
NBC‘s sophomore comedy Up All Night will be off all winter, but when it comes back in the spring, it will look and feel different. NBC has decided to convert the family comedy from a single-camera to a multi-camera format. Episode 11, which wraps production next week, will be the last episode of the show in the single-camera form. Production will then shut down for a three-month hiatus to convert the stage and set to multi-cam tapings in front of live audiences, during which time the show’s writers will work on scripts. Up All Night‘s new showrunner this season, Tucker Cawley, comes from a very strong multi-camera background as one of the top writer-producers on CBS’ Everybody Loves Raymond, as does Up All Night creator/exec producer Emily Spivey, a Saturday Night Live veteran.
Up All Night will go back into production in February on five multi-camera episodes. That will bring the total for the show’s second season to 16 episodes, up from the original 13 ordered in May. Up All Night will remain on the air until December, when all of the 11 single-camera episodes will have aired. The show will make its multi-camera debut in April/May. A modest ratings performer at best, Up All Night has had a promising ratings uptick in the last two weeks with a 1.4 rating among adults 18-49, building on its 30 Rock lead-in both times.
The idea for the conversion came from Up All Night executive producer and SNL honcho Lorne Michaels, who had been looking for a way to infuse the show with more energy. Another single-camera NBC comedy he exec produces, 30 Rock, has done successful live multi-cam episodes. “We know what the multi-camera audience does for the live episodes of 30 Rock, plus after seeing both Maya and Christina do SNL within the past few months, we knew we had the kind of performers — Will Arnett included — who love the reaction from a live audience,” said NBC chairman Bob Greenblatt. (Up All Night star Christina Applegate recently hosted the late-night comedy show, while her co-star, SNL alumna Maya Rudolph, pops up from time to time for guest appearances.) “We think we can make a seamless tradition to the new format. Also, we’re committed to the multi-camera form and this will give us another show to consider for next season in this new format.” The network has two multi-cam shows on the air right now, freshman Guys With Kids and sophomore Whitney. Both Applegate and Rudolph have extensive experience in front of live audiences — Rudolph from SNL, Applegate from her years on Married… With Children.
While changing the format of a comedy from single- to multi-camera and vice versa is not unusual during the development process and even after the pilot — most recently ABC orered a single-camera version of CBS’ multi-cam pilot Super Fun Night — a switch during a series’ run is extremely rare. Happy Days did it after Season 2. (The series always used a laugh track but switched from single-camera type filming to multi-cam tapings in front of a live audience in Season 3.)
Interestings, the one recent example of such a transition was on NBC, which aired 10 episodes of the low-rated Julia Louis-Dreyfus 2002 single-camera comedy Watching Ellie before putting the show on a long hiatus to retool it as a multi-cam. The multi-camera version fared even worse and was cancelled after 6 episodes.
Applegate’s previous series, ABC’s single-camera Samantha Who? considered adding extra cameras during filming to lower cost while trying to keep the show’s single-camera feel, but the plan was ultimately scrapped and the show cancelled.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


a poo sandwich is still a poo sandwich regardless of how it shot
Agreed. The show isn’t funny and they’re blaming the format? Even if it does work better as a multi-cam it’s TOO LATE. Stop trying to retool a dead show and find some better shows and better writers.
Has something like this ever happened before? Props to NBC for trying to rescue a struggling series with great talent. They could easily pair this with Guys With Kids now.
Yes, Happy Days switched from single to multi after 2 seasons and became a hit. Good for UAN, these actors are better suited for multi anyway
It actually happened to an NBC show before called WATCHING ELLE starring Julia Louise Dreyfus and before that was done with HAPPY DAYS. They fail to mention how much money they’ll save doing this live audience.
Is this the first time this has ever happened, where a show switches format mid-series?
Happy Days season 2
The precedents are pretty old. Happy Days started as single camera and switched to multi-cam. Later on the same thing happened with Newhart.
Not quite. Newhart started out shooting on videotape and then switched to film. Always three-camera, though.
The Odd Couple however, was another show that started as one camera and found success after switching to three.
I can’t think of any other time that this has happened. ABC was considering picking up Rebel Wilson’s pilot “Super Fun Night”, which was rejected by CBS, and converting it the other way around, from a multi-camera show to a single-camera one, which makes more sense. But I can’t imagine this working out well; we have gotten used to seeing the characters in a realistic, film-like setting so seeing them all brightly lit and CBS-y is going to be really weird.
The only thing that’s close to this that I can think of is the show “Roc”, which started out as a traditional multi-cam sitcom and then in its second season went to doing live episodes every week. But that wasn’t as jarring as this will be.
The Odd Couple with Tony Randall and Jack Klugman changed formats after 1 season.
Newhart was always a multicam. It switched from videotape to film in season 2, but all seasons were multicam, in front of an audience.
Stupid great show ruined thanks NBC.
That is one of the worst ideas I’ve ever heard. This show barely works as a single-cam show, but turning it into a multi-cam one will most certainly guarantee the show getting cancelled at the end of the season. I can’t imagine Applegate, Arnett, Rudolph et al. are happy about this.
