Saved by the Bell
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Saved by the Bell | |
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File:Saved By the Bell Title Card.jpg | |
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Sam Bobrick |
Starring | Mark-Paul Gosselaar Tiffani-Amber Thiessen (1989 – 1992) Lark Voorhies Dustin Diamond Mario Lopez Dennis Haskins Elizabeth Berkley (1989 – 1992) Ed Alonzo (1989 – 1990) Leanna Creel (1992 – 1993) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 4 |
No. of episodes | 87 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Peter Engel |
Running time | 20 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | NBC |
Release | August 20, 1989 – May 22, 1993 |
Saved by the Bell is an American sitcom that originally aired between 1989 and 1993. The series is a retooled version of the 1988 series Good Morning, Miss Bliss, which later retconned into the history of Saved by the Bell. The series follows the exploits of several students at Bayside High School, along with their principal. The show stars Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Dustin Diamond, Lark Voorhies, and Dennis Haskins, who appeared in Good Morning, Miss Bliss, as well as Tiffani-Amber Thiessen, Elizabeth Berkley, and Mario Lopez who joined the cast for Saved by the Bell. The show brought fame to the cast members and launched most of their careers.
The show's popularity allowed for two spin-off series: Saved by the Bell: The College Years, which follows several of the characters' college experiences, and Saved by the Bell: The New Class, which follows a new group of students at Bayside High School. The series also spawned two TV movies and a short-lived comic book series.
The series is also available in French: Sauvés par le gong, Spanish: Salvados por la campana and Italian: Bayside School.
History
In recent records Miss Bliss was a convicted gypsy and stole her tears
Good Morning, Miss Bliss
Saved by the Bell originated in an ABC pilot entitled Good Morning, Miss Bliss, which was inspired by then NBC president Brandon Tartikoff's teachers from his past. The show was set in Indianapolis, Indiana. NBC decided not to pick up the pilot, but the Disney Channel did, and aired the series for one season. Unlike the series that followed, the intention was to focus on the life of the teacher, played by Hayley Mills, as the main character. The characters of Zack Morris, Samuel "Screech" Powers, Lisa Turtle, and Mr. Richard Belding all originated on the series. Jaleel White, Brian Austin Green, and Jonathan Brandis all had roles in the pilot episode.
The show was cancelled after 13 episodes, and the rights were acquired by NBC, which had reconsidered the matter. Seeing that it had merit, they decided to revamp and recreate the series. Executive Producer Peter Engel wanted the show to be called When the Bell Rings, but Tartikoff convinced him to go with the title Saved by the Bell.[1]
NBC rebirth - Saved by the Bell
Three of the teens from the original cast, Gosselaar, Diamond, and Voorhies, remained on the show, as the same characters with only minor changes to things like their backstories. Haskins also remained as Mr. Belding, but the setting was changed from Indianapolis, Indiana, to the fictional Bayside High School in Pacific Palisades, California. The two students dropped from the original series were replaced by three new additions. Kelly Kapowski (Tiffani Thiessen) and Jessie Spano (Elizabeth Berkley) were introduced as longtime friends of the original three characters, and new transfer student A.C. Slater (Mario López) rounded out the group. Max (Ed Alonzo), the proprietor of the local restaurant hangout ("The Max") was also a cast member in early episodes.
The focus of the show was shifted towards the exploits of the students themselves, and Zack Morris became the show's lead character. Several teachers recurred over the course of the series, but Mr. Belding was the only school authority figure to ever be in the main cast.
The show performed well for NBC, and despite bad reviews from TV critics, easily became the number one show on Saturday Mornings, and at the end of the show's first season, NBC boldly sold the series off into syndication with the Good Morning, Miss Bliss episodes included to pad out the syndication package, despite the continuity problems and production changes. At the height of its popularity, the show did many road tours to different malls and places for the cast to make appearances and sign autographs. The Good Morning, Miss Bliss episodes were edited to include openings to match the Saved by the Bell episodes, as well as introductions by Zack explaining that the episodes occurred in junior high (these episodes are sometimes billed as Saved by the Bell: The Junior High Years).
The show often dealt with "real teen social issues", such as drug use, drinking and driving, homelessness, financial issues, divorce, first love and love lost, graduating, college, sibling rivalry, taking responsibilities for one's actions, being bullied, death, and environmental issues. Notably, sexual relationships were alluded to but not actually dealt with. (See also Very special episode.)
