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The Chinese Restaurant

"The Chinese Restaurant" is the 11th episode of the sitcom Seinfeld's second season on NBC,[1] and is the show's 16th episode overall. The episode revolves entirely around Jerry (Jerry Seinfeld) and his friends Elaine Benes (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and George Costanza (Jason Alexander) waiting for a table at a Chinese restaurant, on their way to see a special one-night showing of Plan 9 from Outer Space. George tries to use the phone but it is constantly occupied, Elaine struggles to control her hunger, and Jerry recognizes a woman but is unsure where he has seen her before.

"The Chinese Restaurant"
Seinfeld episode
Episode no.Season 2
Episode 11
Directed byTom Cherones
Written byLarry David & Jerry Seinfeld
Production code206
Original air dateMay 23, 1991 (1991-05-23)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"The Busboy"
Seinfeld season 2
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Co-written by the series' creators Seinfeld and head writer Larry David, the episode is set in real time, without any scene breaks. It was the first of two episodes in which Jerry's neighbor Kramer (Michael Richards) did not appear (the other being "The Pen"). It is considered a "bottle episode", and NBC executives objected to its production and broadcast due to its lack of an involved storyline, thinking that audiences would be uninterested. It was not until David threatened to quit if the network forced any major changes upon the script that NBC allowed the episode to be produced, though the network postponed broadcast to near the end of season two.

First broadcast in the United States on May 23, 1991, the episode gained a Nielsen rating of 11.7/21. Television critics reacted positively to "The Chinese Restaurant", widely considering it one of the show's "classic episodes". In 1998, a South Florida Sun-Sentinel critic wrote that the episode, along with season four's "The Contest", "broke new sitcom ground".[2]

Plot edit

Jerry, George, and Elaine decide to eat dinner without a reservation at a Chinese restaurant before seeing a one-night showing of Plan 9 from Outer Space.[3] The maître d'hôtel repeatedly tells the party they will receive a table in "five, ten minutes". Besides having only a short time until the movie begins, they have other worries.

Elaine is extremely hungry. Jerry dares her to take an egg roll from someone's plate and eat it, offering her fifty dollars to do so. Elaine approaches a table and offers to split the fifty dollars with the party in exchange for them letting her take the egg roll. As she softly speaks the offer, they fail to comprehend her. She awkwardly walks away, then laughs off her attempt.

Jerry previously lied to his uncle, saying he was sick and could not join him for dinner, so that he could see the showing instead. He notices a woman at the restaurant that he has seen before, but cannot remember who she is. When the mysterious woman greets Jerry, he remembers that she is his uncle's receptionist and realized that she will tell his uncle, who will spread the story through the family grapevine.

George is anxious because the previous night he left his girlfriend Tatiana during sex because he needed to use a bathroom and thought hers was too close to her bedroom to provide enough privacy. He wants to call Tatiana to invite her to join them, but the restaurant's payphone is first occupied by a man who ignores George, and then by a woman who is rude to him. By the time George gets the phone, Tatiana has left, so he leaves a message. Tatiana calls the restaurant to reach George, but the maître d' calls out "Cartwright"; George does not recognize this as a corruption of his surname, so he tells her that George is not there.

Elaine tries bribing the maître d'hôtel to give them a table immediately, but he pockets the money without responding to her hints. The three debate eating at Sky Burger or in the theater instead, but Elaine refuses. After discovering that he missed Tatiana's call, George decides not to see the movie, Elaine decides to leave and get a hamburger, and Jerry decides that he might as well have dinner with his uncle. As soon as they leave, the maître d' calls out for them.

Production edit

"['The Chinese Restaurant'] was the point where the network said, 'You know, we really don't understand what you're trying to do with this show, and we think it's wrong. But we're going to air it anyway.' I was thrilled that NBC took that attitude. We had done enough good things at that point that they were willing to trust us."

Seinfeld on NBC's reaction[4]

"The Chinese Restaurant" was written by series co-creators Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld and directed by Tom Cherones, who directed all of the episodes in season two.[5] David came up with the idea of the real-time episode while he and Seinfeld were waiting for a table at a Chinese restaurant in Los Angeles.[6][7] When David presented the episode to NBC executives, their reception was cool.[8] The executives felt that there was no real story to the episode and viewers would not be interested.[9] Executive Warren Littlefield commented that he thought there were pages missing from the script he had received.[6] David argued that each character had a storyline: Jerry's story was he recognized a woman but did not know from where; Elaine's story was that she was very hungry; and George's story was that he was unable to use the phone.[10] NBC disagreed and objected to the broadcast of the episode.[10] To satisfy the executives, staff writer Larry Charles suggested the group's storyline to be on their way to a one-night screening of Plan 9 from Outer Space, and thus introducing a "ticking clock" scenario to the story.[6] When the NBC executives still objected, David threatened to quit the show if the network forced any major changes to the script.[10] Seinfeld supported David and NBC eventually allowed them to produce "The Chinese Restaurant" without any significant alterations, although they strongly advised them not go through with it, and postponed the broadcast until near the end of the season.[6][10][8]

