

Hulu quickdraw series#
"We kind of see it like a joke pitch room but all the people pitching jokes are in costume and makeup pitching in front of the camera," Lehr added.Īfter the success of Quick Draw's first season, Hulu renewed the series for a 10-episode second season. The result is spontaneous dialogue that doesn't necessarily depend on the set-up and punchline jokes of traditional sitcoms. "The actors come in, they get into costume, they walk onto set and then Nancy will give them whatever direction is necessary for them to launch the scene, and then we just go," Lehr said. Hower directs and Lehr stars, but none of the other actors ever see a script. Rather than writing a script, Lehr and Hower put together a very detailed outline of every episode. Hower and Lehr most recently collaborated on TBS' 10 Items or Less, which, like Quick Draw, makes use of completely improvised dialogue. "It's so much fun as a writer to use really dramatic shootouts and stunts and intermix it with this comedy that focuses on the mundane and awkward pauses."

"We felt our comedy would do well in a historic context," Lehr said.

The ridiculous plot points might sound like fiction, but Hower and Lehr find most of their inspiration in history books. For example, the 1875 treatment of rabies, essentially just locking someone up in a jail cell, gets used as a punchline as opposed to a somber moment. Lehr and Hower research the historical peculiarities of the era, and exploit them for comedic effect. The improvised comedy-western procedural series, which returns to Hulu Thursday for a second season, tries to find the funny in the lawlessness of a small Kansas town circa 1875.Ĭreated by John Lehr and Nancy Hower, the series follows the Harvard-educated Sheriff John Henry Hoyle (Lehr) who relies on 1800-era forensic science to fight crime. Nevertheless, it’s hard to see any of the more traditional networks being drawn to something like this. Viewed that way, “Quick Draw” represents a pretty conspicuous misfire, pardner.Quick Draw does not take shootouts, rabies or forensic science very seriously. tour illustrates that the service wants to be taken seriously as an original-programming provider, and anybody committed to playing in the big leagues is going to fire off their share of duds (a la Netflix’s “Hemlock Grove“). “ Quick Draw” virtually dispenses with any of that, which leaves the actors doing little more than playing dress-up, for what feels considerably longer than the premiere’s 23 minutes. When it was over, I emailed Quickdraw star/creator John Lehr. Moreover, the western is hardly a regular point of reference for the young guys who are presumably the target audience, given the snarky, let’s-sift-through-that-corpse tone of the humor. I stumbled on the hilarious series Quickdraw on Hulu last year and binged watched Season One. Silliness isn’t bad, necessarily, but when confined to such a specific setting, there needs to be some point of view.

Yet while Hoyle acts like a buffoon and cites his Ivy League credentials at every opportunity, he’s actually pretty handy with a gun, which becomes apparent when he’s charged with hunting down a gang of outlaws. Hoyle’s deputy (Nick Brown) has seen them all come and go, which understandably gives the new lawman pause - as does a pool among the locals on when he’s going to join the ranks of the deceased. Lehr plays John Henry Hoyle, the new sheriff in a Kansas town where his five predecessors all met a violent end.