The show's popularity on Saturday morning is what led NBC to shift from airing cartoons to live action teen-oriented shows instead (California Dreams, Hang Time, etc.) under the TNBC banner. Each season of the series essentially represented a year of high school for the students, culminating in their graduation. In the show's final season, NBC doubled the number of episodes ordered, despite the fact that they would have to re-sign the entire cast to new contracts in order to film them. Thiessen and Berkley refused to sign a new contract for these new episodes, resulting in a block of episodes that feature a new character, Tori Scott (Leanna Creel) in their place.
The final episode of the series aired in prime time on May 22, 1993. The episode, in which the cast graduated from high school, was filmed before Thiessen and Berkley left the show. No mention is made as to what happened to Tori Scott. The series finale was followed by a special airing of the Saved by the Bell: The College Years pilot episode, to set up the next phase of the characters' lives.
Main characters
Zachary "Zack" Morris
Played by Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Zack is a charming schemer in the mold of Ferris Bueller. The series features Zack engaging in Bueller-esque, direct-to-camera addresses to the audience as well as occasionally freezing everyone around him, offering plot exposition and amusing side-commentary.
Zack's best friends since grade school have been Lisa Turtle and next-door neighbor Jessie Spano; Samuel "Screech" Powers has also been tagging along with Zack since they were little. Zack was also constantly pining for Kelly, with each episode coming up with new ways to try to win her over, often battling for her affections with his on-again off-again best friend A.C. Slater. This rivalry ended as the show decided that Zack and A.C. were better suited as good friends, not least because of the close friendship between the actors who played them. Zack's father is a hot-shot computer salesman (with whom his relationship was, for a time, rather distant) who has been played by two different actors. His mother is a kind, but overly permissive homemaker. Upon graduation, Zack was slated to go to Yale University, having scored the highest of the gang on his SATs (despite his slacker reputation) but he ultimately attended Cal U with Slater, Screech, and Kelly.
Lisa Marie Turtle
Played by Lark Voorhies, Lisa is trendy and intelligent. She is the clique's fashion expert and the gossip queen of Bayside High. She comes from a wealthy family; her father and mother are shown to be surgeons. Originally, her character was written to be Caucasian and Jewish, however, Lark aced the audition and they awarded her the role. Because of her upbringing, Lisa always has access to the latest fashions and knows when something is in and when it's over. Like Jessie and Screech, Lisa has been Zack's best friend since grade school, and some episodes hinted that she harbored a small crush on him. Lisa's goal is to become a world famous fashion designer. For the majority of the gang's years at Bayside, one of the running gags was Screech's fruitless attempts to woo Lisa. While his romantic feelings for her were never returned, and often rejected with insults and jokes, eventually she realized she had developed a soft spot for Screech and even attended the Bayside Senior Prom with him. Upon graduation she receives acceptance into the Fashion Institute of Technology after a successful fashion show.
Samuel "Screech" Powers
Played by Dustin Diamond, Screech (whose real name is Samuel Powers) is the school nerd. Screech has been tagging along with Zack since they were in elementary school and is extremely loyal to him. In exchange for doing Zack's homework and being roped into Zack's various stunts, Screech receives protection from school bullies and a general boost in his confidence; but Zack's affection for Screech is evident in spite of this. He is very comfortable with his geekiness and fancies himself a ladies' man. The rest of the gang simultaneously picks on and humors Screech for his eccentricities (e.g. hiding in his locker, wearing extremely loud and mismatched clothes, and obsessing over science and chess). Though clumsy and goofy, Screech is very smart. A recurring gag in the series is his unrequited love for Lisa Turtle. In several early episodes of the series, Screech has an anthropomorphized robot named Kevin, which he programmed. Screech was class valedictorian, but gave that title to Jessie as a sign of goodwill, which she then returned on graduation day. He received acceptance to Duke University; Emerson College; Clemson University; University of California, Berkeley; the California Institute of Technology; Emory University, University of Southern California; Washington & Jefferson College; and Princeton University. He is rejected from an all-women school that was his number one choice. He chose to go to the fictional Cal U after graduation, and shared a dormitory suite with Zack, Slater, and Kelly. He also was the only cast member to star in every incarnation of Saved by the Bell, as he joined the cast of The New Class as an aide to Mr. Belding. Diamond was three years younger than most of the cast though his character was the same age as them. This is mentioned on a DVD commentary section where Mark-Paul Gosselaar is told by a producer that Diamond was acting immaturely, and Gosselaar noted that Diamond was a lot younger than the producer thought he was.
