List of That Girl episodes
Appearance
That Girl is an American television sitcom that aired on ABC from September 8, 1966 to March 19, 1971. Over five seasons, 136 half-hour episodes of the series aired. All seasons are available on DVD.
Series overview
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
1 | 30 | September 8, 1966 | April 6, 1967 | |
2 | 30 | September 7, 1967 | April 25, 1968 | |
3 | 26 | September 26, 1968 | March 27, 1969 | |
4 | 26 | September 18, 1969 | March 26, 1970 | |
5 | 24 | September 25, 1970 | March 19, 1971 |
Episodes
Season 1: 1966–1967
- Season 1 of That Girl consisted of 30 episodes on ABC.
- The first season's opening credits consisted of Ann Marie (Marlo Thomas) strolling through the streets of New York City.
- This is the first season to use the 1962-1971 ABC in Color logo.
- This is the first season to use the ABC studio camera closing logo.
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Don't Just Do Something, Stand There" | Bob Sweeney | Jim Parker & Arnold Margolin | September 8, 1966 | |
Aspiring actress Ann Marie is working at a newsstand in an office building, where she meets Donald Hollinger (Ted Bessell), a writer for Newsview magazine. Ann has just gotten an acting job for a television commercial filming in the lobby of the office building, but an encounter with the chivalrous Donald may put her new job at risk. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "Good-bye, Hello, Good-bye" | Bob Sweeney | Bill Persky & Sam Denoff | September 15, 1966 | |
Ann Marie moves out of Brewster, New York to an apartment in New York City, with the help of her agent Harvey Peck (Ronnie Schell), much to the chagrin of her father (Lew Parker). While looking at her apartment she meets her neighbor, Judy Bessemer (Bonnie Scott), and her independence is tested when her mother (Rosemary DeCamp) moves in after an argument with her father, and the only decent paying gig available is a mop on a kids show. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "Never Change a Diaper on Opening Night" | Bob Sweeney | Milton Pascal | September 22, 1966 | |
Ann agrees to babysit for her neighbor and friend, Judy Bessemer, who assures her that she'll be back long before Ann has to leave for her audition for an acting workshop. Judy gets stuck at her sisters house and her husband, Leon, is an obstetrician and gets called to deliver a patient's baby, forcing Ann to take baby Stanley along on her audition. The director of the acting workshop is very no-nonsense and isn't a fan of babies. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "I'll Be Suing You" | Bob Sweeney | Peggy Elliott & Ed Scharlach | September 29, 1966 | |
As Ann borrows Donald's car to move a rubber tree plant, a sewing machine salesman (Carl Ballantine) distracted by a pretty girl bumps into the car and sues her for damages. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "Anatomy of a Blunder" | Bob Sweeney | Dale McRaven & Carl Kleinschmitt | October 6, 1966 | |
Ann talks Don into a drive to Brewster to pick up her old hi-fi system, which leads to an on-the-road picnic that goes wrong. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Rich Little Rich Kid" | Sidney Miller | Joseph Bonaduce | October 13, 1966 | |
While paying a parking ticket, Ann meets a rich young man (Sam Melville) who invests in the theater and tries to seduce her, much to the chagrin of Donald. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Help Wanted" | Bob Sweeney | Tom & Helen August | October 20, 1966 | |
When Donald's secretary goes on maternal leave, Judy Bessemer suggests hiring Ann as a substitute. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "Little Auction Annie" | Sidney Miller | Rick Mittleman | October 27, 1966 | |
Ann's acquisition of a box full of various items at an auction draws the attention of a mysterious stranger (Michael Conrad) who has a strong interest in one of its contents. | ||||||
9 | 9 | "Time for Arrest" | David McDearmon | Jack Winter | November 3, 1966 | |
Ann is found in jail in a cave-girl outfit, after replacing her neighbor and fellow actress Margie (Jackie Joseph) on a side job that turns out to be a catering job for a Mafia boss seeking to merge with a rival family. | ||||||
10 | 10 | "Break a Leg" | Jerry Davis | Jim Parker & Arnold Margolin | November 10, 1966 | |
A friend of Ann's named Sandy Stafford (Sally Kellerman), lands a role in a Broadway show, and asks Ann to be her understudy. While Sandy is staying with her, she comes down with the measles and Ann has to take Sandy's place on stage. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "What's in a Name?" | Henri Falk | Bill Persky & Sam Denoff | November 17, 1966 | |
Ann's attempt to adopt a stage name based on a suggestion from her agent (Ronnie Schell) is met with disapproval from her parents. The recycled version of the original pilot episode. | ||||||
