Family Matters: Difference between revisions
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The show currently airs on [[Nick at Nite]]. However, when [[Nick at Nite]] airs the show, the theme song is cut short (unlike ABC Family, which aired the full theme song from Seasons 1–3), and towards the middle of the episode, goes straight to commercial (ABC Family went the started with a "cold" opener). Also, when the series airs reruns of the show's fourth season, [[Telma Hopkins]]' title card is removed during the short version of the opening credits/theme song in some of the episodes. |
The show currently airs on [[Nick at Nite]]. However, when [[Nick at Nite]] airs the show, the theme song is cut short (unlike ABC Family, which aired the full theme song from Seasons 1–3), and towards the middle of the episode, goes straight to commercial (ABC Family went the started with a "cold" opener). Also, when the series airs reruns of the show's fourth season, [[Telma Hopkins]]' title card is removed during the short version of the opening credits/theme song in some of the episodes. |
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Viacom announced that it had purchased the naming rights to [[TGIF]] (Thank God It's Friday) from [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]. Viacom announced the removal of TV Land's PRIME block to be replaced with the TGIF Lineup. The block will begin in 2010 and shows expected to air on the block include [[The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air]], [[Home Improvement]], [[Growing Pains]], [[Family Matters]], [[Full House]], [[Roseanne (TV series)|Roseanne]], [[Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (TV series)|Sabrina, the Teenage Witch]], and [[3rd Rock from the Sun]]. |
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==Production== |
==Production== |
Revision as of 20:12, 5 September 2009
Family Matters | |
---|---|
Created by | William Bickley Michael Warren |
Developed by | Thomas L. Miller Robert L. Boyett |
Starring | Reginald VelJohnson Jo Marie Payton (season 1-season 9 ep. "Deck the Malls") Rosetta LeNoire (seasons 1-6) Darius McCrary Kellie Shanygne Williams Michelle Thomas (seasons 4-9) Jaimee Foxworth (seasons 1-4) Jaleel White Telma Hopkins (seasons 1-4) Judyann Elder (season 9 eps. "Grills of My Dreams"-"Lost in Space") |
Theme music composer | Jesse Frederick, Bennett Salvay & Scott Roeme (Pilot episode: Bob Thiele, George David Weiss & George Douglas) |
Opening theme | "As Days Go By", performed by Jesse Frederick (Pilot episode: "What a Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 9 |
No. of episodes | 215 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Thomas L. Miller Robert L. Boyett William Bickley Michael Warren (seasons 2–7) David W. Duclon (seasons 3–8) |
Production locations | Chicago, Illinois (setting) Warner Bros. Studios, Burbank, California (filming location) |
Camera setup | Film; Multi-camera |
Running time | 22-25 Minutes |
Production companies | Miller-Boyett Productions Bickley-Warren Productions (seasons 2-9) Lorimar Television (seasons 1-3) Warner Bros. Television (seasons 4-9) |
Original release | |
Network | ABC (1989-1997) CBS (1997-1998) |
Release | September 22, 1989 – July 17, 1998 |
Related | |
Perfect Strangers |
Family Matters is an Emmy Award-winning American sitcom about an African-American middle-class family living in Chicago. The series was spun-off from Perfect Strangers and revolves around the Winslow family. Midway through the first season, the show introduced the Winslow's nerdy neighbor Steve Urkel (played by Jaleel White), who became its breakout character. Family Matters aired from September 22, 1989, to September 19, 1997, on ABC, and moved to CBS from September 19, 1997, to July 17, 1998. Having aired 215 episodes, Family Matters is the second longest-running U.S. sitcom with a predominantly African-American cast, surpassed only by The Jeffersons.[citation needed] It was filmed in front of a live studio audience at WB studios in Burbank, California.[1]
Family Matters was created by William Bickley and Michael Warren (who also wrote for, and were producers of parent series Perfect Strangers) and developed by Thomas L. Miller and Robert L. Boyett (also producers of Perfect Strangers), it was also executive produced by Bickley, Warren, Miller and Boyett. The series was produced by Bickley-Warren Productions and Miller-Boyett Productions, in association with Lorimar Television who produced the show until 1993, when Warner Bros. Television took over). It was often rated TV-PG on ABC Family although on Nick at Nite soon to be TV Land the 1997-1998 episodes are rated TV-G.
History
Family Matters originally focused on the character of Carl Winslow and his family: wife Harriette Winslow, rebellious son Eddie Winslow, intelligent daughter Laura Winslow, youngest child Judy Winslow (until Season 4), and (later) adopted son 3J.
In the series opener, the family had also opened their home to Carl's street-wise mother, Estelle Winslow (usually known as "Mother Winslow"), as well as Harriette's sister, Rachel Crawford, and her son, Richie Crawford, after the death of Rachel's husband prior to the start of the series.