Kelly Kapowski
Played by Tiffani-Amber Thiessen (now known as Tiffani Thiessen), Kelly is a cheerleader and has been described by creator Peter Engel as the quintessential "All-American Girl." She served as a love interest for both Zack and Slater in the first season, but it was Zack who would eventually win her heart. Indeed, much of the show's storylines concernced their on-and-off relationship. Considered the most popular girl in school, Kelly was also known as one of its nicest and most squeaky clean. She was introduced as an outsider to the show's core clique.
At times Kelly and Jessie had arguments due to their differences. Jessie hated cheerleaders although she became one for many episodes. Zack had been obsessively in love with Kelly for years, as evidenced by a cardboard cutout of her in his bedroom. His pursuit of Kelly led to her eventually joining the gang. She is on the volleyball, cheerleading, and swim teams, and is also a trained lifeguard. Upon graduation, she did not have enough money for college so she attended community college, but later transferred to Cal U with Zack, Slater, and Screech. Both Elizabeth Berkley and Thiessen (as well as Jennie Garth) auditioned for the role of Kelly Kapowski. Thiessen and Garth would later work together on Beverly Hills, 90210 as unfriendly rivals Valerie Malone and Kelly Taylor (ironically, the actresses became best friends in real life).
Kelly comes from a big family (one of seven siblings) that often had financial difficulties. This figured into the plots of several episodes.
Albert Clifford "A.C." Slater
Played by Mario Lopez, Slater is the token "jock" of the group. An army brat, he was an outsider, having transferred to Bayside in the first filmed episode (though it was aired later as a flashback). A. C. mentions that he has been to Bolivia, Italy, Iceland, and Berlin among other places. He becomes the school's star athlete, excelling as a wrestler and the quarterback of the football team. He is on the basketball team in one episode, even though the basketball season coincides with the wrestling season. Slater was originally written as Zack's rival for Kelly's affection before becoming Zack's best friend in the show's second season and developing an attraction to strong-willed feminist Jessie Spano. He refers to Zack as "Preppie." López is a drummer and dancer, and some episodes include Slater showcasing these "hidden talents." Slater has a sister who makes an appearance in one episode. His father (a Major) appears in two episodes, but his mother, though mentioned throughout the series, never appears. In an earlier episode, his ex-girlfriend from Berlin visits and calls him by his real name, "Albert Clifford," AKA A.C.. In an episode from the college years, it is also revealed that 25 years earlier A.C.'s father changed his last name from Sanchez to Slater so he could get into the military academy. A.C. receives a wrestling scholarship to the University of Iowa, but ends up going to Cal U.
Jessica Myrtle "Jessie" Spano
Played by Elizabeth Berkley, Jessica Myrtle ("Jessie") Spano is the show's resident know-it-all crusader. She's often seen pursuing a variety of environmental and generally liberal causes while keeping up her position as Class President and one of the smartest students in her class. Like Lisa and Screech, Jessie is Zack's childhood friend (despite discontinuity with Good Morning, Miss Bliss), and he routinely climbs into her room via a tree outside her window. From the second season onwards, her main love interest is Slater, who disagrees with her feminist views. Jessie's parents are divorced. She has a step-brother named Eric from New York. Jessie also struggled with drug addiction at one point on the series, taking caffeine pills in order to stay awake for longer study hours. Jessie fully expected to be crowned valedictorian, but finished a fraction of a point behind Screech, and reluctantly settled for salutatorian status. Upon matriculation, Jessie attends Columbia University, although she had been hoping to get into Stansbury (fictional) in one episode, and had applied to Harvard and Yale and Princeton as well.
Richard Belding
Played by Dennis Haskins, Mr. Belding is the principal of Bayside High School and the show's resident authority figure. He's known for his catch phrase "Hey, hey, hey, what is going on here?" as well as his high-pitched laugh. Belding has frequent run-ins with Zack and his friends as either a foe to be outwitted or a friend to turn to for help. Despite being a responsible authority figure, Mr. Belding is unusual in that he genuinely seems to care about what his students, particularly Zack, think of him.
