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In Living Color
''This article is about the television series. For the band, see Living Colour.''
''In Living Color'' is an American sketch comedy television series, which originally ran on the Fox Network from April 15, 1990 to May 19, 1994. Brothers Keenen and Damon Wayans created, wrote, and starred in the program. The show was produced by Ivory Way Productions in association with 20th Century Fox Television.
Other members of the Wayans family—Kim, Shawn and Marlon—had regular roles, while brother Dwayne frequently appeared as an extra.
Description and history
The series strove to produce comedy with a strong emphasis on Black subject matter. Its groundbreaking sketch comedy helped launch the career of male comedians and actors Jim Carrey (one of only two white members of the original cast, then credited as "James Carrey"), Jamie Foxx (a future Academy Award winner who joined the cast in the third season) and David Alan Grier (an established character actor who had worked in Keenen Ivory Wayans' 1988 motion picture ''I'm Gonna Git You Sucka''). Its Fly Girl dance troupe helped launch careers of future actress/singer Jennifer Lopez (who joined the show in its third season), choreographer Laurie Ann Gibson, choreographer Carrie Ann Inaba (who was a Fly Girl from 1990 to 1992), and future Academy Award Nominee Rosie Perez (the show's choreographer 1990 to 1992).
Pilot episode
For the first episode, an exotic-looking black-and-white logo was used for the opening credits. After the band Living Colour claimed the show stole the logo from them and threatened to sue, the logo was changed to one with rather plain-type letters of three colors. Both versions of the theme song were performed by the hip-hop group Heavy D & the Boyz. The logo and opening sequence was derivative of the Memphis Movement art style.
Live musical performances
''In Living Color'' was known for its live music performances, which started in Season 2 with Queen Latifah as their first performer (appearing again in the third season). Some of the other music acts who performed on the show were Public Enemy, Kris Kross, En Vogue, Eazy-E, Monie Love, Heavy D, MC Lyte, Jodeci, Tupac Shakur, and Busta Rhymes (then with Leaders of the New School).
Departure of the Wayans
Keenen Ivory Wayans left the show in 1992 after the end of the third season, over disputes with Fox about the network censoring the show's content and rerunning early episodes without his consultation. Keenen feared that Fox would ultimately decrease the syndication value of ''In Living Color''. During the fourth season in 1992, he appeared only in the (1992-93) season opener, though he remained the executive producer and thus stayed in the opening credits until the thirteenth episode. Marlon Wayans left with Keenen. Shawn Wayans and Kim Wayans both left the show at the end of the fourth season. Damon Wayans left at the end of the third season to pursue a movie career though he made a few "special guest appearances" in the fourth season.
Censorship
Fox started censoring the scripts more after ''In Living Color'' produced a live Super Bowl halftime special (branded by the network as ''The Doritos Zaptime/'In Living Color' Super Halftime Party''). During the "Men on Football" sketch, Damon Wayans and David Alan Grier ad libbed a suggestion that Richard Gere and track and field star Carl Lewis were homosexuals, much to Lewis' open chagrin. Also, in the originally aired version, there was a simulation of male facial ejaculation using a water bottle and a clever camera angle. These two segments have been cut from reruns and the DVD version. The programming stunt lured 20 million to 25 million viewers from CBS' telecast of the halftime festivities during Super Bowl XXVI.
When airing on BET, most curse words (such as "ho" and "bitch") have been muted out and one line ("drop the soap") was also muted for its implications of prison rape. The DVD version has the language intact (except for the "drop the soap" line from "Men on Film"), but numerous sketches have been cut, particularly the music video parodies due to copyright reasons.
On the May 5, 1990 broadcast, Keenen Ivory Wayans did a take-off on a Billy Dee Williams "Colt 45" commercial (in which the purpose of the beverage is to get your lady friend wasted) that ended with a woman (played by Kim Coles) passed out on her back on a dining table, and "Billy Dee" moving in on her unconscious body to have sex with her. The "Colt 45" sketch was seen only once during the original broadcast. The sketch was omitted from repeats because some felt it was making light of date rape. The Season 1 DVD set of ''ILC'' didn't include the "cut" sketch from the pilot. This skit was cut by Fox censors, and the necessary modifications were made to the master tape. But Keenen "accidentally" mixed up the masters, and the original master was broadcast. That segment has never been broadcast since, not even in syndication, on FX or BET. It has been replaced by "The Exxxon Family" (a fake promo for a sitcom about a clumsy Exxon boat captain) in syndication and DVD box sets.