Staff writer Spike Feresten later said that the host's calling George "Cartwright" instead of "Costanza" referenced Bonanza; "Bonanza" rhymes with "Costanza" and the show's main characters are the Cartwright family.[11]

"The Chinese Restaurant" was first read by its cast on December 5, 1990, and it was filmed on December 11.[10] Filming took place at CBS Studio Center in Studio City, Los Angeles, California, where all filming for the second season took place.[12] As only one location was used, it took roughly half of the time it usually took for an episode to be filmed. Cast members have remarked that the filming was shorter than on any other episode.[10] A few changes were made; in the first draft of the script, George, Jerry, and Elaine entered the restaurant talking about their least favorite holiday. In the version that aired, they talk about combining the jobs of policemen and garbagemen into a single job.[10] In the original draft, the three friends also discussed how to spend the long waiting period in the future, with George suggesting they bring a deck of cards and that Jerry bring a jigsaw puzzle with nothing but penguins.[10] One scene was cut before broadcast, featuring George explaining to Jerry that he pulled his hamstring while trying to untuck the covers of a hotel bed during his recent stay in Boston.[13] George can be seen grabbing his hamstring as he walks to the phone. The scene was later included on the Seinfeld seasons one and two DVD boxset.[10][14] George makes the same claim about his hamstring in "The Limo", and complains about the tightness of hotel bedsheets again in "The Trip".

At one point in the episode, Jerry mentions having a sister; however, she is never mentioned again in the series.

Cast edit

"The Chinese Restaurant" was the first episode that did not feature regular character Kramer (Michael Richards), Jerry's neighbor.[6] David explained that the reason for Kramer's absence was because, during Seinfeld's early seasons, the character never left his apartment and did not go out with the other three.[6] Richards was still displeased with the absence of his character, as he felt the episode was a breakthrough and, as such, essential for the series' development.[10] In an interview for the Seinfeld first- and second-season DVD box set, he commented: "The Chinese restaurant episode was so unique, and I just wanted to be a part of that because it was cutting edge. I knew that was a very important episode; it was so odd."[6]

Michael Mitz, who portrayed one of the payphone occupants, would return in season five as a photographer in "The Puffy Shirt".[10] The maître d' was portrayed by James Hong;[15] it is one of the actor's notable roles in the United States.[16] Hong had a small part in an episode of The Bob Newhart Show, season one, in 1972, portraying a man who is mistaken for a maître d', and played a similar role to his in "The Chinese Restaurant" in the 1961 film Flower Drum Song. Judy Kain, known for a recurring role on Married... with Children, guest-starred as Lorraine Catalano, the receptionist of Jerry's uncle.[10] David Tress guest-starred as Mr. Cohen, a guest who enters the restaurant and receives a table without reservation, as he is good friends with the maître d'.[10] Larry David's voice can be heard among the group of elderly people from whom Elaine tries to buy an egg-roll.[10] Norman Brenner, Richards' stand-in,[17] appears as an extra; he is sitting by the door of the restaurant when George, Jerry, and Elaine enter, and is still at the same spot when they leave.[10]

Themes edit

The episode is widely considered to encapsulate Seinfeld's "show about nothing" concept, with The Tampa Tribune critic Walt Belcher calling it "the ultimate episode about nothing",[18] and David Lavery and Sara Lewis Dunne describing it as "existential" in Seinfeld, Master of Its Domain: Revisiting Television's Greatest Sitcom.[19] Critics had a similar reaction to season three's "The Parking Garage", in which the four central characters spent the whole episode looking for their car.[20] The episode drags a small event out over the course of an entire episode. Lavery and Dunne suggest that this structure critiques sitcoms with implied moral lessons (such as those found in so-called "very special episodes"), in keeping with David's "no hugging and no learning" maxim.[21][22] Vincent Brook, as part of his analysis regarding the influence of Jewish culture on Seinfeld, has said that the episode's theme of entrapment and confinement in a small space is a recurring scenario on the show.[23] The relationship between the characters and food is another recurring theme of the series according to Lavery and Dunne; specific food items are associated with individual characters, and food itself is a "signifier of social contracts".[24]

