All's Fair
All's Fair | |
---|---|
Created by | Bob Schiller Bob Weiskopf Rod Parker |
Developed by | Norman Lear |
Starring | Richard Crenna Bernadette Peters Michael Keaton |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 24 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Production locations | Metromedia Square, Los Angeles, California |
Running time | approx. 0:30 (per episode) |
Production company | T.A.T. Communications Company |
Original release | |
Network | CBS |
Release | September 20, 1976 April 30, 1977 | –
All's Fair is an American television sitcom from Norman Lear that aired one season on CBS from 1976 to 1977. The series co-starred Richard Crenna as a conservative political columnist and Bernadette Peters as a liberal photographer, and their romantic mismatch because of age and political opinions. The program also featured Michael Keaton in an early role as Lanny Wolf. Peters was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for her role.
Plot
In Washington, D.C., an older (49) conservative columnist Richard C. Barrington (Richard Crenna) and a young (23) liberal photographer Charlotte (Charley) Drake (Bernadette Peters) become romantically involved. The complications of their politics and the age difference provide the story lines. They are "separated by politics, generation gap, manners and living styles".[1]
Barrington is a gourmet cook who lives in a luxurious Washington townhouse, and Drake is a vegetarian. Barrington has a girl friend, a literary agent (Salome Jens), when he first meets Drake.[2] The style of the show is "almost constant hysteria, the rapid pacing set to the sounds of argumentative shouting."[1]
Cast and crew
- Cast
Source: Nostalgia Central[3]
- Richard C. Barrington – Richard Crenna
- Charlotte (Charley) Drake – Bernadette Peters
- Lucy Daniels, Al's girlfriend and a reporter – Lee Chamberlin
- Allen Brooks, Richard's assistant – J.A. Preston
- Ginger Livingston, Charley's roommate – Judith Kahan
- Senator Wayne Joplin, a liberal Senator and friend of Richard – Jack Dodson
- Lanny Wolf (1976), aide to President Carter – Michael Keaton
- Crew
- Norman Lear – Production Supervisor
- Michael Elias – Producer
- Rod Parker – Executive Producer
- Bob Claver – Director
- Hal Cooper – Director
- Bob Schiller – Writer and Producer
- Bob Weiskopf – Writer and Producer
- Ben Stein – Consultant and writer[4][5]
Episodes
This section needs a plot summary. (April 2015) |
{{Episode table |background=#000000 |overall= |title= |director= |writer= |airdate= |prodcode= |aux4= |aux4T=Tape date |episodes=
1"Strange Bedfellows"UnknownUnknownSeptember 20, 1976
Dixie Brown Grossman,
Ron FriedmanNovember 8, 1976 112November 1, 1976
8"Happy Anniversary: Part 1"Bob ClaverMichael LomanNovember 15, 1976 109October 12, 1976
9"Happy Anniversary: Part 2"Bob ClaverUnknownNovember 22, 1976 TBATBA
10"The Weekend"UnknownBob Van ScoykNovember 29, 1976 TBATBA
11"The Leak"Bob ClaverUnknownDecember 13, 1976 TBATBA
12"True Confessions"Bob ClaverSylvie Adelman (s),
Bob Van Scoyk (s/t),
Bud Wiser (s/t)December 20, 1976 114December 7, 1976
13"Love and Marriage: Part 1"Bob ClaverBob Van ScoykJanuary 3, 1977 TBATBA
14"Love and Marriage: Part 2"J.D. LobueBud WiserJanuary 17, 1977 113November 10, 1976
15"Lucy's Job Offer"Bob ClaverHoward OstroffFebruary 7, 1977 116December 21, 1976
16"President Requests: Part 1"Bob ClaverTom WhedonFebruary 14, 1977 115December 14, 1976
17"President Requests: Part 2"Bob ClaverRod ParkerFebruary 21, 1977 116December 14, 1976
18"In Name Only"Bob ClaverUnknownFebruary 28, 1977 TBATBA
19"Save the Yak"Bob ClaverHoward OstroffMarch 7, 1977 TBATBA
20"Remembrance"Bob ClaverTom WhedonMarch 14, 1977 TBATBA
21"The Dick and Vanessa Show"Bob ClaverTom Whedon{{{1}}}
22"The Jailbirds: Part 1"UnknownUnknownApril 23, 1977 TBATBA
23"The Jailbirds: Part 2"UnknownUnknownApril 30, 1977 TBATBA
24"Charley's Father"UnknownUnknownMay 30, 1977 TBATBA
Reception
The reviewer for Knight News Wire wrote that the show "looks like the best new comedy series of the year...The show looks sound in both writing and acting ... the characters spend a lot of time shouting. Lear seems to have decided ... that high-decibel dialogue is necessary to hold the attention of a large audience."[6]
The critic for The New York Times wrote that "The casting is first-rate and the finger-snapping pace of the show leaves just about everything looking easy and undemanding.[2]
The reviewer for Copley News Service wrote that he did not believe in the relationship (between Crenna and Peters). However, he wrote that "it works. It works because Crenna is an expert farceur and Peters is, well, cute and full of the old ginger. It works because the dialogue has crackle and wit. ... Peters has spunk and spirit and a bawdy and snappishly delightful wit ... a well-paced, intelligently conceived and altogether trenchant comedy and I don't see how it can miss."[7]
Awards and nominations
- Golden Globe, 1977, Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series - Comedy or Musical - Bernadette Peters (nominated)[8]
See also
References
- ^ a b O'Connor, John J. "TV View. Competition Makes Networks Go Rigid", The New York Times, September 26, 1976, page D29
- ^ a b O'Connor, John J. "TV: An Odd, Late Season That Is Full of Gaps: Few New Shows Promising, but Most Follow Formula Old Sitcom Series Return in Slightly Altered Guise", The New York Times , September 20, 1976, p. 46
- ^ " 'All's Fair'" Nostalgia Central
- ^ Stein, Ben and Burton, Al. "Chapter 22" 26 Steps to Succeed in Hollywood (2006), books.google.com, Hay House. Inc., ISBN 978-1-4019-0700-6, p.68
- ^ Sipos, Thomas M. "Ben Stein -- Portrait Of A Hollywood Republican" hollywoodinvestigator.com, September 28, 2003
- ^ Winfrey, Lee. " 'All's Fair' Hot New Show" Boca Raton News, Knight News Wire (news.google.com), September 20, 1976
- ^ Freeman, Don. "All's Fair' has Lear Touch" Beaver County Times (Copley News Service), news.google.com, October 7, 1976
- ^ "Bernadette Peters Golden Globe Wins and Nominations" Archived 2012-09-02 at the Wayback Machine, Goldenglobes.org, accessed April 15, 2012