Other main characters
- Max, played by magician/comedian Ed Alonzo, is the owner of The Max, the favorite hangout of the gang. He acted as a sort of liaison between the adult and kid worlds -- serving as both a guide and a friend to the gang. Max is known for his quirky sense of humor and his array of magic tricks. He starred in the first season, and recurred in the second, and then stopped appearing without explanation. The Max continued to be featured without him. His diner, The Max, burned down in the episode Fire at The Max.
- Tori Scott, played by Leanna Creel, was introduced near the end of the series as the new girl at Bayside High. She is initially portrayed as a "tough girl" and is seldom seen without her leather jacket and drives a motorcycle to school. She at first is an antagonist to Zack, often getting the better of him, but eventually becomes a love interest of Zack. Tori only appears in approximately half the episodes of the final season.
- Stacey Carosi, played by Leah Remini, was introduced in the Malibu Sands Beach Club episodes where the gang took jobs over the summer (the exception being Lisa who was a member at the Resort). Stacey attends school on the East Coast and the owner of the club is her father, Leon Carosi, played by Ernie Sabella. Stacey is initially disgusted by Zack and refers to him sarcastically as "Dude" and often remarks that his being "Californian" is quite annoying, but a few episodes in, she becomes Zack's love interest. They must hide their affair from Leon, as Zack and Leon are at odds from the very beginning of the summer. Their romance ends when Stacey must go back to New York for school and in the final summer episode, even Leon, who finds out about the romance, grows to like Zack.
The Tori Paradox
As mentioned above, the character of Tori Scott (Leanna Creel) was added in later episodes as an initial sparring partner and later girlfriend for Zack. Originally, the final season consisted of thirteen episodes featuring the original cast, and the casts' contracts with the show expired after those episodes were completed with the final graduation episode. However, NBC ordered more episodes of the show and Thiessen and Berkley refused to sign new contracts. Rather than producing new episodes with only four cast members, a new character, Tori Scott, was added to serve as a replacement for Kelly and Jessie.
Oddly enough, the promos for the final season of the show featured Kelly, Jessie, and Tori together, despite the fact that the actresses never actually appear in an episode together. Rather, the network alternated between "Kelly and Jessie" and "Tori" episodes each week.
During the "Tori" episodes, it was never explained why Jessie and Kelly were not present, and likewise for the "Kelly and Jessie" episodes, no mention was made of Tori. So Tori does not appear in the show's final episode due to the fact that the graduation episode was shot prior to Theissen and Berkley's departure from the program, and due to the "Tori Episodes", the gang actually had two senior proms.
Writer Chuck Klosterman would later remark in book, Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs, that, ironically, this bizarre, "unexplained" paradox was the only thing on the show that actually happened to him in real life (i.e. having a friend suddenly drop out of his social circle, only to return just as randomly).[citation needed]
Spin-offs
The show was popular enough to warrant two spin-offs, both of which premiered in 1993.
Saved by the Bell: The College Years
Saved by the Bell: The College Years continued with several of the characters dealing with college life. It aired in the season following the original series' last, and was also set in the following school year. The series sported a continuity problem in that the characters who ended up at the fictional California University were set to go off to different universities at the end of the original Saved By The Bell.
Due to low ratings, Saved by the Bell: The College Years only lasted one season. Unlike the original series which aired on Saturday mornings with only one exception in 1993, The College Years was shown in prime time. The series aired from September 14, 1993 (though the original pilot aired on May 22, 1993) to February 8, 1994.
Saved by the Bell: The New Class
Saved by the Bell: The New Class was created to continue the story of Bayside High School in the Saturday morning timeslot after the original cast graduated. The series featured a new set of students anchored by Dennis Haskins, and later Dustin Diamond, whose character Screech became Principal Belding's administrative assistant on a work-study program from California University (a reference to Screech's college in "The College Years"). While Saved by the Bell: The New Class ran for seven seasons, it suffered numerous cast changes (including a second season cast purge that only left Haskins and three other cast members) and never gained the popularity of the original series. The New Class aired from September 11, 1993 to July 28, 2000. Many of the New Class episodes were actually "recycled" plots from the original Saved by the Bell. Slater, Lisa, and Zack had a cameo in one episode in Season 2 while trying to keep Bayside from being bought and destroyed. The Max remained as the hangout for the Bayside High students, although a fire burned it down in one episode and it was given a new look. The New Class is the only Saved by the Bell incarnation not to be currently syndicated, although all seven seasons have made it to DVD.