The Winslows' nerdy next-door neighbor, Steve Urkel was introduced midway through the first season and quickly became the focus of the show. The popular sitcom was part of ABC's TGIF from 1989 until 1997, before it became part of the CBS Block Party lineup from 1997 until 1998. Family Matters was produced by Bickley-Warren Productions and Miller-Boyett Productions, in association with Lorimar Television (1989-1993), and later Warner Bros. Television (1993-1998).
Original characters leave the show
As the focus of the show began to center more and more on Urkel (and occasionally his alter-ego, Stefan), other original characters were shunted to the periphery. By 1993, the actresses who portrayed two members of the Winslow household, Judy (Jaimee Foxworth) and Rachel (Telma Hopkins), left the show. Hopkins (as Rachel) left the series after the fourth season to focus on her own series (Getting By), but she made occasional guest appearances until 1997. Foxworth later revealed on The Oprah Winfrey Show and The Tyra Banks Show that her mother demanded that her character be developed in order to receive more money, and those demands were denied. Foxworth was let go, and the producers felt no need to hire another actress to replace her, admitting that they did not think audiences would notice Judy's disappearance and felt no need to explain it.
In later seasons, other characters also disappeared. Shawn Harrison's character, Waldo, was said to have gone off to culinary school. Waldo had been mentioned a season later by Maxine, who received a poorly addressed Dear Jane letter from Waldo. Bryton McClure, who played Richie, started to appear less once 3J was introduced, and disappeared by the last season. Rosetta LeNoire, who played Carl's mother, Estelle Winslow, was gone by the last season as well, due to aging (she was 85 in the 8th season). Jo Marie Payton-Noble, the original actress who played Harriette (originating the character on Perfect Strangers), left in December 1997 because she was unhappy with the emphasis placed on Steve Urkel and his sub-characters (Stefan, Myrtle, O.G.D., etc.). When a Parade viewer asked why she was replaced, Jo Marie Payton-Noble stated that she also wanted to write or direct an episode, but was never permitted to do so. She was replaced in the last nine episodes of the ninth season by Judyann Elder.
In the Season 9 Christmas episode "Deck the Malls", Estelle, Richie, and Rachel appear for the last time. It is also Jo Marie Payton's last appearance as Harriette.
Network change
In early 1997 CBS bought Family Matters and Step By Step for $40 Million from the ABC Network. ABC then promised to pay Miller-Boyett Productions $1.5 million per episode for a ninth and tenth season of Family Matters. However, tensions had risen between Miller-Boyett Productions and ABC's parent company, Disney. Miller-Boyett thought that they would not be big players on ABC after recently being bought up by Disney. So in turn Miller-Boyett Productions signed in the $40 Million offer from CBS for both Family Matters and Step By Step to be renewed for a 22-episode season on CBS. CBS put "Family Matters", along with "Step By Step" as a part of their new Friday line up they called the CBS Block Party. They put up the "CBS Block Party" againist ABC's TGIF lineup, where the two series previously originated. CBS cancelled "Family Matters", along with "Step By Step", after one season, along with the rest of the "Block Party" lineup.
Cast
- Reginald VelJohnson as Carl Winslow
- Jo Marie Payton as Harriette Winslow #1 (originating on Perfect Strangers in 1987, 1989–1997 seasons 1–8 and the first half of season 9)
- Judyann Elder as Harriette Winslow #2 (Remainder of season 9)
- Darius McCrary as Eddie Winslow
- Kellie Shanygne Williams as Laura Winslow
- Valerie Jones as Judy Winslow #1 (Pilot only)
- Jaimee Foxworth as Judy Winslow #2 (seasons 1–4)
- Rosetta LeNoire as Estelle Winslow (seasons 1–6, sporadic appearances in 7, 8 and 9)
- Jaleel White as Steve Urkel (season 1–9)/Stefan Urquelle (season 5–9)/Myrtle Urkel (sporadic appearances in season 2,7,8, and 9)/Original Gangster Dawg (O.G.D.) (season 9)
- Bridgid Coulter as Jolene Santiago (season 2, sporadic appearances in 8 and 9)
- Telma Hopkins as Rachel Crawford (season 1–4, sporadic appearances in 6, 7, and 9)
- Bryton McClure as Richie Crawford (second actor, seasons 2–7, sporadic appearances in 8 and 9)
- Orlando Brown as 3J (seasons 7–9)
- Michelle Thomas as Myra Monkhouse (seasons 4–9)
- Shawn Harrison as Waldo Geraldo Faldo (seasons 2–8)
- Cherie Johnson as Maxine Johnson (seasons 2–9)
Ratings
Family Matters was a top 50 hit for its first eight seasons, and ranked in the top 30 for the second, third, and fourth seasons. However, when the show moved to CBS, it fell out of the top 100 altogether.
