Cybill
Cybill | |
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File:Cybill.JPG | |
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Chuck Lorre |
Starring | Cybill Shepherd Christine Baranski Alicia Witt Dedee Pfeiffer Tom Wopat Alan Rosenberg |
Theme music composer | George Gershwin Ira Gershwin |
Opening theme | "Nice Work if You Can Get It" sung by Cybill Shepherd |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 4 |
No. of episodes | 87 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Marcy Carsey Jay Daniel Howard Gould Chuck Lorre Caryn Mandabach Bob Myer Cybill Shepherd Tom Werner |
Running time | 22–24 minutes |
Production companies | YBYL Productions Carsey-Werner Productions |
Original release | |
Network | CBS |
Release | January 2, 1995 July 13, 1998 | –
Cybill is an American television sitcom created by Chuck Lorre, which aired on CBS from January 2, 1995, to July 13, 1998. Starring Cybill Shepherd, the series revolves around Cybill Sheridan, a twice-divorced single mother of two and struggling actress in her 40s, who has never gotten her big show business break. Alicia Witt and Dedee Pfeiffer co-starred as Sheridan's daughters, with Alan Rosenberg and Tom Wopat playing their fathers each, while Christine Baranski appeared as Cybill's hard-drinking friend Maryann.
The sitcom was produced by Carsey-Werner Productions and YBYL Productions, with Shepherd, Lorre, Howard Gould, Jay Daniel, Marcy Carsey and Tom Werner serving as the show's original executive producers. Broadcast to critical praise, Cybill was nominated for twelve Emmy Awards throughout its run and awarded the 1996 Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy. Shepherd won a third Golden Globe Award for her performance, while Baranski received an Emmy, a SAG and an American Comedy Award.
Premise
Cybill takes place in Los Angeles, California, and focuses on the character of a somewhat faded actress Cybill Sheridan (played by Cybill Shepherd) who, because of her age, had been relegated to playing character roles, bit parts and TV commercials. Also featured are her daughters, headstrong Zoey (Alicia Witt) and uptight Rachel (Dedee Pfeiffer), her two ex-husbands, Ira (Alan Rosenberg) and Jeff (Tom Wopat), and her hard-drinking best friend Maryann (Christine Baranski).
In her autobiography, Cybill Disobedience, Shepherd stated the Cybill character was based on herself—or, at least, what her life as an actress could have been without the successes of The Last Picture Show and Moonlighting. Many the show's details and situations were also mined from her own family, marriages and experiences.[1]
Main cast
- Cybill Shepherd as Cybill Sheridan[2] – Cybill is an aging actress who has a had a varied, though mediocre career (which, even in her salad days, seems to have consisted primarily of television commercials and B-movies). She now finds that, due to her age, roles are becoming harder to find and that the quality of roles she is offered is diminishing. Her fortunes seem to vary over the course of the series. Sometimes she has consistent work and appears to be relatively wealthy; other times she scrambles to find and keep jobs, and seems to be struggling financially as well. Cybill is a rather eccentric feminist who practices New Age philosophy, as well as a native Southerner from Memphis, Tennesee. Her loud, public and honest rantings about female sexuality, her perkiness, bouts of outrage and hysteria, and her exhibitions of “down-home” Southern behavior often embarrass her two daughters, Zoey and Rachel. Cybill has a civil relationship with her ex-husbands Jeff and Ira, even tolerating their tendency to cling to her. She does sometimes spar, however, with Jeff over his past infidelities, and is quick to remind Ira of how controlling he was when they were married. Cybill's best friend is the wealthy, alcoholic divorcee Maryann Thorpe, whom she supports emotionally and assists in her bitter war with her ex-husband. Cybill's own rival, Andrea (played by Morgan Fairchild), has also often been the target of Cybill's own immature pranks and their enmity has resulted in personal humiliations, professional loss and injury on both sides. Cybill has a caustic sense of humour and an acid tongue. Although eccentric and flawed, Cybill's strength and wisdom shines through in her support of her family and friends.
- Christine Baranski as Maryann Thorpe[2] – Cybill's best friend, she is a former nurse-receptionist—now fabulously wealthy due to her divorce settlement with her unfaithful ex-husband, celebrity plastic surgeon Richard Thorpe (an infrequently and never fully seen character, to whom she always refers to with a sneer as "Doctor Dick"). Maryann is a bored, bitter alcoholic who often seems unstable and emotionally dependent on Cybill. When she is not stalking her ex-husband and playing elaborate and destructive pranks on him, she spends lavishly, drinks and pursues younger men. She has a few healthy relationships with men of her own age over the course of the series, including Cybill's ex-husband Ira, but these do not last. She has a son, Justin (played by Danny Masterson), who infrequently visits. A passionate environmentalist with excessive liberal beliefs, he is at odds with her frivolous and extravagant lifestyle. Maryann's most consistent and healthy relationship is with Cybill. They seem to be endlessly sharing martinis in an upmarket Hollywood restaurant and are accomplices in each others' bad behaviour. Maryann seems to spend most of her time at Cybill's house and involving herself in Cybill's family life to alleviate her own boredom. Her caustic tongue vies with Cybill's, but her remarks are more inappropriate, bitter and cynical. She is, however, a constant support for Cybill at crucial moments.
- Alicia Witt as Zoey Woodbine[2] – Cybill's younger daughter. A high-school teenager, Zoey is brilliant, rebellious and more sarcastic than her mother. She is a piano virtuoso (as is Witt) and hopes to attend the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music. A self-imposed outcast, she is a vocal advocate of celibacy. In the later seasons, she is seen in an on-again-off-again relationship with Maryann's estranged son.
- Dedee Pfeiffer as Rachel Robbins Blanders[2] – Cybill's elder daughter. Uptight and pretentious, Rachel is married to Kevin Blanders (played by Peter Krause), an equally uptight, untenured assistant professor from Boston. She is prone to outbursts of hysteria similar to her mother's, especially during her pregnancies of the first and fourth season. Rachel and Kevin's first child is a boy named William; the second is a girl, Amanda.
- Tom Wopat as Jeff Robbins[2] – Cybill's first husband. Jeff is a Hollywood stuntman with a roving eye. Though his many indiscretions were the cause of the divorce, Cybill and Jeff still have a good relationship, bound together by their daughter and grandson (and the fact that Jeff lived over Cybill's garage in the early seasons of the show). Jeff is somewhat dim, making him a prime target for Zoey's dry wit, but possesses a good heart.