12 | 12 | "Soap Gets in Your Eyes" | Seymour Robbie | Tom & Helen August | November 24, 1966 | |
Ann's role as a villainess in a soap opera compromises a potential relationship with Don's mother (Mabel Albertson). Will a visit from the actor playing the hero improve her image? | ||||||
13 | 13 | "All About Ann" | John Erman | Milton Pascal | December 1, 1966 | |
Donald works with one of the actresses in Ann's workshop to do an article about her, but she thinks he's having an affair. | ||||||
14 | 14 | "Phantom of the Horse Opera" | John Erman | Peggy Elliott & Ed Scharlach | December 8, 1966 | |
Ann's apartment building is being "haunted" by an old movie theater organist (Sterling Holloway). | ||||||
15 | 15 | "Beware of Actors Bearing Gifts" | Bob Sweeney | Richard Baer | December 15, 1966 | |
A member of Ann's acting workshop tries to buy her friendship. | ||||||
16 | 16 | "Christmas and the Hard-Luck Kid" | John Erman | James L. Brooks | December 22, 1966 | |
As her shift as an elf for a department store Santa Claus concludes, Ann tells Donald about her stint as a teacher in a boarding school trying to bring good tidings and joy to a boy who won't be able to go home for Christmas. | ||||||
17 | 17 | "Among My Souvenirs" | Seymour Robbie | Peggy Elliott & Ed Scharlach | January 5, 1967 | |
While sifting through boxes of souvenirs, Ann finds a ring given to her by a high school sweetheart and attempts to return it. | ||||||
18 | 18 | "These Boots Weren't Made for Walking" | John Erman | Peggy Elliott & Ed Scharlach | January 12, 1967 | |
Seeking a job that gives her more free time for auditions, Ann tries her luck as a traveling saleswoman selling shoes door-to-door. What her boss (Paul Lynde) doesn't tell her is that the shoes are poorly constructed... in fact they're made entirely from cardboard. | ||||||
19 | 19 | "Kimono My House" | John Erman | Peggy Elliott & Ed Scharlach | January 19, 1967 | |
When Ann finds out how messy Don's apartment is, she hires a maid to help him clean the place up. Suddenly she begins to suspect that this little geisha girl has other plans for him. | ||||||
20 | 20 | "Gone with the Breeze" | John Erman | Tom & Helen August | January 26, 1967 | |
Donald hands Ann the manuscript for a novel he wrote, which she is suddenly convinced she lost. | ||||||
21 | 21 | "Rain, Snow and Rice" | John Erman | James L. Brooks | February 2, 1967 | |
At the Baumans' wedding in Connecticut, a snowstorm traps Ann, Don, and their friends at the hotel, but only two rooms are available, and Ann has no intention of sharing a bed with Donald. | ||||||
22 | 22 | "Paper Hats and Everything" | John Erman | Sydney Zelinka | February 9, 1967 | |
While Ann expects a dinner date with her father to be a surprise birthday party, Judy assembles one on short notice just in case it isn't. | ||||||
23 | 23 | "What Are Your Intentions?" | John Erman | Milton Pascal | February 16, 1967 | |
Ann's father presses Donald as to whether he intends to marry his daughter. | ||||||
24 | 24 | "A Tenor's Loving Care" | John Erman | Joseph Bonaduce | February 23, 1967 | |
A famous opera singer (Carroll O'Connor) makes a play for Ann while Don tries to get an interview with the temperamental celebrity. | ||||||
25 | 25 | "Leaving the Nest Is for the Birds" | Hal Cooper | Barbara Avedon | March 2, 1967 | |
A family dinner put on by Ann to show that life in New York City is safe is spoiled by an alleged peeping Tom (Jerry Van Dyke). | ||||||
26 | 26 | "You Have to Know Someone to Be Unknown" | Jerrold Bernstein | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | March 9, 1967 | |
Finding out that Broadway producer Harold J. Davis (Herbert Rudley) is seeking a fresh-faced unknown for his next play, Ann goes out of her way to get recognized by him, and even goes so far as to get Donald to put the good word in for her. | ||||||
27 | 27 | "The Honeymoon Apartment" | Hal Cooper | Austin & Irma Kalish | March 16, 1967 | |
Ann's cheap cousin (Warren Berlinger) and his brand new bride insist on using her apartment for their honeymoon, rather than a cheap hotel. | ||||||
28 | 28 | "This Little Piggy Had a Ball" | Hal Cooper | Arnold Margolin & Jim Parker | March 23, 1967 | |
While bowling with Donald just before she has to accept an award for another actress, Ann reads about another bowler who bowled with his toes, and makes the mistake of trying to do it herself. | ||||||
29 | 29 | "Author, Author" | Danny Arnold | Ronald Axe & Howard Harris | March 30, 1967 | |
For an upcoming audition, Ann needs a comedic line, and seeks help from both Donald and a washed-up comedy writer, neither of which prove to be adequate. | ||||||
30 | 30 | "The Mating Game" | Hal Cooper | Treva Silverman & Peter Meyerson | April 6, 1967 | |
While working on an expose on the inner workings of a game show called The Mating Game, Donald sends Ann out to go undercover as a bacholerette. |
Season 2: 1967–1968
- Season 2 of That Girl consisted of 30 episodes.
