Mork & Mindy

Last updated
Mork & Mindy
Mork & Mindy.jpg
First season title card
Genre
Created by
Starring
Theme music composer Perry Botkin Jr.
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes
  • 91 (original run)
  • 95 (syndication)
(list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • Bruce Johnson
  • Brian Levant
  • Dale McRaven
  • Ed Scharlach
  • Tom Tenowich
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time22–24 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network ABC
ReleaseSeptember 14, 1978 (1978-09-14) 
May 27, 1982 (1982-05-27)
Related

Mork & Mindy is an American television sitcom that aired on ABC from September 14, 1978, to May 27, 1982. A spin-off after a highly successful episode of Happy Days , "My Favorite Orkan", it starred Robin Williams as Mork, an extraterrestrial who comes to Earth from the planet Ork, and Pam Dawber as Mindy McConnell, his human friend, roommate, and eventual love interest.

Contents

History and episodes


Premise and initial success

Mork first appears in the Happy Days season five episode "My Favorite Orkan", which aired in February 1978, and is a take on the 1960s sitcom, My Favorite Martian . The show wanted to feature a spaceman to capitalize on the popularity of the recently released Star Wars film. [1] Williams's character, Mork, attempts to take Richie Cunningham to his planet of Ork as a specimen, but is foiled by Fonzie. In the initial broadcast, it turned out to be a dream of Richie's. However, when Mork proved popular, the syndicated version was re-edited to show Mork erasing the experience from everyone's minds. [2] [3]

The character of Mork was played by then-unknown Robin Williams, who impressed producer Garry Marshall with his quirky comedic ability as soon as they met. Dom DeLuise and Roger Rees were offered the role, but both passed. [4] [5] Richard Lewis and Jeff Altman were considered. [6] When Williams was asked to take a seat at the audition, he sat on his head, and Marshall cast him on the spot, later wryly commenting that Williams was the only alien who auditioned. [7]

Mork & Mindy is set in Boulder, Colorado, in the then-present-day late 1970s and early 1980s (as opposed to the Happy Days setting of Milwaukee in the late 1950s and early 1960s). Mork explains to Richie that he is from the "future": the 1970s.

SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedRankRating
First airedLast aired
1 25September 14, 1978 (1978-09-14)May 10, 1979 (1979-05-10)328.6
(Tied with Happy Days )
2 26September 16, 1979 (1979-09-16)May 1, 1980 (1980-05-01)2720.2
3 22November 13, 1980 (1980-11-13)May 14, 1981 (1981-05-14)49
4 22October 8, 1981 (1981-10-08)May 27, 1982 (1982-05-27)60

First season

Williams and Dawber in a promotional picture, 1978 Robin Williams and Pam Dawber 1978.jpg
Williams and Dawber in a promotional picture, 1978

Mork arrives on Earth in an egg-shaped spacecraft. He has been assigned to observe human behavior by Orson, his mostly unseen and long-suffering superior (voiced by Ralph James). Orson has sent Mork to get him off Ork, where humor is not permitted. Attempting to fit in, Mork dresses in an Earth suit, but wears it backwards. Landing in Boulder, Colorado, he encounters 21-year-old Mindy McConnell (Pam Dawber), who is upset after an argument with her boyfriend, and offers assistance. Because of his odd garb, she mistakes him for a priest and is taken in by his willingness to listen (in fact, simply observing her behavior). When Mindy notices his backward suit and unconventional behavior, she asks who he really is, and he innocently tells her the truth. She promises to keep his identity a secret and allows him to move into her attic. Mindy's father, Fred (Conrad Janis), objects to his daughter living with a man (particularly one as bizarre as Mork), but Fred's mother-in-law and Mindy's grandmother, Cora (Elizabeth Kerr), approves of Mork and the living arrangement. Mindy and Cora work at Fred's music store, where Cora gives violin lessons to Eugene (Jeffrey Jacquet), a 10-year-old boy who becomes Mork's friend. Also seen occasionally are Mindy's snooty old high school friend, Susan (Morgan Fairchild), and the possibly insane Exidor (Robert Donner).

Storylines usually center on Mork's attempts to understand human behavior and American culture as Mindy helps him to adjust to life on Earth. It usually ends up frustrating Mindy, as Mork can do things only according to Orkan customs. For example, lying to someone or not informing them it will rain is considered a practical joke (called "splinking") on Ork. At the end of each episode, Mork reports to Orson what he has learned about Earth. These end-of-show summaries allow Mork to humorously comment on social norms.

Mork's greeting is "Na-Nu Na-Nu" (pronounced /ˈnɑːnˈnɑːn/ ), with a hand gesture similar to Mr. Spock's Vulcan salute from Star Trek combined with a handshake. It became a popular catchphrase at the time, as did "Shazbat" ( /ˈʃæzbɒt/ ), an Orkan interjection that Mork uses. Mork says "KO" in place of "OK".