- Alan Rosenberg as Ira Woodbine[2] – Cybill's second husband. Ira is the polar opposite of Cybill's first husband, Jeff. Unassuming and rather neurotic, he is a brilliant writer, though prone to "writer's block". His marriage to Cybill ended because he was unable to stop trying to control her life; even in divorce, he cannot help meddling in her life. For several episodes of the second season, he became involved with Maryann.
Reception
Awards
Cybill was nominated for twelve Emmy Awards throughout its entire run, winning three. Nominated for her performance in each season, Baranski was the only cast member to win an Emmy.[3] Baranski also received an American Comedy Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award and a Viewers for Quality Television Awardf or her portrayal, while Shepherd was awarded the 1996 Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy.[3] The same year, the sitcom also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy, its only win for both the crew and the cast.[3]
Ratings
The series got respectable ratings throughout its run, but was abruptly canceled by CBS at the end of the 1997-98 season, amid allegations by Shepherd that the network was uncomfortable with Cybill's feminist leanings and frank depiction of female sexuality.[4]
Average seasonal ratings
Season | Premiere | Finale | TV Season | Season rank |
Viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | January 2, 1995 | May 15, 1995 | 1994-1995 | #22 | 12.8 |
2 | September 17, 1995 | May 20, 1996 | 1995-1996 | #50 [5] | 10.0 |
3 | September 16, 1996 | May 19, 1997 | 1996-1997 | #32[6] | 10.5 |
4 | September 15, 1997 | July 13, 1998 | 1997-1998 | #50[7] | 8.3 |
Episodes
Episode Listing
Season 1
# | Episode title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.01 | "Virgin, Mother, Crone" | Robert Berlinger | Chuck Lorre | 2 January 1995 | |
Cybil dates a stranger she meet in a traffic jam, but is thrown off balance by being told she is too old to get good parts, that her older daughter is expecting a baby, and that her younger daughter is dating a college man by lying about her age. | |||||
1.02 | "How Can I Call You My Ex-Husbands If You Won't Go Away?" | Tom Moore | Chuck Lorre | 9 January 1995 | |
Are Cybill's ex-husbands really out of her life? She's not sure any more, as Jeff temporarily moves in, and she and Ira share a romantic moment. Meanwhile, she must decide whether to do a movie with a nude shower scene. | |||||
1.03 | "As The World Turns to Crap" | Tom Moore | Elaine Aronson | 16 January 1995 | |
Cybill competes with a wily colleague for the role of the producer's pet when she learns that one of their soap opera characters will die; meanwhile, she plans for the arrival of Rachel's prudish Boston in-laws. | |||||
1.04 | "Look Who's Stalking" | Tom Moore | Dottie Dartland | 23 January 1995 | |
Cybill is attracted to a guy she meets while they walk their respective dogs, who turns out to be Ira's ex-psychiatrist; Maryann befriends her ex-husband's new girlfriend Sharon in her continuing scheme for revenge. | |||||
1.05 | "Starting on the Wrong Foot" | Tom Moore | Howard M. Gould | 6 February 1995 | |
Maryann has her first date in 25 years, but frightens him off with obsessive gifts of shoes; the costar of a futuristic space series presses Cybill to go out with him. | |||||
1.06 | "Call Me Irresponsible" | Tom Moore | Teleplay: Dottie Dartland & Linda Wallem Story: Michael Dempsey | 13 February 1995 | |
Dateless on Valentine's Day, Cybill and Maryann feel unappreciated and bored unitl Maryann comes up with a plan - a trip to Vegas to max out her ex's credit card. Meanwhile, Ira has to look after Jeff in ways he'd rather not when Jeff gets his hands covered with poison oak. | |||||
1.07 | "See Jeff Jump, Jump, Jeff, Jump!" | Robert Berlinger | Teleplay: Mike Langworthy Story: Mike Langworthy & Philip Babcock | 20 February 1995 | |
Cybill's efforts to end Jeff's overextended stay above her garage stall out when her ex gets fired, then decides he wants to switch careers. | |||||
1.08 | "The Curse of Zoey" | Robert Berlinger | Teleplay: Elaine Aronson & Linda Wallem Story: Dottie Dartland | 27 February 1995 | |
Maryann insists that it's no coincidence that Cybill's luck improved when Zoey moves out - especially after a psychic senses a "negative energy" in the house. | |||||
1.09 | "The Replacements" | Andrew D. Weyman | Lee Aronsohn & Chuck Lorre | 13 March 1995 | |
Cybill feels neglected when Maryann becomes preoccupied with her new basoonist boyfriend. | |||||
1.10 | "Death and Execs" | Andrew D. Weyman | Teleplay: Chuck Lorre & Howard M. Gould. Story: Dottie Dartland & Linda Wallem | 20 March 1995 | |
Old feelings come back to life when Cybill lands in Ira's comforting arms after a brush with death on a movie set. So the two decide to bury their past and start dating. | |||||
1.11 | "The Last Temptation of Cybill" | Robert Berlinger | Teleplay: Elaine Aronson & Lee Aronsohn Story: Mike Langworthy & Michael Dempsey | 10 April 1995 | |
Cybill and Ira's second chance at romance faces a Herculean challenge when handsome young actor Rick takes his love-scene rehearsals with Cybill very seriously. Meanwhile, Maryann buys a telescope to gaze at the stars - movie stars. | |||||
1.12 | "The Big Sleep-Over" | Robert Berlinger | Teleplay: Dottie Dartland & Howard M. Gould Story: Chuck Lorre | 8 May 1995 | |
The arrival of Zoe's rocket-scientist boyfriend Greg launches a series of squabbles; Cybill takes off for Nevada to rescue a flighty Maryann from marriage. | |||||
1.13 | "The Cheese Stands Alone" | Alan Myerson | Lee Aronsohn | 15 May 1995 | |
Maryann plans a sabotage surprise (Limberger cheese in the air conditioning) for Dr. Dick's party, which is the sam e night as her own party. Ira's book is going to be made into a film with Sir Anthony Hopkins, and he wants Cybill to go to London with him. |
Season 2
# | Episode title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2.01 | "Cybill Discovers the Meaning of Life" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Chuck Lorre & Elaine Aronson Story: Chuck Lorre | 17 September 1995 | |
Disturbed by feeling that her family all have lives separate from her own, Cybill drags Maryann into the desert in search of spiritual insights and, receiving an urgent psychic message from the universe, rushes back just in time for the birth of her grandson. | |||||
2.02 | "Zing!" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Lee Aronsohn & Alan Ball Story: Lee Aronsohn | 24 September 1995 | |
Cybill tells Maryann that "there's no zing anymore" when she meets someone new. And it's still missing when Maryann sets her up on a blind date - until she meets the guy's sixty-something father. | |||||
