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ROSEANNE
 Roseanne CAST
Roseanne
Conner.......................................... Roseanne
Dan Conner ............................................John
Goodman
Becky Conner (1988-1992, 1995-1996)......Lecy Goranson
Becky Conner (1993-1995)........................ Sarah Chalke
Darlene Conner........................................... Sara
Gilbert
D.J. (David Jacob) Conner (pilot)................... Sal Barone
D.J. Conner........................................ Michael
Fishman
Jackie Harris ...........................................Laurie
Metcalf
Crystal Anderson (1988-1992)..................... Natalie West
Booker Brooks (1988-1989)................... George Clooney
Pete Wilkins (1988-1989) ............................Ron Perkins
Juanita Herrera (1988-1989) ................Evalina Fernandez
Sylvia Foster (1988-1989).......................... Anne Falkner
Ed Conner (1989-) ........................................Ned
Beatty
Bev Harris (1989-) .................................Estelle
Parsons
Mark Healy (1990-) .....................................Glenn
Quinn
David Healy (1992-) ..................................Johnny
Galeki
Grandma Nanna (1991-) ...........................Shelly Winters
Leon Carp (1991-) .........................................Martin
Mull
Bonnie (1991-1992)............................... Bonnie Sheridan
Nancy (1991-)...................................... Sandra Bernhard
Fred (1993-)......................................... Michael
O'Keefe
PRODUCERS
Marcy Carsey, Tom Werner, Roseanne
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
ABC
October
1988-February 1989 Tuesday
8:30-9:00
February 1989-September 1994
Tuesday 9:00-9:30
September 1994-March 1995 Wednesday
9:00-9:30
March 1995-May 1995 Wednesday
8:00-8:30
May 1995-September 1995 Wednesday
9:30-10:00
September 1995- Wednesday
8:00-8:30
U.S. Domestic Comedy
Roseanne
evolved from the stand-up comedy act and HBO special of its
star and executive producer, Roseanne (formerly Roseanne Barr Arnold).
In the act, Roseanne deemed herself a "domestic goddess" and dispensed
mock cynical advice about child-rearing: "I figure by the time my
husband comes home at night, if those kids are still alive, I've
done my job." Roseanne, the program, built a working class
family around this matriarchal figure and became an instantaneous
hit when it premiered in 1988 on ABC.
Roseanne's
immediate success may well have been in reaction to the dominant
1980s domestic situation comedy, The Cosby Show. Like
The Cosby Show, Roseanne starred an individual who began as
a stand-up comic, but the families in the two programs were polar
opposites. Where The Cosby Show portrayed a loving, prosperous
family with a strong father figure, Roseanne's Conner family
was discordant, adamantly working class and mother-centered.
The Conner family included Roseanne, her husband Dan (John Goodman),
sister Jackie (Laurie Metcalf), daughters Darlene (Sara Gilbert)
and Becky (Lecy Goranson, replaced in fall 1993 by Sarah Chalke),
and son D.J. (Michael Fishman). Over the years the household expanded
to include Becky's husband Mark (Glenn Quinn) and Darlene's boyfriend
David (Johnny Galecki) and, in 1995, a new infant for Roseanne and
Dan.
The
Connors were constantly facing money problems as they both worked
in blue-collar jobs--in factories, hanging sheetrock, running a
motorcycle shop, and eventually owning their own diner where they
served "loose-meat" sandwiches. Their parenting style was often
sarcastic, bordering on scornful. Once, when the kids left for school,
Roseanne commented, "Quick. They're gone. Change the locks." But
caustic remarks such as these were always balanced by scenes of
affection and support so that the stability of the family was never
truly in doubt. Much as in its working class predecessor, All
in the Family, the Conner family was not genuinely dysfunctional,
despite all the rancor.
Roseanne
often tested the boundaries of network standards and practices.
One episode dealt with the young son's masturbation. In others,
Roseanne frankly discussed birth control with Becky and explained
her choice to have breast reduction surgery. The program also featured
gay and lesbian characters, which made ABC nervous--especially when
a lesbian character kissed Roseanne. The network initially refused
to air that episode until Roseanne, the producer, demanded they
do so.
Controversy
attended the program off screen as well. During its first season
there were well publicized squabbles among the producing team, which
led to firings and Roseanne assuming principal control of the program.
Subsequently, Roseanne battled ABC over its handling of her then-husband
Tom Arnold's sitcom, The Jackie Thomas Show. Dwarfing these
professional controversies has been the strife in Roseanne's publicly
available personal life. Among the events that have been chronicled
in the tabloid press are her tumultuous marriage to and divorce
from Arnold (amid accusations of spousal abuse), the reconciliation
with the daughter she put up for adoption (which was forced by a
tabloid newspaper's threat to reveal the story), her charges of
being abused as a child, struggles with addictions to food and other
substances, and a misfired parody of the national anthem at a baseball
game (1990).
-Jeremy
Butler
FURTHER
READING
Arnold,
Roseanne. My Lives. New York: Ballantine, 1994.
Dresner,
Zita Z. "Roseanne Barr: Goddess or She-devil." Journal of American
Culture (Bowling Green, Ohio), Summer 1993.
Dworkin,
Susan. "Roseanne Barr: The Disgruntled Housewife as Stand-up Comedian."
Ms. Magazine (New York), July-August 1987.
Rich,
Frank. "What Now My Love." The New York Times, 6 March 1994.
Rowe,
Kathleen. The Unruly Woman: Gender and Genres of Laughter.
Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1995.
Givens,
Ron. "A Real Stand-up Mom." Newsweek (New York), 31 October
1988.
Klaus,
Barbara. "The War of the Roseanne: How I Survived Three Months
in the Trenches Writing for TV's Sitcom Queen." New York, 22
October 1990.
Lee,
Janet. "Subversive Sitcoms: Roseanne as Inspiration for Feminist
Resistance." Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal (Claremont,
California), 1992.
Mayerle,
Judine. "Roseanne-How Did You Get Inside My House? A Case Study
of a Hit Blue-Collar Situation Comedy." Journal of Popular Culture
(Bowling Green, Ohio), Spring 1991.
Volk, Patricia. "Really Roseanne." The New York Times Magazine,
8 August 1993.
See
also Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Family
on Television; Gender
and Television; Roseanne
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