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THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY
 The Partridge Family CAST
Shirley
Partridge....................................... Shirley Jones
Keith Partridge........................................ David
Cassidy Laurie Partridge............................................
Susan Dey Danny Partridge...................................
Danny Bonaduce Christopher Partridge (1970-1971)........
Jeremy Gelbwaks Christopher Partridge (1971-1974)...............
Brian Forster Tracy Partridge....................................
Suzanne Crough Reuben Kinkaid .......................................David
Madden Ricky Stevens (1973-1974).........................
Ricky Segall Alan Kinkaid (1973-1974) ............................Alan
Bursky
PRODUCERS
Bob Claver, Paul Junger Witt, Mel Swope, William S. Bickley,
Michael Warren
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 96 Episodes
ABC
September 1970-June 1973 Friday
8:30-9:00 June 1973-August 1974 Saturday
8:00-3:30
U.S. Situation/Domestic
Comedy
The
Partridge Family was broadcast on ABC from 1970 to 1974. A modest
ratings success, the show peaked at number sixteen in the ratings
for the 1971-72 season. While The Partridge Family never
attracted huge audiences, it was a major hit with younger viewers.
The series was also distinguished for spawning highly successful,
if short-lived, commercial tie-ins. Children's mystery books and
comic books featured the Partridges; their musical albums were heavily
promoted; and David Cassidy, one of the actors, became a teen idol.
The
Partridges were a fatherless family of six who decided, in the premier
episode, to form a rock band and tour the country in a psychedelically-painted
school bus. Most episodes began at the family home in California.
Under the leadership of 70s supermom Shirley Partridge (Shirley
Jones), the five Partridge kids survived various capers that almost
always culminated in successful concerts. Mom covered lead vocals.
Teenage stepson Keith (David Cassidy) helped keep the family in
line. Keith sometimes clashed with sister Laurie (Susan Dey) and
everyone clashed with ten-year-old brother Danny (Danny Bonaduce),
the freckle-faced bass player who was always looking for the big score.
Danny's special nemesis was band manager Reuben Kinkaid (David Madden),
an irritable man with a knack for getting the family into trouble
when the plot needed fresh complications. Two younger Partridges,
Chris and Tracy, rounded out the cast, along with a next-door neighbor,
Ricky, and Reuben's nephew, Alan, who joined the show in 1973.
The
show was not a sustained hit in syndication. During the 1990s, however,
a retro-vogue endowed The Partridge Family with minor cult
status. With their shag hairdos, flair pants, and polyester outfits,
the Partridges epitomized the early 1970s. MTV vee-jay Pagan Kennedy
praised the show for having made rock 'n' roll culture seem both
exciting and benign: "The Partridge Family took drug culture,
made it square, and added kids. It was hipness for the under-10
crowd."
The
dramatic formula of the show--something between The Brady Bunch
and Scooby Doo--rarely receives scholarly attention. References
occasionally note Shirley Partridge's status as a supermother in
the Donna Reed mold. For the most part, the show is remembered for
its successful commercial tie-ins. Several Partridge Family songs
became genuine hits, including the theme, "Come On, Get Happy,"
and "I Think I Love You," which sold four million copies. On the
Partridge Family albums, Jones and Cassidy sang their own parts,
but studio artists supplied background vocals and music. The Family
never toured (since they did not play their own music), but Cassidy
had a brief and wildly successful career as a pop singer. At the
heights of his popularity, he could fill stadiums with pre-pubescent
girls.
In 1973-74, The Partridge Family was switched from Friday
nights to Saturday nights, opposite All in the Family and
Emergency. The ratings quickly fell and the show was canceled
before the next season. A cartoon sequel, Partridge Family: 2200
AD, brought the Partridges back to life in space. The show played
Saturday mornings for one season (1974-75), featuring voices from
the prime-time cast.
-J.B.
Bird
FURTHER
READING
Brooks, Tim, and Earle Marsh. The Complete Directory To Prime-Time
Network TV Shows; 1946-Present. New York: Ballantine, 1992.
Kennedy,
Pagan. "I Think I Love You." The Village Voice Literary Supplement
(New York), 10 December 1991.
Mitz,
Rick. The Great TV Sitcom Book. New York: Perigree, 1988.
Steinberg,
Cobbet. TV Facts. New York: Facts on File, 1985.
See
also Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Comedy,
Workplace
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