Audio clips of Lopez and Prinze Jr. embedded in story. Windows Media Player required.
Let's get one thing straight: Just because George Lopez and Freddie Prinze
Jr. are Latino men with their own sitcoms on ABC, and their shows just
happen to be scheduled consecutively on Wednesday nights, doesn't mean
there's a new "Latin hour" on prime-time television.
So, por favor, don't call it that. Nobody called the pairing of the
wacky Barones on "Everybody Loves Raymond" and the emotionally challenged Harper brothers on "Two and a Half Men" the "white hour," did
they?
"Shows should just be able to be shows without hyphenating their lead characters," Lopez said. "[With] us,
they feel like they need to somehow label it to say, 'All right, this is what
you're going to be watching, so are you sure you want to watch?' But they don't
do it to people who are Jewish or African American. Because we have the muscle
but we need the voice to say you can't do that to us. Just watch because you
think the shows are funny. Don't watch because we're a couple of Latino guys."
To which Prinze added: "I have no patience for that. Because Latino is cool,
all of a sudden, they're like, we'll say this and we'll be cool. Shut your
face, man. It's TV."
Actually, there's a lot more to it than TV. Both Lopez and Prinze, whose lives
and careers are connected by the tragic death at a young age of Prinze's father,
Freddie Prinze Sr., feel they have a lot to prove to the television industry,
to mainstream America and to themselves. To them, the idea that their back-to-back
shows on ABC have been labeled "the Latin hour" undermines the historic and
cultural impact of what the shows bring to the entertainment landscape.
For the first time, there will be two shows centered on Latino families hailing
from different cultures ("The George Lopez Show" is Mexican, "Freddie" is Puerto Rican) and socioeconomic perspectives (Lopez is working class, Prinze is upscale) but who have no qualms about expressing their Latino pride. Additionally, "The George Lopez Show" will air its 100th episode this season. It's the first time a show about a Latino family has reached that milestone, which potentially means big-time syndication dollars. And for its creator and star, it means a place in history next to the only other Latinos who had hit shows: Desi Arnaz and Freddie Prinze Sr."It means a lot in that I always felt invisible and I was louder in my own head than I was verbally," Lopez said. "I
was torturing myself, wanting to say things and not knowing how to be. The
stand-up was a way out but it never came easy. So to have something that's
named after me make it, and that has history tied to Desi and Freddie and now
Freddie Jr., it's unbelievable to me because I never really thought anything
good would happen to me."
In recent years, TV has introduced characters who are able to remain true to
their Latino roots without hitting viewers over the head with their ethnicity:
Rico (Freddy Rodriguez) and Vanessa (Justina Machado) on "Six Feet Under," nurse Carla (Judy Reyes) on "Scrubs" and Gabrielle (Eva Longoria) and Carlos (Ricardo Antonio Chavira) on "Desperate Housewives." (Although
the latter drew the ire of Latinos when it was revealed that the wealthiest
couple on Wisteria Lane gained its riches illegally).
"This is indeed a milestone but it's 2005: Why has it taken so long?" said Vince Gutierrez, a National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences governor who chairs the diversity committee. "There is finally recognition that the themes that George's show portrays cross racial lines and have struck a chord with the viewing audience."But
even now as Lopez approaches a career landmark, months after his wife donated
one of her kidneys to save his life, and just before his idol's son will become
the fourth Latino man to star in his own show, Lopez resents that he hasn't gained
the level of respect of other comics with their own sitcoms, such as Ray Romano
or Chris Rock.
"I think it's easier for African American and white comics to
be praised than it is Latinos because they think our culture or our humor is
substandard," Lopez said. "I mean, I just don't think they want to give us credit. I just don't think that they see us as important enough to be at their level.... I'm the longest-produced [comedy] at
Warner Bros. and I don't feel special. They come over and say hello. But everybody's
gonna make a lot of money and I don't feel like I'm special to them."
Personal approach
Inspired by the lives of their stars, "The George Lopez Show" and "Freddie" demonstrate
what should already be obvious as the Latino population has swelled and the
culture blended more into the mainstream.
"If you leak anything out, it's that we are very different," wisecracked the
44-year-old Lopez, who grew up in the San Fernando Valley. He finds it perplexing
that such a fact needs to be pointed out at a time when Latinos, the largest
minority group in the country, represent $700 billion a year in buying power
and 11.2 million homes with TV sets.
Lopez's 4-year-old sitcom depicts a Mexican American family in Los Angeles; Freddie's family is Puerto Rican and lives in Chicago. George is a working-class airplane manufacturing plant manager; Freddie is a chef and owner of an upscale restaurant.
George's show revolves around a nuclear family of four and George's mother, who lived alone until last week's season premiere, when her house burned down. Through it, Lopez says he has worked out many of the painful issues of his childhood that make his stand-up act so poignant.
On "Freddie," which premieres tonight, the lead character is a successful
bachelor who takes in three generations of women, including a sister-in-law,
to live with him in his fancy digs while trying to balance his love life and
relationship with his best friend, played by Brian Austin Green. (In a groundbreaking
role, actress Jenny Gago will play the grandmother, speaking only in Spanish;
her dialogue will be subtitled.)
The son of Freddie Prinze Sr., whose sitcom "Chico and the Man" broke new
ground in 1974 and who shot himself while intoxicated on sedatives at age
22 in 1977, grew up in New Mexico with his Italian mother, grandmother, aunts
and godmother, and spent the summers in Puerto Rico with his father's family.
