Angie (TV series)
Angie is an American sitcom television series that aired on ABC from February 8, 1979, to September 4, 1980. The series was created by Garry Marshall and Dale McRaven, and produced by Miller-Milkis Productions (Miller-Milkis-Boyett in season two) in association with Paramount Television.
Angie | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Garry Marshall Dale McRaven |
Developed by | Alan Eisenstock Larry Mintz |
Starring | Donna Pescow Robert Hays Doris Roberts Debralee Scott Diane Robin Tammy Lauren Sharon Spelman Tim Thomerson |
Theme music composer | Norman Gimbel (Lyrics) Charles Fox |
Opening theme | "Different Worlds" performed by Maureen McGovern |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 36 (1 unaired) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Bob Ellison Dale McRaven Leonora Thuna |
Producers | Alan Eisenstock Bruce Johnson Larry Mintz |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 24 minutes |
Production companies | Miller-Milkis Productions (season 1) Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions (season 2) Henderson Production Company, Inc. Paramount Television |
Distributor | CBS Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | February 8, 1979 – September 4, 1980 |
The series starred Donna Pescow in the lead role, Robert Hays as her love interest and eventual husband, and Doris Roberts and Debralee Scott as her mother and sister, respectively.
A DVD release of the series was announced in 2015, and was later changed and released on September 1, 2017 in Region 1.[1][2][3]
Premise
Working class Italian American Philadelphia coffee shop waitress Angie Falco (Pescow) starts a romance with customer Bradley Benson (Hays), a pediatrician. While she assumes he is a struggling young doctor, he reveals that he is actually rebelling against his wealthy family, presumably residents in the Main Line region of the city's suburbs. (In response to Angie asking him just how wealthy, he replied, "You've heard of 'filthy rich?' We're disgusting.")
The other Falco family members are Angie's mother Theresa (Roberts) and her younger sister Marie (Scott). Angie and Marie's father had walked out on the family many years earlier, but Theresa continued to set a place for him at the dinner table. Brad's relatives consist of his stuffy father Randall (John Randolph), his divorced sister, the overbearing Joyce (Sharon Spelman), and Joyce's daughter Hillary (Tammy Lauren). Angie forms a close bond with Hillary.
Angie and Brad later marry (they first eloped due to the arguments between their families over the wedding plans, but they would later have a small Catholic family wedding set up by Theresa), merging their two very different families: the blue-blooded suburban Bensons and the blue collar urban Italian-American Falcos. The characters of Hillary Benson and Didi Malloy were not continued after the first season. Angie and Theresa later open a beauty parlor together, where they had to contend with a pleasure-seeking hairstylist, Gianni (Tim Thomerson).
The series drew many comparisons to the CBS hit sitcom Rhoda, in which the character of Angie Falco was seen as an Italian-Catholic version of Rhoda Morgenstern (Valerie Harper); both characters strove to break away from their ethnic, close-knit families to find their own voice in the world (however, Pescow, like the Rhoda character, is Jewish in real life). The constant presence of Angie's mother and sister was seen as similar to Rhoda's family setup of mother Ida (Nancy Walker) and sister Brenda (Julie Kavner). Angie's father being absent was also comparable to the later Rhoda plotline, in which Rhoda's father Martin (Harold Gould) separated from Ida.
Characters
Angelina "Angie" Falco, later Angie Benson, is the title character. At first a waitress at the Liberty Coffee Shop in Philadelphia, she meets her prince charming, Brad Benson, M.D., who worked at the medical center across the street. At first, she thought he was a struggling young doctor, and would slip him a Danish, but he would later reveal he was wealthy. Angie wasn't sure about dating him after he revealed who he was because of their economic differences, but he convinced her that he loved her. Angie then eloped with him, because of the families continual arguing about the wedding details, but she did concede to a small Catholic wedding set up by her mother. Brad eventually bought Angie the coffee shop to keep her busy, but she would later sell it to help Theresa buy a beauty salon.
Bradley Benson, M.D., is Angie's wealthy boyfriend and, later, her husband. A pediatrician at the medical center across from where Angie worked, the two fell in love immediately. They eloped due to arguments between the families about the wedding details, but he agreed to a small family Catholic wedding that was set up by Theresa. At first, he and Angie lived in his large home which he inherited from his parents, but it intimidated her, so they moved to a smaller duplex home nearby, where they had their living space upstairs and Brad saw his young patients downstairs.