- A new opening sequence was introduced in this season, with the introduction of the scene where Ann Marie (Marlo Thomas) looking at her in the window, and she winks at her.
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
31 | 1 | "Pass the Potatoes, Ethel Merman" | James Frawley | James L. Brooks | September 7, 1967 | |
A walk on role for a play starring Ethel Merman in a revival of Gypsy leaves Ann awestruck. | ||||||
32 | 2 | "The Good Skate" | Jeffrey Hayden | Tom & Helen August | September 14, 1967 | |
Ann auditions for a soda commercial that requires a performance on roller skates, something she has a little difficulty with. | ||||||
33 | 3 | "Black, White and Read All Over" | Jeffrey Hayden | Richard Baer | September 21, 1967 | |
After yet another rejection of Donald's unpublished novel, Ann offers to submit it to her father, who knows a publisher who's a customer at his restaurant. Unfortunately he takes a look at it himself, and nearly equates it with pornography. | ||||||
34 | 4 | "To Each Her Own" | James Sheldon | Stanley Ralph Ross | September 28, 1967 | |
Donald does a news story on computer dating, and takes Ann along for the ride. Much to Ann's chagrin, the girl that the computer dating service assigns to her boyfriend, is a lot like her. | ||||||
35 | 5 | "The Apartment" | Danny Arnold | Ruth Brooks Flippen | October 5, 1967 | |
Donald gets Ann to house sit at his apartment, and she runs into another friend of his (Bill Bixby), who is also staying there. | ||||||
36 | 6 | "Absence Makes the Heart Grow Nervous" | Danny Arnold | Arnold Margolin & Jim Parker | October 12, 1967 | |
Before Ann goes to Philadelphia for a play that's making a nationwide tour, Donald tries to show her a good time by giving her a night on the town... and another night, and another night,... | ||||||
37 | 7 | "The Philadelphia Story" | Danny Arnold | Arnold Margolin & Jim Parker | October 19, 1967 | |
Unable to tolerate life without Ann, Donald goes to Philadelphia to write a review of Ann's play. | ||||||
38 | 8 | "There's Nothing to Be Afreud of But Freud Himself" | Hal Cooper | Milton Pascal | October 26, 1967 | |
Donald writes an article on a newfangled psychological exam, and tries to use it on Ann and the Baumans... with predictably traumaic results. | ||||||
39 | 9 | "The Collaborators" | Bruce Bilson | Ruth Brooks Flippen | November 2, 1967 | |
Ann and Donald decide to work on a play about her life, but creative differences get in the way. | ||||||
40 | 10 | "When in Rome" | Hal Cooper | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | November 9, 1967 | |
An Italian movie director spots Ann and wants her to star in his next movie... and perform a nude scene. | ||||||
41 | 11 | "Thanksgiving Comes But Once a Year, Thankfully"[1][2] | James Sheldon | Peggy Elliott | November 23, 1967 | |
Ann struggles to cook everybody's favorite dishes for a Thanksgiving dinner. Note: This episode is called "Thanksgiving Comes But Once a Year, Hopefully" on the DVDs. | ||||||
42 | 12 | "The Mailman Cometh" | James Sheldon | Danny Arnold and Ruth Brooks Flippen | November 30, 1967 | |
A substitute agent sets Ann up on a publicity date with Dick Shawn who knows nothing about it. | ||||||
43 | 13 | "It's a Mod, Mod World" (Part 1) | James Frawley | Tom & Helen August | December 7, 1967 | |
Originally doubting the intentions of a photographer, Ann is convinced (thanks to Donald) that she should take a job as a model for him because he's a legitimate photographer named Noel Prince. But when Prince flies her out to California, he realizes he intends to keep her. | ||||||
44 | 14 | "It's a Mod, Mod World" (Part 2) | James Frawley | Tom & Helen August | December 14, 1967 | |
Donald is on the edge over Ann's time with Noel Prince, despite her assurances she has no interest in her new boss. | ||||||
45 | 15 | "'Twas the Night Before Christmas, You're Under Arrest" | James Sheldon | Ruth Brooks Flippen | December 21, 1967 | |
