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ROOM 222
 Room 222 CAST
Pete
Dixon...............................................
Lloyd Haynes
Liz Mcintyre.......................................... Denise
Nicholas
Seymour Kaufman.......................... Michael Constantine
Alice Johnson .......................................Karen Valentine
Richie Lane (1969-1971)............................. Howard
Rice
Helen Loomis........................................... Judy
Strangis
Jason Allen.....................................................
Heshimu
Al Cowley (1969-1971)........................ Pendrant Netherly
Bernie (1970-1974) ......................................David
Jollife
Pam (1970-1972).......................................... Te-Tanisha
Larry (1971-1973)..................................... Eric
Laneuville
PRODUCERS
Gene Reynolds, William D'Angelo, John Kubichan, Ronald Rubin
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 112
Episodes
ABC
September 1969-January 1971 Wednesday
8:30-9:00
January 1971-September 1971 Wednesday
8:00-8:30
September 1971-January 1974
Friday 9:00-9:30
U.S. High School
Drama
Room
222 was a half-hour comedy-drama that aired on ABC from 1969-74.
While seldom seen in syndication today, the show broke new narrative
ground that would later be developed by the major sitcom factories
of the 1970s, Grant Tinker's MTM Enterprises and Norman Lear's Tandem
Productions. Mixing dramatic elements with traditional television
comedy, Room 222 also prefigured the "dramedy" form by almost
two decades.
The
series was set at an integrated high school in contemporary Los
Angeles. While the narrative centered around a dedicated and student-friendly
African-American history teacher, Pete Dixon (Lloyd Haynes), it
also depended upon an ensemble cast of students and other school
employees. The optimistic idealism of Pete, guidance counselor Liz
McIntyre (Denise Nicholas), and student-teacher Alice Johnson (Karen
Valentine) was balanced by the experienced, somewhat jaded principal,
Seymour Kaufman (Michael Constantine). These characters and a handful
of other teachers would spend each episode arguing among themselves
about the way in which to go about both educating their students
and acting as surrogate parents.
A
season and a half before Norman Lear made "relevant" programming
a dominant genre with the introduction of programs like All in
the Family and Maude, Room 222 was using the form of
the half-hour comedy to discuss serious contemporary issues. During
its five seasons on the air, the show included episodes that dealt
with such topics as racism, sexism, homophobia, dropping out of
school, shoplifting, drug use among both teachers and students,
illiteracy, cops in school, guns in school, Vietnam war veterans,
venereal disease, and teenage pregnancy.
Most
importantly, Room 222 served as a prototype of sorts for
what would become the formula that MTM Enterprises would employ
in a wide variety of comedies and dramas during the 1970s and 1980s.
When Grant Tinker set up MTM, he hired Room 222's executive
story editors James L. Brooks and Allan Burns to create and produce
the company's first series, The Mary Tyler Moore Show. This
series eschewed issue-oriented comedy, but it picked up on Room
222's contemporary and realistic style as well as its setting
in a "workplace family." Treva Silverman, a writer for Room 222,
also joined her bosses on the new show, and Gene Reynolds, another
Room 222 producer, produced The Mary Tyler Moore Show
spin-off Lou Grant several years later.
Room
222 was given a number of awards by community and educational
groups for its positive portrayal of important social issues seldom
discussed on television at the time. It won an Emmy for Outstanding
New Series in 1969.
-Robert
Thompson
FURTHER
READING
Eisner,
Joel, and David Krinsky. Television Comedy Series: An Episode
Guide to 153 TV Sitcoms in Syndication. Jefferson, North Carolina:
McFarland, 1984.
Feuer, Jane, Paul Kerr, and Tise Vahimagi, editors. MTM--'Quality
Television.' London: British Film Institute, 1984.
MacDonald,
J. Fred. Blacks And White TV: Afro-Americans in Television Since
1948. Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1992.
Newcomb,
Horace, and Robert Alley. The Producer's Medium: Conversations
with Creators of American TV. New York: Oxford University Press,
1983.
Tinker,
Grant, and Bud Rukeyser. Tinker in Television: From General Sarnoff
to General Electric. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1994.
See
also Brooks,
James L.; Burns,
Allan; Tinker,
Grant
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