2.03 | "Since I Lost My Baby" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Lee Aronsohn & Linda Wallem Story: Chuck Lorre | 1 October 1995 | |
Jeff's second ex-wife Terry is pregnant, and tells Cybil that Jeff is the unwitting father; Cybill and Maryann take William shopping, but return home with the wrong stroller and baby. | |||||
2.04 | "Cybill with an 'S'" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Michael Langworthy & Linda Wallem Story: Howard M. Gould | 8 October 1995 | |
Ira brings his new girlfriend to Zoey's sweet sixteen birthday party, and Cybill and Maryann both like her until they discover she has uncontrollable multiple personalities; Zoey and Sean, a busboy from the restaurant, are mutually smitten. | |||||
2.05 | "Cybill's Fifteen Minutes" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Russ Woody Story: Lee Aronsohn & Howard M. Gould | 15 October 1995 | |
Cybill is hounded by the press after her Oscar night date, famous actor Dennis Oliver leaves her and then solicits a prostitute in LA, taking it for granted he won't get caught. | |||||
2.06 | "Nice Work If You Can Get It" | Andrew D. Weymen | Pat Bowman & Shivas Irons | 22 October 1995 | |
Controlling Maryann comes to Cybill's financial rescue when the star of her new sitcom, Dick Van Patten, drops dead during a curtain call. | |||||
2.07 | "To Sir, with Lust" | Andrew D. Weymen | Alan Ball | 24 March 1996 | |
To be physically intimate or not to be? That's the question when Cybill dates and desires her acting teacher, until she sees him in his one-man play; and Zoey reconsiders her vow of chastity now that she has met Sean. | |||||
2.08 | "They Shoot Turkeys, Don't They?" | Andrew D. Weymen | Elaine Aronson & Howard M. Gould | 19 November 1995 | |
Cybill's an unhappy Pilgrim who's not making much progress realizing her dream of a family Thanksgiving: everyone goes elsewhere, and she has to work on the holiday. | |||||
2.09 | "Local Hero" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Linda Wallem & Howard M. Gould Story: Elaine Aronson & Russ Woody | 26 November 1995 | |
After she is replaced in a movie starring Kenny Rogers, Cybill thinks her career's a flop - until she takes a gamble on accepting an invitation to visit an immigrant family who collectively idolize her. Meanwhile, Rachel tries to counsel Ira out of his neurotic fear of the telephone. | |||||
2.10 | "The Odd Couples" | Andrew D. Weymen | Russ Woody | 3 December 1995 | |
Not since Felix and Oscar have there been such odd pairings: Ira shadows Maryann hoping her lunacy will dispel his trouble with writers' block; and Cybill hangs out with Sean. | |||||
2.11 | "Mourning Has Broken" | Andrew D. Weymen | Elaine Aronson | 17 December 1995 | |
Cybill renews a romance with David Whittier Sr., which ended the first time because he was still mourning his wife's death. But Maryann's convinced he did more than mourn - she thinks he caused it. So she and Cybill break into his house in search of evidence. | |||||
2.12 | "The Big Apple Can Bite Me" | Andrew D. Weymen | Linda Wallem | 7 January 1996 | |
A rotten experience in the Big Apple in 1969 took a chunk out of Cybill's self-esteem, so, for her birthday, Maryann, Rachel and Zoey take her to New York and teach her how to bite back. | |||||
2.13 | "Educating Zoey" | Andrew D. Weymen | Michael Dempsey | 14 January 1996 | |
Cybill and Ira learn a lesson in parenting when one of Zoey informs them that college is not part of her plans for the future. | |||||
2.14 | "Where's Zoey?" | Andrew D. Weymen | Maria A. Brown | 4 February 1996 | |
Cybill refuses to let Zoey stay home alone while she travels to Vancouver to film an sf series, so Maryann offers to let the "demon seed" stay with her. But Maryann gets into a pickle when she goes out for olives and Zoey disappears. | |||||
2.15 | "Lowenstein's Lament" | Andrew D. Weymen | Glenn Gers | 11 February 1996 | |
Cybill auditions to play herself in the film based on Ira's book, but she regards the written character as a "needy doormat" - which may be why her performance is flat; and she loses the role to Paula Abdul. | |||||
2.16 | "A Who's Who for What's His Name" | Andrew D. Weymen | Russ Woody | 18 February 1996 | |
Cybill's agent Arthur dies and Cybill ends up planning his funeral loaded with look-alikes. Maryann makes a move on Ira, but he rejects her. | |||||
2.17 | "Wedding Bell Blues" | Andrew D. Weymen | James L. Freedman | 25 February 1996 | |
Morgan Fairchild returns as one of Cybill's casting competitors, who beats her out for another job, and then announces that she is getting married to Maryann's ex-husband Dr. Dick. So the two plot revenge schemes to ruin the wedding reception. Nothing goes as planned, but a food fight puts an end to the reception anyway. Zoey discovers that Kevin is having a online affair and tells Rachel. | |||||
2.18 | "Romancing the Crone" | Andrew D. Weymen | Bruce Eric Kaplan | 10 March 1996 | |
Cybill accidentally causes a famous actress to break her arm, so she invites her to recuperate at her ho me, where the woman breaks Cybill's endurance with boundless demands. Meanwhile, Zoey discovers that her brother-in-law Kevin is having an on-line dalliance with another woman. | |||||
2.19 | "An Officer and a Thespian" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Michael Langworthy & Linda Wallem Story: Russ Woody & Maria A. Brown | 17 March 1996 | |
To land a movie role as a cop, Cybill prepares by riding with a cop on duty; but when his wife goes into labour, Cybill is left with the car, the siren and a call from Maryann in trouble. Meanwhile, Rachel's husband throws a party to suck up to his academic superior in hopes of landing tenure; and Zoey and Sean notice the academic's wife stealing the silver. | |||||
2.20 | "Virgin, Mother, Cheater" | Jonathan Weiss | Jane O'Brien | 22 April 1996 | |
Kevin's preoccupation with getting tenure looks like an affair to Rachel, who decides that two can play that game; Zoey and Sean lie about their celibacy to stop their friends' questions. | |||||
2.21 | "When You're Hot, You're Hot" | Andrew D. Weymen | Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe | 29 April 1996 | |
Cybill's hot flashes and herbal treatments don't make her feel any younger, nor does Ira's visiting mother Ruth, who has traded in pantsuits for trendy clothes and an herbal pleasure of her own (or, as she calls it, "a little sweet wheat"). But Ruth is a hit with Zoey, since she arrives in a pink Cadillac that's a present for her granddaughter, much to Cybill and Ira's dismay. | |||||
2.22 | "Pal Zoey" | Andrew D. Weymen | Michael Langworthy | 6 May 1996 | |
Cybill is disconcerted but delighted when a heartbroken Zoey decides she wants to be best friends; but Rachel storms off when Cybill and Kevin agree to sit in on a marriage counselling session, only to discover that Kevin slept with Rachel's therapist. Meanwhile, Maryann tries to make Ira jealous by flirting with Cybill's Arkansas cousin Lyle, who is obsessed with getting onto 'The Price is Right'. | |||||