After buying theater tickets from a scalper as a Christmas present for the Baumans, and learning from Don that some scalpers use personal information to burglarize their customers, Ann coaxes Donald to help her hide the Baumans' presents, only for both to be accused of burglary themselves. | ||||||
46 | 16 | "A Friend in Need" | Hal Cooper | Richard Baer | December 28, 1967 | |
After Ann is injured on a movie set, Donald goes overboard in trying to take care of her. | ||||||
47 | 17 | "Fur All We Know" | Hal Cooper | Peggy Elliott & Ed Scharlach | January 4, 1968 | |
After Ann models an expensive chinchilla stole, the owner insists that she borrow it as she accompanies Don to a party for the wealthy jet set, when a gigolo mistakes Ann for a wealthy heiress. | ||||||
48 | 18 | "The Rivals" | Hal Cooper | Richard Baer | January 11, 1968 | |
Another family visit to Ann's parents in Brewster pits Donald against Lou. | ||||||
49 | 19 | "Sixty-Five on the Aisle" | James Frawley | Ruth Brooks Flippen | January 18, 1968 | |
Lou Marie buys theater and train tickets for sixty-five people from Brewster to see Ann in a play. A conflict arises between the producers who do not want them leaving the theater during an important scene and Ann's official debut that causes them to keep changing their schedule. | ||||||
50 | 20 | "Call of the Wild" | Hal Cooper | Milton Pascal | January 25, 1968 | |
When Ann gets a soap commercial, the director tells her that it's because she has a face that no housewife would feel threatened by, which makes her wonder if she has any sex appeal. | ||||||
51 | 21 | "The Other Woman" | Andrew McCullough | Richard Baer | February 1, 1968 | |
Ann suggests that her father escort Ethel Merman to a formal event, and the tabloids make him look like her new boyfriend, which doesn't exactly please her mother. | ||||||
52 | 22 | "He and She and He" | Norman Hall | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | February 8, 1968 | |
Still obsessed with Ann, Noel Prince returns to New York to try to get her to marry him. | ||||||
53 | 23 | "Odpdypahimcaifss"[3][4] "Oh, Don, Poor Don, Your Pants Are Hanging in My Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad"[5][6] | Hal Cooper | Richard Baer | February 22, 1968 | |
A scandal erupts when Donald's mother is invited to Ann's place and finds his pants in her closet. | ||||||
54 | 24 | "Great Guy" | John Rich | Teleplay: Bruce Howard Story: Ruth Brooks Flippen and Danny Arnold | March 7, 1968 | |
Ann is worried about Pete's new boyfriend George (Albert Salmi), a jock who doesn't necessarily treat her like a lady. | ||||||
55 | 25 | "The Detective Story" | Hal Cooper | Carl Kleinschmitt | March 14, 1968 | |
A series of obscene phone calls prompts Ann to call the NYPD, who sends over a detective who seems to be getting a little too close for comfort, especially Donald's. | ||||||
56 | 26 | "If You Were Almost the Only Man in the World" | Hal Cooper | Danny Arnold and Ruth Brooks Flippen | March 21, 1968 | |
After being hit by a fly ball at a baseball game, Ann meets a doctor who bears a striking resemblance to Donald. | ||||||
57 | 27 | "Just Spell the Name Right" | John Rich | Richard Baer | March 28, 1968 | |
Ann hires press agent Eddie Edwards (Jesse White) to boost her career, but his method of doing so involves naming her in the divorce of one of her former soap opera co-stars (Robert Alda). | ||||||
58 | 28 | "The Beard" | James Frawley | Richard Baer | April 11, 1968 | |
After a hunting trip, Donald decides to grow a beard, which doesn't necessarily turn Ann on. | ||||||
59 | 29 | "The Drunkard" | Hal Cooper | Danny Arnold and Ruth Brooks Flippen | April 18, 1968 | |
Ann helps sober up a comedian who thinks that they had an affair. Sid Caesar guest stars. | ||||||
60 | 30 | "Old Man's Darling" | John Rich | Richard Baer | April 25, 1968 | |
An elderly man who ruins Ann dress get her a new one and keeps buying her gifts which she feels that she can't accept. |
Season 3: 1968–1969
- This is the last season to use the ABC studio camera closing logo. It has been in use since Season 1.
- This is the first season to use the 1966-1973 ABC Films logo.
- This season consisted of 26 episodes.