Sounds like a genius way to ruin a decent show. I hope they add a canned laughter track too, so we get the full hilarity of the episode in which Will Arnett jumps a shark with the kid’s stroller… because surely that episode is imminent.
I don’t understand the reasoning behind the change in format. Oh, wait, it’s NBC. They’re changing it into crap. Got it.
MONEY. It’s a lot cheaper to shoot one day a week on a stage. Clearly, show was costing to much to produce.
The ratings are crap, that’s the reasoning.
I think this show should switch the director, the actors, and the writers – the number of cameras being utilized isn’t the problem.
This must all be to so NBC can keep it’s relationship with Lorne Michaels. No other reason to keep this desperately unfunny show on the air. Changing it because the current showrunner has a strong background in multi-cam cannot be the reason. We all remember “Hank” don’t we?
This has been a hilarious show, but who am I to argue with someone funny enough to call himself “Hurricane Sandy”?
NBC, STOP trying to make Up All Night happen. It is never, EVER going to happen! I get that they have loads of talent that they don’t want to let go of but they’re all trapped on a sinking ship. A sitcom based completely around the
Maya Rudolph character would be funnier
Has this ever happened before (I believe Sports Night did the opposite between 1st and 2nd seasons)? I know NBC is trying to broaden their comedic scope, but man, this seems like a really odd way to go about that.
Sports Night was always a single-cam show. ABC just forced them to tack a godawful laugh track onto a show that clearly hadn’t been written for it, before letting them faze it out near the end of season 1.
I’m convinced that Will Arnett is a huge part of the problem. He is so unappealing.
Did you never watch Arrested Development. His Gob character was one of the best on the show. I personally really like this show, but think it is a mistake to change the format. I would have thought if they believed it was going to be cancelled they would wrap up the storyline nicely, rather than changing the show completely.
I was just thinking the other day: You know what would make Up All Night even better? An audience of people laughing in the background.
At least now the show will have some laughs in it.
Happy Days changed from single-cam to multi-cam after its second season. Then again, that was the 1970s.
When will network execs realise that retooling just doesn’t work? It alienates your existing viewers and it’s almost impossible to bring in new viewers to an existing show.
Oh, well, at least they aren’t ruining something good.
Back in the old days, THE JOEY BISHOP SHOW (the sitcom, not the talk show) and THE ODD COUPLE also used canned laughter their first seasons, then switched to live audiences.
This can only help UP ALL NIGHT, as the writers will now be required to come up with actual jokes.
Great idea. I feel they have great stars in the show and it would be a shame not to move forward with this show. Applegate, Arnett and Rudolph are amazing performers who will thrive with the new format. However I wish they would of thought of this before because 5 episodes in April/May may not be good enough to save the show. If NBC hadn’t been so high on single-cam, then maybe they would of made this work. I’m a little skeptical and feel NBC might scarp the idea. But I hope it works, because its a great idea!
Here’s a thought – WRITE BETTER MATERIAL! Do this and the format won’t make a hill o’ beans of difference. I don’t know how i got sucked into watching this show every week (I’ll blame my wife), but with such great talent – the writing is abysmal. The show is called “Up All Night” because they are supposed to be “up all night” taking care of a kid, it seems that whole premise has been tossed out the window, and it’s turned into lame material about Applegate’s ass.
I thought this show was just starting to find itself, last 2 episode were better than the other Thursday night shows. I hope this works. Love the cast.
NBC is changing the format so when it’s cancelled after this season they can say “hey atleast we tried”.
I think folks are missing the big picture here.
Look at NBC’s history with comedies. Look at their Must See TV of yesteryear compared to today. The biggest difference is the format.
Compare their ratings to the CBS comedies.
The multi-camera format does make or break a comedy, the writing does but I think MANY viewers are familiar with the audience laughter and enjoy those shows more.
The ratings for Up All Night are TERRIBLE and this format change is a great attempt to salvage the show. I personally think that they should’ve done this with the superior ‘Samantha Who?’.
The single cam comedy can work when it suits the WRITING and/or CONCEPT of the show. The Office, Arrested Development or Modern Family but shows like Up All Night, The Middle, Suburgatory, etc. are just formatted this way because it’s the thing to do.
If shows like Cheers, Mary Tyler Moore Show, Seinfeld, etc. didn’t need to be single cam then neither do these shows.
Multi-camera sitcoms tend to do better because you can listen to them from the other room while you’re putting the kids to bed and not really miss anything. One camera shows like 30 Rock and Arrested Development need to be actually watched to get all the jokes, so the ratings are unfortunately going to suffer a bit.
well, they could always turn the camera’s 180 degrees and see what they get. a little improv voice over and creative cutting and there you go.
Maybe after hearing all those jokes about Community doing this, NBC was like “Hey! That’s a good idea!”
Remember when they added laugh tracks to Sports Night? Yeah, that sucked, too.
Nellie, Thanks for the Happy Days mention. It’s that kind of research and writing that makes your reports always stand out. I think this could be great for this show. Something about the way it’s shot felt like the actors couldn’t breathe; not a lot of room for the set-ups and jokes.
I actually think this is a great idea. Applegates hits have all being mult cams ( married with children, Jessie) so this is exactly the power surge this series needs! Great move!