2.23 | "Three Women and a Dummy" | Pamela Fryman | Alan Ball | 13 May 1996 | |
Zoey's new-found popularity confounds an apologetic Sean; Ira and Maryann go on a first date; Cybill accompanies the waiter to a party at his ex-boyfriend's. | |||||
2.24 | "Going Out with a Bang" | Pamela Fryman | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown & Michael Langworthy Story: Howard M. Gould | 20 May 1996 | |
Children's show host Major Milo proposes to Cybill on the air; but she's much more interested in a hunky cable technician. Meanwhile, Ira and Maryann have a steamy dinner date that ends in disaster. |
Season 3
# | Episode title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3.01 | "Bringing Home the Bacon" | Andrew D. Weymen | Russ Woody | 16 September 1996 | |
On the barnyard set of her new show (a parody of Babe), Cybill rescues a pig that was fired and doomed to the frying pan; then tries to keep an independent Zoey from flying the coop after she visits the greener pastures of Paris. Meanwhile, Maryann dresses as Little Bo Peep to entice a sheepish Ira. | |||||
3.02 | "Venice or Bust" | Andrew D. Weymen | Alan Ball | 23 September 1996 | |
Zoey moves out; Cybill and Maryann take a sculpting class. | |||||
3.03 | "Cybill and Maryann Go to Japan" | Andrew D. Weymen | Linda Wallem | 30 September 1996 | |
As the spokeswoman for a Japanese car company, Cybill (along with Maryann) visits Japan, where both are embraced - until they take a stuffy exec's wife out to greet the rising sun. Meanwhile, Ira mediates a dispute between Zoey and Sean | |||||
3.04 | "It's for You, Mrs. Lincoln" | Andrew D. Weymen | Michael Langworthy | 7 October 1996 | |
When Cybill gets a chance to play Abe Lincoln's wife on stage, an unexpected caller interrupts her big moment. Cast as the understudy for Joan Hayden, the lead in What Now, Mrs. Lincoln?, Cybill awaits the day that the star breaks her amazing record of never having missed a performance in her life. Just when Cybill thinks it's hopeless, the star is stricken with an allergic reaction, putting Cybill in the spotlight. Unfortunately, her chance of a lifetime runs amok when the cell phone that she accidentally left in her skirt pocket starts ringing in the middle of the climactic scene. Meantime, Maryann and Ira gang up on a woman in the audience for her rude behavior - oblivious to the fact that she's the powerful agent Cybill has been courting for months. | |||||
3.05 | "Cybill, Get Your Gun" | Andrew D. Weymen | Jeff Lowell | 14 October 1996 | |
After Cybill is robbed, she decides to fight back by taking a course in self defense. Cybill decides to take action with tactics that include an obnoxious house alarm, self-defense courses taught by Vicki Lawrence (guest starring as herself), and her very own "Safety Man," a role she bestows on an unenthusiastic Zoey. Meanwhile, the newly available Ira finds that he has misrepresented himself when he meets a woman at one of Jeff's favorite hangouts - an Alcoholic's Anonymous meeting. And, Maryann becomes a suspect in the abrupt disappearance of Dr. Dick | |||||
3.06 | "Cybill Does Diary" | Andrew D. Weymen | Michael Patrick King | 21 October 1996 | |
After discovering Cybill's picture on an X-rated video, Cybill and Maryann decide to produce an erotic video intended for women. But when Cybill borrows Zoey's laptop to write the script and tries to e-mail it to a producer, she accidentally sends Zoey's European diary instead - and the producer loves the story of how Zoey lost her virginity. | |||||
3.07 | "Sex, Drugs and Catholicism" | Peter Baldwin | James L. Freedman | 4 November 1996 | |
Ira is full of sexual energy thanks to the new hormones he's taking - but when he learns they are really placebos, he proposes to Holly. Cybill agrees to be Ira's best man, but when Zoey resists being a bridesmaid, Holly shows her true colours. Meanwhile, Maryann goes to confession. | |||||
3.08 | "Going to Hell in a Limo: Part 1" | Peter Baldwin | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown Story: Elaine Aronson | 11 November 1996 | |
Cybill becomes a prime-time hit in the new sf series Lifeforms, but when her co-star starts sleeping with the female producer, Cybill's role gets reduced to a few lines per episode. Meanwhile, Ira tries to convince Zoey to throw a bridal shower for Holly. | |||||
3.09 | "Going to Hell in a Limo: Part 2" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe Story: Elaine Aronson | 18 November 1996 | |
Cybill retaliates when her obnoxious co-star Jack mysteriously fires his friend, the executive producer, Buddy, and apologizes to Cybill for his rude - and crude - behavior. Smelling a rat, Cybill, Maryann and Cybill's producer friend Amy devise a sting operation to trick Buddy into revealing the truth behind Jack's sudden change of heart. Meanwhile, Zoey is having second thoughts about being maid of honor at the wedding of her father, Ira, and Holly after overhearing Holly remark to a friend that Zoey threw her a tacky wedding shower. | |||||
3.10 | "Buffalo Gals" | Andrew D. Weymen | Alan Ball | 25 November 1996 | |
Maryann goes home to Buffalo for an uneasy reunion with her parents , and to attend a 25-year reunion of her high-school classmates - who treated her like dirt. When Maryann can't make her high school reunion, Cybill decides to pose as Maryann and go in her place. Cybill had convinced Maryann to attend her high school reunion and planned to accompany her, but when the pair returns to Maryann's home town of Buffalo, N.Y. to take on the former classmates who made Maryann's life intolerable, Maryann learns that her son - who she believed was traveling with Greenpeace - is actually living with her parents. When Maryann consequently opts to forgo the reunion to spend time with him, Cybill, not one to miss an opportunity, goes to the reunion as Maryann in order to claim sweet revenge on the classmates who made Maryann's high school experience a nightmare. Meantime, Cybill is also spearheading efforts to make Thanksgiving dinner plans. | |||||
3.11 | "A Hell of a Christmas" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Jane O'Brien & Michael Poryes Story: Maria A. Brown | 9 December 1996 | |
Cybill's overbearing mom comes for a Christmas visit. Cybill welcomes her mom, Virginia, who's in town for the holidays, but tensions arise when "Me-Maw" showers Rachel with affection while virtually ignoring Zoey. When Cybill confronts her about the favoritism, she learns that Virginia feels a responsibility to compensate for Cybill's own partiality towards Zoey. Meanwhile, Maryann volunteers to be Cybill's personal holiday shopper while Cybill deals with the fact that her show's time slot has been moved - opposite 60 Minutes, and Ira finds out that Zoey lost her virginity while in Europe. | |||||