Linda S. Ghent of Eastern Illinois University, has discussed the episode's treatment of economic problems. Just before Jerry's dare about the egg roll, Elaine says, "You know, it's not fair people are seated first come first served. It should be based on who's hungriest. I feel like just going over there and taking some food off somebody's plate."[3] Ghent discusses the history and reasoning behind rationing mechanisms and economic efficiency, which are the basis behind how tables are seated at restaurants, rationales which are perhaps invisible to hungry or impatient customers.[25] Elaine's attempt at bribery is an example of opportunity cost: the trio are willing to pay more than usual to get a table if it means Elaine can eat sooner and Jerry makes it to the movie on time.[26] Ghent also gives Jerry's willingness to lie to his uncle as another example of opportunity cost: "Did I do a bad thing by lying to my uncle and saying I couldn't go to dinner? Plan 9 from Outer Space – one night only, the big screen! My hands are tied!"[27]

Reception edit

"The anti-sitcom: no contrived plots, in fact no plots at all: these people can be funny just waiting to be seated."

Jamie Malanowski, Time[28]

When the episode first aired in the United States on May 23, 1991,[29] it received a Nielsen rating of 11.7 (11.7% of American households watched it) and an audience share of 21 (21% of televisions in use at the time were tuned to it).[10] Seinfeld was the eighteenth most-watched show of the week, and the sixth most-watched show on NBC.[30] It was believed that NBC executives held a meeting after the broadcast to determine the fate of the show, and decided it would receive a third season if the writers would put more effort into episode storylines.[10] However, the 1991 fall schedule had already been announced two days' earlier and the show was on the schedule.[31]

"The Chinese Restaurant" received higly positive reviews from critics, and is considered one of Seinfeld's first "classic" episodes.[10][32] Kit Boss, a critic for the Ocala Star-Banner, wrote that it was "like real life, but with better dialogue".[33] Various critics and news sources have praised how the episode defines the show's "show about nothing" concept.[34][35] Critics have also noted that aside from being a turning point for the show, the episode also became a turning point for television sitcoms as a whole.[36] One South Florida Sun-Sentinel critic commented that the episode, along with "The Contest" from season four, "broke new sitcom ground and expanded the lexicon of the '90s."[2] Vance Durgin of the Orange County Register praised how the show "wrung" so much comedy "out of a simple premise".[37] The episode was also included in a list compiled by The Star-Ledger called "1900–1999 The century in review – 50 events that shaped TV – and our lives".[38] The Charlotte Observer has called "The Chinese Restaurant" "the very epitome of the classic Seinfeld format" and the series' best episode.[39]

Critics also praised Louis-Dreyfus' and Alexander's performances; The Age critic Kenneth Nguyen stated that they "characteristically, rock[ed] their line readings".[40] Michael Flaherty and Mary Kaye Schilling of Entertainment Weekly, who graded the episode with an A−, commented: "George is at his pressure-cooker best, but it's Elaine—famished and in high dudgeon—who is the centerpiece."[41] David Sims of The A.V. Club gave the episode an A+, saying "it's a deftly-plotted, extremely funny example of the 'show about nothing' label that Seinfeld assigned itself".[42]