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
61 | 1 | "Sock It to Me" | James Sheldon | Stan Cutler & Martin Donovan | September 26, 1968 | |
Ann's opportunity to perform in a Broadway play opposite Barry Sullivan is jeopardized by her inability to slap him. | ||||||
62 | 2 | "The Hi-Jack and The Mighty" | John Rich | Ruth Brooks Flippen | October 3, 1968 | |
While working as a flight attendant in order to land a job on an airline television commercial, Ann mistakes a private investigator for a hijacker. | ||||||
63 | 3 | "Eleven Angry Men and That Girl" | Hal Cooper | Stan Cutler & Martin Donovan | October 10, 1968 | |
Ann is selected for jury duty. | ||||||
64 | 4 | "7 1/4" (Part 1) | Hal Cooper | Arthur Julian | October 17, 1968 | |
Ann flies to Los Angeles for a series of TV commercial along with Donald, who tags along to do a magazine story about violence in the entertainment industry. | ||||||
65 | 5 | "7 1/4" (Part 2) | Hal Cooper | Arthur Julian | October 24, 1968 | |
Ann commercial work proves to be more grueling than she could possibly have expected. | ||||||
66 | 6 | "Secret Ballot" | John Rich | Richard Baer | October 31, 1968 | |
Ann gets excited about voting in her first presidential election, learns all she can about the system, but won't tell her father who she's voting for since it's a secret ballot. | ||||||
67 | 7 | "The Face in the Shower Room Door" | Danny Arnold | Teleplay: Stan Cutler & Martin Donovan Story: Bill Idelson & Harvey Miller | November 7, 1968 | |
Ann gets stuck in the shower and the new neighbor comes to her rescue. | ||||||
68 | 8 | "A Muggy Day in Central Park" | Hal Cooper | Arthur Julian | November 14, 1968 | |
Ann is mugged in Central Park, and though she survives without a scratch, she desperately tries to conceal the incident from her father. | ||||||
69 | 9 | "Just Donald and Me and Jerry Makes Three" | James Sheldon | Stan Cutler & Martin Donovan | November 21, 1968 | |
Jerry and Ruth's marriage is on the rocks, and a remorseful Jerry is interrupting Ann & Donald's time with each other. | ||||||
70 | 10 | "The Seventh Time Around" | Richard Kinon | Carl Kleinschmitt | November 28, 1968 | |
Donald interviews wealthy heiress named Trixie Weatherby (Benay Venuta), a woman who has been married six times, that Ann fears might turn Donald into her seventh husband. | ||||||
71 | 11 | "Ann vs. Secretary" | Hal Cooper | Ruth Brooks Flippen | December 5, 1968 | |
Donald hires a new secretary (Mary Frann), who she suspects is trying to make a move on him...and could actually succeed. | ||||||
72 | 12 | "Decision Before Dawn" | King Donovan | Jinx Kragen | December 12, 1968 | |
The Screen Actor's Guild gives Ann a huge paycheck, and she must struggle on how to invest or spend it. | ||||||
73 | 13 | "Should All Our Old Acquaintance Be Forgot" | Hal Cooper | Stan Cutler & Martin Donovan | December 26, 1968 | |
Ann's plans to spend New Years Eve alone with Donald are thwarted by her parents, most of her neighbors, their cousins, and people neither of them know. | ||||||
74 | 14 | "The Homewrecker and the Window Washer" | Hal Cooper | Teleplay: Stan Cutler & Martin Donovan Story: Ken Englund | January 2, 1969 | |
When a window washer comes to the rescue of a man who hassles Ann in a building lobby, his wife becomes convinced he's having an affair with her. | ||||||
75 | 15 | "The Eye of the Beholder" | James Sheldon | Paul Wayne | January 9, 1969 | |
Donald buys Ann a small avante-garde sculpture, and gets plenty of advice on what to do with it. | ||||||
76 | 16 | "Dark on Top of Everything Else" | Ted Bessell | Carl Kleinschmitt | January 16, 1969 | |
While watching her parents house in Brewster, Ann gets locked in the basement. | ||||||
77 | 17 | "The Earrings" | Russ Mayberry | Howard Leeds | January 23, 1969 | |
Donald buys Ann some expensive earrings for Valentine's Day, and insists that she wears them on a date that night, in spite of her fear that she might lose them. Sure enough her worst fears are realized, and now both Ann and Don try to hide replacements for them. | ||||||
78 | 18 | "Many Happy Returns" | Jay Sandrich | John Whedon | January 30, 1969 | |
Ann is faced with a sudden audit from the IRS. | ||||||
79 | 19 | "My Sister's Keeper" | John Rich | Bill Persky & Sam Denoff | February 6, 1969 | |
While working on a commercial, Ann's voice is dubbed by a singer that she finds to be fantastic. But her efforts to give this young woman a boost in her career may not go so well, when she finds the young woman has a higher calling. Guest starring Terre and Tony Thomas (Marlo's sister and brother) and featuring a humorous cameo appearance by their father Danny Thomas. | ||||||
80 | 20 | "There Was a Time Ann Met a Pie Man" | Russ Mayberry | Milt Rosen | February 13, 1969 | |
Ann gets hired to do a television skit where she gets a pie in the face and the bit becomes a big hit. | ||||||
81 | 21 | "The Subject Was Rabies" | Jay Sandrich | Skip Webster | February 20, 1969 | |
A stray dog that follow Ann home decides to bite her visiting father. | ||||||
82 | 22 | "The Defiant One" | Richard Kinon | Teleplay: Richard Baer Story: Gene Boland and Richard Baer | February 27, 1969 | |
While shopping, Ann becomes sympathetic to an eight-year-old black boy who tries to steal a candy bar. | ||||||
83 | 23 | "Fly Me to the Moon" | Richard Kinon | John McGreevey | March 6, 1969 | |
84 | 24 | "It's So Nice to Have a Mouse Around the House" | Russ Mayberry | Ruth Brooks Flippen | March 13, 1969 | |
A lonely night at Ann's apartment is interrupted by a mouse, which somehow makes her father think she and Ann are fooling around. | ||||||
85 | 25 | "Bad Day at Marvin Gardens" | Danny Arnold | Carl Kleinschmitt | March 20, 1969 | |
After inviting her parents over to a baseball game that gets rained out, Ann decides to let them and Donald stay at her place for a game of Monopoly, for which Lou gets much too competitive in. | ||||||
86 | 26 | "Sue Me, Sue Me, What Can You Do Me?" | Russ Mayberry | Danny Arnold, Ruth Brooks Flippen & Milt Rosen | March 27, 1969 | |
Ann's father slips at Donald's magazine and hurts himself. Donald has to get him to sign an insurance waiver. |
Season 4: 1969–1970
- Season 4 consisted of 26 episodes.
