Friday, September 10, 2021

Ten Forgotten Shows I’d Like to Watch: 1970s Edition

 

This will be my third deep dive into the strange, enchanted realms of short-lived and nearly forgotten series from the Comfort TV era. You can read the first two here and here.

 

I was inspired to return to this topic after discovering a YouTube channel that collects opening credits sequences from obscure shows. I watched a couple of videos about shows from the 1970s, and realized again that this is the only decade where I find the flops as interesting as the hits. So this time around, here are ten groovy and far out '70s shows that disappeared faster than earth shoes and “Gee Your Hair Smells Terrific” shampoo.

 

Loves Me, Loves Me Not (1977)

Two words: Susan Dey. After she gave up the keyboards and left the Partridge family band, Dey was top-billed in this situation comedy as a teacher dating a reporter (Kip Gilman). 

 


I’d like to see how she handled her first adult role, but I acknowledge that naming the characters Dick and Jane was not an encouraging sign of what the writers considered clever.

 

 


Curiosity Shop (1971)

I have vague memories of watching this Saturday morning series first-run when I was five or six years old. All I remember now is that it had songs and educational content, that Pamelyn Ferdin was in it, and that it was the first time I ever heard the word “onomatopoeia.” 

 


The Mac Davis Show (1974)

I moved to Las Vegas at the tail end of the Rat Pack era and over the next 20 years saw hundreds of showroom performers. One of the biggest surprises during that time was how much I enjoyed Mac Davis at the MGM Grand. Such a wonderfully talented singer and musician, with great comic timing – just the sort of person they gave variety shows to in the 1970s. 

 

 

I’m sure the comedy sketches in his series were substandard, as they were on all every show not featuring Carol Burnett and Tim Conway. But the lineup of musical guests could not be topped:  Aretha Franklin, Anne Murray, Loretta Lynn, John Sebastian, Dolly Parton, Dean Martin, Olivia Newton-John and many more. Find me another series that would book Roy Rogers and Dale Evans one week, and Ike and Tina Turner the next.

 

Gibbsville (1976)

In a small town in Pennsylvania in the 1940s, young Jim Malloy is hired by the local newspaper as a cub reporter. He is mentored by Ray Whitehead, in what had to be an art-imitating-life performance by Gig Young as a newspaperman whose drinking cost him a more successful career. I’ll always check out any show about a newspaper, especially from the days when reporters used typewriters instead of computer terminals. 

 

 

Here We Go Again (1973)

Between I Dream of Jeannie and Dallas, Larry Hagman starred in this situation comedy alongside the ever charming Diane Baker as a just-married couple trying to begin their new lives together, despite constant interference from their respective ex-partners (Dick Gautier and Nita Talbot). With that set-up the material could have been played broadly to the point of farce, with a lot of yelling and conflict and over-the-top mugging. But the pilot is on YouTube and it was refreshing to discover how they opted instead for a more laid-back, sophisticated vibe that should have been easier to sustain. 

 

 

Miss Winslow and Son (1979)

This was Darleen Carr’s third attempt at a 1970s series that would stick around for a while. She began the decade on The Smith Family with Henry Fonda and Ron Howard, and then headed west with Rod Taylor on The Oregon Trail, a pretty good western that happily is also available on DVD. Miss Winslow and Son was an adaptation of a British series called Miss Jones and Son; the company behind the show hoped for another hit like they had three years earlier, when they turned Man About the House into Three’s Company. But apparently viewers had fewer issues with a guy living with two girls than with an unwed mother. Or maybe the show just wasn’t that good, as it lasted just six episodes. 

 


Out of the Blue (1979)

Also known as “the Happy Days spinoff that no one remembers.” The episode “Chachi Sells His Soul” featured James Brogan as an angel named Random. In “Out of the Blue,” Random comes to the aid of a family of kids whose parents are killed in a plane crash. Could it be worse than Joanie Loves Chachi

 


The Interns (1970)

In CBS promos for this medical drama, the network proudly proclaimed: “It’s about…what it’s all about.” Yeah, not encouraging. But the couple of episodes that have turned up online certainly held my interest.  Broderick Crawford plays the gruff but lovable veteran doctor who oversees the ongoing educations of five interns. From that cast only Mike Farrell went on to bigger and better things, but it’s a talented ensemble. I also enjoyed seeing Elaine Giftos, another charismatic ‘70s star who deserved better roles, as Farrell’s wife.

 

 


 

Kingston: Confidential (1976)

Raymond Burr managed to follow up nine years as Perry Mason with eight years as a wheelchair-bound detective on Ironside. But that golden touch did not carry over to this series, in which Burr played a top executive in one of the nation’s top media conglomerates, who habitually left his cushy desk job to track down an important story. One of his assistants is played by Pamela Hensley, who would trade in her business suits for a sci-fi showgirl ensemble on Buck Rogers In the 25th Century. As I previously stated with Gibbsville, I’m always interested in any show about journalism the way it used to be. 