References edit

  1. ^ "Seinfeld Season 2 Episodes". TV Guide. from the original on 2 December 2021. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Sein Language: The Seinfeld Dialogue Quiz". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. May 14, 1998. p. 3E.
  3. ^ a b "Script, Episode 16 - The Chinese Restaurant". Seinology.com. from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved July 13, 2012.
  4. ^ Bark, Ed (September 24, 1995). "Comedy is a serious business – The outlook for the coming season varies widely for four NBC stars". The Dallas Morning News. p. 1C.
  5. ^ Lavery, David; Dunne, Sara Lewis (2006). Seinfeld, master of its domain: revisiting television's greatest sitcom. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 232–233. ISBN 978-0-8264-1803-6.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Louis-Dreyfus, Julia; Richards, Michael; Seinfeld, Jerry; David, Larry; Alexander, Jason; Cherones, Tom; Wilkie Newman, Karen; Charles, Larry; Littlefield, Warren (November 3, 2004). Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Inside Looks – "The Chinese Restaurant" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
  7. ^ Klein, Joshua (November 23, 2004). "'Seinfeld : Seasons 1–3' Columbia Tri-Star, $119.96". Chicago Tribune. p. 21.
  8. ^ a b King, Susan (November 22, 2004). "Something from a lot of nothing; The first compilations of the classic sitcom 'Seinfeld' arrive packed with bonus material". Los Angeles Times. p. E2.
  9. ^ Dancis, Bruce (November 23, 2004). "Now, that's something; 'Seinfeld,' the classic sitcom about nothing, comes to DVD with bonuses and yada yada yada". Sacramento Bee. p. E1.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Notes about Nothing – "The Chinese Restaurant" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. November 3, 2004.
  11. ^ Bradley, Bill (May 23, 2015). "Classic 'Seinfeld' Joke Is Revealed To Be A Huge Easter Egg". Huffington Post TV. The Huffington Post. from the original on 30 May 2015. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  12. ^ Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Notes about Nothing – "The Ex-Girlfriend" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. November 3, 2004.
  13. ^ Roeper, Richard (November 21, 2004). "It's about nothing, but I've learned a lot". Chicago Sun-Times. p. 1.
  14. ^ Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: In the Vault – "The Chinese Restaurant" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. November 3, 2004.
  15. ^ Smith, Scott (September 29, 2002). "Hollywood face to grace Manteca". Tri-Valley Herald.
  16. ^ "To be heard and not seen a sweet gig for an actor". Worcester Telegram & Gazette. June 15, 1998.
  17. ^ Seinfeld Seasons 1 & 2: Notes about Nothing – "The Stake Out" (DVD). Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
  18. ^ Belcher, Walt (May 13, 1998). "Seinfeld gang broke mold with laughs". The Tampa Tribune. p. 1.
  19. ^ Lavery & Dunne, p. 32
  20. ^ Deggans, Eric (April 26, 1998). "Behold! Mount Seinfeld ! – Monumental Nothingness". St. Petersburg Times. p. 1F.
  21. ^ Lavery & Dunne, p. 82
  22. ^ Colburn, Randall (2018-05-10). "'No hugging, no learning': 20 years on Seinfeld's mantra still looms large". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
  23. ^ Brook, Vincent (2003). Something ain't kosher here: the rise of the 'Jewish' sitcom. Rutgers University Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-8135-3211-0.
  24. ^ Lavery & Dunne, pp. 148–149
  25. ^ "Seinfeld Economics: The Chinese Restaurant (Waiting at Restaurant)". Critical Commons. from the original on May 8, 2013. Retrieved July 13, 2012.
  26. ^ "Seinfeld Economics: The Chinese Restaurant (Bribing Maitre d')". Critical Commons. from the original on May 8, 2013. Retrieved July 13, 2012.
  27. ^ "Seinfeld Economics: The Chinese Restaurant (Lying to Uncle)". Critical Commons. from the original on July 6, 2013. Retrieved July 13, 2012.
  28. ^ Malanowski, Jamie (January 12, 1998). . Time. Vol. 151. Archived from the original on December 3, 2007. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  29. ^ "Seinfeld: episode by episode". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. May 7, 1998.
  30. ^ "Nielsen Ratings". The Tampa Tribune. May 30, 1991. p. 4.
  31. ^ Carter, Bill (1991-05-21). "NBC Announces Its Lineup for Fall". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on 2019-08-13. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  32. ^ Nichols, Adam (November 21, 2004). "Re-Disk-Overing Seinfeld Fans rush to buy first DVD". New York Daily News. from the original on June 7, 2019. Retrieved August 11, 2009.
  33. ^ Boss, Kit (July 16, 1991). "The Success of Jerry Seinfeld, TV star, keeps Jerry Seinfeld, comic, of stage". Ocala Star-Banner. p. 7B. Retrieved October 17, 2009.
  34. ^ "Seinline, 1988–1998". Newsday. May 3, 1998. p. D6.
  35. ^ Rosenthal, Phil (December 25, 1991). "Don't Complain; At Least we have Seinfeld". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. p. 4E.
  36. ^ Johnson, Ted (March 10, 1996). "Shining the Lite On Sitcoms / From losing cars to shaving goatees, no plot's too frivolous". Newsday. p. 16.
  37. ^ Durgin, Vance (May 10, 1998). "Nothing Never Made us Laugh so Much – Opinion: Here are some of our favorite 'Seinfeld' episodes". Orange County Register. p. F11.
  38. ^ Sepinwall, Alan; Seitz, Matt Zoller (December 26, 1999). "1900–1999 The century in review – 50 events that shaped TV – and our lives". The Star-Ledger. p. 1.
  39. ^ "Seinfood, Seinfeld' Finale Will be Easier to Swallow with some Babke, Marble Rry and, of course, Soup". The Charlotte Observer. May 13, 1998. p. 1E.
  40. ^ Nguyen, Kenneth (May 18, 2006). "Critic's view – Saturday". The Age. p. 24.
  41. ^ Schilling, Mary Kaye; Flaherty, Mike (April 7, 2008). "The Seinfeld Chronicles: Season Two". Entertainment Weekly. from the original on October 15, 2012. Retrieved August 26, 2009.
  42. ^ Sims, David (2011-08-05). "'The Baby Shower'/'The Jacket'/'The Chinese Restaurant'". The A.V. Club. from the original on 2011-09-11. Retrieved 2011-08-16.