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
87 | 1 | "Mission Improbable" (Part 1) | John Rich | Rick Mittleman | September 18, 1969 | |
While modeling Ann is hired to spy on a competitor who is suspected of stealing designs. | ||||||
88 | 2 | "Mission Improbable" (Part 2) | John Rich | Rick Mittleman | September 25, 1969 | |
Ann's cover is blown and is tricked into photographing rejected dress designs. | ||||||
89 | 3 | "My Part Belongs to Daddy" | Richard Kinon | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | October 2, 1969 | |
Ann is directing a play back at home in Brewster and has to tell her father that he's not getting the starring role. | ||||||
90 | 4 | "Nobody Here But Us Chickens" | Richard Kinon | Arnold Horwitt | October 9, 1969 | |
Ann gets a job as a dancing chicken and after some advances by the boss ends up stranded in her costume. | ||||||
91 | 5 | "At the Drop of a Budget" | Russ Mayberry | Ed Scharlach and Warren Murray | October 16, 1969 | |
Under hypnosis at the dentist (guest star Monty Hall), Ann is mistakenly told to buy anything at the drop of a hat at the same time Donald is trying to help her work on a budget. | ||||||
92 | 6 | "Hearing Today, Gone Tomorrow" | Hal Cooper | Bernie Orenstein & Saul Turteltaub | October 23, 1969 | |
Ann loses her hearing when a cold ruins her job on a commercial. | ||||||
93 | 7 | "The Snow Must Go On" | Russ Mayberry | Arnold Horwitt | October 30, 1969 | |
While stranded at JFK Airport during a snowstorm, Ann will do anything to get to an audition on Broadway. | ||||||
94 | 8 | "Write Is Wrong" | John Rich | Ruth Brooks Flippen | November 6, 1969 | |
Don writes a comedy sketch about their previous adventures being stranded at JFK Airport. | ||||||
95 | 9 | "Shake Hands and Come Out Acting" | John Rich | Bernie Orenstein & Saul Turteltaub | November 13, 1969 | |
Don is doing a story on a fighter (Scoey Mitchell) who has developed an acting bug. However, some of his "handlers" want to make sure he doesn't change his career so soon. | ||||||
96 | 10 | "Fix My Screen and Bug Out" | Saul Turteltaub | Bernie Orenstein & Saul Turteltaub | November 20, 1969 | |
Ann's former boyfriend becomes her new landlord and wants to marry her, much to Don 's chagrin. | ||||||
97 | 11 | "Kiss That Girl Goodbye" | John Rich | Fai Harris & Lynn Farr | November 27, 1969 | |
Donald has a chance to get a job in Paris and worries about leaving Ann. | ||||||
98 | 12 | "She Never Had the Vegas Notion" (Part 1) | Richard Kinon | Bernie Orenstein & Saul Turteltaub | December 11, 1969 | |
Ann gets a job in Las Vegas with an actor who wants her to break up with Donald. Guest star Jack Cassidy | ||||||
99 | 13 | "She Never Had the Vegas Notion" (Part 2) | Richard Kinon | Bernie Orenstein & Saul Turteltaub | December 18, 1969 | |
While in Las Vegas, Donald is tricked into thinking that he married an actress. Guest star Jack Cassidy. | ||||||
100 | 14 | "I Am a Curious Lemon" | Russ Mayberry | Alex Barris | December 25, 1969 | |
Ann tries to impress Donald's ex-girlfriend who is now married to his old friend. Also, Ann is babysitting her cousin's 8 year old daughter. | ||||||
101 | 15 | "Ten Percent of Nothing Is Nothing" | John Rich | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein Story: Ron Clark and Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | January 1, 1970 | |
Ann Marie is helping her agent with his stand-up comedy act. | ||||||
102 | 16 | "Opening Night" | Russ Mayberry | Arnold Horwitt | January 8, 1970 | |
Ann dreads bad reviews of her opening night in Broadway, and all this anxiety gets her finger trapped in a kitchen faucet. | ||||||
103 | 17 | "That Metermaid" | Ted Bessell | Jerry Ross & William Lynn | January 22, 1970 | |
Don's new boss and Ann relate a story about Ann's summer job back home when she was younger and worked as a metermaid. | ||||||
104 | 18 | "Fly by Night" | Saul Turteltaub | Bernie Orenstein & Saul Turteltaub | January 29, 1970 | |
While flying to a cabin in Vermont, Ann, Donald and their pilot land in a snow storm after they run out of gas. | ||||||
105 | 19 | "Ugh, Wilderness" | John Rich | Joseph Bonaduce | February 5, 1970 | |
