07 Feb 91: KNOTS LANDING: Always on Your Side v. 08 Feb 91: DALLAS: 90265
This week’s DALLAS finds Michelle Stevens revelling in her new position as the head of Ewing Oil. First, she fires JR, then Sly and Phyllis, and then she pulls the same gag Alexis Colby did eight years ago — lining up a reception full of hunky male models to find her new secretary. “It looks like a collar ad convention out there,” says James after walking past them. “When the Ewings had it, it looked like the Miss Texas contest,” she counters. Then she and James marry and that’s fun too. James is amusingly unenthusiastic during the proceedings. Instead of “I do”, he shrugs and says, “Sure.” When it comes to “You may kiss the bride”, the most he can muster is a peck on the cheek.
Having lost the family business, JR turns his focus to the family homestead. “This house used to be full of people,” he recalls. “We’d have cocktails in here. We’d talk and laugh and sometimes we’d get in a fight and Daddy would jump on us. Don’t you miss that?” “Of course I do,“ replies Bobby, “but you remember something — nobody ever left this house because they wanted to.” His words fall on deaf ears. “I need our family, the family we used to have,” JR insists. In his attempt to recreate the past, he tries once more to bury the hatchet with James. “You came here looking for some kind of sitcom version of a father who’d sing you a lullaby and tuck you into bed at night,” he tells him. “You didn’t want a real father with real flaws, you wanted somebody perfect … I’m not perfect nor will I ever be, but dammit, son, you’re my blood … I want you to come home to Southfork. We can start living like a family again.” James plays along and agrees to return to the ranch. (“Maybe you’re right, Daddy, maybe we ought to try to be one big happy family again.”) He even recreates the circumstances of the first-ever episode of DALLAS by bringing a wife home with him — one that JR can’t stand. “Is it all right if I call you Daddy too?” Michelle asks sweetly (echoing James’s line to Cally when he first moved onto Southfork: “Do I call you Mom?”). James goes so far as to propose they reinstate Jock’s old rule of the family “sitting down to dinner at six o’clock sharp.”
The subject of mealtimes also arises on KNOTS when the Mackenzies receive a visit from a social worker regarding their suitability as foster parents for Jason. “We have dinner around 6.30,” Karen explains. “As a family, at the table,” adds Mack. “Three nights a week,” says Karen. “Four nights,” corrects Mack. "Four nights," repeats Karen. They’re both nervous, trying too hard to impress and keep tripping themselves up as a result. Then Meg wanders in dressed as a bumblebee and has a little tantrum, which only flusters them even more. Oh, if only they could see what we and the indulgently smiling social worker can see — that they don’t have to
try to be wonderful parents, they already
are wonderful parents! It feels a tad disingenuous.
The same could be said of Frank and Charlotte’s storyline. Having agreed to go out on a casual “non-date”, we see a montage of them each trying on a succession of outfits in front of the mirror, both anxiously looking for the one that will make the best impression. This is accompanied by some upbeat jazzy piano music (Larry Riley again) that rams home the lighthearted romcom feel the sequence is meant to have. Then we observe them in a trendy restaurant, each pretending to enjoy their nouveau riche meal. Eventually, Frank can’t take it anymore and comes clean about how uncomfortable he is. Cut to them sitting in a brightly lit cafeteria eating plain wholesome food. “I’m a meat and potatoes man,” Frank declares before reeling off a list of his likes (science fiction movies, old Marvel comics, gardening) and dislikes (French menus, public smoking, baseball). “I suppose I thought if you saw the real me, you wouldn’t be interested,” he explains to Charlotte who, needless to say, is as charmed by “the real him” as the social worker was by the real Mackenzies. An old-fashioned doo-wop number plays in the background, just to underline what an authentic guy Frank is.
KNOTS gets better as soon as it gets serious. At a court hearing to determine Jason’s future, the judge makes the surprise ruling that he be returned to his father. Mack impulsively takes the law into his own hands, sneaking Jason out of the courthouse away from his father. While everyone else is wondering where they are, we see Jason and Mack shooting hoops and laughing. It’s the first time we’ve seen Jason look genuinely unguarded and free, yet the music that underscores the scene is dramatic and urgent, evoking the seriousness of their wider situation. The juxtaposition is strangely moving in a way that’s hard to pin down; as such, it’s the direct opposite of the Frank/Charlotte scenes where everything — the music, the acting, the humour — feels oversold and forced and, ultimately, somewhat bogus.
Mack later receives an ultimatum: “Give the kid back to the father … or you’re gonna be at the receiving end of half a dozen criminal charges.” He refuses to comply and the episode ends with him being handcuffed and led away by the cops.