External links edit

  • "The Chinese Restaurant" at IMDb  

chinese, restaurant, other, uses, chinese, restaurant, disambiguation, 11th, episode, sitcom, seinfeld, second, season, show, 16th, episode, overall, episode, revolves, entirely, around, jerry, jerry, seinfeld, friends, elaine, benes, julia, louis, dreyfus, ge. For other uses see Chinese restaurant disambiguation The Chinese Restaurant is the 11th episode of the sitcom Seinfeld s second season on NBC 1 and is the show s 16th episode overall The episode revolves entirely around Jerry Jerry Seinfeld and his friends Elaine Benes Julia Louis Dreyfus and George Costanza Jason Alexander waiting for a table at a Chinese restaurant on their way to see a special one night showing of Plan 9 from Outer Space George tries to use the phone but it is constantly occupied Elaine struggles to control her hunger and Jerry recognizes a woman but is unsure where he has seen her before The Chinese Restaurant Seinfeld episodeEpisode no Season 2Episode 11Directed byTom CheronesWritten byLarry David amp Jerry SeinfeldProduction code206Original air dateMay 23 1991 1991 05 23 Guest appearancesJames Hong as the maitre d hotel David Tress as Mr Cohen Judy Kain as Lorraine Catalano Michael Mitz as man on phoneEpisode chronology Previous The Baby Shower Next The Busboy Seinfeldseason 2List of episodesCo written by the series creators Seinfeld and head writer Larry David the episode is set in real time without any scene breaks It was the first of two episodes in which Jerry s neighbor Kramer Michael Richards did not appear the other being The Pen It is considered a bottle episode and NBC executives objected to its production and broadcast due to its lack of an involved storyline thinking that audiences would be uninterested It was not until David threatened to quit if the network forced any major changes upon the script that NBC allowed the episode to be produced though the network postponed broadcast to near the end of season two First broadcast in the United States on May 23 1991 the episode gained a Nielsen rating of 11 7 21 Television critics reacted positively to The Chinese Restaurant widely considering it one of the show s classic episodes In 1998 a South Florida Sun Sentinel critic wrote that the episode along with season four s The Contest broke new sitcom ground 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Cast 3 Themes 4 Reception 5 References 6 External linksPlot editJerry George and Elaine decide to eat dinner without a reservation at a Chinese restaurant before seeing a one night showing of Plan 9 from Outer Space 3 The maitre d hotel repeatedly tells the party they will receive a table in five ten minutes Besides having only a short time until the movie begins they have other worries Elaine is extremely hungry Jerry dares her to take an egg roll from someone s plate and eat it offering her fifty dollars to do so Elaine approaches a table and offers to split the fifty dollars with the party in exchange for them letting her take the egg roll As she softly speaks the offer they fail to comprehend her She awkwardly walks away then laughs off her attempt Jerry previously lied to his uncle saying he was sick and could not join him for dinner so that he could see the showing instead He notices a woman at the restaurant that he has seen before but cannot remember who she is When the mysterious woman greets Jerry he remembers that she is his uncle s receptionist and realized that she will tell his uncle who will spread the story through the family grapevine George is anxious because the previous night he left his girlfriend Tatiana during sex because he needed to use a bathroom and thought hers was too close to her bedroom to provide enough privacy He wants to call Tatiana to invite her to join them but the restaurant s payphone is first occupied by a man who ignores George and then by a woman who is rude to him By the time George gets the phone Tatiana has left so he leaves a message Tatiana calls the restaurant to reach George but the maitre d calls out Cartwright George does not recognize this as a corruption of his surname so he tells her that George is not there Elaine tries bribing the maitre d hotel to give them a table immediately but he pockets the money without responding to her hints The three debate eating at Sky Burger or in the theater instead but Elaine refuses After discovering that he missed Tatiana s call George decides not to see the movie Elaine decides to leave and get a hamburger and Jerry decides that he might as well have dinner with his uncle As soon as they leave the maitre d calls out for them Production edit The Chinese Restaurant was the point where the network said You know we really don t understand what you re trying to do with this show and we think it s wrong But we re going to air it anyway I was thrilled that NBC took that attitude We had done enough good things at that point that they were willing to trust us Seinfeld on NBC s reaction 4 The Chinese