Ann and Donald leave the crash site and find a cabin to stay in. Her father send out a search party. | ||||||
106 | 20 | "Stocks and the Single Girl" | Bill Persky | Bruce Howard | February 12, 1970 | |
Ann gets a card from a stockbroker and invests in the list of items on the back, even though it is his shopping list. | ||||||
107 | 21 | "The Night They Raided Daddy's" | Hal Cooper | Coslough Johnson | February 19, 1970 | |
Ann's father hires a musical group to increase business at his restaurant. He doesn't know that the group performs nude. | ||||||
108 | 22 | "The Reunion" | Richard Kinon | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | February 26, 1970 | |
As class treasurer, Ann loses $360 that was saved for their reunion. Ann looks for the thieves. | ||||||
109 | 23 | "Gone-a-Courtin'" | Russ Mayberry | Joseph Bonaduce | March 5, 1970 | |
Ann has to go to court to help a producer win a lawsuit involving a shish-kebab skewer. | ||||||
110 | 24 | "They Shoot Pictures, Don't They?" | Russ Mayberry | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | March 12, 1970 | |
Ann sees her neighbor Ruthie kissing another man. | ||||||
111 | 25 | "Easy Faller" | John Rich | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | March 19, 1970 | |
After Donald injures his back in her apartment, Ann brings his interviewer to Don. Then her father shows up. | ||||||
112 | 26 | "All's Well That Ends" | Saul Turteltaub | Sydney Zelinka | March 26, 1970 | |
Don wants to take Ann to the theater on her birthday, however, Ann promised to sit a sick child. |
Season 5: 1970–1971
- Starting with this season, lyrics were added to the theme song.
- This is the last season to use the 1962-1971 in Color logo. It has been in use since Season 1.
- This is the last season to use the 1966-1973 ABC Films logo. It has been in use since Season 3.
- This season consisted of 24 episodes.
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
113 | 1 | "Counter-Proposal" | Saul Turteltaub | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | September 25, 1970 | |
Donald finally asks Ann Marie to marry him and takes his buddies advice to buy the ring second-hand. | ||||||
114 | 2 | "Don and Sandi and Harry and Snoopy" | Earl Bellamy | Peggy Elliott | October 2, 1970 | |
Donald has Ann investigate his sister's new beau. | ||||||
115 | 3 | "I Ain't Got No Body" | Richard Kinon | Ed Scharlach and Warren Murray | October 9, 1970 | |
Ann finds her head, but not her body, in "Playpen" magazine. | ||||||
116 | 4 | "No Man's a Manhattan Island" | Richard Kinon | Arnold Horwitt | October 16, 1970 | |
As part of a game show, Ann throws a party for her neighbors and gets her purse stolen. | ||||||
117 | 5 | "Rattle of a Single Girl" | John Rich | Bruce Howard | October 23, 1970 | |
Ann and Donald go to pre-marital counselling finding problems that may or may not be there. | ||||||
118 | 6 | "There Sure Are a Bunch of Cards in St. Louis" (Part 1) | Richard Kinon | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | October 30, 1970 | |
Ann is working in a play in St. Louis and has difficulties while visiting Don's parents. | ||||||
119 | 7 | "There Sure Are a Bunch of Cards in St. Louis" (Part 2) | Richard Kinon | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | November 6, 1970 | |
Ann is working in a play in St. Louis and has difficulties while visiting Don's parents. Former St. Louis Cardinals' outfielder Stan Musial appears as himself.[7] | ||||||
120 | 8 | "That Cake" | Richard Kinon | Rick Mittleman | November 13, 1970 | |
Ann thinks she accidentally bakes her engagement ring in a cake that is going to the Governor of New York's residence. | ||||||
121 | 9 | "That Girl's Daddy" | John Rich | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | November 20, 1970 | |
Ann's father is feeling much younger after he is introduced to a younger lady. Ann thinks he's going to leave her mother. | ||||||
122 | 10 | "Stop the Presses, I Want to Get Off" | Saul Turteltaub | Gordon Farr | November 27, 1970 | |
Ann is hired by a rival news magazine when they think that Donald will help Ann with her assignments. | ||||||
123 | 11 | "Super Reporter" | Richard Kinon | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | December 4, 1970 | |
Donald is stuck in a superhero costume when his buddies steal his clothes and he is getting an award from the deputy mayor. | ||||||
124 | 12 | "That Señorita" | John Rich | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | December 11, 1970 | |
Ann gets a lesson in minority relations when she is in a television sketch that is offensive to Mexicans. Rodolfo Hoyos, Jr., guest stars as Rudy Sanchez. | ||||||
125 | 13 | "An Uncle Herbert for All Seasons" | John Rich | Bob Garland | December 18, 1970 | |
Ann's flamboyant Uncle Herbert (Joe Flynn) is turning Ann and Donald's world upside down when he makes bogus get-rich-quick schemes. | ||||||
126 | 14 | "That Script" | Roger Duchowny | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | January 1, 1971 | |
Ann wants to get the movie rights for a novel whose author thinks that Ann resembles his late wife. | ||||||
127 | 15 | "Those Friars" | Alan Rifkin | Marvin Walkenstein | January 8, 1971 | |
Ann's late Uncle Harry wills her an old trunk used during his career in vaudeville. Stars Milton Berle and Danny Thomas show up wanting to buy the old trunk. | ||||||
128 | 16 | "A Limited Engagement" | Richard Kinon | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | January 15, 1971 | |
Donald gets cold feet about marriage and breaks their engagement. | ||||||
129 | 17 | "The Russians Are Staying" | Homer Powell | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | January 29, 1971 | |
Ann meet's a Russian who moves in with her and won't leave. | ||||||
130 | 18 | "That Shoplifter" | Richard Kinon | Arnold Horwitt | February 5, 1971 | |
Ann is tricked by a conman into shoplifting. | ||||||
131 | 19 | "Chef's Night Out" | Richard Kinon | Budd Grossman | February 12, 1971 | |
Running her father's restaurant is tough for Ann and Don when the staff comes down with a virus. | ||||||
132 | 20 | "That King" | Richard Kinon | Warren Murray | February 19, 1971 | |
Ann makes friends with a royalty and finds that the king is a youngster. | ||||||
133 | 21 | "Stag Party" | John Rich | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | February 26, 1971 | |
The stag party thrown by Don's buddies costs him his engagement to Ann. | ||||||
134 | 22 | "Two for the Money" | Roger Duchowny | San Nichols | March 5, 1971 | |
Ann gets a modeling assignment at Belmont Racetrack and when Don's friends realize there's a horse running named for her, they see it as a "sign" and send her with the money to place a bet for them. She loses the ticket at the wrong time! | ||||||
135 | 23 | "Soot Yourself" | Saul Turteltaub | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | March 12, 1971 | |
As a member of an ecology-minded group, Ann is assigned to picket in front of the Newsview Magazine building where Donald works. Donald tries to make amends by inviting his boss to Ann's house for dinner. | ||||||
136 | 24 | "The Elevated Woman" | Roger Duchowny | Saul Turteltaub & Bernie Orenstein | March 19, 1971 | |
Stuck in an elevator, Donald and Ann reminisce about their last five years together as we see the last of "That Girl!" |
References
- ^ "Thanksgiving Comes But Once a Year, Thankfully". That Girl: Episode Info. MSN TV. Retrieved December 18, 2011.
- ^ "Episode Detail: Thanksgiving Comes but Once a Year, Thankfully - That Girl". That Girl Episodes on ABC. TV Guide. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
- ^ ""That Girl (1966)" - 2x23 - Odpdypahimcaifss - EPisodeWorld". EPisodeWorld. Retrieved February 3, 2012.
- ^ "Amazon.com: That Girl: Season 2, Episode 23 "Odpdypahimcaifss": Amazon Video". Amazon.com. Retrieved February 3, 2012.
- ^ "That Girl - Season 2". Classicflix.com. Retrieved October 19, 2012. (a reference to the play and 1967 film Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad, as it is referenced in the episode.)
- ^ "Oh, Don, Poor Don ..." That Girl: Episode Info. MSN TV. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0918240/
- General references
- "That Girl Episodes on ABC". TV Guide. Retrieved December 13, 2011.
- "That Girl - Episode Guide". MSN TV. Retrieved December 13, 2011.