While Mack reaches a point of no return, Bobby Ewing’s own personal crusade continues, albeit in more pleasant surroundings. Calling himself Bobby Southworth, he moves into a conveniently empty Malibu beach house right next door to the one occupied by Hilary Taylor (aka Sheila Foley)’s daughter Jory. Jory has an air stewardess roommate called Kit Marlowe, which is also the name of the character played by Kim Novak on FALCON CREST four years ago, and the stage name Novak herself almost adopted at the start of her career. So unless it’s a coincidence, this is an in-joke about an in-joke.
Although not quite as brutally shocking as the final season of FALCON CREST (no-one’s been suffocated in their bed, at least not yet), there has been a steady succession of “unthinkable” moments thus far on DALLAS this season — from Jordan Lee’s defection to April’s death to Bobby selling Ewing Oil to Barbara Eden to Cliff confessing to murder to Phyllis telling off JR — and this week there is yet another. After ten years of working together, Sly and JR finally have a one night stand. It’s funny stuff, but unlike KNOTS’ heavy-handed attempts at comedy, DALLAS plays the whole thing — from Sly’s come-on line, “I’ve always wanted you to be on top”, to her palpable relief the next morning that JR doesn’t expect a repeat performance — with a completely straight-face.
Back at Southfork, the newlyweds put on a united front for JR’s benefit, but behind closed doors, James is as immune to his new bride’s charms as JR was Sue Ellen’s when DALLAS first began. “Don’t bother waiting up for me, I got a date,” he informs Michelle on their wedding night. “I think you’re putting on weight, I’m going downstairs to watch TV,” he tells her after she slips out of her negligee on their first night at the ranch.
With Michelle taking over Ewing Oil and the rivalry between Paige and Linda intensifying at the Sumner Group (last week, Linda was promoted in spite of Paige’s best efforts; this week, Paige swipes an account from under Linda’s nose), there is a new generation of ambitious blonde businesswomen emerging in the Ewingverse. Meanwhile, two other twenty-something females, Kate Whittaker on KNOTS and Jory Taylor on DALLAS, have very different career goals — the former to be an athlete, the latter an actress. Unusually for Soap Land, they’re both self-deprecating about their ambitions. “You bring enlightenment to the world; I just play tennis,” says Kate to her history-teaching mother, while Jory is acutely aware of what a cliche she is. “If you asked a hundred pretty girls in LA what they were, ninety-nine of them would say, ‘Actress and model,'” she admits ruefully.
Kate is interviewed by her new pal Steve Brewer and Jory questioned by her new neighbour Bobby Southworth, ostensibly about their chosen professions — yet somehow both conversations keep returning to their respective mothers. “Did your mother encourage you to play tennis? … What about your father? … How long were they married?” Steve wants to know. Meanwhile, Bobby’s ears prick up when Jory tells him that she was given the beach house by her mom. In return, Kate and Jory want to know about Steve and Bobby’s backgrounds. “No fair - I’m interviewing you,” replies Steve. “I guess that’s fair,” concedes Bobby, before giving Jory an edited version of his recent past: “I lost my wife a while back … That’s why I came here … to put the pieces back together.” Steve is less forthcoming but does mention his parents in the past tense (“They were great”), suggesting that he, like Bobby, is recently bereaved. Whereas we already know why Bobby is so interested in Jory, all we know for sure about Steve thus far is that he is Not What He Seems: he pockets Kate’s house keys when she’s not looking and appears to have a parole officer.
Towards the end of this week’s KNOTS, Kate breaks her losing streak with a victory on the tennis court and celebrates by dyeing her hair back to Mary Frances’s original colour. At the end of this week’s DALLAS, it looks like Jory’s also caught a career break. When Bobby overhears her receive some good news on the phone, he assumes she's got the acting job she just auditioned for. But as she explains, it’s something even better than that: “My mother’s flying in to be with me!”
And this week’s Top 2 are …
1 (1) DALLAS
2 (2) KNOTS LANDING
Dallas is doing incredibly well this season. It's good to see it going down fighting.
With only two soaps left I can never predict who's going to win. And I think there's something very obscure about these late 80s/early 90s episodes. Everybody knows Sue Ellen, but how many people remember LeeAnn De La Vega (my fingers like, too!)
It's a dark and dusty corner in SoapLand, it almost justifies the gritty picture quality of the DVDs. Sort of a Fan Club Only Release.
Yes, DALLAS has a confident, devil-may-care, slightly reckless, "last season" feel to it this year whereas KNOTS feels, for the first time, like it's trying a bit too hard.
And you're right, there
is something very Fan Club Only Release about LeeAnn De La Vega!
Actually, the picture quality of DALLAS is quite good this season, and it's got a very nice "hue", if that's the right word, sort of peach-coloured.