MovieChat Forums > The Pee-Wee Herman Show (1981) Discussion > Is it just me or was something special h...

Is it just me or was something special happening in L.A. around 1981?


I keep going back over the really wacky, subversive comedies that were coming out of Los Angeles in the late '70s and early '80s...the Pee Wee Herman Show, Uncle Andy's Playhouse, Eating Raoul, the Cheech and Chong films, Young Doctors in Love, Pandemonium, Jekyll and Hyde, Together Again, etc. I don't know if it was just the SNL/Animal House influence or if there was a seriously creative and rebellious scene happening, because there was a really out-of-control feel and a shared sense of anarchic humour that I can only assume came out of the '60s experience. A lot of the same people seem to show up in these things, like Paul Rubens, John Paragon, members of the Groundlings, etc. These films and shows were a special part of my teenage years, and I feel like my sense of humour as both a writer and actor was shaped by this stuff. Anyone who was around at the time care to comment? I wish I had been but I was an Ohio teenager. I was following the L.A. hardcore punk scene at the same time, and it seems like the same spirit was infused into that. Someone needs to write a book about this and explain it to me! :-)

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I think you nailed it. The LA punk scene that had been going since 1977... it fed into lots of creative/show-biz stuff going on in the years that followed. I was only 12 or 13 when I first saw this on cable in the early 80s, and it wasn't until a couple years later that I got into punk, somewhere in 1984... and then it was many, many years later when I finally discovered that Hammy was played by Tito Larriva from the Plugz and his sister was played by Nicole Panter, the manager of the Germs whom I had a massive crush on from her interview in Decline of Western Civilization. (I guess her hair going from bleach blond to jet black was like Clark Kent wearing glasses) That was when I realized there was a very direct connection.

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