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Friday, July 13, 2018

Think You Know Your Stuff About EIGHT IS ENOUGH? - YouTube
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Eight Is Enough is an American television comedy-drama series that ran on ABC from March 15, 1977 until May 23, 1981. The show was modeled on the life of syndicated newspaper columnist Thomas Braden, a real-life parent with eight children, who wrote a book by the same title.


Video Eight Is Enough



Synopsis

The show centers on a Sacramento, California family with eight children (from oldest to youngest: David, Mary, Joanie, Susan, Nancy, Elizabeth, Tommy, and Nicholas). The father, Tom Bradford (Dick Van Patten), was a newspaper columnist for the fictional Sacramento Register. His wife Joan (Diana Hyland) took care of the children. Hyland was only in four episodes before falling ill. She died soon after, and her character's death was written into the script.

The second season began in the fall of 1977 with the revelation that Tom had become a widower. Tom fell in love with Sandra Sue "Abby" Abbott (Betty Buckley), a schoolteacher who came to the house to tutor Tommy when he broke his leg in a football game. They were married in one of the series' TV movie broadcasts on November 9, 1977. The role went to Buckley after being approved by network chief Brandon Tartikoff, who felt the character of the sympathetic teacher she had played in the 1976 film Carrie would also be great for the series. In another TV movie event in September 1979, David and Susan were both married in a double wedding. As the series progressed, Abby got her Ph.D. in education and started a job counseling students at the local high school, oldest daughter Mary became a doctor, and second-youngest son Tommy became a singer in a rock-and-roll band.


Maps Eight Is Enough



Cast and characters

Main

  • Dick Van Patten as Tom Bradford
  • Diana Hyland as Joan Wells Bradford (season 1)
  • Betty Buckley as Sandra Sue "Abby" Abbott Bradford (seasons 2-5)
  • Grant Goodeve (Mark Hamill in the series pilot) as David Bradford
  • Lani O'Grady as Mary Bradford
  • Laurie Walters as Joanie Bradford
  • Susan Richardson as Susan Bradford
  • Dianne Kay (Kimberly Beck in the series pilot) as Nancy Bradford
  • Connie Needham as Elizabeth Bradford (originally credited as Connie Newton)
  • Willie Aames (Chris English in the series pilot) as Tommy Bradford
  • Adam Rich as Nicholas Bradford

In the pilot, the role of David was played by Mark Hamill, Nancy was played by Kimberly Beck, and Tommy was played by Chris English. When ABC screened the pilot, they were unhappy with a couple of performances. Beck and English were let go and replaced respectively by Dianne Kay and Willie Aames. Hamill sought to get out of his 5-year contract on Eight Is Enough to take the opportunity to star in George Lucas' Star Wars. Lorimar Productions granted his request and the role was re-cast with Grant Goodeve.

Recurring

  • Brian Patrick Clarke as Merle "The Pearl" Stockwell (1979-1981)
  • Jennifer Darling as Donna (1977-1981)
  • Janis Paige as Vivian "Auntie V" Bradford (1977-1980)
  • Michael Goodrow as Ernie Fields (1979-1981)
  • James Karen as Eliot Randolph
  • Ralph Macchio as Jeremy Andretti (1980-1981)
  • Michele Greene as Jill (1980-1981)
  • Joan Prather as Janet McArthur Bradford (1977-1981)
  • Michael Thoma as Dr. Greg Maxwell (1977-1981)
  • Virginia Vincent as Daisy Maxwell (1977-1981)

TV.Eight is Enough â€
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Production

The show was developed by writer William Blinn and was a Lorimar Production. It was originally distributed by Worldvision Enterprises. For the first three years the show filmed interior scenes at The Burbank Studios now known as the Warner Bros. Ranch. From the fourth season the show filmed interiors at MGM Studios in Culver City.

The home featured in the exterior shots was on Chiquita St, near Lankershim Boulevard in Los Angeles. The house has since been demolished and replaced. The interiors were filmed on two separate sound stages at the studio: one for the main floor and one for the upstairs.

The show's team of producers included Robert L. Jacks, Gary Adelson, Greg Strangis, and Phil Fehrle. Executive producers were Lee Rich and Philip Capice.

As a production of the Lorimar stable, who were concurrently producing CBS's The Waltons, writers were often contracted by the producers and were shared between both programs. (Waltons costar Will Geer also made an Eight is Enough guest appearance during season 2.) Regular writers included Peter Lefcourt, the writing teams of Gwen Bagni and Paul Dubov, Rod Peterson and Claire Whittaker, Bill Nuss and Dusty Kay, Nick Thiel and David Braff, J. Miyoko Hensley and Steven Hensley, Bruce Shelly, Sandra Kay Siegel, Gil Grant, Karen I. Hall, and Hindi Brooks, who soon became the show's long-time story editor. In-house directors included Philip Leacock, Harry Harris, and Irving J. Moore. As an in-joke, the character name of one of Nicholas Bradford's best friends was Irving Julius Moore, a nod to the director of the same name whose middle name was, in fact, Joseph.


my farrah: Dick Van Patten friend to Fawcett
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Music

Theme

For the show's first two seasons, an upbeat instrumental piece written by Fred Werner was used as the show's opening theme. Beginning with the show's third season, this was replaced by a slowed-down vocal theme titled "Eight Is Enough," which was sung by series co-star Grant Goodeve. The song had music by Lee Holdridge and lyrics by Molly-Ann Leikin, and was first heard in a longer arrangement on the last episode of the second season titled "Who's on First?", which was also performed by Goodeve.


