"You know what I would really like to do? I'd like to do a half hour drama with comedy in it"
About this Quote
Gless isn’t pitching a genre so much as airing a frustration with the boxes TV likes to tape around women, especially women of a certain age. “Half hour drama with comedy in it” reads like a small technical preference, but the specificity is the point: she’s asking for permission to live in the in-between. In an industry that treats the half-hour as sitcom territory (setup, punchline, reset) and the hour as “serious” (trauma, prestige lighting, awards), she’s describing the kind of storytelling that mirrors actual adulthood: the absurdity doesn’t cancel the hurt, it rides alongside it.
The line also carries a veteran actor’s implicit critique of what roles get greenlit. Gless came up in an era when female leads were often either glossy problem-solvers or comic foils. She’s signaling appetite for tonal complexity without the macho solemnity that often passes for depth. Comedy, here, isn’t a garnish; it’s a delivery system that makes drama more intimate, less performative. The half-hour format suggests urgency and focus: fewer speeches, more behavior, more subtext in the silences between jokes.
Culturally, it anticipates the wave of dramedies that later became a prestige lane of their own, built on the premise that coping looks like cracking wise while the floor is still shaking. Gless’s intent feels practical and quietly radical: stop forcing human experience into tidy TV drawers, and let a woman’s life be funny and consequential in the same breath.
The line also carries a veteran actor’s implicit critique of what roles get greenlit. Gless came up in an era when female leads were often either glossy problem-solvers or comic foils. She’s signaling appetite for tonal complexity without the macho solemnity that often passes for depth. Comedy, here, isn’t a garnish; it’s a delivery system that makes drama more intimate, less performative. The half-hour format suggests urgency and focus: fewer speeches, more behavior, more subtext in the silences between jokes.
Culturally, it anticipates the wave of dramedies that later became a prestige lane of their own, built on the premise that coping looks like cracking wise while the floor is still shaking. Gless’s intent feels practical and quietly radical: stop forcing human experience into tidy TV drawers, and let a woman’s life be funny and consequential in the same breath.
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| Topic | Movie |
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