3.12 | "The Little Drummer Girls" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Joey Murphy & John Pardee Story: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe | 16 December 1996 | |
Cybill tries to help Maryann, Rachel and Zoey overcome their romantic troubles by forcing them to take part in a new age drum beating session. Maryann, furious when Dr. Dick doesn't send any hateful gifts to her in honor of what would have been their 23rd anniversary, agrees to let Cybill take her to a new age female bonding session so she can get Dr. Dick out of her system once and for all. Meanwhile, Kevin uses Baby William to diffuse his anger towards Rachel and his job-hunting problems, and Ira finds out that Sean cheated on Zoey. | |||||
3.13 | "Bachelor Party" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Jane O'Brien & Michael Langworthy Story: Jane O'Brien | 6 January 1997 | |
As designated "best man" at Ira's wedding, Cybill is in charge of planning the bachelor party. Since Holly objects to hiring a stripper, Cybill decides to have everyone go to the track instead. But when Ira and the director of Cybill's television series show up expecting to see some skin, Cybill reluctantly agrees to have the party at a strip club. She and Maryann go disguised as men, primarily because Cybill doesn't want to jeopardize her newfound celebrity status. Meanwhile, Zoey tries to get used to her new job as production assistant on Cybill's television show, Lifeforms. | |||||
3.14 | "Little Bo Beep" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: James L. Freedman Story: Maria A. Brown | 20 January 1997 | |
Provoked by Cybill's offensive reaction to a lamb attack on live television, animal activists - led by Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop (as themselves) - launch a campaign against Cybill. When Cybill makes an appearance at a local zoo to promote "Lifeforms," she's bitten by a lamb while being interviewed on live television and reacts in politically incorrect fashion. Trying to save her career, Andy convinces her to be a guest speaker at an animal rights banquet. Meanwhile, while Cybill dates a younger man who seems too good to be true, Maryann desperately tries to cope with the fact that her new romantic interest shares something in common with her ex-husband - the same name. | |||||
3.15 | "In Her Dreams" | Pamela Fryman | Teleplay: Bob Myer Story: Bob Myer & Marilyn Suzanne Miller | 3 February 1997 | |
Kevin gets a job teaching third grade, while Cybill loses her job and flashes back to how she first met Maryann at an audition for Rocky. Maryann and Cybill argue about Maryann going for a mammogram, while Ira and Cybill are both audited by the IRS. | |||||
3.16 | "Valentine's Day" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: Joey Murphy & John Pardee Story: Michael Poryes | 10 February 1997 | |
Maryann is acting more bizarre than usual during a Valentine's Day outing with Richard and her visiting son. Meanwhile, Zoey moves in with Ira to spite her mother. Sparks fly between Zoey and Maryann's son, Justin. Maryann arranges a Valentine's Day dinner with her son and her new flame but panics and shows up on Cybill's doorstep with Justin and her beau, looking for moral support - just as Zoey is leaving to meet Ira. When Zoey and Justin see each other again - after years apart - they begin spending time together, and, although Maryann loves Zoey like a daughter, she fears that Zoey may break her son's heart. Meanwhile, Cybill spends Valentine's Day with the special guy in her life - her grandson, William. | |||||
3.17 | "Kiss Me, You Fool" | Andrew D. Weymen | Teleplay: James L. Freedman & Michael Langworthy Story: Linda Wallem | 17 February 1997 | |
Cybill and Jeff co-star in a new action film. Just as Cybill is complaining to her photographer friend, Davolio that her career is going nowhere, Jeff pulls some strings to get her the co-starring role in his new action film. Cybill must then return the favor when she learns that Jeff's future as the next action hero is on the line because he's unable to keep a straight face during intimate scenes. Now that Jeff's making more money than he knows what to do with, he gives Rachel and Kevin a down payment for a new house. | |||||
3.18 | "True Confessions" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: Linda Wallem & Maria A. Brown Story: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe | 24 February 1997 | |
Cybill stalks Maryann in order to research a new role and discovers a jaw-dropping secret. When Cybill decides to base her character in Ira's new play on Maryann, she immediately begins to shadow Maryann's every move. But, when Maryann tells Cybill that she's not welcome to accompany her one afternoon, Cybill secretly follows her anyway. When she spies Maryann suspiciously meeting a man at his apartment, Cybill assumes that her friend is having an affair, only to discover that Maryann has been posing as a nude model. | |||||
3.19 | "Name That Tune" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Alan Ball & Michael Langworthy Story: Linda Wallem | 3 March 1997 | |
Cybill joins Ira at an open-mike night for his debut as a stand-up comic, which gets off to a rocky start when he faints from stage fright. Cybill's performance, however, results in an offer to sing in a new Name That Tune. Meanwhile, Maryann displays unusual behavior, but if she seems preoccupied (to the point of wearing the same outfit two days running), it's because she thinks she may be pregnant. | |||||
3.20 | "From Boca, with Love" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown & Michael Poryes Story: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe | 10 March 1997 | |
3.21 | "All of Me" | Pamela Fryman | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown & Linda Wallem Story: Steve Young | 7 April 1997 | |
Cybill puts her foot down when she's chosen as a model for a shoe campaign only to see a billboard with her face - on a younger, thinner woman's "waif" body. Cybill decides to defend women of all shapes and sizes by defacing a billboard that depicts her face with someone else's waif-like figure. Meanwhile, Maryann freaks when she discovers that her son, Justin, is two-timing Zoey, and Ira decides to give up caffeine, which creates some abnormal side effects. | |||||
3.22 | "The Wedding" | David Trainer | Teleplay: James L. Freedman & Michael Langworthy Michael Poryes | 21 April 1997 | |
Learning that her film's a flop, Cybill has nothing to throw in the faces of her friends when she attends a neighbor's wedding. But that's not the case for Zoey, who accidentally decks the bride while dancing. | |||||
