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ALL IN THE FAMILY
CAST
Archie
Bunker...................................Carroll O'Connor Edith
Bunker(1971-80).........................Jean Stapleton Gloria
Bunker Stivic(1971-78................ Sally Struthers Mike
Stivic (Meathead)(1971-78).................Rob Reiner Lionel
Jefferson(1971-75)...........................Mike Evans Louise
Jefferson(1971-75)......................Isabel Sanford Henry
Jefferson(1971-73)..........................Mel Stewart George
Jefferson(1973-75)...............Sherman Hemsley Irene Lorenzo(1973-75)............................Betty
Garrett
Frank Lorenzo (1973-74)...................Vincent
Gardenia
Bert Munson (1972-77)................................Billy
Halop
Tommy Kelsey (1972-73).......................Brendon Dillon
Tommy Kelsey (1973-77).........................Bob Hastings
Justin Quigley (1973-76)............................Burt
Mustin
Barney Hefner (1973-83)............................Allan
Melvin
Jo Nelson (1973-75)...............................Ruth McDevitt
Stretch Cunningham (1974).................James Cromwell
Teresa Betancourt (1976-77).........................Liz Torres
Stephanie Mills (1978-83)..................Danielle Brisebois
Harry Snowden (1977-83).................... Jason Wingreen
Hank Pivnik (1977-81)...........................Danny Dayton
Murray Klein (1979-81)...........................Martin Balsam
Mr. Van Ranseleer (1978-83).........................Bill
Quinn
Veronica Rooney (1979-82)........................Anne Meara
Jose (1979-83)..................................Abraham Alvarez
Linda (1980-81)......................................Heidi
Hagman
Raoul (1980-83)........................................Joe
Rosario
Ellen Canby (1980-82)............................Barbara
Meek
Polly Swanson (1980-81)..................Janet MacLachlan
Ed Swanson (1980-81)................................Mel Bryant
Billie Bunker (1981-83).............................Denise
Miller
Gary Rabinowitz (1981-83).......................Barry Gordon
Bruce (198Z-83)......................................Bob
Okazaki
Marsha (1982-83).................................Jessica
Nelson
PRODUCERS
Norman
Lear, Woody Kling, Hal Kanter, Mort Lachman, Don Nicholl, Lou Derman,
Brigit Jensen Drake, John Rich, Milt Josefberg, Michael Ross, Bernie
West, Bill Danoff
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
204 Episodes
CBS
January
1971-July 1971 Tuesday
9:30-10:00 September 1971-September 1975 Saturday
8:00-8:30 September 1975-September 1976 Monday
9:00-9:30 September 1976-0ctober 1976 Wednesday
9:00-9:30 November 1976-September 1977 Saturday
9:00-9:30 October 1977-October 1978 Sunday
9:00-9:30 October 1978-March 1983 Sunday
8:00-8:30 Mar 1983-May 1983 Monday
8:00-8:30 May 1983 Sunday
8:00-8:30 June 1983 Monday
9:30-10:00 June 1983-September 1983 Wednesday
8:00-8:30 June 1991 Sunday
8:30-9:00 June 1991-July 1991 Sunday
8:00-8:30 September 1991 Friday
8:30-9:00
U.S. Situation
Comedy
For five years,
All in the Family, which aired on CBS from 1971-1983 (in
its last four seasons under the title Archie Bunker's Place),
was the top-rated show on American television, and the winner of
four consecutive Emmy Awards as Outstanding Comedy Series. All
in the Family was not only one of the most successful sitcoms
in history, it was also one of the most important and influential
series ever to air, for it ushered in a new era in American television
characterized by programs that did not shy away from addressing
controversial or socially relevant subject matters.
All in the
Family's storylines centered on the domestic concerns of the
Bunker household in Queens, New York. Family patriarch and breadwinner
Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) was a bigoted loading dock worker
disturbed by the changes occurring in the American society he once
knew. To Archie, gains by the "Spades," "Spics," or "Hebes" of America
(as he referred to Blacks, Hispanics, and Jews, respectively), came
at his expense and that of other lower middle class whites. Countering
Archie's harsh demeanor was his sweet but flighty "dingbat" wife,
Edith. Played by Jean Stapleton, Edith usually endured Archie's
tirades in a manner meant to avoid confrontation. But that was hardly
the case with Archie's live-in son-in-law Mike Stivic (Rob Reiner),
a liberal college student who was married to the Bunkers' daughter,
Gloria (Sally Struthers). The confrontations between Archie and
Mike ("Meathead") served as the basis for much of All in the
Family's comedy. As surely as Archie could be counted upon to
be politically conservative and socially misguided, Mike was equally
liberal and sensitive to the concerns of minorities and the oppressed,
and, because both characters were extremely vocal in their viewpoints,
heated conflict between the two was assured.
Producers Norman
Lear and Alan (Bud) Yorkin brought All in the Family into
being by obtaining the U.S. rights to the hit British comedy series,
Till Death Us Do Part, which aired on the BBC in the mid-1960s
and featured the character of bigoted dock worker Alf Garnett. Lear
developed two pilots based on the concept for ABC, with O'Connor
(Mickey Rooney had been Lear's first choice to play Archie) and
Stapleton in the lead roles. But when ABC turned down the series,
then known as Those Were the Days, it appeared that it would
never get off the ground. Luckily for Lear and Yorkin, CBS President
Robert D. Wood was in the market for new shows that would appeal
to the more affluent, urban audience the network's entrenched lineup
of top-rated but aging series failed to attract. As a result, CBS
jettisoned highly rated programs like The Red Skelton Show
and Green Acres in an effort to improve the demographic profile
of its audiences, and All in the Family seemed a perfect,
though risky, vehicle to put in their place. CBS therefore made
a 13-episode commitment to air the series beginning in January 1971,
as a midseason replacement.