Made-for-TV movies
In 1992, Saved by the Bell's first made-for-TV movie, Saved by the Bell: Hawaiian Style aired. This movie occurred during the continuity of the original series, during a summer vacation. In the movie, Kelly's grandfather, played by Dean Jones, invites the kids to stay at his hotel in Hawaii. However, someone else is out to buy his land and build a hotel/resort complex, and the group has to save it.
After the College Years spin-off was completed, a second movie was aired entitled Saved by the Bell: Wedding in Las Vegas. The plot of the film was based upon the wedding of Zack and Kelly, which had been set up at the end of the spin-off series. The movie included most of the cast members from both the original series and the College Years series.
Guest stars
Several future-celebrities had appearances as Bayside students. Scott Wolf appeared as a member of the glee club in one episode and as a waiter at the Max in two others. Tori Spelling (Beverly Hills, 90210) had a recurring role as Screech's girlfriend, Violet, during Seasons 2 & 3. Bridgette Wilson (Billy Madison) played Zack's ditzy girlfriend Ginger in a few episodes during Season 4. Also appearing in one of the beach episodes is future Grey's Anatomy regular, Eric Dane. Popular radio DJ and personality Casey Kasem made two separate guest appearances on the show ("Dancing to the Max" and "Rockumentary").
Two new up-and-coming movie stars also had roles on Saved by the Bell: Casper Van Dien who was an extra in two episodes, and Denise Richards who played a girl rescued by Slater in a Malibu Sands episode. As noted before, Leah Remini was in the summer episodes as the girl who Zack falls in love with. She played the character Stacey Carosi in eight summer episodes. She became famous years later for her role as Carrie Heffernan in the long-running CBS sitcom The King of Queens.
Kirsten Kemp, the host of TLC's Property Ladder, had a small role in three episodes of Saved By The Bell. She played the part of Rhonda Robinstelli, a large and "unattractive" girl that is interested in Zack.
Syndication
Saved by the Bell is syndicated in what appears to be two syndication packages:
- The original series, with the repackaged Good Morning, Miss Bliss episodes, and the Hawaiian Style TV movie, broken down into four standard-length episodes.
- The College Years and the Wedding in Las Vegas TV movie (broken down into four standard-length episodes).
Produced by NBC Productions (now operating as Universal Media Studios), Saved by the Bell's United States distribution rights are currently handled by their distribution arm, NBC Universal Television Distribution. Until recently, it was syndicated via Rysher Entertainment (CBS Paramount Television would take over distribution after purchasing Rysher, although the Rysher logo was retained on most episodes). The series is syndicated on individual television stations around the country (depending on the market) and is shown for two hours daily starting at 7:00 a.m. ET/PT on TBS with the College Years episodes airing on Fridays in the same time slot.
The show will premiere on The-N with a 6 hour marathon on January 14 starting at 6pm est. Then, it will settle into its regular 6pm and 11pm est timeslots.
In the United Kingdom, the series was broadcast on cable television network Nickelodeon UK; however, the show was discontinued from its run around 2006 and was removed from the Nickelodeon UK website; however, the program made a return to the channel in September 2007, being shown every week day.
On April 9, 2006, Cartoon Network's Adult Swim announced that Saved by the Bell would air at midnight as a two week special starting April 17. On April 19, 2006, Adult Swim also posted on their website that Saved by the Bell was back in production due to "[t]he popularity of the show thanks to the fans of Adult Swim".[2] A week later, the announcement was exposed as a joke.[3]
Continuity errors
The series was generally not one to take itself too seriously, and as a result, it contains a significant number of continuity errors, due to oversight or plot convenience.
- Some of the biggest continuity errors are between Saved by the Bell and Good Morning, Miss Bliss:
- Good Morning, Miss Bliss took place at John F. Kennedy Jr. High in Indiana while Saved by the Bell is set at Bayside High in Pacific Palisades, California.
- The California high school looks essentially identical to the old Indiana junior high.