Theresa Falco is Angie's and Marie's mother. The owner of a news stand, which she ran for years after her husband deserted the family 19 years earlier. She remains in denial and still sets a place at the table for him. She loved Brad, and wanted to make sure that he loved Angie. It astonished, and indeed horrified, her that Angie had eloped with Brad, but she convinced her daughter to have a small Catholic family wedding which she had set up. In the second season, she sold the news stand, and, with Angie's help (by her selling the coffee shop she used to work at), bought a beauty salon called Rose's House of Beauty.
Marie Falco is Theresa's younger daughter, and Angie's younger sister. She works nights at a day care center, and doesn't like it. She is kind of a klutz, but she is well-meaning.
Diedre "DiDi" Malloy is Angie's loudmouthed best friend and co-worker at the Liberty Coffee Shop. She was not seen in the second season.
Joyce Benson is Brad's snobby three-times-married older sister. She was seeing a psychiatrist about her third divorce, made all the more difficult because her psychiatrist hated her. The mother of Hillary, she did not hate Angie, but she did not like her either, because she felt Brad could have married someone of their own station, and she felt Angie was not worthy enough to marry her brother. However, she did try to get along with her, as she was the woman her brother chose to be his wife.
Hillary Benson is Joyce's daughter, who was not seen in the second season. She was happy about her uncle's marriage and she instantly bonded with her new aunt.
Randall Benson is Brad's and Joyce's father and Hillary's grandfather. He was, at first, stunned by Angie and her family, but he realized that she loved Brad and he loved her. He then began to like her and her family.
Phipps (Emory Bass) is the Benson family butler. He liked Angie.
Gianni is the hair stylist at Rose's House of Beauty, the beauty salon that Angie and Theresa bought after they sold the newsstand and coffee shop. He was always chasing after his female clients to the annoyance of Angie and Theresa.
Mary Mary (Valri Bromfield); Mary Grace (Susan Duvall); and Mary Katherine (Nancy Lane) are three former school mates of Angie's. They were also her close friends.
Production
Although Thomas L. Miller, Robert L. Boyett, and Edward K. Milkis were the show's supervising producers for the second season, the show was produced by Miller-Milkis Productions at Paramount Television. Angie was also one of the few Miller-Milkis productions that did not take place in Miller's hometown of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Theme song
The show's theme song, "Different Worlds," was written by Norman Gimbel and Charles Fox and performed by Maureen McGovern. "Different Worlds" peaked at #18 on the Billboard Hot 100 and spent two weeks at #1 on the Billboard adult contemporary chart, McGovern's only #1 on that chart.[4]
Cancellation
The show was a ratings hit during its first half-season on air. It ranked fifth for the 1978–79 season with a 26.7 average household share, thanks in big part to Thursday night lead-in Mork & Mindy, which ranked No. 3. All of the top-five shows in 1978–79 were ABC comedies, with the others Laverne & Shirley (No. 1), Three's Company (No. 2) and Happy Days (tying Mork & Mindy at No. 3).
However, ratings for Angie dropped drastically after a move to Tuesday for the start of the 1979-80 season, even though the show was placed between Happy Days and Three's Company. (ABC moved Laverne & Shirley in an effort to bolster ratings on other nights.) Viewers lost interest in the interplay between Angie and Brad after they were married in the season premiere, and many critics noted that much of the previously feisty chemistry that Pescow and Hays demonstrated on screen was apparently compromised once their characters were wed.
The show was cancelled in its second season. Thirty-six episodes in total were produced.