- 1989-1990: #32
- 1990–1991: #15
- 1991–1992: #27
- 1992-1993: #30
- 1993–1994: #31
- 1994–1995: #34
- 1995-1996: #42
- 1996-1997: #50
- 1997-1998: #108
Broadcast history
- ABC (1989-1997)
- CBS (1997-1998)
- WGN (1997-2001)
- TBS (1995-2002)
- ABC Family (2003-2008)
- Nick at Nite (June 29, 2008-present)
- BET (December 22, 2008)
Theme song and opening credits
The show's original theme was the Louis Armstrong classic "What a Wonderful World", but was scrapped after three episodes, though it was only heard in the pilot episode in syndicated reruns. The second theme "As Days Go By", written by Jesse Frederick, Bennett Salvay, and Scott Roeme, and performed by Jesse Frederick, would be the theme for the majority of the series until 1995 (again this was heard in season one episodes in ABC Family and syndicated airings). A longer version of "As Days Go By" can be heard in the first three seasons, though in syndicated reruns the short version is heard (in ABC Family airings, however, the long theme was used for all of the season one through three episodes).
The opening sequence begins with a shot of the Chicago Lakefront (the John Hancock Center can be seen in the center), then a shot of the Winslow home. In the opening titles, the main characters were shown around the Winslow home (though in some shots featured some characters in other places as well, such as Rachel at the Rachel's Place restaurant during the season two through four version, or Eddie as a bag boy at a grocery store during season one version). The opening credits during the first three seasons feature a scene showing the Winslow family riding their bicycles across a bridge over the Chicago River; an allusion to parent series Perfect Strangers, which featured a scene of Larry and Balki (played by Bronson Pinchot and Mark Linn-Baker) riding a tour boat underneath the same bridge in its own opening credits from season three until the end of that series. Clips of episodes were shown after the bike scene and before the house shot in the season one through three versions. The house shown at the beginning and the end of the opening credits (as well as in establishing shots for scenes set at the Winslow house) is located at 1516 W. Wrightwood Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. The closing shot in the end credits with the Winslow family at the piano, in which the shot pans outside the house and the camera zooms out showing neighborhoods and the Chicago skyline in the background, was originally used in the pilot episode "The Mama Who Came to Dinner" (though the scene featuring the Winslows before the pan was redone in season two). In season seven, the opening theme song and credits were dropped. The names of cast members and some producers were shown in the opening teaser for season seven and eight.
The role of Richie as a baby was credited as being played by "Joseph Julius Wright" in season 1 (the duo was credited this way because the show's producers did not want audiences to know that Richie was then played by twins). Julius' name was made to appear as Joseph's middle name in the titles (the role of Richie as a baby was played by two children because California state law regulates the number of work hours for a young child, therefore it is common for the role of one baby in a TV or film production to be played by twins). Another Miller-Boyett production, Full House credited Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in the same manner in its opening credits until its seventh season. In season five after Telma Hopkins left the show, Jaleel White was now given special billing in response to the popularity he earned as Steve Urkel. Appearing last in the credits, he was credited as "and Jaleel White as Steve Urkel" (Hopkins was credited similarly as "and Telma Hopkins as Rachel" prior to season five).
Syndication
In 1995, reruns aired on TBS Superstation until 2003. From 1997-2002, it was aired on WGN America.
In 2002 ABC Family picked up the series and would air it for 5 years. In March 2008 ABC Family removed the show from their line-up.
The show currently airs on Nick at Nite. However, when Nick at Nite airs the show, the theme song is cut short (unlike ABC Family, which aired the full theme song from Seasons 1–3), and towards the middle of the episode, goes straight to commercial (ABC Family went the started with a "cold" opener). Also, when the series airs reruns of the show's fourth season, Telma Hopkins' title card is removed during the short version of the opening credits/theme song in some of the episodes.
Viacom announced that it had purchased the naming rights to TGIF (Thank God It's Friday) from ABC. Viacom announced the removal of TV Land's PRIME block to be replaced with the TGIF Lineup. The block will begin in 2010 and shows expected to air on the block include The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Home Improvement, Growing Pains, Family Matters, Full House, Roseanne, Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, and 3rd Rock from the Sun.
Production
This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. (July 2009) |
- There are 2 closing shots. One with the family playing with Little Richie and the other one is the family at the piano that came from the pilot episode "The Mama Who Came to Dinner".
- Every season contains an episode where a set is completely demolished.
- The only cast member to appear in every single episode was Reginald VelJohnson.
