," Riley says. "He's the one who got me
in front of thousands of people."
Riley's evolution as a comic began by accident. When he plays the fiddle, he
sometimes keeps time by clenching his jaw and working his mouth. People said
that when he did this, he looked like the Cajun fiddle whiz Doug Kershaw. With
Summer's encouragement, he began to consciously work these facial tics into his
act.
Stokes, who also found Riley funny, persuaded him to do comic turns dressed in
outrageously corny costumes -- something Riley swore after leaving the Revue
that he would never do again. But he had discovered that he liked making people
laugh, that he could be more than a musician. He just wasn't sure exactly what.
PLACING BETS
When Riley and McFetridge met, that began to become clearer. Once he recognized
Riley's improvisational skills, McFetridge gave him large ad-lib latitude in the
All-Stars film.
Although he has plenty of stock jokes in his repertoire, Riley was new to
working from a script. One of the boiler-plate exchanges he and Gilley use on
stage involves a seemingly flustered Gilley telling him to stick to the script.
To which Riley replies, "The script ain't funny."
And McFetridge often agreed.
"I really trusted Bill," Riley says. "I liked the way I worked with him. And he
just let me fly." McFetridge repeatedly emphasizes that a key characteristic of
the new show-- as is true of Riley's stage humor -- comes from one of Bill
Cosby's dicta abouut comedy: "Keep it clean." Riley echoes this notion.
"Poo-poo" may be as rough as the language gets.
McFetridge runs on informed optimism. He knows the risks. But he also knows
talent and has learned that the market for situation comedy extends beyond the
United States to Europe and elsewhere.
Scores of pilot episodes for television series debut each year. Only a handful
go into full production, and many of those fail to survive a season. But
television comedy with a Southern accent has been successful on occasion
(witness Designing Women, Evening Shade and The Jeff Foxworthy Show). And the
Branson music scene has proved itself a sustained draw.
McFetridge, Riley, and Miller are banking that a wholesome,
behind-the-scenes look at this facet of show biz, along with a fresh and
energetic young face, will find a network home.
It's a brave gamble -- all just for laughs.
This article was published in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette