When Levitan and Lloyd pitched the show to ABC, they were still licking their wounds from Back to You, their Kelsey Grammer newsroom sitcom that fizzled on Fox two seasons ago (Burrell had a role as a reporter with an unpronounceable last name). It's still a sore spot: ''Getting notes on creativity from Fox is like getting notes on fashion from the Braille Institute,'' sneers Lloyd. For their follow-up act, the duo initially had an idea ''for a show about an Archie Bunker-type retiree who finds himself living with his Asperger's-challenged son,'' explains Lloyd. ''But we kept coming back to family because we both have kids and we're always telling stories about situations that come up at home.''

Having burned out on the traditional multicamera sitcom format with Back to You, for Modern Family they went the trendy mockumentary route — though they scrapped an original plan to include a Dutch filmmaker character who was making the ''documentary.'' Still, they're careful to point out that they weren't just hopping on the Office bandwagon. ''The fake documentary form has been around forever,'' says Lloyd. ''Obviously, The Office does it. But Woody Allen did it too with Take the Money and Run. And there was the Spinal Tap movie. We're just the first family comedy to do it.''

In the spirit of a true documentary, the writers take plenty of stories for their show directly from their real families. A scene from the pilot in which doofus dad Phil punishes his 11-year-old son by shooting him with a BB gun came from Levitan trying to give the same misguided lesson to his own child. ''I even videotaped it,'' he admits. ''I'm writing a story right now involving my wife's inability to master technology. I came home one night and found a remote control in a thousand pieces by the front door. That'll be in the show.'' The actors also sacrifice their home lives for the cause. ''We all come in to work with stories,'' says Bowen, who recently ''found my husband punching holes in the wall looking for a place to put a wall safe. I was like, 'Oh, my God, this is so Phil.''' Amen to that, says Burrell. ''I am Phil...and I love how well-intentioned he is. He's basically a dog that can talk. Every time anybody comes in the door, he's crazy happy to see them, but he's always knocking things over and eating crap out of the fridge and getting his paws over everything.'' Yet typecasting doesn't apply to all the actors on the Modern Family set. Stonestreet, for instance, a 38-year-old former clown from Kansas, had to figure out how to play an extroverted, dancing fool of a gay man, despite the handicap of being single and straight. ''I ground the character in my mom,'' he says, pointing to his visiting, silver-haired mother, who's standing in a corner of the soundstage. ''She's very passionate and excitable, just like my character.''

Upcoming episodes will see Claire's anniversary gift to Phil — a command performance by their favorite musician, Izzy LaFontaine (guest star Edward Norton) — go horribly awry, and Jay will feel a newfound pride in Manny when he turns out to be a fantastic fencer. Also, Benjamin Bratt (Law & Order) will guest as Manny's sketchy dad, and Stonestreet's real-life clown training will pay off when Cameron dons a red nose to work the birthday party for Phil and Claire's son, Luke (Nolan Gould). On this show, Levitan and Lloyd aren't complaining about the network's notes, because they've mostly been thank-yous attached to gift baskets. And the execs aren't the only ones weighing in with praise. Producers have heard through friends of Steven Spielberg and Sacha Baron Cohen that they love the show. ''We never got anywhere near this amount of attention on Married...With Children,'' marvels O'Neill. ''People actually respect this show.'' And more importantly these days, they're watching it, too.

Originally posted Oct 30, 2009 Published in issue #1074 Nov 06, 2009 Order article reprints
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