ern Pennsylvania, Patchett and Tarses formed a stand-up duo. "We wanted to be the Smothers Brothers, but we weren't musicians," says Tarses, adding, "of course, neither were they." For six years Patchett and Tarses toured with some success, opening for jazz acts such as Art Blakey in clubs and appearing on talk shows. Tiring of the road, they de- cided to try writing for TV, so they moved to L.A., landed Brillstein as a manager and began to free-lance scripts. In 1972 the two became staff writers for "The Carol Bur- nett Show" and won an Emmy. Then they entered the high holy shrine of TV comedy: MTM. Working as partners on "The Bob Newhart Show," Patchett and Tarses rose to become executive producers. Despite some friction, they stayed together, creat- ing "The Tony Randall Show" in 1976, which ran for two seasons, and the ac- claimed "We've Got Each Other"-The New York Times called it the best series of 1977-which ran for 11 episodes. That same year, however, Patchett and Tarses produced "The Chopped Liver Brothers," a pilot about a struggling stand-up comedy team, starring them- selves, that never got picked up. That was followed, in 1978, by a serious flop, "Mary." This attempt to put Mary Tyler Moore in a variety format was canceled after only three outings, despite the pres- ence of such talent as David Letterman, Michael Keaton, Dick Shawn and Swoosie Kurtz. Tarses says, "We were sort of per- sona non grata in the business for a while after that." So they wrote a couple of movies, "Up the Academy" and "The Great Muppet Ca- per." (In the latter, Tarses played a man who threw the Muppets off a plane in flight.) In 1982 they returned to TV with "Open All Night" on ABC, which lasted for only 11 shows despite a warm critical re- ception. By 1983, when they created "Buf- been modestly decorated with ribbons and lace. One wedding cake sits on the table and three more on the floor. Susan Anspach, playing the wife of Slap in a weddinggown, shoves a slice of the cake into the face of Dabney Coleman, playing Slap in a tuxedo, four times in four takes. The crew, outfitted with party hats in honor of the occasion, cheers when the scene is over. Jay Tarses didn't start out to be a TV genius. It was only after flunking out of Williams College-twice-and starting over at Ithaca College that he "took a flier" by majoring in drama. After gradu- ating in 1964, he went to New York and worked at a variety of jobs, including driv- ing a truck for "Candid Camera." After about eight months Tarses shifted to an advertising/promotion job for what was then Armstrong Cork in Lancaster, Pa., where he met Hugh Wilson, now execu- tive producer of "Frank's Place," and Tom Patchett, the man who was to become his comedic partner for the next 17 years. Bored with their jobs and southeast- GARY NULL-NBC A focus on hard-to-predict characters: Scenes from 'The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd' (left) and 'The "Slap" Maxwell Story' NOVEMBER 1987