Restaurant was written by series co creators Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld and directed by Tom Cherones who directed all of the episodes in season two 5 David came up with the idea of the real time episode while he and Seinfeld were waiting for a table at a Chinese restaurant in Los Angeles 6 7 When David presented the episode to NBC executives their reception was cool 8 The executives felt that there was no real story to the episode and viewers would not be interested 9 Executive Warren Littlefield commented that he thought there were pages missing from the script he had received 6 David argued that each character had a storyline Jerry s story was he recognized a woman but did not know from where Elaine s story was that she was very hungry and George s story was that he was unable to use the phone 10 NBC disagreed and objected to the broadcast of the episode 10 To satisfy the executives staff writer Larry Charles suggested the group s storyline to be on their way to a one night screening of Plan 9 from Outer Space and thus introducing a ticking clock scenario to the story 6 When the NBC executives still objected David threatened to quit the show if the network forced any major changes to the script 10 Seinfeld supported David and NBC eventually allowed them to produce The Chinese Restaurant without any significant alterations although they strongly advised them not go through with it and postponed the broadcast until near the end of the season 6 10 8 Staff writer Spike Feresten later said that the host s calling George Cartwright instead of Costanza referenced Bonanza Bonanza rhymes with Costanza and the show s main characters are the Cartwright family 11 The Chinese Restaurant was first read by its cast on December 5 1990 and it was filmed on December 11 10 Filming took place at CBS Studio Center in Studio City Los Angeles California where all filming for the second season took place 12 As only one location was used it took roughly half of the time it usually took for an episode to be filmed Cast members have remarked that the filming was shorter than on any other episode 10 A few changes were made in the first draft of the script George Jerry and Elaine entered the restaurant talking about their least favorite holiday In the version that aired they talk about combining the jobs of policemen and garbagemen into a single job 10 In the original draft the three friends also discussed how to spend the long waiting period in the future with George suggesting they bring a deck of cards and that Jerry bring a jigsaw puzzle with nothing but penguins 10 One scene was cut before broadcast featuring George explaining to Jerry that he pulled his hamstring while trying to untuck the covers of a hotel bed during his recent stay in Boston 13 George can be seen grabbing his hamstring as he walks to the phone The scene was later included on the Seinfeld seasons one and two DVD boxset 10 14 George makes the same claim about his hamstring in The Limo and complains about the tightness of hotel bedsheets again in The Trip At one point in the episode Jerry mentions having a sister however she is never mentioned again in the series Cast edit The Chinese Restaurant was the first episode that did not feature regular character Kramer Michael Richards Jerry s neighbor 6 David explained that the reason for Kramer s absence was because during Seinfeld s early seasons the character never left his apartment and did not go out with the other three 6 Richards was still displeased with the absence of his character as he felt the episode was a breakthrough and as such essential for the series development 10 In an interview for the Seinfeld first and second season DVD box set he commented The Chinese restaurant episode was so unique and I just wanted to be a part of that because it was cutting edge I knew that was a very important episode it was so odd 6 Michael Mitz who portrayed one of the payphone occupants would return in season five as a photographer in The Puffy Shirt 10 The maitre d was portrayed by James Hong 15 it is one of the actor s notable roles in the United States 16 Hong had a small part in an episode of The Bob Newhart Show season one in 1972 portraying a man who is mistaken for a maitre d and played a similar role to his in The Chinese Restaurant in the 1961 film Flower Drum Song Judy Kain known for a recurring role on Married with Children guest starred as Lorraine Catalano the receptionist of Jerry s uncle 10 David Tress guest starred as Mr Cohen a guest who enters the restaurant and receives a table without reservation as he is good friends with the maitre d 10 Larry David s voice can be heard among the group of elderly people from whom Elaine tries to buy an egg roll 10 Norman Brenner Richards stand in 17 appears as an extra he is sitting by the door of the restaurant when George Jerry and Elaine enter and is still at the same spot when they leave 10 Themes editThe episode is widely considered to encapsulate Seinfeld