The network
had good reason to be wary of reaction to its new show. All in
the Family seemed to revel in breaking prime time's previously
unbreakable taboos. Archie's frequent diatribes laced with degrading
racial and ethnic epithets, Mike and Gloria's obviously active sex
life, the sounds of Archie's belching and of flushing toilets--all
broke with sitcom convention. They also and made people sit up and
take notice of the new CBS series. In fact, its unconventionality
caused All in the Family's pilot episode to consistently
rate below average in research tests conducted by both ABC and CBS.
Nevertheless, CBS went ahead and debuted the show on 12 January
1971, though with relatively little fanfare or network promotion.
Viewer response
to All in the Family was at first tepid. CBS's switchboards
were prepared for an avalanche of calls in response to the show's
initial airing, but this onslaught never materialized, in part because
of the poor 15% audience share garnered by the first episode, which
put it a distant third in its time period behind movies on NBC and
ABC. But while the show continued to languish in the Nielsen ratings
in its first few months, TV critics began to take notice. Despite
the negative reviews of a small number of critics, such as Life's
John Leonard ("a wretched program"), the critical response was generally
positive. Combined with strong word-of-mouth among viewers these
evaluations helped the show's audience to slowly grow. The May 1971,
Emmy Awards helped to cap All in the Family's climb. The
midseason replacement was featured in the opening skit of the Emmy
telecast, and earned awards in three categories, including Outstanding
Comedy Series. All in the Family shortly thereafter became
the top-rated show in prime time, and held onto that position for
each of the following five seasons.
The program
was able to keep an especially sharp edge over its first half dozen
years thanks to the evolving character development of the series'
primary cast members and the infusion of strong supporting characters.
Both the Bunkers' African American next-door neighbors, the Jeffersons,
and Edith's visiting cousin, Maude Findlay, eventually went on to
star in successful spin-off series of their own. All in the Family
also benefited from an occasional one-shot guest appearance, the
most memorable of which featured entertainer Sammy Davis, Jr.
All in the
Family's impact went beyond the world of television. The show
became the focus of a heated national debate on whether the use
of comedy was an appropriate means by which to combat prejudice
and social inequality. In addition, the character of Archie Bunker
became nothing short of an American icon. While Till Death Us
Do Part's Alf Garnett was generally unlikable, producer Lear
chose to soften the character for American TV, patterning him in
many ways after his own father. As a result, Carroll O'Connor's
characterization of Archie contained notable sympathetic qualities,
allowing many viewers to see Archie in a favorable light despite
his obvious foibles.
By the late
1970s, however, it was becoming clear that the show had lost much
of its earlier spark. Major cast changes occurred in 1978, when
Struthers and Reiner left the series, and again in 1980, when Stapleton
departed. (The fact that this contractual arrangement was written
into the show as Edith's death allowed Lear and company to show
once again what had made this series truly memorable.) Archie quit
his job in 1977 to buy and run a neighborhood tavern, and the series
was retitled Archie Bunker's Place in 1979 to reflect the
changed nature of the program. By that point, however, though still
highly rated, the show no longer stood out as unique, and had become
what seemed to many a rather conventional sitcom.
All in the
Family's lasting impact on American television is difficult
to overestimate. It helped to usher in a new generation of comedic
programs that abandoned the light domestic plotlines of television's
early years in favor of topical themes with important social significance.
In this sense, its influence on prime time programming continues
to be felt decades later. =-David Gunzerath
FURTHER
READING
Arlen,
Michael. The View from Highway 1. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1976.
Barnouw,
Erik. Tube of Plenty: The Evolution of American Television.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.
Bedell, Sally. Up the Tube: Prime-Time TV and the Silverman Years.
New York: Viking, 1981.
Brooks,
Tim, and Earle Marsh. The Complete Directory To Prime Time Network
TV Shows, 1946-Present. 4th ed. New York: Ballantine, 1988.
"CBS
Sked Shake; Shift All in Family to Lead Sat." Variety (Los
Angeles), 18 August 1971.
"CBS-TV's
Bigot that BBC Begat Figures to Salt Up Second Season." Variety
(Los Angeles), 22 July 1970.
"Family
Fun." Newsweek (New York), 15 March 1971.
Ferretti,
Fred. "Are Racism and Bigotry Funny?" New York Times, 12
January 1971.
Gent,
George. "All In The Family Takes First Place in Nielsen Ratings."
New York Times, 25 May 1971.
Gitlin,
Todd. Inside Prime Time. New York: Pantheon, 1985.
Hano,
Arnold. "Can Archie Bunker Give Bigotry A Bad Name?" New York
Times Magazine, 12 March 1972.
Kasindorf,
Martin. "Archie and Maude and Fred and Norman and Alan." New
York Times Magazine, 24 June 1973.
Leonard,
John. "Bigotry as a Dirty Joke." Life (New York), 19 March
1971.
Metz,
Robert. CBS: Reflections In A Bloodshot Eye. Chicago: Playboy,
1975.
O'Neil,
Thomas. The Emmys. New York: Penguin, 1992.
Shayon,
Robert Lewis. "Love That Hate." Saturday Review (New York),
27 March 1971.
_______________.
"Archie's Other Side." Saturday Review (New York), 8 January
1972.
Waldron,
Vince. Classic Sitcoms. New York: Macmillan, 1987.
Wander,
Philip. "Counters In The Social Drama: Some Notes On All In The
Family." In, Newcomb, Horace, editor. Television: The Critical
View, 1st Edition. New York: Oxford University Press, 1976.
See
also Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Lear,
Norman; O'Connor,
Carroll
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