 


Co-ed Fever (1979)

I have no doubt this show was awful. But sometimes a series looks so dreadful from its opening credits that I can’t resist a perverse curiosity to discover the precise level of terrible it achieves. As with Delta House on ABC, this was CBS’s attempt to adapt National Lampoon’s Animal House into a sitcom, without all the R-rated moments that made the film a hit. Delta House failed despite featuring several actors from the film plus Michelle Pfeiffer. Coed Fever countered with Heather Thomas and David Keith. According to IMDB eight episodes were made, but CBS pulled the plug after just one. If the set looks familiar, it’s because it was recycled with few alterations for the first season of The Facts of Life

 


 

13 comments:

  1. Mr. Hofstede, the 1970s Quinn Martin crime shows "The Manhunter," "Caribe," and "Most Wanted" are absent from your list. I have the latter series on manufacture-on-demand DVD. Check out the following URLs to opening credit sequences from the shows to see if they interest you:

    https://youtu.be/Q0B-5yPcHlc

    https://youtu.be/f46bo7JLgLY

    https://youtu.be/maX_F5rXZxQ

    It's apparently just as well that Mary Louise Weller didn't reprise her "Animal House" role as Mandy Pepperidge for "Delta House." As for "Co-Ed Fever," I personally find it unfortunate that a GUY wore a beavertail wetsuit with twistlock fasteners during the opening credits instead of a GIRL. *sigh*

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  2. Great rundown! Lots of stuff here I want to seek out. My mom was a HUGE Mac Davis fan when I was a kid. -Jason H. at DrunkTV

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  3. I watched Curiosity Shop when it aired in repeats on Sunday mornings. What I primarily recall is lots of animated adaptions of comic strips such as "Dennis the Menace" and "The Wizard of Id", as well as the Berenstain Bears' book, "The Bike Lesson". There was also a segment where the live-action children were superimposed over a specially-drawn "Dennis the Menace" comic strip. Yet another series that will probably never hit DVD/Blu-ray because of rights issues. A shame.

    Regarding Loves Me, Loves Me Not--Sadly, Art Metrano just passed away on the 8th.

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  4. Two episodes of the Interns are currently up on YouTube.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdcXhv0FZvo&t=2236s

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nswNcUKY_LA&t=602s

    As is one ep of Out of the Blue

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65c6G2WDU5g

    And one episode of Here We Go Again

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzlW4C7YhQE

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  5. I suppose Mike Farrell had lots of experience playing a doctor before he became B.J. Hunnicut on MASH. He was a doctor on THE INTERNS here, and he also played a morphine-addicted doctor on an episode of BONANZA from its abbreviated 14th season.

    KINGSTON: CONFIDENTIAL has a bit of distinction for giving Carl Betz his last IMDB credit before his death from lung cancer early in 1978.

    NBC also had a college-based ripoff of "Animal House" the same 1978-79 season. I remember seeing a bit of BROTHERS & SISTERS, which included a lead role for Jack Lemmon's son, Chris. CBS cancelled CO-ED FEVER after its single airing. The episode was aired at 10:30 PM ET and had ok ratings, mainly because it followed a broadcast of "Rocky" that night. Apparently the ratings weren't good enough, so CBS dumped it after its premiere, even though 8 episodes were filmed. The cast also included Jane Rose, Phyllis Lindstrom's remarried mother-in-law on PHYLLIS, as a house mother.

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    1. If I remember correctly, Animal House was notable in that ALL THREE major networks had a spin-off series from the movie. One of them, "Delta House", had some of the actors from the movie. None of them lasted very long.

      Jane Rose was good on Phyllis, but I think that Judith Lowry was the one who really made the show. Her scenes on Phyllis were pure gold.

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  6. I love seeing an Elaine Giftos mention. She is so tall and good looking in a unique way that she always stood out (literally) in every role.

    She's still around, and is an International Feng Shui Expert.

    https://way2fengshui.com/

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    1. Elaine Giftos is best known as Reuben Kincaid's girlfriend Bonnie Kleinschmidt on "The Partridge Family".

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  7. I've seen Brothers & Sisters & Delta House (I think I watched Delta House in it's original run) but Co-Ed Fever has never resurfaced in any manner shape or form. It makes me think it must be much much worse than its two rivals, but I can't imagine how...

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    1. I was amazed that all three networks simultaneously did a series based on the movie. Offhand, I can only remember once where even two networks did a movie take-off simultaneously, and that was Ferris Bueller's Day Off. (Fox's version, Parker Lewis Can't Lose, was actually a really cool show.)

      I thought that, of the three Animal House take-offs, Delta House was going to last simply because it had John Vernon, Stephen Furst, Bruce McGill, and James Widdoes.

      The only thing I (think that I) remember from Delta House was a scene where D-Day got out of the draft because he could turn his feet around backwards.

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  8. Our Ironside group was just talking about Kingston: Confidential. Many of the members had never heard of it. Ultimately, Raymond Burr went back to what he knew the best, Perry Mason and the final Ironside movie.

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  9. I was an avid TV watcher in the 1970s and I don't remember half of these shows. This is odd because it was not like there were 500 channels like today. I was usually aware of what was on even if I did not watch it. Or at least I THOUGHT I was. Thanks for shaking the foundation of my childhood.
    What is interesting is to see the shift of TV in the 1970s from the urban dramas (and comedies) of the '50s and '60s to the more laid back and "organic" shows of the environmental '70s. Shows you did not mention like Apple's Way, Three for the Road, and Sunshine (with Bill Mumy). These were counterbalanced with shows that focused on the reality of divorce, which of course was a forbidden subject in the decades previous.
    Great job as usual.

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    1. Thank you! And thanks for your feedback on other posts.

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