3.23 | "The Piano" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: Joey Murphy & John Pardee Story: Micahel Poryes | 28 April 1997 | |
Cybill needs a favor from Dr. Dick's wife, Andrea (guest star Morgan Fairchild, reprising the role), so in return, she grudgingly agrees to give a speech at an awards banquet honoring Andrea. When Cybill discovers that Andrea can get Zoey a piano audition that's otherwise unobtainable, she agrees to give the testimonial speech for the charity award, which deservedly belongs to Maryann. But when Cybill finds out that Zoey got the audition on her own, she decides to tell the awards committee what she really thinks of Andrea. | |||||
3.24 | "There Was an Old Woman" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe Story: Linda Wallem | 5 May 1997 | |
When a TV director takes his cat to see Maryann's Richard, Cybill drops by - dressed as an old woman - and becomes privy to Richard's intentions regarding Maryann. | |||||
3.25 | "Mother's Day" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: Michael Langworthy & Michael Poryes Story: Alan Ball | 12 May 1997 | |
Cybill doesn't realize that her mom, who's visiting for Mother's Day, is within earshot when she says she's worked her entire life trying not to become her mother. | |||||
3.26 | "Let's Stalk" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: James L. Freedman & Stephanie Arasim Portnoy Story: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe | 19 May 1997 | |
With Cybill as the organizer, Maryann's bachelorette party turns out to be one last evening stalking Dr. Dick. Realizing their stalking days are almost behind them, Cybill and Maryann agree that one last act of torment is in order. Zoey and Rachel join the duo in a rented van, equipped with the latest in surveillance technology, staking out Dr. Dick's house. Their mission: to inject Dr. Dick's water supply with a barrel of liposuctioned fat stolen from his office. But mid-execution, Cybill and Maryann overhear "Mrs. Dr. Dick" Andrea tell Dr. Dick that she's leaving him, causing Maryann to rethink her own marriage plans. |
Season 4
# | Episode title | Directed by | Written by | Original airdate | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4.01 | "Regarding Henry" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe Story: Alan Ball | 15 September 1997 | |
The series begins its fourth season with a trip back in time to the 16th century, as Cybill undergoes past-life regression treatment on the advice of her therapist when she begins having erotic dreams about Maryann's jilted beau Richard. She discovers that Maryann's poor choice in men goes back to the days of Henry VIII, when Maryann was Anne Bolyne, and returns to the present just in time to head off a close encounter between Maryann and the despised Dr. Dick. Joining Cybill in the Court of King Henry VIII are Zoey as Ariel's father, Ira as her brother the poet, and Justin as a serving wench. | |||||
4.02 | "The Love of Her Life" | David Trainer | Teleplay: John Pardee & Joey Murphy Story: Maria A. Brown | 22 September 1997 | |
Maryann is shocked when Cybill tells her she had an affair with a married man - and now wants to rekindle the romance. Maryann reels from Cybill's hypocrisy, since Cybill is always advising her not to even consider going back to the cheating Dr. Dick. But Cybill, head-over-heels in lust with Roger, refuses to admit to her own double standard. Meanwhile, Ira is hurt when he overhears Cybill wonder about what might have been if she had never become Mrs. Woodbine | |||||
4.03 | "The Big, Flouncy Thing" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Linda Wallem & William Lucas Walker Story: Dan Bucatinky | 29 September 1997 | |
Zoey rejects Cybill's advice about what to wear for her first piano competition, and Cybill mourns the loss of a mother-daughter moment. After having been brushed off by Zoey, Cybill meets a young girl who welcomes her mothering - and her father isn't bad either. But when he turns out to be a cad, Cybill and Maryann scheme to get revenge. In the meantime, Ira and Justin battle over whose good luck charm Zoey should wear for her competition. | |||||
4.04 | "Some Like It Hot" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Michael Poryes & Kim Friese Story: Linda Wallem | 6 October 1997 | |
The family take cover when Cybill's hormones rage after she opts to cope with menopause the "natural way" rather than with prescription durgs, while her visiting mother creates her own waves in the house and Ira tries to light a fire with Zoey's teacher Julia. | |||||
4.05 | "Like Family" | David Trainer | Teleplay: J. David Stem & David N. Weiss Story: Mark Hudis | 13 October 1997 | |
Cybill throws herself into her role when she is cast to play the mother of a sweet teenage girl on a network sitcom. In reality, the girl turns out to be a tough-talking, ultra-hip teen, but Cybill is determined to mentor the difficult youth. The pending birth of Rachel's baby has everyone wondering who will be the godmother, and Maryann is hurt when no one even considers her as a possible choice. | |||||
4.06 | "Earthquake" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown & William Lucas Walker Story: Erin A. Bishop | 20 October 1997 | |
Cybill endures her new role as a sitcom mom, even though she thinks it could mean the end of her career, until her life is shaken up when a 4.0 earthquake rattles the city and inspires her to quit and "follow her bliss." Next thing she knows, Maryann convinces her that they should go to a "schmoozing" where Cybill meets a prominent female playwright. Meanwhile, Rachel shares some shocking news of her own with the family. | |||||
4.07 | "Halloween" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Alan Ball & Mark Hudis Story: Susan Nirah Jaffe | 27 October 1997 | |
Cybill hosts a Halloween eve telethon, and recruits Maryann, Zoey, and Ira to help out. Things go fine at first, until Cybill and Maryann begin to air their differences on the air! | |||||
4.08 | "Where's a Harpoon When You Need One?" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Alan Ball & Kim Friese Story: Michael Poryes | 3 November 1997 | |
Cybill gets a job as a spokeswoman on a cruise ship, but when she and Maryann take a cruise, it turns out to be one of displeasure: Dr. Dick, relentless in his efforts to win back Maryann, puts Cybill in a difficult situation by giving her a letter for his ex that Cybill knows will make Maryann "melt down." | |||||
4.09 | "How to Get a Head in Show Business" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: J. David Stem & David N. Weiss Story: Kim Friese | 10 November 1997 | |