s show about nothing concept with The Tampa Tribune critic Walt Belcher calling it the ultimate episode about nothing 18 and David Lavery and Sara Lewis Dunne describing it as existential in Seinfeld Master of Its Domain Revisiting Television s Greatest Sitcom 19 Critics had a similar reaction to season three s The Parking Garage in which the four central characters spent the whole episode looking for their car 20 The episode drags a small event out over the course of an entire episode Lavery and Dunne suggest that this structure critiques sitcoms with implied moral lessons such as those found in so called very special episodes in keeping with David s no hugging and no learning maxim 21 22 Vincent Brook as part of his analysis regarding the influence of Jewish culture on Seinfeld has said that the episode s theme of entrapment and confinement in a small space is a recurring scenario on the show 23 The relationship between the characters and food is another recurring theme of the series according to Lavery and Dunne specific food items are associated with individual characters and food itself is a signifier of social contracts 24 Linda S Ghent of Eastern Illinois University has discussed the episode s treatment of economic problems Just before Jerry s dare about the egg roll Elaine says You know it s not fair people are seated first come first served It should be based on who s hungriest I feel like just going over there and taking some food off somebody s plate 3 Ghent discusses the history and reasoning behind rationing mechanisms and economic efficiency which are the basis behind how tables are seated at restaurants rationales which are perhaps invisible to hungry or impatient customers 25 Elaine s attempt at bribery is an example of opportunity cost the trio are willing to pay more than usual to get a table if it means Elaine can eat sooner and Jerry makes it to the movie on time 26 Ghent also gives Jerry s willingness to lie to his uncle as another example of opportunity cost Did I do a bad thing by lying to my uncle and saying I couldn t go to dinner Plan 9 from Outer Space one night only the big screen My hands are tied 27 Reception edit The anti sitcom no contrived plots in fact no plots at all these people can be funny just waiting to be seated Jamie Malanowski Time 28 When the episode first aired in the United States on May 23 1991 29 it received a Nielsen rating of 11 7 11 7 of American households watched it and an audience share of 21 21 of televisions in use at the time were tuned to it 10 Seinfeld was the eighteenth most watched show of the week and the sixth most watched show on NBC 30 It was believed that NBC executives held a meeting after the broadcast to determine the fate of the show and decided it would receive a third season if the writers would put more effort into episode storylines 10 However the 1991 fall schedule had already been announced two days earlier and the show was on the schedule 31 The Chinese Restaurant received higly positive reviews from critics and is considered one of Seinfeld s first classic episodes 10 32 Kit Boss a critic for the Ocala Star Banner wrote that it was like real life but with better dialogue 33 Various critics and news sources have praised how the episode defines the show s show about nothing concept 34 35 Critics have also noted that aside from being a turning point for the show the episode also became a turning point for television sitcoms as a whole 36 One South Florida Sun Sentinel critic commented that the episode along with The Contest from season four broke new sitcom ground and expanded the lexicon of the 90s 2 Vance Durgin of the Orange County Register praised how the show wrung so much comedy out of a simple premise 37 The episode was also included in a list compiled by The Star Ledger called 1900 1999 The century in review 50 events that shaped TV and our lives 38 The Charlotte Observer has called The Chinese Restaurant the very epitome of the classic Seinfeld format and the series best episode 39 Critics also praised Louis Dreyfus and Alexander s performances The Age critic Kenneth Nguyen stated that they characteristically rock ed their line readings 40 Michael Flaherty and Mary Kaye Schilling of Entertainment Weekly who graded the episode with an A commented George is at his pressure cooker best but it s Elaine famished and in high dudgeon who is the centerpiece 41 David Sims of The A V Club gave the episode an A saying it s a deftly plotted extremely funny example of the show about nothing label that Seinfeld assigned itself 42 References edit Seinfeld Season 2 Episodes TV Guide Archived from the original on 2 December 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 a b Sein Language The Seinfeld Dialogue Quiz South Florida Sun Sentinel May 14 1998 p 3E a b Script Episode 16 The Chinese Restaurant Seinology com Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved July 13 2012 Bark Ed September 24 1995 Comedy is a serious business The outlook for the