- In an episode of Good Morning, Miss Bliss, Zack's father is a single, swinging bachelor named Peter with a laid-back attitude. On Saved by the Bell, Zack's dad, Derek, is married and is a lot more serious and mature, and is played by a different actor.
- In one episode of Good Morning, Miss Bliss, it's also mentioned that Zack has a sister and Screech has a brother, but neither has siblings in the Saved by the Bell series.
- In one two-part episode ("Wicked Stepbrother"), Jessie's stepbrother Eric (Joshua Hoffman) is introduced; although he makes a menace of himself and intends to return to his home in New York, the gang convinces him to stay in Palisades. He is never seen again.
- In another episode ("Miss Bayside"), Kelly performs a song at the rehearsals for the Miss Bayside pageant, and her singing is way off-key. However, in other episodes, especially "Jessie's Song" and "Rockumentary", Kelly can sing very well.
- "The Last Dance" episode spawned two continuity errors: beginning with that episode, Kelly was usually waitressing at The Max. However, on the episode called "The Teacher's Strike", Jessie was waitressing for that episode. Also in "The Last Dance", Jessie was the lead vocalist for the band Zack Attack; "Rockumentary" (11/30/1991), however, had Kelly as lead singer. (It should be noted that Berkley and Thiessen were absent in "Rockumentary" and "The Teacher's Strike", respectively; thus the switch for the remaining actresses was necessary.)
- Another continuity error involves the relationship of Zack and Lisa, who in one episode ("The Bayside Triangle") wind up kissing each other and decide to become a couple. This upsets Screech when he sees them kissing before a fashion show that Lisa organized to get into a fashion school. Screech decides to fight for Lisa's heart but is convinced by Zack (and more effectively, by Lisa herself) to get over her. Lisa and Zack become a couple, but it is never again referenced after the episode, and in fact, Zack again continues to pursue Tori and Kelly, and Screech again pursues Lisa (after being seen briefly pursuing Jesse at the end of "Bayside Triangle").
- During the show, Zack states he will attend Yale, and Slater says he is going to attend Iowa on a wrestling scholarship; however both Zack and Slater end up being roommates at California University, with no explanation given for the switch.
- In the Saved By the Bell episodes where the gang all have summer jobs at a beach resort ("Boss Lady"), Slater translates on behalf of the Spanish-speaking kitchen staff, but in the episode of The College Years "Slater's War", he tells his activist classmate Theresa that he doesn't speak it because he took French, "the language of love."
- In the episode "The Election" when Slater finds Mr. Belding working out in the locker room, they can both be seen wearing shirts that say "Bayside Jr. High School", even though Bayside is a high school. The mascot on the shirt is also a bird instead of a tiger. This may be due to the fact that the original series was set in a junior high school, and initially it was not clear whether Bayside was a junior high or high school.
- Despite the fact that his door opens directly to the hallway, Mr. Belding is often contacted by a secretary via intercom who announces his visitors.
- The season-four episode "Screech's Birthday" was not shot around the same time as the other episodes from that season. It shows a much younger looking cast, having been taped two years before.[4]
- In at least one episode of the original and another in the College Years, Slater makes note of the fact he's known Screech since they were little, although Slater was introduced in the original as a transfer student.
Merchandise
DVD releases
In the United States, Region 1, Saved by the Bell was released on DVD for the very first time by Lions Gate Entertainment. Seasons 1 and 2 were released on September 2, 2003. Seasons 3 and 4 were released on April 27, 2004, and Season 5 (with the 'Tori episodes') was released on July 19, 2005. Several episodes from the first two seasons are the syndicated versions, and not the original broadcast versions. Lions Gate Entertainment released the two feature-length TV movies on DVD, in Region 1, on August 7, 2007.[5]
A three-disc DVD boxset is available on Region 2 with the two feature-length TV movies, as well as the episodes 'Dancing In The Dark', 'Graduation Day', and 'The College Years: Wedding Plans'. Each disc is also available to buy separately.
To date, there has been no DVD or home video release of Good Morning, Miss Bliss.
DVD Name | Ep # | Release Date |
---|---|---|
Seasons 1 & 2 | 33 | September 2 2003 |
Seasons 3 & 4 | 29 | April 27 2004 |
Season 5 | 24 | July 19 2005 |
Soundtrack
A CD and cassette tape Soundtrack was released on April 11 1995.[6] It contained songs used throughout the series. The tracklisting is as follows:
- Saved By the Bell
- Don't Leave With Your Love
- Go for It!
