
Family
CAST
Kate Lawrence................................... Sada Thompson
Doug Lawrence.................................. James Broderick
Nancy Lawrence Maitland (1976).............Elayne Heilveil
Nancy Lawrence Maitland (1976-1980).......................................
Meredith Baxter-Birney Willie Lawrence.........................................
Gary Frank Letitia "Buddy" Lawrence.....................
Kristy McNichol Jeff Maitland......................................
John Rubinstein Mrs. Hanley (1976-1978)................Mary
Grace Canfield Salina Magee (1976-1977)....................
Season Hubley Annie Cooper (1978-1980)................. Quinn
Cummings Timmy Maitland (1978-1980)........................................
.........................................Michael David Schackelford
PRODUCERS
Aaron Spelling, Leonard Goldberg, Mike Nichols
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
94
Episodes
ABC
March 1976-February 1978
Tuesday 10:00-11:00 May 1978 Tuesday
10:00-11:00 September 1978-March 1979 Thursday
10:00-11:00 March 1979-April 1979 Friday
8:00-9:00 May 1979 Thursday
10:00-11:00 December 1979-February 1980
Monday 10:00-11:00 March 1980
Monday 9:00-10:00 June 1980
Wednesday 8:00-9:00
Family,
a weekly prime-time drama about a Southern California suburban family,
ran from 1976 to 1980 on ABC. The show's pilot, which became the
first episode of a six-part miniseries that aired in March 1976,
was created by novelist and screenwriter Jay Presson Allen (Forty
Carats), directed by film director Mark Rydell (On Golden
Pond), and produced by film director Mike Nichols (Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, The Graduate) as well as television
moguls Aaron Spelling and Leonard Goldberg (Charlie's Angels,
Starsky & Hutch). The success of the miniseries--it recorded
an astonishing 40 share in the ratings--led ABC to pick up Family
as a regular series for their 1976-77 season. During its five seasons
Family received fourteen Emmy Award nominations, three of
them for Outstanding Drama Series. The show won four awards all
in acting categories: Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series
(Sada Thompson in 1977), Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama
Series (Kristy McNichol in 1976 and 1978) and Outstanding Supporting
Actor in a Drama Series (Gary Frank in 1976).
Family's
initial success came from the creative forces behind the project.
These artists and producers, nevertheless, had to fight for three
years (beginning 1973) before convincing ABC to give the series
a chance. As Rowland Barber explains in "Three Strikes and They're
On," during development ABC found the family portrayed in the series
"at various critical time, (1) too well-educated and too well-dressed,
(2) too true to life for Family Viewing Time and (9) simply 'too
good for television'" (24). These attempts to dismiss the project
were discarded once the miniseries proved to be a hit both with
audiences and critics.
Family
also became a success due to the renewed interest in dramatic shows
during the mid-1970s (as witnessed by the huge success of the miniseries
Rich Man, Poor Man). In general, police/detective shows like
Police Woman, Charlie's Angels, S.W.A.T., Starsky & Hutch, Switch
and Kojak dominated the televisual panorama of the 1976-76 season.
The appearance of non-violent, well-crafted and well-acted programs
like Family constituted a refreshing alternative to the predominant
action-packed TV scene, which was readily embraced by TV audiences.
Family
followed the saga of the Lawrences, a middle-class family from Pasadena,
California. The clan was constituted by the parents, Kate and Doug
(played by Sada Thompson and the late James Broderick), and their
three offspring: Nancy, divorcee lawyer and mother of infant Timmy
(originally played in the miniseries by Elaine Heilveil, Nancy was
portrayed in the regular series by Meredith Baxter-Birney), Willie,
a high school drop-out who was nevertheless a talented and idealistic
aspiring writer (played by Gary Frank), and free-spirited teenager
Letitia, better known as "Buddy" (played by Kristy McNichol). During
its 1978-79 season, a new regular character joined the series: Annie
Cooper, an 11-year-old orphan girl whom the Lawrences decide to
adopt (played by Quinn Cummings)
Throughout its
five seasons, the series engaged a range of contemporary social
issues within the parameters of its melodramatic structure. For
example, the miniseries began with a pregnant Nancy discovering
her husband Jeff(played by John Rubinstein) in bed with one of her
girlfriends. This situation led to a divorce. Subsequently, the
series explored, through the character of Nancy, issues related
to the social position of a divorced, professional woman who was
also a mother. On a couple of occasions, the show dealt with issues
pertaining to homosexuality. In one episode, Willie's best friend
came out of the closet forcing Willie to reconsider his positions
about both friendship and homosexuality. In another episode, Buddy
had to face issues about bigotry when the school attempted to fire
a teacher she admired who turned out to be a lesbian. On several
occasions, the Lawrence matriarch found herself in difficult social,
moral, and ethical positions that resulted from her situation as
a middle-age woman. Once Kate faced the dilemma of possibly having
to have an abortion when she discovered she was expecting a child
at an age when risks and complications related to pregnancy are
higher (she was over forty). In another episode, Kate had to confront
her insecurities and fears when she decided to take a job outside
the house. At one point in the series, Kate had to deal with the
fact that she had breast cancer.
Not
only did Family reclaim a place for hour-long (melo)dramatic
series dealing with contemporary everyday topics during a time when
action series ruled, but it also prepared the ground for the explosion
of prime time soap operas such as Dallas, Dynasty, Knots Landing,
and Falcon Crest that appeared during the late 1970s and 1980s.
-Gilberto
M. Blasini
Barbor, Rowland. "Three Strikes and They're On." TV Guide
(Radnor, Pennsylvania), 21 January 1978.