The Lyricist Lounge Show | |
---|---|
Genre | Sketch comedy |
Created by | Claude Brooks Danny Castro Anthony Marshall Perry Landesberg Jacob Septimus Wordsworth |
Written by | Hugh Moore Adam Strohl K. Snyder Vito Viscomi |
Directed by | Paul Casey Terri McCoy Sue Wolf |
Starring |
Wordsworth BabeePower Master Fuol Jordan Black Marty Belafsky Heather McDonald Mike Ricca Tracee Ellis Ross |
Country of origin | USA |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Jim Biederman Claude Brooks Dan Redican, Rachel Broker, Stacy Bronte |
Producer(s) | Danny Castro CK Gillen Richard G. King Perry Landesberg Anthony Marshall Jacob Septimus |
Running time | 30 mins. (approx) |
Release | |
Original network | MTV |
Original release | February 8, 2000 – January 1, 2001 |
The Lyricist Lounge Show was an American sketch comedy series that aired on MTV from 2000 to 2001 that combined hip-hop music with raps interspersed throughout the sketches. As Wordsworth, BabeePower, and Master Fuol rap on the theme song: "Welcome to the lyricist lounge show, it's rappin' and actin', laughin', clappin', lights, cameras, action, we're the first ones to ever place a sketch to a beat, it's the avenue the street where hip hop and comedy meet..." The show is also noted as the first program to feature Tracee Ellis Ross prior to Girlfriends.
MTV's The Lyricist Lounge Show had its roots in New York City's "Lyricist Lounge", a hip hop show case founded by Danny Castro and Anthony Marshall, which featured up and coming musical artists, many of whom have gone on to huge success, including Sean Combs, Notorious B.I.G, and Eminem. The showcase quickly outgrew the studio apartment where it was originally held and was forced to move to larger sold out venues which eventually led to a record deal for compilation CDs featuring Lyricist Lounge performers. A national tour followed, headlined by top hip-hop artists and showcasing unsigned talent.
The series was created by Danny Castro, Anthony Marshall, Perry Landesberg and Jacob Septimus of the Lyricist Lounge in New York along with the creative vision of executive producers Stacy Bronte and Rachel Broker. The show was pitched as a freestyle comedy jam with skits shot on location and in a loose studio setting. This approach was pushed aside by initial executive producer Claude Brooks, a product of sitcom television acting and producing, who insisted on shooting the show live to tape, with a studio audience. This approach proved to be too expensive and time-consuming and doomed the show at the outset. During the second season, executive producer Jim Beiderman tried to modify the format to return to the creators' original premise, but by that time the show had already established itself.
The Lyricist Lounge Show combined traditional comedic skits with the breakthrough concept of lyrical sketches, an innovative convergence of hip-hop music and theatrical narratives. Farcical comedic sketches pushed the envelope of political correctness, while lyrical acts showcased the talent of the show's resident rappers, who performed humorous vignettes with rhyming dialogue and hip hop beats. The lyrical sketches featured a variety of hip hop artists such as Q-Tip, Mos Def, Cee-lo, Common, Tash, Snoop Dogg, Erykah Badu, Krayzie Bone, Slick Rick, MC Lyte, and a host of others.