Season 5
By the fifth and final season, none of the Wayans family had any involvement whatsoever with the show. The show's traditional reliance on the character-driven sketches featuring Damon and Keenan gave way to an increasing reliance upon walk-on cameos by "special guests" like James Brown, Rodney Dangerfield, Barry Bonds, Biz Markie, Ed O'Neill, Sherman Hemsley, Chris Rock, and various stars of the NBA. Kelly Coffield, who, prior to Alexandra Wentworth's arrival in the fourth season, was the lone female white cast member, left prior to the final season. Jim Carrey, David Alan Grier, Tommy Davidson, T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh and Fly Girl Deidre Lang are the only cast members to remain on the show throughout all five seasons, although Carrey's presence during the fifth season was limited due to his rising movie career, while Davidson missed most of the fourth season for an unknown reason.
Syndication
It was in reruns on local affiliates and on the News Corporation-owned FX Network, where it was distributed by Twentieth Television.
Reruns of the show air on the BET Network through December 31, 2008.
Comedy Central confirmed it will begin airing reruns of ''In Living Color'' on January 1, 2009. There is news on the Comedy Central website posted on December 8, 2008. comedycentral.com will post ''In Living Color'' in the Shows category on December 12, 2008.
''The Best of In Living Color'' aired on MyNetworkTV from April 16 to June 18, 2008. Hosted by David Alan Grier, it was a retrospective show featuring classic sketches, along with cast interviews and behind-the-scenes footage. The show aired on Wednesdays at 8:30 pm Eastern/7:30 pm Central, after MyNetworkTV's sitcom ''Under One Roof''.
Popular recurring sketches
Cast
Crossovers
*At the 2006 BET Awards when the show returned from one of its commercial breaks, the show's host Damon Wayans played a character very reminiscent to "Men on ..." critic Blaine Edwards.
*Former cast member Shawn Wayans (before he went to star in ''The Wayans Bros.'') portrayed J.J. Evans in an parody music video sketch of LL Cool J's "Mama Said Knock You Out" in 1992, later on Shawn Wayans would portray J. J. Evans one last time in 1997 on a fourth season episode of ''The Wayans Bros.'', entitled "Unspoken Token", in which he dreams that he is J.J. from hit 1970s sitcom, ''Good Times'', in a reunion with Bern Nadette Stanis (Thelma Evans), Johnny Brown (Nathan Bookman) and Ja'net DuBois (Willona Woods), reprising the characters on the show, Shawn's brother Marlon portrays Michael Evans, Anna Maria Horsford as Florida, and John Witherspoon as James.
*''In Living Color'' alums Damon Wayans, Jim Carrey, David Alan Grier, Jamie Foxx and Jennifer Lopez have all hosted ''Saturday Night Live'':
**Damon Wayans was a featured player on ''SNL'' in its 11th season (1985-1986); he was fired for playing a stereotypically homosexual cop on a sketch that didn't call for one. Though Wayans was fired, he returned to perform stand-up on the season finale hosted by Anjelica Huston and Billy Martin, and returned to host an episode from ''SNL'''s 20th season in 1995 (where he brought on two of his famous In Living Color characters: homeless wino Anton Jackson and gay film critc Blaine Edwards).
**Jim Carrey auditioned to be one of the castmembers on the ill-fated 1980-1981 season, but was dropped in favor of Charles Rocket (who later appeared in the 1994 film ''Dumb and Dumber'' with Carrey). Carrey hosted the season finale of ''SNL'''s 21st season in 1996, where he impersonated Fire Marshal Bill during the monologue.
**David Alan Grier first appeared on the season 20 episode as fellow "Men on Film" critic Antoine Merriweather. Grier hosted SNL on December 9, 1995 (season 21) and March 18, 1997 (season 22). Grier has also appeared on ''Saturday Night Live'''s rival show, MADtv, as Ed Bradley in a ''60 Minutes'' sketch.
**Jamie Foxx hosted SNL on January 8, 2000, making Foxx ''SNL's'' first host of the new millenium.
**Jennifer Lopez was a musical guest on ''SNL'' for the season 25 episode hosted by Alan Cumming (originally supposed to be hosted by Jon Stewart). Lopez was also the host and musical guest of her own episode in February 2001 (the episode was delayed due to an XFL game and had to be rerun three weeks after the original air date), which had a sketch where the Fly Girls from ''In Living Color'' (played by SNL castmembers Rachel Dratch, Maya Rudolph, and Tracy Morgan) visit Lopez and accuse her of forgetting about her beginnings as a dancer.
*In ''Liar Liar'', Jim Carrey reprised his "Fire Marshal Bill" character (albeit with no lines) in the background of one of the closing scenes.
Episodes
DVD releases
20th Century Fox Home Entertainment has released all five seasons of ''In Living Color'' on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time. Unfortunately the sets have been edited due to music licensing issues, resulting in some shows having entire sketches removed.
Source: Wikipedia