Mork & Mindy was Robin Williams's first major acting role. Scripts were shorter than on Happy Days, with notes specifying, "Robin will do something here", to let Williams improvise. [8] However, his improvisations often had to be replaced with pre-written "ad libs" scripted by a large team, due to Williams's true ad libs being unsuitable for a general television audience. [9]

The series was extremely popular in its first season. The Nielsen ratings were very high, ranking at 3, behind Laverne & Shirley (at 1) and Three's Company (at 2), both on ABC, which was the highest-rated network in the U.S. in 1978. The show gained higher ratings than Happy Days, the series that had spawned it, at number 4. [10] [11] However, network management sought to improve the show in several ways. This was done in conjunction with what is known in the industry as counterprogramming, a technique in which a successful show is moved opposite a ratings hit on another network. The show was moved from Thursdays, where it outrated CBS's The Waltons , to Sundays, where it replaced the canceled sci-fi series, Battlestar Galactica . The show then aired against two highly rated shows: NBC's anthology series, titled The Sunday Big Event, and CBS's revamped continuation of All in the Family , titled Archie Bunker's Place . [10]

Second season

The second season saw an attempt to seek younger viewers, and premiered a new disco arrangement of the gentle theme tune.

The characters of Fred and Cora were dropped from the regular cast. It was explained that Fred went on tour as a conductor with an orchestra, taking Cora with him. Fred and Cora made return appearances in later episodes. Recurring characters, Susan and Eugene, made no further appearances after season one, and were never mentioned again.

New cast members were added. Among the new supporting characters were Remo and Jeanie DaVinci (Jay Thomas and Gina Hecht), a brother and sister from New York City who owned a new neighborhood deli where Mork and Mindy now spent a lot of time. Also added as regulars were their grumpy neighbor, Mr. Bickley (who was occasionally seen in the first season, and ironically worked as a verse writer for a greeting-card company), portrayed by Tom Poston, along with Nelson Flavor (Jim Staahl), Mindy's snooty cousin who ran for city council.

The show's main focus was no longer on Mork's slapstick attempts to adjust to the new world that he was in, but on the relationship between Mork and Mindy on a romantic level. Also, some of the focus was on Mork trying to find a steady job.

Because of the abrupt changes to the show and time slot, ratings slipped dramatically (dropping to 27th place). The show was quickly moved back to its previous timeslot, and efforts were made to return to the core of the series; however, ratings did not recover.

Third season

For the third season, Jeanie, Remo and Nelson were retained as regulars, with Jeanie and Remo having opened a restaurant. Nelson was no longer into politics, and wore more casual clothes.

Mindy's father and grandmother returned to the series. The show acknowledged this attempt to restore its original premise, with the third season's hourlong opener, titled "Putting the Ork Back in Mork".

Several supporting characters were added to the lineup. Joining were Lola and Stephanie, two children from the day-care center where Mork worked. Also added was Mindy's close friend, Glenda Faye Comstock (Crissy Wilzak), a lovely young widow on whom Nelson develops a crush. Wilzak lasted one season as a regular.

When these ideas failed to improve ratings, many wilder ideas were tried in an attempt to capitalize on Williams's comedic talents. The season ended at number 49 in the ratings.

Fourth season

Despite the show's steady decline, ABC agreed to a fourth season of Mork & Mindy, but executives wanted changes. The show began to include special guest stars this year.

At the beginning of the fourth season, Mork and Mindy got married. [12] Jonathan Winters, one of Williams's idols, was brought in as their child, Mearth. Because of the different Orkan physiology, Mork laid an egg, which grew and hatched into the much older Winters. [13] Winters had previously appeared in a Season 3 episode as Dave McConnell (Mindy's uncle and Fred's brother). It had previously been explained that Orkans aged "backward", thus explaining Mearth's appearance, and that of his teacher, Miss Geezba (portrayed by then-11-year-old actress, Louanne Sirota). After four seasons and 95 episodes, Mork & Mindy was canceled in summer 1982. The show ended at 60th place at season's end.

Characters

Recurring characters

Connections to other shows

Actor-director Jerry Paris was inspired to create the character of Mork after directing an episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show , titled "It May Look Like a Walnut", in which Van Dyke's Rob Petrie has a dream in which he believes the Earth has been surreptitiously invaded by walnut-eating aliens who steal humans' thumbs and imaginations. [16] Series creator, Carl Reiner, had written the episode, which was the 20th in the show's second season, and the 50th episode produced. When Paris moved on to direct Happy Days , he introduced Mork in a similarly atypical season-five episode, titled My Favorite Orkan. [16] [17] In it, Richie tells everyone that he has seen a flying saucer, but no one believes him. Fonzie tells him that people make up stories about UFOs because their lives are average, or "humdrum".

In the pilot episode, Fonzie is unamused by Mork's antics. Mork and Fonzie 1978.jpg
In the pilot episode, Fonzie is unamused by Mork's antics.