- Love Me Now
- Make My Day
- Friends Forever
- Did We Ever Have a Chance?
- Deep Within My Heart
- Surfer Dude
- Gone Hawaiian
- School Song
- Saved By The Bell featuring Michael Damon
Cultural references
- The episode "Jessie's Song" was parodied in an episode of the NBC sketch comedy The Rerun Show (being introduced by Dustin Diamond in hospital scrubs). "Miss Bayside" was also parodied on the series in a Star Wars-themed sketch. Dennis Haskins returned to his role as Mr. Belding in the latter sketch.
- In his 2004 collection of essays on popular culture Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto, writer Chuck Klosterman devoted a chapter to Saved by the Bell entitled "Being Zack Morris." He wrote that the show "is like this little generational secret that's hyperfamiliar to people born between 1970 and 1977, yet generally unremarkable to anyone born after (and completely alien to all those born before.)"
- Popular freeform hardcore producer and DJ AC Slater took his name from the Saved by the Bell character of the same name.
- Bayside High is the same school that Raven, Eddie, and Chelsea go to in the Disney Channel series That's So Raven, though that Bayside High is located in San Francisco, California.
- On December 1, 2002, the E! network used the show's history as a segment for its E! True Hollywood Story. The special revealed facts and contained interviews with the cast and crew.
- Details magazine reunited Mark-Paul Gosselaar and Tiffani Thiessen for a special-edition photoshoot in the August 2006 issue.
- Saturday Night Live also parodied Screech in a satire of Inside the Actors Studio. James Lipton (played by Will Ferrell) interviews Screech, played by Tobey Maguire.
- In The Simpsons episode "The President Wore Pearls", Martin organizes a casino night, claiming he got the idea from an episode of Saved by the Bell (which Principal Skinner for some reason says "was always on too late for me"). But the night is a disaster, in which Martin says the same thing happened in Saved by the Bell.
- A common term for large cellphones in the 1980s and early 1990s is the Zack Morris Phone showing the shows immense popularity and cultural significance.
- On a 2001 episode of Smackdown! Kurt Angle said to Spike Dudley "Stay away from my girl? What is this, Saved by The Bell?" after Spike told him to stay away from Molly Holly.
- In an episode of the British television show Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps, Gaz (played by Will Mellor) is complaining about his brother, Munch, and finishes by saying "Is he standing behind me? If this was Saved By The Bell he would be". He then turns round to see Munch standing behind him.
Trivia
This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. (June 2007) |
- The Bayside Tigers school logo was actually a knockoff of the Detroit Tigers logo from the 1980s (it was colored maroon and said "Bayside" instead of "Detroit").
- The nerd characters usually have a last name that contains the word "nerd" or some synonym of it. ("Nerdstrom", "Poindexter", "Geekman", etc.)
- Two classroom sets were used; each set was rearranged based on the subject of the class.
- The exterior of Bayside High School is seldom seen throughout the series. It was shown in a hand-drawn form in the opening credits and the whole exterior is shown in "Wedding In Las Vegas", before the gang immediately left to Las Vegas. At which point, it is known that the physical set is shot at Palisades Charter High School, California.[7] The parking lot of Bayside is seen in the two-part episode "Wicked Stepbrother" when Mr. Belding buys a new car for his wife and asks Zack and Slater to install a CD player for him.
- On the episode "Fake IDs", when Zack, Slater, and a sleepy Screech see Jeff dancing with and kissing another girl at the club The Attic, they all react with a rare WHOA! Not only that, Zack is clearly seen as he turns his head to Slater mouthing, "Oh shit."
- The episode "Day of Detention" was the last to be filmed for the original series. During the episode, Screech rigs the telephone lines for a radio station set up at the Max, so he can take all the incoming calls in order to route Zack to the station lines to be caller number 10 to win a trip to Hawaii. However, Screech fails to route the first 9 callers but the DJ states Zack is caller ten anyway. Zack then gets busted by Mr. Belding and sent to detention, where his efforts to use his friends to claim the prize lands all of them in detention as well, and Screech's attempt to win the contest ends disastrously. Zack finally does get to the Max but answers one of three questions about Hawaii incorrectly, after which Mr. Belding shows up angrily looking for Zack and inadvertently answers the question right and wins the trip for himself.
