
Happy Days
CAST
Richie Cunningham (1974-80).................. Ron Howard Arthur
"Fonzie" Fonzarelli.................... Henry Winkler Howard
Cunningham ...............................Tom Bosley Marion
Cunningham............................... Marion Ross Warren
"Potsie" Webber (1974-83).... Anson Williams Ralph Malph
(1974-80)............................ Donny Most Joonie Cunningham
.................................Erin Moran Chuck Cunningham
(1974)................ Gavan O'Herlihy Chuck Cunningham (1974-75).........
Randolph Roberts Bag Zombroski (1974-75).................
Neil J. Schwartz Marsha Simms( 1974-76)....................
Beatrice Colen Gloria (1974-75)........................................
Linda Purl Wendy (1974-75)....................................
Misty Rowe Trudy (1974-75)...........................................
Tita Bell Arnold (Matsuo Takahashi) 1975-76, 1982-83)..........................................................
Pat Morita Charles "Chachi" Arcola (1977-84).............
Scott Baio Lori Beth Allen Cunningham (1977-82)................................................
Lynda Goodfriend Eugene Belvin (1980-82).......................
Denis Mandel Bobby (1980-84).......................................
Harris Kal Jenny Piccalo (1980-83)........................
Cathy Silvers Roger Phillips (1980-84).......................
Ted McGinley Flip Phillips (1982-83)...........................
Billy Warlock K.C. Cunningham (1982-83)............... Crystal
Bernard Ashley Pfister (1982-83)............................
Linda Purl Heather Pfister (1982-83)................ Heather
O'Rourke Officer Kirk................................................
Ed Peck
PRODUCERS
Garry Marshall, Thomas Miller, Edward Milkis, Lowell Ganz, Brian
levant, Fred Fox Jr., Tony Marshall, Jerry Paris, William S. Bickley,
Gary Menteer, Walter Kempley, Ronny Hallin.
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
ABC
256 Episodes
January 1974-September 1983 Tuesday
8:00-8:30 September 1983-January 1984
Tuesday 8:30-9:00 April 1984-May 1984
Tuesday 8:30-9:00 June 1984-July 1984 Thursday
8:00-8:30
See
also Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Laverne
and Shirley; Marshall,
Garry
Happy
Days originated in 1974 as a nostalgic teen-populated situation
comedy centered on the life of Richie Cunningham (Ron Howard) and
his best friend Potsie (Anson Williams), both students at Jefferson
High School in 1950's Milwaukee Wisconsin. The character, of Arthur
Fonzarelli, Fonzie, with whom the show is now most associated was
originally only fifth-billed. But his leather jacketed, "great with
the girls," biker profile unexpectedly captured the imagination
of viewers. Fonzie increased the popularity of the show and actor,
who portrayed him, Henry Winkler, and by 1980, "the Fonz" had achieved
top billing.
The
show presented a saccharine perspective on American youth culture
of the 1950s. With rock and roll confined to the jukebox of Al's
Diner, the kids worried over first loves, homecoming parades, and
the occasional innocuous rumble. The Cunninghams represented the
middle class family values of the era. Minor skirmishes erupted
between parents and children, but dinner together was never missed--prepared
and served by mother, Marion (Marion Ross), or daughter, Joanie
(Erin Moran). There was no inkling of the "generation gap" discourse
which was beginning to differentiate youth from their parents in
the 1950s, and which was still active in the mid-1970s when the
show was created.
One
episode pits Ritchie and his friends against Ritchie's father, Howard
(Tom Bosley), by virtue of his support of a business plan that would
send a freeway through the teen make-out spot, Inspiration Point.
Civil disobedience is suggested by the teenagers' organization of
petitions and picket signs to protest the plan. Fonzie even chains
himself to a tree at the site. Yet generational harmony is restored
when Ritchie makes Howard realize that he, too, participated in
the culture of Inspiration Point when he was young.
Fonzie's
lower class status, his black leather clothes, and motorcycle, propensity
to get into fights, and apparent sexual exploits with multiple women
takes advantage of the code of delinquency which social scientists
of the period fashioned under the rubric of deviancy studies. But
again, Fonzie's representation had none of the hard edge or angst
of a James Dean or Marlon Brandon character and was played more
for laughs than social critique. Yet his popularity on the show
may have tapped into deeper audience identifications.
His image of an impervious, highly testosteroned male, albeit with
modicums of vulnerability and hyperbole as acted by Winkler, was
overtly rewarded in the show. It only took a snap of his fingers
to have women do his bidding or grown men cower in fear of being
pummeled by an out-of-control Fonzarelli. So male-identified was
his character that the men's restroom in Al's Diner was referred
to as his "office."
The
Fonz's courting of many women at once meant be was never subject
to the kind of romantic involvement and inevitable heartbreak which
characterized Ritchie's relationships with women. The Fonz's style,
"my way" bravado, working class ethos, and loner sensibility differed
from the mainstream Cunninghams and was in direct opposition to
the upwardly mobile, college-bound, leadership-quality Ritchie.
Ritchie, audiences knew, would someday outgrowth Milwaukee and leave
it behind, but Fonzie had fewer choices, and was the type to stay
behind. And perhaps the tension between these two worlds, these
two life directions kept audiences watching through the show's ten
year run during which time Ritchie and his pals go to college, the
army, and even get married.
Despite
these contrasts, however, Fonzie and the Cunningham family were
never involved in overt conflict. Indeed, by the end of the show,
Fonzie had moved into the Cunningham's garage apartment, and though
the bemused Howard Cunningham often wondered what was happening
"up there," Fonzie was, by this time, a thoroughly domesticated
character. His role not only paralleled that of Mr. Cunningham,
but those of countless sitcom fathers before him, and he was as
likely to dispense careful, family-oriented wisdom, as to suggest
rebellion of the slightest sort. But it was always proffered with
Winkler's parody-delinquent sense of style, a style that continues
to appeal to youngsters in syndicated rerun throughout the world.
Happy
Days stands as the first of a string of extremely successful
spinoff comedies from producer Garry Marshall. Laverne and Shirley,
Mork and Mindy, and others shows helped propel the ABC television
network into first place in the ratings battles, and enabled Marshall
to move from television to feature film direction.
-Lisa Anne Lewis