coming season varies widely for four NBC stars The Dallas Morning News p 1C Lavery David Dunne Sara Lewis 2006 Seinfeld master of its domain revisiting television s greatest sitcom Continuum International Publishing Group pp 232 233 ISBN 978 0 8264 1803 6 a b c d e f g Louis Dreyfus Julia Richards Michael Seinfeld Jerry David Larry Alexander Jason Cherones Tom Wilkie Newman Karen Charles Larry Littlefield Warren November 3 2004 Seinfeld Seasons 1 amp 2 Inside Looks The Chinese Restaurant DVD Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Klein Joshua November 23 2004 Seinfeld Seasons 1 3 Columbia Tri Star 119 96 Chicago Tribune p 21 a b King Susan November 22 2004 Something from a lot of nothing The first compilations of the classic sitcom Seinfeld arrive packed with bonus material Los Angeles Times p E2 Dancis Bruce November 23 2004 Now that s something Seinfeld the classic sitcom about nothing comes to DVD with bonuses and yada yada yada Sacramento Bee p E1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Seinfeld Seasons 1 amp 2 Notes about Nothing The Chinese Restaurant DVD Sony Pictures Home Entertainment November 3 2004 Bradley Bill May 23 2015 Classic Seinfeld Joke Is Revealed To Be A Huge Easter Egg Huffington Post TV The Huffington Post Archived from the original on 30 May 2015 Retrieved 30 May 2015 Seinfeld Seasons 1 amp 2 Notes about Nothing The Ex Girlfriend DVD Sony Pictures Home Entertainment November 3 2004 Roeper Richard November 21 2004 It s about nothing but I ve learned a lot Chicago Sun Times p 1 Seinfeld Seasons 1 amp 2 In the Vault The Chinese Restaurant DVD Sony Pictures Home Entertainment November 3 2004 Smith Scott September 29 2002 Hollywood face to grace Manteca Tri Valley Herald To be heard and not seen a sweet gig for an actor Worcester Telegram amp Gazette June 15 1998 Seinfeld Seasons 1 amp 2 Notes about Nothing The Stake Out DVD Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Belcher Walt May 13 1998 Seinfeld gang broke mold with laughs The Tampa Tribune p 1 Lavery amp Dunne p 32 Deggans Eric April 26 1998 Behold Mount Seinfeld Monumental Nothingness St Petersburg Times p 1F Lavery amp Dunne p 82 Colburn Randall 2018 05 10 No hugging no learning 20 years on Seinfeld s mantra still looms large The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2023 08 05 Brook Vincent 2003 Something ain t kosher here the rise of the Jewish sitcom Rutgers University Press p 108 ISBN 978 0 8135 3211 0 Lavery amp Dunne pp 148 149 Seinfeld Economics The Chinese Restaurant Waiting at Restaurant Critical Commons Archived from the original on May 8 2013 Retrieved July 13 2012 Seinfeld Economics The Chinese Restaurant Bribing Maitre d Critical Commons Archived from the original on May 8 2013 Retrieved July 13 2012 Seinfeld Economics The Chinese Restaurant Lying to Uncle Critical Commons Archived from the original on July 6 2013 Retrieved July 13 2012 Malanowski Jamie January 12 1998 Forgetting Nothing Time Vol 151 Archived from the original on December 3 2007 Retrieved October 24 2009 Seinfeld episode by episode Seattle Post Intelligencer May 7 1998 Nielsen Ratings The Tampa Tribune May 30 1991 p 4 Carter Bill 1991 05 21 NBC Announces Its Lineup for Fall The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 2019 08 13 Retrieved 2021 03 18 Nichols Adam November 21 2004 Re Disk Overing Seinfeld Fans rush to buy first DVD New York Daily News Archived from the original on June 7 2019 Retrieved August 11 2009 Boss Kit July 16 1991 The Success of Jerry Seinfeld TV star keeps Jerry Seinfeld comic of stage Ocala Star Banner p 7B Retrieved October 17 2009 Seinline 1988 1998 Newsday May 3 1998 p D6 Rosenthal Phil December 25 1991 Don t Complain At Least we have Seinfeld South Florida Sun Sentinel p 4E Johnson Ted March 10 1996 Shining the Lite On Sitcoms From losing cars to shaving goatees no plot s too frivolous Newsday p 16 Durgin Vance May 10 1998 Nothing Never Made us Laugh so Much Opinion Here are some of our favorite Seinfeld episodes Orange County Register p F11 Sepinwall Alan Seitz Matt Zoller December 26 1999 1900 1999 The century in review 50 events that shaped TV and our lives The Star Ledger p 1 Seinfood Seinfeld Finale Will be Easier to Swallow with some Babke Marble Rry and of course Soup The Charlotte Observer May 13 1998 p 1E Nguyen Kenneth May 18 2006 Critic s view Saturday The Age p 24 Schilling Mary Kaye Flaherty Mike April 7 2008 The Seinfeld Chronicles Season Two Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on October 15 2012 Retrieved August 26 2009 Sims David 2011 08 05 The Baby Shower The Jacket The Chinese Restaurant The A V Club Archived from the original on 2011 09 11 Retrieved 2011 08 16 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Chinese Restaurant The Chinese Restaurant at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Chinese Restaurant amp oldid 1217389758, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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