When obsessed fan Minnie steals Cybill's wax head from Madame Tussaud's, the museum simply replaces it with the head of another blonde actress. Cybill and Maryann are outraged, so they concoct a scheme to travel to London and return the real "Cybill-head." Meanwhile, Zoey decides to give up her career as a pianist for an office job, while Cybill and Ira try to save her from a life of corporate drudgery. | |||||
4.10 | "Grandbaby" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: Michael Poryes & Linda Wallem Story: Stephanie Arasim Portnoy | 17 November 1997 | |
When Rachel goes into labor and Maryann has an appendicitis attack on the same day, Cybill finds herself stretched thin trying to care for each of them. After convincing a panicked Rachel that having a second child is a piece of cake, Cybill must reassure Maryann, who is delusional from pain-killing drugs, that her hallucinated dinner party is a smashing success. | |||||
4.11 | "The Golden Years" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: John Pardee & Joey Murphy Story: William Lucas Walker | 1 December 1997 | |
It's the year 2027, and Cybill and Maryann, now senior citizens, are still sipping martinis and insulting men. When they come across Cybill's diary from 97, Cybill begins to read aloud from the book, and one of the passages hurts Maryann's feelings - creating a rift between the two friends. Cybill and Maryann must travel 30 years into the past to resolve the issue and discover that their friendship has withstood the test of time for good reason. | |||||
4.12 | "Show Me the Minnie" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown & Susan Nirah Jaffe Story: Erin A. Bishop | 8 December 1997 | |
When Cybill's garage roof collapses and requires expensive repairs, she tries to get a loan from the bank, only to discover that the loan officer turns out to be her disgruntled former fan, Minnie Arbogast. Adding to Cybill's troubles, Ira accuses Maryann of causing the breakup of his marriage to Cybill. After trying unsuccessfully to reconcile her two friends and resolve her own financial crisis, Cybill gets help from an unlikely source - her former enemy and new-found friend, Minnie. | |||||
4.13 | "Bakersfield" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Kim Friese & Mark Hudis Story: Alan Ball | 4 March 1998 | |
Following her mother's untimely passing, Cybill finds what appears to be a love letter to an unknown man in Bakersfield. She is shocked that her supposedly conservative mother may have had a longstanding, passionate secret love affair. Curious about this hidden part of her mother's past, Cybill travels to Bakersfield with Maryann and Zoey to deliver the letter to the mystery man herself. | |||||
4.14 | "Once, Twice, Three Times a Lady" | David Trainer | Teleplay: John Pardee & Joey Murphy Story: Maria A. Brown | 11 March 1998 | |
In a fit of romantic nostalgia, Cybill writes a letter to her first love, Bobby Ray, and is pleasantly surprised when he flies in from Memphis to take her out on a date. After spending a wonderfully romantic evening with Bobby Ray, Cybill's faith in love is restored - until she realizes that his criminal history extends beyond being just a thief of hearts. Meanwhile, when Zoey's first love, Gianni, visits from Italy, she worries that seeing him will destroy the magic of their short-lived but passionate romance. | |||||
4.15 | "Cybill Sheridan's Day Off" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Linda Wallem & William Lucas Walker Story: Kim Friese | 18 March 1998 | |
Cybill and Maryann masquerade as ladies of the night to foil an evil prank by the dastardly Dr. Dick. The scheme conceived by Dr. Dick goes wrong when his hired thugs mistakenly drug Cybill instead of Maryann and deposit her in a seedy bus station in the middle of nowhere. To make matters worse, when Maryann comes to rescue Cybill, her car gets stolen and both women end up stranded. The two friends finally get a ride home when two unsuspecting high school boys looking for a good time mistake them for ladies of the night. Meanwhile, Ira tries to instill in Zoey a love for basketball when he gets her a job playing the organ at a Lakers' game. | |||||
4.16 | "Fine Is Not a Feeling" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Erin A. Bishop & Susan Nirah Jaffe Story: Maria A. Brown | 25 March 1998 | |
Maryann's son Justin decides to move to San Francisco for a new job, and Cybill convinces a reluctant Maryann to see a therapist and confront her irrational fear of losing her son. Cybill's suggestion backfires when Justin brings Maryann's ex-boyfriend, Richard, to the group therapy and the session descends into chaos. Meanwhile, Cybill quits an acting job out of disgust with Hollywood's lack of respect for older women. | |||||
4.17 | "Oh Brother!" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Alan Ball & Mark Hudis Story: Michael Poryes | 1 April 1998 | |
Cybill forgot Ira's birthday and, to ease her guilty conscience, then concocts a crazy scheme to kidnap him and surprise him with the perfect gift - courtside tickets for a Lakers game. Maryann and Zoey act as Cybill's accomplices in the kidnapping scheme and successfully complete their mission - only to discover that they've abducted the wrong man. Meanwhile, Cybill's long-lost niece, Claire, visits from Bakersfield and is starstruck with her aunt's glamorous Hollywood. While Cybill entertains Claire, she finds a photo showing her with her brother, a man she never knew - and can't remember. | |||||
4.18 | "Whose Wife Am I, Anyway?" | David Trainer | Teleplay: J. David Stem & David N. Weiss Story: Erin A. Bishop | 8 April 1998 | |
Jeff convinces Cybill to pretend they're still married to please his sweet but old-fashioned grandmother. While Jeff and Cybill are celebrating their pretend 25th anniversary with grandma, the waiter, who is nervous about telling his parents that he's gay, introduces Cybill as his fiancee. Meanwhile, Maryann and Richard enjoy a romantic vacation in the country until the trip gets sidetracked by a veterinary emergency and Maryann finds herself delivering a calf. | |||||
4.19 | "Dream Date" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Susan Nirah Jaffe & Mark Hudis Story: Alan Ball | 8 June 1998 | |
Maryann convinces a reluctant Cybill to go on the blind date with Bruce, who turns out to be an offensive jerk. Although Cybill is repulsed by Bruce's piggish behavior, after a storm straps him at Cybill's for the night along with Maryann, Zoey, Ira and his mother, she is determined to be nice to him after he saves the life of Ira's mother. Meanwhile, Maryann and Dick work on their co-dependency issues, and Ira tries to improve his relationship with his mother. | |||||
4.20 | "Farewell, My Sweet" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Kim Fiese & Michael Poryes Story: David Jackson Willis & Stephanie Novik | 15 June 1998 | |
