Live on tape from Hollywood, it's the Larry Sanders Show!
Superb late-night talk show satire, written by and starring the late Garry Shandling as the titular Larry Sanders, a self-centred and neurotic late-night talk show hostá la David Letterman or Jay Leno. Adopting a curious format, the show wassplit between Larry's talk-show (recorded on videotape) and the back-stage exploits (recorded on film). This effortlessly presented the contrast between the professional showbiz world of the show and the petty, snide backstabbing environment behind the scenes, along with Larry's effortlessly smooth, constantly grinning and in-control stage persona and his insecure, paranoid off-camera personality. The contrast was helped by numerous real-life stars who agreed to play as 'guests' on Larry's show, includingRobin Williams, Ellen DeGeneres, Roseanne Barr and David Duchovny, whose man-crush on Larry became a running gag.
Present to help (or hinder) Larry was his ultra-aggressive and tough-as-boots, but loyal, bulldog of a producer, Artie (Rip Torn), and Larry's pompous and egotistical sidekick, "Hey Now!" Hank Kingsley (Jeffrey Tambor), who despite his genial and bumbling stage presence was if anything even more paranoid, insecure and pathetic than Larry himself.
Adored by the Network: The unnamed network groomsJon Stewart to replace Larry, believing he can get the same or better ratings at a fraction of Larry's salary.
Larry ends each of his monologues with "No flipping!" as he mimes clicking on a remote, as a mock warning not to change the channel during the first commercial break.
Hank Kingsley uses his "Hey, now!" catch phrase during the show... and at pretty much all other times. He even gets fired from a Stunt Casting gig as a plumber onCaroline in The City because he insists on repeatedly ad-libbing his catch phrase.
Garry Shandlingdoes have a separate existence from Larry Sanders. On Larry's final show, Sean Penn complains to Sanders about what a terrible and insecure actor Shandling (his co-star on aReal Life movie) is.
Likewise, Paul Mooney plays Beverly's brother in one episode and is mentioned as a potential booking on theShow Within a Show in another.
Retraux: Larry's show, for the most part, mimics the style of Johnny Carson'sTonight Show, even as contemporaneous late night shows moved away from Johnny's template in various ways.
Stunt Casting: The producers got an awful lot of big names to appear on the show playing themselves.In-Universe, this is pretty much the only reason Hank Kingsley ever gets offered outside acting gigs - e.g., a guest spot as the janitor onCaroline in The City and a voice role in Disney'sHercules movie.
Below average in appearance Larry is married to the gorgeous Jeannie in the first season and dates many beautiful actresses throughout (Mimi Rogers, Sharon Stone etc). Balding Hank also has a much younger and attractive wife.