Eight Is Enough (1977) | cast OFF photo | Pinterest | Televisions
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Score

Early episodes had instrumental music by Fred Werner and Alexander Courage, but the show's real musical stamp came from composer Earle Hagen, who had a knack of composing memorable cues as he had previously been the in-house composer on The Andy Griffith Show. He composed a love theme for Tom and Abby, a theme that permeated the show in various incarnations throughout the remainder of the series. Some later episodes were scored by John Beal and Miles Goodman.

In 1980 there was a writers' strike in Hollywood, and one of the offshoots of this industry problem was making cost-cutting measures in the music department on the show. Some of the later episodes were tracked with a combination of uncredited library music and with some original music by those of the aforementioned Messrs. Hagen, Beal, and Goodman.


Dying 'Eight Is Enough' Star Susan Richardson On Last Legs, Needs ...
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Reception and cancellation

The series jump-started acting careers for several of its young stars. It cemented teen idol status for Grant Goodeve (David), Willie Aames (Tommy), and Ralph Macchio, who played Abby's orphaned nephew Jeremy later in the show's last season. Aames would go on to star with Scott Baio in Charles in Charge. Goodeve started a minor singing career, following his rendition of the show's theme song (see "Theme music") and initially hosted HGTV's If Walls Could Talk. Macchio would gain the most fame in feature films such as The Karate Kid and its sequels, as well as My Cousin Vinny.

After the end of the show's fifth season (112 one-hour episodes), production costs and declining ratings caused the show to be cancelled, along with seven other shows that season (including The Waltons). Variety's headline on the cancellation stated, "Eight Shows In, Eight Shows Out". In a 2000 episode of E! True Hollywood Story, Dick Van Patten stated that no one contacted him to inform him of the cancellation. Instead, he read about it in a newspaper.

The series had two reunion movies on NBC. In An Eight Is Enough Reunion on October 18, 1987, Mary Frann replaced Betty Buckley as Abby; Buckley had been filming Frantic during its production. This was followed by An Eight Is Enough Wedding on October 22, 1989, this time with Sandy Faison as Abby. By coincidence, both movies aired opposite game two of the World Series on ABC.


Eight Is Enough ending theme - YouTube
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Nielsen Ratings

  • 1976-1977 -- #23
  • 1977-1978 -- #12
  • 1978-1979 -- #11
  • 1979-1980 -- #12
  • 1980-1981 -- Not in Top 30

Eight is Enough (1977-81) â€
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Series overview


Hooray for those 'Eight Is Enough' girls! (1977) - Click Americana
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Episodes

All airdates have been compiled from either TV listings in the Los Angeles Times or publicity photos. Unless otherwise specified, all episodes, including the pilot, were standard hour-long ones.

  • = Overall episode number
  • Ep = Episode number by season

Season 1 (1977)

Season 2 (1977-78)

Season 3 (1978-79)

Season 4 (1979-80)

Season 5 (1980-81)


Why 'Eight Is Enough' Star Susan Richardson Now Lives In A Trailer ...
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Post-series movies

  • Eight Is Enough: A Family Reunion (1987)
  • An Eight Is Enough Wedding (1989)

Eight is Enough: The Complete Fifth Season | WB Shop
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Syndication

Reruns of all 112 episodes of Eight Is Enough have aired sporadically since the show's syndication debut in September 1982. The show aired on FX in 1994, on PAX in 1998, and as part of a 50th-anniversary Warner Bros. marathon on TV Land in 2005. Eight Is Enough also aired on the Chicago-based MeTV and MeToo, a sister station of MeTV, from 2008 to 2010 before MeTV spread to other markets around the U.S.

During its network run, the show was distributed by Worldvision Enterprises (also internationally in rebroadcasts), and later by Lorimar-Telepictures. All syndication rights are now held by (Lorimar successor) Warner Bros. Television.

International

In Italy, RAI public networks aired the first season of Eight Is Enough under the title Otto Bastano in 1978, the literal Italian translation of the original title. The remaining seasons were aired in the 1980s on Retequattro, a commercial network from Fininvest (now Mediaset), under the title La Famiglia Bradford. The Italian version excludes the laugh track.

The true French version excludes the laugh track, Huit, ça suffit! was a big success in the 1980s both in France and Quebec, Canada, and among all Francophone (French-speaking) Canadians.

In Spain, Eight Is Enough was aired also in the 1980s. RTVE (public network) aired all the seasons under the title Con Ocho Basta (the Spanish translation) in Friday's evening time.

In the Philippines, Eight Is Enough aired on GMA 7 from 1978 to 1981.


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DVD releases

On April 17, 2012, Warner Home Video released the complete first season of Eight Is Enough on DVD in Region 1. The release includes the pilot episode (featuring Mark Hamill in the role of eldest son David) and a cast reunion special. Several of the episodes have the wrong end credits, and the Lorimar Productions logo has also been edited out of the end credits.

On November 13, 2012, Warner Bros. released Season 2, parts one and two on DVD-R via their Warner Archive Collection. These are Manufacture-on-Demand (MOD) releases and are available through Warner's online store and Amazon.com. Season 3, Parts One and Two were released on April 30, 2013.

Season 4, parts one and two were released on August 13, 2013. The fifth and final season was released on March 11, 2014.




See also

  • The Brady Bunch (1969)
  • Just the Ten of Us (1988)



References




External links

  • Eight Is Enough on IMDb
  • Eight Is Enough at TV.com
  • Eight Is Enough: A Family Reunion on IMDb (1987 reunion movie)
  • An Eight Is Enough Wedding on IMDb (1989 reunion movie)
  • Eightisenough.com contains episode summaries

Source of article : Wikipedia