Cybill and Maryann each get a shock when Cybill discovers that she's allergic to chocolate and Maryann gets a surprise visit from her parents, who are in town for a bowling tournament. | |||||
4.21 | "Daddy" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Michael Poryes & Linda Wallem Story: William Lucas Walker | 22 June 1998 | |
Cybill's Daddy, who failed to show up for Christmas, breezes into town with news that he has gotten Cybill a plum spot on a TV show about Southern women who have made it big. But it's just another disappointment for Cybill when she realizes he has done it to promote his failing car dealership. NOTE: Since this episode ends with the announcement of Cybill's mother's death, it obviously was intended to air before "Bakersfield", although the production codes don't seem to indicate that. | |||||
4.22 | "Don Gianni" | Jonathan Weiss | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown & William Lucas Walker Story: Cybill Shepherd | 29 June 1998 | |
When Zoey's first love, Gianni, visits from Italy and steals her heart with his good looks, charm and romantic gestures, Cybill suspects he will soon propose marriage. Unfortunately, the seemingly perfect Italian turns out be a cad who makes a secret pass at Cybill behind Zoey's back. After rejecting the overly-amorous suitor, Cybill must decide whether or not to break her daughter's heart and tell her the truth. Meanwhile, Maryann is bent on wreaking cruel revenge on the lecherous Gianni. | |||||
4.23 | "Cybill in the Morning" | David Trainer | Linda Wallem | 6 July 1998 | |
Cybill is thrilled when she gets a job hosting a popular morning talk show - until she discovers that her co-host is a prissy, jealous domestic goddess-type who enjoys playing live, on-air practical jokes on Cybill. Adding to her troubles, Cybill finds herself both sexually attracted to and morally repulsed by her deceitful new producer. Meanwhile, Ira stands in as Cybill's best friend and advisor while Maryann goes on a shopping spree in Paris. | |||||
4.24 | "Ka-Boom!" | David Trainer | Teleplay: Maria A. Brown & Mike Langworthy Story: Howard M. Gould | 13 July 1998 | |
When the scheming Dr. Dick tricks Maryann into signing a form that gives him control of her fortune, Cybill must help her friend cope with being poor. The two women plot a horrible revenge against Dr. Dick and find themselves on the wrong side of the law when their vengeful prank goes a little too far. Meanwhile, Cybill and her new morning show producer finally reveal their mutual attraction for each other, only to discover that the show has been cancelled. |
Awards and nominations
Year | Award Show | Category | Result | Recipient(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Individual Achievement in Art Direction for a Series | Won | Crew |
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Costume Design for a Series | Nominated | Crew | ||
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Cybill Shepherd | ||
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | Won | Christine Baranski | ||
1996 | American Comedy Award | Funniest Supporting Female Performer in a TV Series | Won | Christine Baranski |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Individual Achievement in Art Direction for a Series | Nominated | Crew | |
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Costuming for a Series | Won | Crew | ||
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Comedy Series or a Special | Nominated | Crew | ||
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Cybill Shepherd | ||
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Christine Baranski | ||
Golden Globe Awards | Best TV-Series - Comedy/Musical | Won | Cast and Crew | |
Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Comedy/Musical | Won | Cybill Shepherd | ||
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series | Nominated | Christine Baranski | ||
Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Cast | |
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series | Won | Christine Baranski | ||
Viewers for Quality Television Awards | Best Supporting Actress in a Quality Comedy Series | Won | Christine Baranski | |
1997 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Cybill Shepherd |
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Christine Baranski | ||
GLAAD Awards | Outstanding TV - Individual Episode | Nominated | Cast and Crew | |
Golden Globe Awards | Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Comedy/Musical | Nominated | Cybill Shepherd | |
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series | Nominated | Christine Baranski | ||
Satellite Awards | Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy | Nominated | Cybill Shepherd | |
Best Television Series - Musical or Comedy | Nominated | Cast and Crew | ||
Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Christine Baranski | |
1998 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Christine Baranski |
Syndication
- In the UK, Cybill is aired on Comedy Central (UK).
- In the United States, Cybill began airing on Lifetime Network in May, 2009. The series moved to TV Guide Network in fall 2011.
DVD releases
Region 1
On September 16, 2008, First Look Studios released Cybill the Collectors Edition, Vol. 1, a 2-disc best of DVD.[8]
Region 2
Anchor Bay Entertainment has released the entire series on DVD in the UK.
DVD Name | Ep# | Release Date |
---|---|---|
The Complete First Series | 13 | 24 April 2006 |
The Complete Second Series | 24 | 2 July 2007 |
The Complete Third Series | 26 | 5 May 2008 |
The Complete Fourth Series | 24 | 4 August 2008 |
The Complete Box Set | 87 | 29 September 2008 |
References
- ^ Cybill Disobedience
- ^ a b c d e f "Full Cast & Crew". IMDb. 2004-05-18. Retrieved 2011-06-03.
- ^ a b c "Awards for Cybill (1995)". IMDb. Retrieved 2011-06-06.
- ^ Griffin, Nancy (July/August 2004). "Cybill Liberties". AARP Magazine.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ http://fbibler.chez.com/tvstats/recent_data/1995-96.html 1995-1996 TV Season Ratings
- ^ http://fbibler.chez.com/tvstats/recent_data/1996-97.html 1996-1997 TV Season Ratings
- ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/1998/05/25/DD61876.DTL&type=chart 1997-1998 TV Season Ratings
- ^ Cybill: The Collector's Edition Volume 1
External links
- 1995 American television series debuts
- 1998 American television series endings
- 1990s American television series
- 1990s American comedy television series
- American television sitcoms
- Best Musical or Comedy Series Golden Globe winners
- CBS network shows
- English-language television series
- Television series by Carsey-Werner Productions
- Television shows set in Los Angeles, California
- Television shows set in California