- Family Matters was produced by Miller-Boyett Productions, in association with Lorimar Television in the first four seasons. In seasons 3–9, it was produced by Bickley-Warren Productions and Miller-Boyett Productions, in association with Warner Bros. Television, which absorbed Lorimar (a sister company under the Time Warner banner) in 1993.
Crossovers with other TGIF shows
Family Matters is set in the same "TV universe" as several other TV series related to ABC's TGIF:
- Perfect Strangers — Before Family Matters, Harriette Winslow was originally the elevator operator at the Chicago Chronicle newspaper office in the third and fourth seasons of Perfect Strangers. Family Matters was a spin-off series given to this character in 1989. In the second episode of Family Matters, Harriette was fired as elevator operator at the Chronicle, but was soon re-hired as "Chief of Security", which explained her absence from dealings with the Perfect Strangers cast.
- Full House — In the 1991 episode, "Stephanie Gets Framed", Steve Urkel helps Stephanie Tanner (Jodie Sweetin) deal with her anxiety after she has to wear eyeglasses.
- Boy Meets World — In the episode "Beauty and the Beast" Urkel sent a chain letter to his friend Cory Matthews, (Ben Savage) who lived in Philadelphia. The two never actually appeared together on either show.
- Step by Step — In the original ABC broadcast, the ending gag of Family Matters' third season episode "Brains Over Brawn" is crossed over with the opening of the second episode of Step By Step, "The Dance". Urkel's jet-propelled flight pack causes him to fly through the Winslows' roof as one show ends, and crash-land in Port Washington, Wisconsin, where the Lambert-Foster family is enjoying a barbecue as the other show opens. Urkel goes on to help his science-fair pen pal, Mark Foster (Christopher Castile), and lifts Al Lambert's (Christine Lakin) spirits after her potential date dumps her just before a school dance. He reprises his "Do the Urkel" dance in the scene where Al gives the guy who dumped her his comeuppance. Urkel also makes a brief cameo in the 1997 episode "A Star Is Born", snapping a clapperboard on the set of the movie that Al was cast in over her two sisters.
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Result | Category | Recipient |
---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | BMI Film & TV Awards | Won | BMI TV Music Award | Bennett Salvay |
1992 | BMI TV Music Award | Bennett Salvay | ||
1996 | Emmy Award | Nominated | Outstanding Individual Achievement in Special Visual Effects | Kelly Sandefur (For episode "Send In The Clone") |
1994 | NAACP Image Awards | Won | Outstanding Youth Actor/Actress | Jaleel White |
1995 | Outstanding Youth Actor/Actress | Jaleel White | ||
1996 | Nominated | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series | Jaleel White | |
1997 | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series | Jaleel White | ||
1996 | Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards | Nominated | Favorite Television Show | |
Favorite Television Actor | Jaleel White | |||
2008 | TV Land Awards | Nominated | Jaimee Foxworth | |
1990 | Young Artist Award | Nominated | Best Young Actor Starring in a Television Series | Darius McCrary |
Best New Television Series | ||||
Won | Best Young Actor Guest Starring in a Television Series | Randy Josselyn | ||
1991 | Nominated | Best Young Actress Supporting or Re-Occurring Role for a TV Series | Jaimee Foxworth | |
Best Young Actress Starring in a Television Series | Kellie Shanygne Williams | |||
Best Young Actor Starring in a Television Series | Darius McCrary | |||
Won | Outstanding Young Comedian in a Television Series | Jaleel White | ||
1992 | Nominated | Outstanding Young Comedienne in a Television Series | Kellie Shanygne Williams | |
1993 | Nominated | Outstanding Young Comedienne in a Television Series | Kellie Shanygne Williams | |
Outstanding Young Comedian in a Television Series | Darius McCrary | |||
Best Young Actress Recurring in a Television Series | Cherie Johnson | |||
Best Young Actor Recurring in a Television Series | Patrick J. Dancy | |||
Best Young Actor Co-starring in a Television Series | Shawn Harrison | |||
Won | Best Young Actor Recurring in a Television Series | Bumper Robinson (Tied with Aeryk Egan for Brooklyn Bridge) |
Episodes
Special Guest appearance
- Larry Johnson
- Donna Summer
- Dave Koz
- Garcelle Beauvais
- Sherman Hemsley
- Shai
- Freddie Jackson
- Missy Elliott
- New Edition
- Immature
- Portrait
- Johnny Gill
- Ziggy Marley
- Emmanuel Lewis
- Larenz Tate
External links
- Articles with trivia sections from July 2009
- 1989 television series debuts
- 1998 television series endings
- 1980s American television series
- 1990s American television series
- 1990s comedy TV shows in the United States
- Black sitcoms
- American Broadcasting Company network shows
- CBS network shows
- Television series by Warner Bros. Television
- American television sitcoms
- Television shows set in Chicago, Illinois
- Television spin-offs