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How Norman Lear Turned Personal Stories Into Television History

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The Man Behind the Laughs: How Norman Lear Turned Personal Stories Into Television History

Growing up in Hartford, Connecticut, Norman Lear wasn’t expected to amount to much. The son of a con artist who spent time in prison, Norman left college to enlist in the Air Force. After World War II, he landed in California, where he worked as a door-to-door salesman before taking a gig as a comedy writer. 

“You looked around television in [the 1950s and 1960s], and the biggest problem any family faced was ‘Mother dented the car, and how do you keep Dad from finding out,’ ” Norman said. “The message that was sending out was that we didn’t have any problems.” 

A new book, Norman Lear: His Life & Times, details how the creator of groundbreaking sitcoms, including All in the Family, Good Times and Maude, boldly brought a more realistic world to primetime television. “He believed that you could find comedy in pretty much anything,” explains its author, showbiz historian Tripp Whetsell, to Closer. “Norman was able to mine deeply into the recesses of his past and turn it into comedy gold.” 

All in the Family’s Archie and Edith Bunker shared traits with Norman’s real parents, Herman and Jeanette. “Herman used to call Norman ‘the laziest white kid I ever saw,’ which is something Archie used on Mike,” says Whetsell. “And ‘stifle’ was something Archie would say to Edith. Herman would say the same thing to Jeanette.” 

When Herman went to prison for selling fake bonds, young Norman watched as his mother sold their furniture to pay bills. “Some guy came up to him and said, ‘Norman, you’re the man of the house now,’ ” relates Whetsell. “And he found that funny.” 

On his shows, Norman tried to reflect the world as he knew it. The working-class Bunkers addressed antisemitism, infidelity, feminism and more over All in the Family’s nine seasons. On Good Times, early episodes dealt with poverty, teen pregnancy and racism. “He certainly had a lot of battles with censors over the years with CBS to get these shows on the air,” says Whetsell. “He showed backbone.” For a time, All in the Family, which would spawn six spinoff series, and Sanford and Son were the No. 1 and No. 2 shows in the country. 

How Norman Lear Turned Personal Stories Into Television History
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Of course, not everything Norman touched turned to gold. “He always loved Nancy Walker and thought she should have a starring vehicle,” says Whetsell. The Nancy Walker Show, which cast the comedian as the owner of a talent agency, was canceled after 12 episodes in 1976. 

Norman, who passed away in 2023 at age 101, enjoyed a legendary career that lasted seven decades and created some of America’s most beloved T.V. programming. “Originally, with all the shows, we went looking for belly laughs,” Norman said. “It crossed our minds early on — the more [viewers] cared, the harder they laughed.”

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