"When I was growing up,
people had whatever image they had about my father, and I'm not crazy about
talking about it because it wasn't a very good image," said Prinze, 29, who was only 10 months old when his father died. "These
parents of the children within my school would look at me and they would see
him. They would see a man that took drugs and ended his life, and whether they
wanted it to believe it was an accident or a suicide, it didn't matter. Their
child wasn't hanging out with Freddie Prinze Jr."
So the son did the only thing he knew to clear his father's name: He became
the best man he could be, working three jobs in high school in New Mexico
to help his mother with the bills, and moving to Los Angeles at 18 to become
an actor and portray "stand-up guys that made mistakes but understood what they were and weren't going to make them again." Never
a party boy, Prinze married actress Sarah Michelle Gellar in 2002.
"They [people] can't fathom what it's like to share that name and
read something bad about the man who gave it to you," Prinze said. "So I worked
as hard as I could to clean up that name.... To do this show is me testing those
waters and if it succeeds, I don't care as long as respect is paid to my father."
What Prinze did not know as he was growing up was that in the San Fernando
Valley there was a Mexican American teenager who lived for "Chico and the Man" and
was crushed when its funny and sexy star died suddenly. That teenager was Lopez,
who says he never believed he could follow in his idol's footsteps, though
he always dreamed it.
"The first time I saw him, I wanted to be like him," Lopez said. "He was so young
and cool and Latino and everybody loved him. And then when he passed, it was
devastating to me. I later learned that he was tortured, like I was tortured,
and I learned to fight through it."
Then fate intervened. At least, that's how Lopez, Prinze and the man who managed his father, Ron De Blasio, see it. Lopez, who had been working the stand-up circuit for many years in the hopes of getting his own sitcom, met De Blasio six years ago. De Blasio had managed such comic heavyweights as Bill Cosby, George Carlin and Richard Pryor, but after his young client's death he gave up comedians for musicians. Eventually, Lopez wore him down.
"Freddie Sr. was a very funny guy but he was also a very, very bright guy with an exceptional IQ," said De Blasio, who has remained an "uncle" to Junior. "He
could have been whatever he wanted to be. And I just felt his presence when I
was with George. I felt like this was probably the extension of what Freddie
and I were going to do and finishing it out."
Restoring father's name
In 2002, Lopez finally got his own show, and later wound up living four houses away from Prinze Jr.'s mother. They became friends, and she gave him his idol's key chain and his old American Express card. Then two years ago, Lopez met her son.
"I don't know what the word is, but there's a stronger spirit out there and a stronger being and a stronger essence that made all these things happen," De Blasio said. "Freddie
Jr. didn't get to this town and go crazy, even when he suffered defeat and people
said things about his dad that weren't true. He remained a good kid and very
decent guy and he's bringing his father's name back that way. And George has
helped him with that."
It was Lopez who campaigned for Prinze Sr.'s star on the Hollywood Walk of
Fame, which was unveiled in December. When Prinze Jr. signed a deal with ABC,
Lopez, who says he still feels like a "mother hen to a fragile egg" on his own show, was there to provide guidance and allowed his executive producer, Bruce Helford, to run "Freddie" as
well.
"George Lopez says without Freddie Prinze there's no George Lopez," Prinze Jr. said. "But
without George Lopez, my father never gets his star. Without George Lopez, nobody
says good stuff about my father. And the fact that he goes above and beyond to
help me, after he's succeeded, that's a big deal to me. I can count on one hand
the people who have character who do that in this business. But it's always guys
like George. It's always the people who have been disrespected and who have not
been treated well their whole life who say, 'I'm not going to let that happen
to somebody else.' "
Perhaps part of the reason Lopez feels the industry does not hold him in high
enough regard is that ABC has moved the show four times (joked Prinze: "from Testosterone Tuesday to the Witness Protection Program on Fridays"), and it has never grown into a ratings juggernaut, said Peter Roth, president of Warner Bros. Television. Last season, "The George Lopez Show" drew
an average 7.2 million viewers (12% of whom were Latino) and ranked 88th among
201 prime-time shows, according to Nielsen Media Research. Last week, 9.1 million
viewers tuned in for the show's season premiere, making it the No. 1 show in
its new time slot.
"From our perspective, he's done a yeoman's job of bringing a very attractive and a very acceptable and large number of people each week," Roth said. "The
thing about George that distinguishes him from almost every other star we work
with is that he has literally been involved with every single stage of development
and execution of the series. "
Added Steve McPherson, ABC's president of prime-time entertainment: "Traditional family comedies right now are not getting the kind of spotlight that they deserve sometimes. But I think creatively, he's doing some of the best family comedy that there is on the air right now. With the departure of ["Everybody Loves Raymond"],
we have the dominant family brand and I think he's a shining star in it."
McPherson has joked that instead of the "Latin hour," the pairing of the two sitcoms should be called "The Bruce Helford Hour" since
the producer runs both shows. Reflecting on the impact of the two comedies
on the TV landscape as well as society, Helford amplified a line from the star
of his new show.
"It's really interesting what Freddie said at press tour [this summer]," Helford said. "Desi [Arnaz] unlocked
the door, his dad opened it and George kicked it down. Now, I guess, we just
have to widen the doorway."
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times




