Tracy Brown, Tribune News Service
The glass partition wall in Lisa Hanawalt's office is lined with reference sheets dedicated to the members of the central family in "Long Story Short." Each page lists a character's name, birth month and year — along with their zodiac sign — and a dated timeline of full body images that tracks how they look at different ages. Depending on the character, this includes their designs as children, teens and middle-aged adults.
During a mid-August morning at ShadowMachine studio, Lisa Hanawalt sits at her desk, pulling up different looks of earlier incarnations of the characters that she did before their final designs were set along with newer works in progress. Raphael Bob-Waksberg sits just behind her as they point out little details that they're fond of and bounce their thoughts back and forth on whether certain characters might drastically change their appearance one year, as people tend to do. "It's a fun thing you don't get to do on a lot of animated shows," says Bob-Waksberg, the creator and showrunner of "Long Story Short." "To evolve with our characters and dress them up and have so many different looks for them."
On most animated sitcoms, characters are trapped in time: perpetually the same age, usually wearing the same clothes, rarely even getting a haircut — no matter how many holiday episodes they get through the years. Not so on "Long Story Short," where the passage of time is a feature. "It's really fun to get to know the characters and to think about their aesthetic," says Hanawalt, the show's supervising producer. "We have to draw a lot of different versions of everybody."
Launching this month on Netflix, "Long Story Short" follows the Schwoopers, a Bay Area family whose portmanteau last name is a blend of the parents' Schwartz and Cooper, through the ups and downs of their lives. The show's cast includes Lisa Edelstein and Paul Reiser, who voice the parents Naomi and Elliot, respectively, and Ben Feldman, Abbi Jacobson and Max Greenfield as the Schwooper children, Avi, Shira and Yoshi. Their story unfolds over time across both everyday happenings and milestones, with each self-contained episode jumping between moments that reverberate from anywhere in the 1950s to 2020s.
"It feels cumulative, even though the episodes themselves are not necessarily connected directly," Bob-Waksberg says. "We thought a lot about emotional arcs more than narrative arcs. Can we feel like these characters have gone on a journey, even though we're seeing the (story) out of order?"
"Long Story Short" is Bob-Waksberg's first new show since the conclusion of "Bojack Horseman," the acclaimed adult animated series that ended in 2020, about a washed up former sitcom star and his struggles set in an alternate Hollywood where humans lived alongside anthropomorphic animals. While "Bojack" didn't shy away from showing how terrible parents were the root cause of various characters' troubles, "Long Story Short" is a more nuanced take on dysfunction where it's not as easy to place blame. "As you get older, you kind of realise, we're all screwed up in different ways and most of us didn't have parents that bad," Bob-Waksberg says. "We had parents who were trying and in some ways succeeding, and in other ways, not quite giving us what we needed."
The show marks the pair's third animated series together. Hanawalt served as the production designer and producer on "Bojack" before developing her own series, "Tuca & Bertie," on which Bob-Waksberg served as an executive producer. But their easy rapport as they comment on a short clip of sauce exploding and whether a character is the type of person to only own one suit — as well as when the conversation detours into listing actors they insist the other likes after a missed film reference — makes it obvious that their friendship runs much deeper. Bob-Waksberg and Hanawalt explain that even during their high school years in Palo Alto, where they crossed paths as theater kids and became friends, they would talk about working on projects together and dream up TV show ideas. Describing Hanawalt as one of his favorite people and artists, Bob-Waksberg says she is the first person he thinks of whenever he needs someone for artistic work.