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THE ODD COUPLE
 The Odd Couple CAST
(1970-1975)
Felix
Unger ...............................................Tony Randall
Oscar Madison........................................ Jack
Klugman Murray Greshner..........................................
Al Molinaro Speed (1970-1974)..................................
Garry Walberg Vinnie......................................................
Larry Gelman Roger (1973-1974)......................................
Archie Hahn Roy (1970-1971)....................................
Ryan McDonald Cecily Pigeon (1970-1971)........................
Monica Evans Gwendolyn Pigeon (1970-1971)....................
Carol Shelly Dr. Nancy Cunningham (1970-1972)...........
Joan Hotchkis Gloria Unger (1971-1975)...........................
Janis Hansen Blanche Madison......................................
Brett Somers Myrna Turner (1971-1975).......................
Penny Marshall Miriam Welby (1972-1974).......................
Elinor Donahue
CAST
(1982-1983)
Felix
Unger................................................... Ron
Glass Oscar Madison......................................
Demond Wilson Murray ......................................................John
Schuck Speed....................................................
Christipher Joy Roy.......................................................
Bart Braverman Cecily Pigeon .......................................Sheila
Anderson Gwendolyn Pigeon...............................
Ronalda Douglas Maria............................................................
Liz Torres Mona........................................ Jo
Marie Payton-France
PRODUCERS
Garry Marshall, Jerry Belson, Harvey
Miller, Sheldon Keller, Tony Marshall, Phil Mishkin
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 114 Episodes
ABC
September 1970-January 1971 Thursday
9:30-10:00 January 1971-June 1973 Friday
9:30-10:00 June 1973-January 1974 Friday
8:30-9:00 January 1974-September 1974 Friday
9:30-10:00 September 1974-January 1975 Thursday
8:00-8:30 January 1975-July 1975 Friday
9:30-10:00 October 1982-February 1983 Friday
8:30-9:00 May 1983 Friday
8:00-8:30 May 1983-June 1983 Thursday
8:30-9:00
U.S. Situation
Comedy
Although
often positioned in the shadow of such ground-breaking series as
The Mary Tyler Moore Show and All in the Family, The Odd
Couple is one of the early examples of sophisticated, well-written,
character-driven sitcoms that came to dominate the 1970s. Like M*A*S*H,
it is also one of the few successful TV sitcoms to be based on material
from another medium, in this case a successful Broadway play and
film. Although critically acclaimed, it did not receive popular
recognition until syndication.
Originally
conceived by Neil Simon, who based the play on his brother Danny's
true-life experience, The Odd Couple concept is best described
in the one-sentence treatment Simon submitted to Paramount, who
financed the stage play sight-unseen. "Two men--one divorced and
one estranged and neither quite sure why their marriages fell apart--move
in together to save money for alimony and suddenly discover they're
having the same conflicts and fights they had in their marriages."
The
Odd Couple, in all forms, is truly a popular culture phenomenon.
Simon's wildly successful play ran from 1965 to 1967, and, as Rip
Stock notes in his book Odd Couple Mania, it is most likely
being produced right now by any number of community theater groups
across the country. In 1968, the play was made into a successful
film starring Walter Matthau as unkempt sports writer Oscar Madison
and Jack Lemmon as anal-retentive commercial photographer Felix
Unger. Naturally, Paramount wanted its TV division to cash in on
this success; while Simon had signed away his TV rights, Paramount
enlisted Dick Van Dyke Show alumni Gary Marshall and Jerry
Belson to produce the series for television, which debuted on ABC
in September 1970.
The
sophisticated style and attention to character that Marshall and
Belson had learned during their Dick Van Dyke days paid off, and
The Odd Couple became one of TV's first relevant sitcoms,
dealing with such issues as the generation gap and sex in an adult
fashion. Of course, the primary focus was its characters. Jack Klugman
and Tony Randall made for a perfect Oscar and Felix, and, indeed,
have become more closely linked with their characters than their
movie counterparts. While both actors won Emmy awards for their
roles, the series failed to capture a wide audience. Third-place
network ABC had little to lose by airing a marginal show, of course,
and remained committed to the sitcom for five seasons before giving
it the ax. The series, however, blossomed in syndication, appearing
in major domestic and foreign markets to this day.
The
names of those connected with the series, both on and off screen,
reads like a Who's Who of television. Producer Gary Marshall used
the respect he had gained from the series to create such less respectable
programs as Happy Days, Mork and Mindy, Laverne and Shirley and
Joanie Loves Chachi. Indeed, it was through his experience
with The Odd Couple that Marshall learned a valuable lesson--in
order to be a major hit, a show must have kid appeal, a formula
Marshall soon had down to an art. While Marshall graduated to feature
films, Jerry Belson remained in TV, eventually serving as co-producer
and co-creator of The Tracy Ullman Show.
Klugman,
after his first of several bouts with throat cancer, returned to
his dramatic roots by starring in NBC's Quincy. Randall moved over
to MTM to star in The Tony Randall Show, as well as the critically
acclaimed NBC series Love, Sidney. Penny Marshall, Gary's sister,
launched her acting career as Oscar Madison's whining secretary
Myrna Turner (a name which rhymed when she pronounced it in her
heavy New York accent).
The
Odd Couple has enjoyed a number of spin-offs, which included
an animated version in 1975 featuring a neat cat and a sloppy dog.
In 1982, Jerry Belson revived the series for prime time, featuring
African American actors Ron Glass and Demond Wilson in the Felix
and Oscar roles. Using many of the same plots from the original
episodes, The New Odd Couple lasted only one season. In 1992,
Klugman and Randall reprised their roles in a special two-hour reunion
episode. Given the American public's captivation with the series,
it is likely that further versions will continue to surface.
-Michael B. Kassel
FURTHER
READING
Gross, Edward A. The 25th Anniversary Odd Couple Companion: Still
Odd After All These Years. Las Vegas, Nevada: Pioneer, 1989.
Marc,
David, and Robert J. Thompson. Prime Time Prime Movers: From
I Love Lucy to L.A. Law--America's Greatest TV Shows and the People
Who Created Them. Boston: Little, Brown, 1992.
Stock,
Rip. Odd Couple Mania. New York: Ballantine, 1983.
See
also Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Randall,
Tony
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