The further we go back in Hollywood history,
the more that fact and legend become intertwined.
It's hard to say where the truth really lies.
Donna Allen-Figueroa
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October 29, 1948
Kate
Jackson was born.
Perhaps
best known for her role as Sabrina Duncan in the popular 1970s
television series Charlie's Angels. Jackson is a
three-time Emmy Award nominee in the Best Actress
category, has been nominated for several Golden Globe Awards,
and has won the titles of Favorite Television Actress in the UK, and Favorite
Television Star in Germany—several times—for her work in the television series Scarecrow and Mrs.
King. She co-produced that series through her
production company, Shoot the Moon Enterprises Ltd., with Warner Brothers
Television. Jackson has starred in a number of theatrical and TV films, and
played the lead role on the short-lived television adaptation of the film Baby Boom.
November
2, 1998
CBS debuted the television series Becker.
Becker is an American sitcom that
ran from 1998 to 2004 on CBS. Set in the New York City borough of the Bronx,
the show starred Ted Danson as John Becker, a misanthropic doctor
who operates a small practice and is constantly annoyed by his patients,
co-workers, friends, and practically everything and everybody else in his
world. Despite everything, his patients and friends are loyal because Becker
genuinely cares about them. The series was produced by Paramount Network Television.
The
show revolved around Becker and the things that annoyed him, although the
supporting cast also had their moments. The relationships between Becker and
Reggie (later, Chris) formed the key plots of many episodes. The show tackled
more serious issues as well, such as race, homosexuality, transvestism,
addiction, nymphomania, schizophrenia, cerebral AVM, and political correctness.
November 3, 1933
Ken Berry is born.
Sitcom actor, dancer and singer. Berry has had success
in multiple television shows, one being with his friend and mentor, Andy Griffith. Berry starred in the
successful comedies F Troop,
The Andy Griffith Show
spin-off Mayberry
R.F.D., and The Carol Burnett Show
spin-off Mama's
Family.
He also appeared on Broadway in The Billy Barnes Revue, has headlined as George M. Cohan in the musical George M! and provided comic relief for the medical drama Dr. Kildare, with Richard Chamberlain in the 1960s.
November 3, 1978
The first episode of Different Strokes was aired on NBC.
The series stars Gary Coleman and Todd Bridges
as Arnold and Willis Jackson, two African American boys from Harlem who are taken in by a rich
white Park Avenue businessman named Phillip Drummond
(Conrad Bain)
and his daughter Kimberly
(Dana Plato),
for whom their deceased mother previously worked. During the first season and
first half of the second season, Charlotte Rae also starred as the Drummonds'
housekeeper, Mrs. Garrett (who ultimately spun-off into her own successful
show, The Facts of
Life).
The series made stars out of child actors Gary
Coleman, Todd Bridges, and Dana Plato, and became known for the "very special episodes"
in which serious issues such as racism, illegal drug use, and child sexual
abuse were dramatically explored. The lives of these stars were later plagued
by legal troubles and drug addiction, as the stardom and success they achieved
while on the show eluded them after the series was cancelled, with both Plato
and Coleman having early deaths.
November 3, 1993
The first episode of The Nanny was aired by CBS.
Fran Drescher starred as Fran Fine, a
Jewish Queens native who
becomes the nanny of three children from the New York/British high society. Created and executive produced by Drescher and her
then-husband Peter Marc Jacobson,
The Nanny took much of its inspiration from Drescher's personal life
growing up in Queens, involving names and characteristics based on her
relatives and friends. The show earned a Rose d'Or and one Emmy Award,
out of a total of thirteen nominations, and Drescher was twice nominated for a Golden Globe
and an Emmy. The sitcom has also spawned several foreign adaptations,
loosely inspired by the original scripts.
To quote the Bicentennial Minute, "And that's the way it was".
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I represent the first generation who, when we were born, the television was now a permanent fixture in our homes. When I was born people had breakfast with Barbara Walters, dinner with Walter Cronkite, and slept with Johnny Carson. Read the full "Pre-ramble"
Monday, October 29, 2018
This Week in Television History: October 2018 PART V
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