- The three video games at The Max are Mr. Do! (1982), Time Pilot '84 (1984), and Pulsar (1981). The location of the games against the wall changes throughout the episodes.
- From 1992-1993, Harvey Comics published two specials and a short-lived comic book based on the series.
- The exterior of The Beach Club where Kelly, AC, Zack, and Screech worked was also the exterior of the Beach Club they used in Beverly Hills, 90210 when Brandon Walsh got a job at the Beverly Hills Beach Club for the summer.
- The following are the SAT scores for the gang:
- Zack - 1502
- Screech - 1220
- Jessie - 1205
- Lisa - 1140
- Kelly - 1100
- A.C. - 1050
Although SATs have been scored in intervals of ten for some time now, this has not always been the case. It was certainly possible to receive a score of 1502 or 1205 in the past -- though this practice was likely obsolete by the time Zack and Jessie would have taken their tests.
College choices
The following is where the gang decides to go to college.
- Zack - Yale University
- A.C. - University of Iowa
- Screech - University of California, Berkeley
- Jessie - Columbia University
- Lisa - Fashion Institute of Technology
- Kelly - An unnamed California community college. Although, in one promotional photograph, she is seen wearing a CSUN sweater (i.e. Cal State Northridge)
- Tori - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
However, Zack, A.C., Screech, and Kelly end up at Cal U in Saved by the Bell: The College Years.
Ties to California Dreams
- California Dreams was a sitcom about a California-based band made up of teenagers. The show was created by Saved by the Bell writers Brett Dewey and Ronald B. Solomon with Peter Engel serving as executive producer.
- Actor Jake Grace played a 'hippie surfer' character named Stingray on both California Dreams and Saved by the Bell: The College Years.
- A cozy, romantic beach hangout called "Paradise Cove" exists on both California Dreams and Saved by the Bell. It is first mentioned on the SBTB episode "My Boyfriends Back" when Zack asks Staci on a date to Paradise Cove. On California Dreams episode "Heal the Bay" Tony Wicks mentions Paradise Cove as a spot he likes to take dates. In that same episode Paradise Cove gets temporarily closed down due to pollution.
- The schools on California Dreams and Saved by the Bell are both Coastal Schools as insinuated by their names, Pacific Coast High (California Dreams) and Bayside High (Saved by the Bell). The shows do exist in the same continuity as proven in an episode of Saved by the Bell: The New Class titled "Belding's Baby" where Scott Erikson dates a girl from Pacific Coast High named Ashley.
- Both shows are set in Los Angeles suburbs right outside of Los Angeles with California Dreams taking place in Redondo Beach and Saved by the Bell set in the fictional city of Palisades (which could be based on Pacific Palisades, a district of Los Angeles).
- Pacific Coast High is mentioned by Screech as one of Bayside's rival schools in an episode of Saved by the Bell: The New Class.
- The character Gem Diamond, played by Gary Beach, appeared in both shows. In Saved by the Bell, he sold shoddy class rings. In California Dreams, he was a used car salesman.
See also
References
- ^ As of October 2007, all 13 episodes of "Good Morning, Miss Bliss" can be viewed by Netflix members through their "Watch Instantly" feature. It should be noted that the Netflix episodes are the "retooled" episodes to better fit into the SBTB format, but they are also shown without the added introductions by Zack.
- ^ http://www.adultswim.com/williams/news/articles/news087.html
- ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1529564/20060426/index.jhtml
- ^ "Screech's Birthday". Saved by the Bell. Created 1989, first release 1992.
- ^ http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/newsitem.cfm?NewsID=7337
- ^ Amazon.com Listing - Saved by the Bell: Soundtrack To The Original Hit TV Series
- ^ Saved by the Bell: The College Years: The Wedding in Las Vegas TV Movie
External links
- Mr. Belding (Dennis Haskins) Interview
- SavedByTheBellNow.Com Updated informations on what the actors/actresses are doing now
- The Saved By The Bell Web
- Articles with trivia sections from June 2007
- 1989 television series debuts
- 1993 television series endings
- 1980s American television series
- 1990s American television series
- NBC network shows
- Saved by the Bell
- American television sitcoms
- Television series by NBC Universal Television
- Television shows set in California
- Teen dramas