Stir Crazy | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom Adventure |
Developed by | Larry Tucker Larry Rosen |
Written by | Michael Russnow |
Directed by | Peter H. Hunt Christian I. Nyby II |
Starring | Joe Guzaldo Larry Riley Marc Silver Jeannie Wilson |
Opening theme | "Stir It Up" |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 9 |
Production | |
Producer | David J. Latt |
Running time | 60 min. |
Production companies | Larry/Larry Productions Columbia Pictures Television |
Original release | |
Network | CBS |
Release | September 18, 1985 – January 7, 1986 |
Stir Crazy is an American sitcom that aired on CBS [1] [2] as part of its 1985 fall lineup. [3] [4] Stir Crazy was based on the 1980 film of the same name. [5] [6] The theme song was "Stir It Up" by Patti LaBelle.
It tells the story of two socially awkward friends, Harry Fletcher (Larry Riley) and Skip Harrington (Joseph Guzaldo), who were wrongfully convicted and sentenced to 132 years in prison. While working on a chain gang, they escape and set out after Crawford (Marc Silver), the man who had actually committed the crime for which they had been sentenced. Pursuing them is the aggressive, ruthless, and cold-hearted Captain Betty Phillips (Jeannie Wilson), a female prison guard. "Captain Betty" was an amalgam of "Warden Beatty", the prison guard character played by Barry Corbin in the feature film, whom the boys were on the run from (the movie character's name, in itself, being a spoof of Warren Beatty).
While the movie upon which it was based [7] had been a hit, [8] the television version of Stir Crazy was anything but. [9] [10] [11] None of the people involved in the film had a major role in this series. It was pulled from the CBS fall lineup in October 1985, the month after its premiere, [12] and put on hiatus. It returned in a new time slot in December 1985 and a few more episodes were aired, also to low ratings. The program was permanently cancelled [13] after the January 7, 1986 broadcast.
The pilot [14] for the TV series, which aired on September 18, 1985, had Polly Holliday [15] [16] [17] in the role of Captain Betty and Royce D. Applegate [18] as Crawford. Both were promptly dismissed from the roles, ostensibly because of poor testing when CBS executives screened the pilot. The sixtyish Betty turned into the much younger and curvaceous version of the character played by Jeannie Wilson, while Marc Silver's Crawford was also younger and physically different from the version played by Applegate.
Nº | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original Air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Pilot" | Peter H. Hunt | Bruce Jay Friedman and Larry Tucker & Larry Rosen | September 18, 1985 |
2 | "The Ping Pong Caper" | Unknown | Unknown | September 25, 1985 |
3 | "Welcome to the Tribe" | Unknown | Unknown | October 2, 1985 |
4 | "Magnificent Repossession" | Christian I. Nyby II | Unknown | October 9, 1985 |
5 | "The Football Story" | Unknown | Unknown | October 16, 1985 |
6 | "The Sulky Race" | Rod Amateau | Unknown | October 23, 1985 |
7 | "The Love Affair" | Rod Amateau | Michael Russnow | December 24, 1985 |
8 | "Where's Mary?" | Rod Amateau | Unknown | December 31, 1985 |
9 | "Basic Straining" | Christian I. Nyby II | Unknown | January 7, 1986 |
The year 1972 involved some significant events in television. Below is a list of notable television-related events.
The year 1975 involved some significant events in television. Below is a list of television-related events which happened that year.
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Must See TV was an American advertising slogan that was used by NBC to brand its primetime blocks during the 1990s, and most often applied to the network's Thursday night lineup, which featured some of its most popular sitcoms and drama series of the period, allowing the network to dominate prime time ratings on Thursday nights in the 1980s and 1990s. Ratings for NBC's lineup fell during the mid-to-late 2000s, and today the network ranks behind Fox, ABC, and CBS on Thursday nights. In 2015 and again in 2021, the network canceled comedy programming on Thursdays and switched entirely to dramas. However, the branding returned for the 2017–18 television season.
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Brooks, Tim and Marsh, Earle, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows