Hello, Larry
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Hello, Larry is an American sitcom that aired on NBC from January 26, 1979, to April 30, 1980.
Contents
Synopsis
First season
Larry Alder (McLean Stevenson) is a radio talk show host who left Los Angeles after being divorced and moved to Portland, Oregon, with his two teenage daughters, Diane (played in the first season by Donna Wilkes and in the second season by Krista Errickson) and Ruthie (played by Kim Richards). In the first season, episodes centered on Larry at the radio station and his smart remarks to callers. The supporting cast consisted of producer Morgan (Joanna Gleason) and engineer Earl (George Memmoli).[1]
Second season
In an effort to make the character (and the series) more likeable, the episodes were based almost entirely around the home life of Larry and the girls, with Morgan and Earl being seen less frequently. In addition, various supporting characters were added in the apartment building where Larry and the girls lived; these included a black neighbor, Leona (Ruth Brown), who usually did not approve of Larry's parenting; Tommy (John Femia), a purportedly worldly wise teenage boy who became a love interest of Ruthie's; former Harlem Globetrotters player Meadowlark Lemon as himself, running a local sporting goods store in the series; and Larry's father (Fred Stuthman), who moved in with the younger Alders. None of these people, nor a two-part episode in which Larry's ex-wife Marian (Shelley Fabares) tried to reconcile with him, were enough to save the show, and it was canceled in the spring of 1980.
The shift to more family-related stories in the second season was represented by a change in the line of the show's opening theme lyrics; the line that went "...the calls are comin' in, you'd better start to grin..." in reference to Larry's radio career gave way to "...you're raising them just fine, but keep an open mind..." when the stories became more focused on the Alder household. In both seasons, the lyrical line always ended with "'cause you never know just what they're gonna say."[2]
Production
The series, created by Dick Bensfield and Perry Grant (veteran writers with a résumé going back to The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet and The Andy Griffith Show), consisted of 35 episodes. Bensfield and Grant had also worked on One Day at a Time, a CBS sitcom about a single woman raising two teenaged daughters alone, and many critics noted the similarity of the two series. The show was produced by Woody Kling and directed by Doug Rogers.
Failure and legacy
Hello, Larry aired on NBC at a time when that network was at its nadir in the ratings. The show was greeted by viewers who had high expectations based on Stevenson's M*A*S*H association, but quickly gained an extremely bad reputation as a weakly written, unfunny sitcom. The show was not helped by frequent ridicule from Johnny Carson in his The Tonight Show monologues. Indicative of NBC's struggles at the time, Hello, Larry—despite its extremely poor reception—lasted 35 episodes and was renewed for a second season.
Although viewers and critics had high hopes for Hello, Larry, McLean Stevenson, in fact, already had two other unsuccessful sitcoms under his belt since leaving M*A*S*H—The McLean Stevenson Show, which also aired on NBC, in 1976–77, and In the Beginning, which aired in 1978. Stevenson appeared in three more series that later failed with him in a regular role: Match Game in its 1981-82 season, Condo in 1983, and Dirty Dancing in 1988.
TV Guide ranked the series number 12 on their "50 Worst Shows of All Time" list in 2002.[3]
The show has often been used as shorthand for badness. In one example, Arianna Huffington said that "John McCain's return to the Senate will be the chilliest reception for a war hero since McLean Stevenson tried to talk his way back onto M*A*S*H after Hello, Larry tanked."[4]
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Hello, Larry at IMDb
- Hello, Larry at TV.comLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- ↑ Hello, Larry Cast and Details
- ↑ Hello, Larry And The Death Of The Sitcom Theme Song - BusinessWeek
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Withdrawal Pains - Slate Magazine
- Pages with reference errors
- Pages using infobox television with unknown parameters
- 1979 American television series debuts
- 1980 American television series endings
- 1970s American comedy television series
- 1980s American comedy television series
- 1970s American television series
- 1980s American television series
- American television sitcoms
- English-language television programming
- NBC network shows
- Television series about radio
- Television series by Sony Pictures Television
- Television shows set in Portland, Oregon
- Television spin-offs