The Odd Couple Together Again | |
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Genre |
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Based on | characters by Neil Simon |
Screenplay by | Robert Klane |
Directed by | Robert Klane |
Starring | |
Music by | Charles Fox |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | Howard W. Koch |
Cinematography | Peter Woeste |
Editor | Alan James Geik |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | CBS |
Release | September 24, 1993 |
The Odd Couple Together Again is a 1993 American made-for-television comedy-drama film starring Tony Randall and Jack Klugman as Felix Unger and Oscar Madison, respectively. It is a sequel to the original Odd Couple series in which Felix is once again rooming with Oscar, but only temporarily due to his daughter, Edna, getting married. The film aired on September 24, 1993 on CBS. [1]
In a ballroom at the Plaza Hotel, the fussy, neat, and perfectionist Felix Unger is leading a dress rehearsal for his daughter Edna's wedding. The rehearsal is cutting into the time the hotel needs to set up for another event in that ballroom. This, along with Felix giving an ultimatum over something he requested in the ballroom that hadn't been fulfilled, gets their reservation revoked by the assistant manager. Gloria, Felix's wife (whom he remarried at the end of the series), decides to kick him out of the house for two weeks in order for her to plan the wedding without him.
Felix returns to the apartment of his former roommate, Oscar Madison. Oscar's voice is now raspy and hoarse after having a vocal cord removed due to throat cancer. (In real life, Klugman had throat cancer surgery in 1989.) Felix is so touched by Oscar's cancer situation, he arranges a poker game, but tells Oscar's poker buddies - Officer Murray Greshler, Homer "Speed" Deegan, and Roy, Oscar's accountant - to always let Oscar win. However, Speed cracks and beats him and spills the beans. Oscar forgives them and resumes playing poker with them. Felix helps Oscar with voice exercises, which start to strengthen his vocal cords, enough so that Felix offers Oscar a voice-over job for a television commercial. However, Oscar is not thrilled to find out it would be for the voice of a toilet that had been cleaned with the advertised product. Felix then gets Oscar a job again with the New York Examiner newspaper, but the job is as a personal advice columnist, rather than a sportswriter. Oscar reluctantly accepts, but starts to enjoy the job once his former secretary, Myrna Turner, transfers over to help him. Eventually, he resigns and gives the job to her.
Felix holds the engagement dinner at Oscar's apartment when Gloria couldn't do so, due to painters still working. Felix bonds with Edna's fiancée, Bill Sutton, but eventually finds out that Bill has been married and divorced twice, at which things turn severely sour. Felix goes to visit Bill's first ex-wife, a cutthroat photographer. Edna asks Oscar to tell Felix to stop, adding that Bill considered calling off the wedding due to Felix embarrassing them. Oscar tries to talk Felix out of it, and Felix initially says he will stop. However, he goes to find Bill's second wife, a nudist whom Felix inadvertently had a photo taken with, which was given back to Gloria. Gloria, in turn, kicks him out of the wedding permanently and files an injunction against him. Felix asks Oscar to walk Edna down the aisle in his place and also give a speech, to which Oscar agrees.
However, Oscar makes a plan to have Felix take his place, by stopping and making an impassioned speech about him and what walking his own daughter down the aisle would mean to him. After so, Felix, who was pathetically hiding behind shrubbery, is brought into the wedding to assume the duty and nobody objects. After a very lively reception, where Edna intentionally tosses the bouquet to Oscar's girlfriend, Jeannie, before entering the limo, Oscar confesses to Felix that he is willing to accept the toilet bowl voiceover job, but Felix informs him the spot was long since taken, then offers him a spot in a potato chip ad as the voice of the deep fryer, which he accepts.
Variety said, "The Odd Couple is often mediocre as it wanders through a two-hour slot. But the visit is a walk down memory lane and Klugman’s performance should give others in his shoes inspiration and encouragement." [2]
Brett Somers was a Canadian-American game-show personality, actress, and singer. Brett was best known as a panelist on the 1970s game show Match Game and for her recurring role as Blanche Madison opposite her real-life husband, actor Jack Klugman, on ABC's The Odd Couple.
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Anthony Leonard Randall was an American actor of film, television and stage. He is best known for portraying the role of Felix Unger in the 1970-75 television adaptation of the 1965 play The Odd Couple by Neil Simon. In a career spanning six decades, Randall received six Golden Globe Award nominations and six Primetime Emmy Award nominations, winning one Emmy.
The Odd Couple is a play by Neil Simon. Following its premiere on Broadway in 1965, the characters were revived in a successful 1968 film and 1970s television series, as well as several other derivative works and spin-offs. The plot concerns two mismatched roommates: the neat, uptight Felix Ungar and the slovenly, easygoing Oscar Madison. Simon adapted the play in 1985 to feature a pair of female roommates in The Female Odd Couple. An updated version of the 1965 show appeared in 2002 with the title Oscar and Felix: A New Look at the Odd Couple.
Jack Klugman was an American actor of stage, film, and television.
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The Odd Couple II is a 1998 American buddy comedy film and the sequel to the 1968 film The Odd Couple. It is the final film written and produced by Neil Simon, starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau. Released nearly three decades later, it is unusual among sequels for having one of the longest gaps between the release of a subsequent film. The Odd Couple II premiered on April 10, 1998, and was a critical and commercial failure, grossing less than half of its predecessor at the box office.
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The Odd Couple is an American sitcom television series broadcast from September 24, 1970, to March 7, 1975, on ABC. The show, which stars Tony Randall as Felix Unger and Jack Klugman as Oscar Madison, was the first of several sitcoms developed by Garry Marshall for Paramount Television. The series is based on the 1965 play, The Odd Couple, written by Neil Simon, which was also adapted into the 1968 film, The Odd Couple. The story examines two divorced men, Oscar and Felix, who share Oscar's Manhattan apartment, and whose contrasting personalities inevitably lead to conflict and laughter.
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The Odd Couple is a 1968 American comedy film directed by Gene Saks, produced by Howard W. Koch and written by Neil Simon, based on his 1965 play. It stars Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau as two divorced men—neurotic neat-freak Felix Ungar and fun-loving slob Oscar Madison—who decide to live together.
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The Odd Couple is an American sitcom television series that aired on CBS from February 19, 2015, to January 30, 2017. It was the seventh screen production based on the 1965 play written by Neil Simon, following the 1968 film, the original 1970s television series, a 1975 Saturday morning cartoon, a 1982 reboot of the 1970 series, The Odd Couple: Together Again and The Odd Couple II.
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