Episodes
Season 1 (1979)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "The Proposal" | Howard Storm | Alan Eisenstock & Larry Mintz | February 8, 1979 |
2 | 2 | "Wedding Wings" | Howard Storm | Story by : Thad Mumford & Dan Wilcox Teleplay by : Alan Eisenstock & Larry Mintz | February 15, 1979 |
3 | 3 | "The Elopement" | Jeff Chambers | Emily Levine | February 22, 1979 |
4 | 4 | "The Morning After" | Jeff Chambers | Thad Mumford & Dan Wilcox | March 1, 1979 |
5 | 5 | "The Adjustment" | Jeff Chambers | Simon Muntner | March 15, 1979 |
6 | 6 | "Theresa's Date" | Jeff Chambers | Emily Levine | March 22, 1979 |
7 | 7 | "The House Guests" | Jeff Chambers | Alan Eisenstock & Larry Mintz | March 29, 1979 |
8 | 8 | "The Opportunity" | Howard Storm | Richard B. Eckhaus | April 12, 1979 |
9 | 9 | "Joyce's Job" | Jeff Chambers | Emily Levine | April 19, 1979 |
10 | 10 | "The First Fight" | Jeff Chambers | Jeff Franklin | April 26, 1979 |
11 | 11 | "Angie's Good Deed" | Jeff Chambers | Kathy Speer & Terry Grossman | May 10, 1979 |
12 | 12 | "The Check Up" | Tony Mordente | Alan Eisenstock & Larry Mintz | May 17, 1979 |
Season 2 (1979–1980)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
13 | 1 | "Angie's Old Friends" | Jeff Chambers | Emily Marshall | September 11, 1979 |
14 | 2 | "The First Separation" | Lowell Ganz | Emily Marshall | September 18, 1979 |
15 | 3 | "Moving Day" | Harvey Medlinsky | TBA | September 25, 1979 |
16 | 4 | "Marie's Crush" | Lowell Ganz | Ellen Guylas | October 2, 1979 |
17 | 5 | "The Gift" | Robert Drivas | Gary H. Miller | October 22, 1979 |
18 | 6 | "The Thief" | Lowell Ganz | Louis Del Grande & David Barlow | October 29, 1979 |
19 | 7 | "Vinnie's Return" | Lowell Ganz | Kenneth Berg | November 5, 1979 |
20 | 8 | "Uncle Cheech" | Robert Drivas | Leonard Ripps | November 12, 1979 |
21 | 9 | "Family Feud" | Norman Abbott | Emily Marshall, Sheldon Bull & Leonard Ripps | November 19, 1979 |
22 | 10 | "Harvey's Mother" | Jeff Chambers | Leonora Thuna | November 26, 1979 |
23 | 11 | "Mary Mary Marries" | John Tracy | Emily Marshall | December 3, 1979 |
24 | 12 | "The Gambler" | John Tracy | Gary Kott | December 10, 1979 |
25 | 13 | "Coffee Wars" | Lowell Ganz | Bruce A. Taylor | December 17, 1979 |
26 | 14 | "Angie and Brad's Close Encounter" | John Tracy | Emily Marshall | January 14, 1980 |
27 | 15 | "The Beauty Shop" | John Tracy | Diane Asselin | January 21, 1980 |
28 | 16 | "Theresa's Gigolo" | John Tracy | Sheldon Bull | February 4, 1980 |
29 | 17 | "Marie Moves Out" | John Tracy | Sheldon Bull | February 11, 1980 |
30 | 18 | "Brad's Best Buddy" | John Tracy | Gloria Banta | February 18, 1980 |
31 | 19 | "The President's Coming, the President's Coming!" | Tony Mordente | Carmen Finestra | February 25, 1980 |
32 | 20 | "February Fever" | Tony Mordente | Sheldon Bull | April 19, 1980 |
33 | 21 | "The Kid Down the Block" | John Tracy | Harry Cauley | July 31, 1980 |
34 | 22 | "Friends in Need" | John Tracy | Emily Marshall | August 7, 1980 |
35 | 23 | "Angie and the Doctor" | Doris Roberts | Gideon Farr | August 28, 1980 |
36 | 24 | "Angie and Joyce Go to Jail" | John Tracy | Pamela Morrison | September 4, 1980 |
Home media
Visual Entertainment released the complete series on DVD in Region 1 on September 1, 2017.[5][6][7]
Syndication
Reruns aired on ABC Daytime from June 17 to September 20, 1985.
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-05-21. Retrieved 2015-05-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Angie - The Complete Collection
- Angie - Release Date and Pricing for VEI's 'Complete Collection' Set DVD package will be available from the studio's website in 2½ weeks!
- Whitburn, Joel (2002). Top Adult Contemporary: 1961-2001. Record Research. p. 165.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-05-21. Retrieved 2015-05-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Angie - The Complete Collection
- Angie - Release Date and Pricing for VEI's 'Complete Collection' Set DVD package will be available from the studio's website in 2½ weeks!