While Richie is home alone, Mork walks in. Mork freezes everyone but Richie with his finger, and says he was sent to Earth to find a "humdrum" human to take back to Ork. Richie runs to Fonzie for help. When Mork catches up with him, he freezes everyone, but finds himself unable to freeze Fonzie because of The Fonz's powerful will. Mork challenges Fonzie to a duel: finger vs. thumb. After their duel, The Fonz admits defeat, so Mork decides to take Fonzie back to Ork instead of Richie.

Richie wakes up and realizes he was dreaming. There is a knock on the door, and, much to Richie's dismay, it is a man who looks exactly like Mork, except in regular clothes, asking for directions.

When production on Mork & Mindy began, an extra scene was filmed and added to this episode for subsequent reruns. In the scene, Mork explains to Orson that he decided to let Fonzie go, and was going to travel to the year 1978 to continue his mission. In the pilot episode of Mork & Mindy, Orson tells Mork that he is assigning him to study the planet Earth. Mork remembers that he has been to Earth before to collect a specimen (Fonzie), and adds that he "had to throw it back, though. Too small."

Fonzie and Laverne (of Laverne & Shirley ) appeared in the first episode of the show. In this segment, Mork relays to Mindy his trip to 1950s Milwaukee, where Fonzie sets up Mork on a date with Laverne.

Mork returned to Happy Days in the episode, "Mork Returns", in which Mork tells Richie that he enjoys coming to the 1950s because life is simpler and more "humdrum" than in the 1970s. Fonzie sees Mork and immediately tries to run away, but Mork freezes him and makes him stay. Mork eventually lets Fonzie go, but not before Fonzie asks Mork to reveal two things about the future: "cars and girls". Mork's response is, "In 1979... both are faster." The episode is mostly a retrospective in which clips are shown as Richie and Fonzie try to explain the concepts of love and friendship to Mork.

Mork also appears in the first episode of Out of the Blue , "Random's Arrival", as a crossover stunt.

Home media

Paramount Home Entertainment released the complete series on DVD in Region 1, in both individual season sets and a complete series configuration, [18] while the four seasons are available in Regions 2 and 4. The Region 1 DVD of Season 1 was from Paramount alone; subsequent releases in Region 1, as well as international Season 1 releases, have been in conjunction with CBS DVD.

In Australia, only the first three seasons were individually released, followed by a complete series boxset December 17, 2014. In 2020, Via Vision Entertainment obtained the rights to the series, and released a complete series boxset December 16, 2020.

DVD nameEpisodesRelease dates
Region 1Region 2Region 4
The Complete First Season25September 7, 2004October 29, 2007September 19, 2007
The Second Season26April 17, 2007April 7, 2008March 6, 2008
The Third Season22November 27, 2007September 1, 2008September 4, 2008
The Fourth Season22December 9, 2014TBATBA
The Complete Series95December 9, 2014December 15, 2014 [19] December 17, 2014 [20]

December 16, 2020 [21]

Primetime Emmy Award nominations

For its first season, Mork & Mindy was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards: Outstanding Comedy Series and Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for Robin Williams. The program lost to Taxi , and Williams lost to Carroll O'Connor for All in the Family .

Syndication

Mork & Mindy was syndicated by Paramount beginning in fall 1982, to low ratings. By 1983, most stations that owned the show rested it in summer, when weaker programming tended to air. Few stations renewed the show a few years later. [ citation needed ] By 1987, the show aired in only a handful of TV markets. However, the expansion of cable television broadened its reach. Nick at Nite reran the show from March 4, 1991, to November 27, 1995. [22] The show also aired on Fox Family Channel in the late 1990s. From 2008 to 2011, the show aired in marathons on SyFy. [23] It has aired in subsequent years on MeTV, the Hub Network and various other classic television stations airing on various digital subchannels. The show currently airs on Antenna TV, Rewind TV and streams on Pluto TV.

Filming locations

1619 Pine Street, Boulder, Colorado, the location used for the external shots of Mindy's house on Mork & Mindy 1619 Pine St, Boulder, Colorado.jpg
1619 Pine Street, Boulder, Colorado, the location used for the external shots of Mindy's house on Mork & Mindy

In an interview with Garry Marshall June 30, 2006, Pat O'Brien mentioned that Mork & Mindy was filmed on Paramount stage 27, the former studio for his infotainment program, The Insider .

The house from the show is located at 1619 Pine Street, just a few blocks away from the Pearl Street Mall in Boulder. This was also used in the show as Mindy's actual address in Boulder, as shown in the episode, "Mork Goes Public". The same house was used for exterior shots on the series, Perfect Strangers , in Episode 21 of Season 5, "This Old House", in which the show's main characters, cousins Larry and Balki, remodel a home for a fix-and-flip with hope of huge profits. It is often mistaken as the house that the cousins moved into with their wives during the final two seasons. In addition, it was used in three episodes of Family Matters as Myra's house. [24] [ unreliable source? ][ original research? ]As of July 2016, the house was valued at $1.9 million, with the date of its last sale as 1974, for US$80,000 (equivalent to $415,000in 2019). [25]

Spin-offs and adaptations

See also

Related Research Articles

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