National Post

A NEW LIGHT FOR A DIFFERENT WORLD

HOW COSBY SHOW SPINOFF IS SURVIVING THE FALLOUT

- AishA hArris

For many, The Cosby Show has become unwatchabl­e since the dozens of sexual assault allegation­s against Bill Cosby entered the media spotlight. Some networks, such as TV Land, have pulled the show from their lineups. (Others, like Bounce TV, initially did the same, only to resume airing reruns up until the verdict came in this year. It remains available to stream on Amazon Prime Video.)

But A Different World, the popular Cosby spinoff that ended its original run 25 years ago this week, does not seem to have inspired the same amount of hand-wringing as its predecesso­r.

Among the many pieces that have been written about Cosby’s legacy and how we square it away with the man himself, few pay much attention to A Different World, which he created. And articles about the sitcom — including a spate of them last fall around another milestone, the 30th anniversar­y of its September 1987 premiere — tend to mostly leave Cosby’s transgress­ions out of it. When black-ish creator Kenya Barris added grownish earlier this year, he openly cited A Different World as an influence and expressed hope that his own show could have a similar cultural impact.

Some of the reasons for this continued affection are obvious. While Cosby’s name appears in the credits for each episode, he only appeared on screen in three of them, all in Season 1. And after that season, which centered on Denise Huxtable’s (Lisa Bonet) transition to university life at the fictional Hillman College, the series was completely revamped.

The result of — and possibly a motivation for — this separating of art from artist allows the show to be a repository for the tender sentiments that have been displaced by the retroactiv­e tarnishing of The Cosby Show.

As someone who grew up watching and enjoying both shows (though I was too young to remember their original runs), I can relate to this. I have not wanted to revisit the Huxtable family since Hannibal Buress’ scathing onstage condemnati­on of Cosby in 2014 that encouraged more women to come forward and accuse Cosby of sexual assault. But I did binge all six seasons of A Different World a couple of summers ago when it finally landed on Netflix. (It is now on Amazon.) While I would rather not again see the Huxtables lip sync to Ray Charles’ “Night Time Is the Right Time” or Claire cut down her children’s dumb retorts with aplomb, I can at least give myself Whitley, Dwayne, Freddie and Kim.

It helps that A Different World was a more challengin­g, and arguably more meaningful show. When Debbie Allen took over as producer and director in Season 2, she famously made it her mission to set it apart from its more benign predecesso­r by having the writers tackle more substantiv­e issues, including colourism within the black community, AIDS and shopping while black.

Last year, Brittany Brathwaite wrote for The Root about how the show was ahead of its time. In a recent phone conversati­on, she told me that because of the creative risks it took, she has “seriously severed Bill Cosby from A Different World.”

“Do we have to cut off the contributi­ons that the show itself made,” she continued, “and all the people that helped contribute to what that was? It’s a tension that feels gross, but at the same time feels necessary.”

Khris Khal Davenport, who has also written appreciati­vely of A Different World, told me that he finds it easier to consume than The Cosby Show. The sensitive topics it tackled in its later seasons “makes that a more important show,” he told me.

At least one cast member has echoed those sentiments. A few weeks after Cosby’s conviction on three counts of sexual assault, Kadeem Hardison, who portrayed Dwayne Wayne, a nerdy Hillman College student (and later, professor), told TMZ that A Different World is “much bigger than Bill Cosby.”

Perhaps the comfort of nostalgia cannot and should not ever be completely divorced from the realities of its roots, but the way some of us cope is by transferri­ng all those warm memories onto one work and discarding the ugliest bits of the rest.

SENSITIVE TOPICS ‘MAKES THAT A MORE IMPORTANT SHOW.’

 ?? PHOTOS: NBC ?? Kadeem Hardison, left, and Darryl M. Bell in A Different World, which ended its original run 25 years ago this week.
PHOTOS: NBC Kadeem Hardison, left, and Darryl M. Bell in A Different World, which ended its original run 25 years ago this week.
 ??  ?? From left, Lisa Bonet, Dawnn Lewis and Marisa Tomei in the first season of A Different World.
From left, Lisa Bonet, Dawnn Lewis and Marisa Tomei in the first season of A Different World.

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