Showing posts with label Fred Fox Jr.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Fox Jr.. Show all posts

Monday, February 15, 2021

"Blansky's Beauties," Episodes Two Through Five


"Blansky for the Defense" aired on February 19, 1977.  A few things of note:
  • We learn a little about Joey and Nancy's backstories, including that Joey hopes to break into show biz, so I guess that runs in the family.
  • Joey does some acrobatic flips at the custody hearing, because you know, Garry figured that's what Eddie should do.
  • The combined writing talents of LAS's Judy Pioli, Marc Sotkin, and Chris Thompson still can't make me laugh at this series.  Not even with Jerry Paris borrowed from Happy Days for the time being.
"Nancy's Cover-Up" aired on February 26th (except IMDB has it as the fourth episode).  Here's what I can tell you about it:
  • In the girls' opening intro, Arnold Takahashi "from Miami Beach, Florida" pops up!  This is about four months after the last episode Mr. T and Tina (nothing to do with the later famous Mr. T).  How does Pat Morita's crossover character fit in?  Well, he's a fry cook at his own coffee shop.  (And apparently also lives in Nancy's apartment building.)  I have no idea what he's been doing in the dozenish years since his last canonical appearance on Happy Days, Season Eleven, in 1983(Yes, it hurt my brain to type that.)  He's still trilingual (English, Chinese, and Japanese).
  • A sample of the writing on this series, the British Beauty observes, "Such a pity this country outlawed flogging."
  • How desperate is this show that they bring on a live camel this early in the run?  Or that they promise that the girls might go topless?
  • The word "kinky" is used no less than six times (including in Nancy's line "I want the world to know that Nancy Blansky is kinky"), which seems like a lot for a Garry Marshall show.
"Nancy's Magic Moment" aired on March 12th (except IMDB has it as the third episode).  Here's more than you ever wanted to know about it:
  • Well, they're getting their money's worth out of the camel at least, including in the French Foreign Legion number.
  • "Ministers applauding a stripper?"  And the surprise there is what?
  • They're not very consistent about how many "Beauties" Nancy manages, since it seemed to be ten and then twelve and now it's thirteen.  Or maybe she keeps hiring new ones to represent more of the United States.  (One girl is named "Arkansas," while one is, shudder, "Cochise.")
  • No, wait, one of the baker's dozen of coffee orders is for the comic-relief dog, Blackjack.
  • They lock the magician's assistant in a closet for one of their nutty schemes, and I'm so exhausted from being outraged by Scott Baio's character's pubescent predatory behavior, I can't manage more than a head-shake at that.
  • You might've thought it was physically impossible for 4'11" Nancy Walker to dip 6'5" Herb Edelman for a kiss, but you'd be wrong.
  • King Tut reference, didn't they realize that that would date the series in syndication?
  • LAS writers Tony DiMarco and David Ketchum wrote this episode.
"Nancy Goes Sheik" aired on March 19th.  Stuff about this one:
  • They seem to vary the girls' introductions each episode, which with much sharper writing would've been neat.
  • Joey is a lot shyer with women than his cousin Carmine is, or for that matter than his kid brother, "who turns everything into smut."
  • They use the word "noogie" on this series a lot.
  • Picture this said as suggestively as possible, "I can't wait to meet Sheik Ben-Ali.  I bet I could make his carpet fly."
  • Well, there's a crossover I wasn't expecting.  Fred Fox, Jr., who would be Freddie the Bellhop on the "Fabian" episode of LAS that Fall, and Freddie on HD in '79, here plays Marvin the Bellhop for the first of two times.  He'd already written the LAS/HD crossover episode "Excuse Me, May I Cut In" and had recently started his run of twenty-nine HD scripts, all the way into Season Eleven.  Anyway, under the Blansky Law of Relativity, I'm going to assume that Marvin is Freddie's younger cousin.
  • Bambi apparently does make the sheik's carpet fly, because he holds her captive so she can become his 33rd wife.  Hilarious, right?
  • Nancy gets a "magic lantern" as an apology gift from the sheik after she helps Bambi escape by donning a Farrah wig (don't ask), and Nancy wishes for Rock Hudson.  Oh, Honey, no.
  • Arnold Kane didn't write any other Blansky episodes, but he doesn't seem to have settled at any sitcom for long.  But then this is the worst episode so far, like a D or D+ rather than the C- I might give the first four episodes, if I were grading them.
Episodes Six and Seven, "Anthony Falls in Love" (with Bambi) and "Nancy Meets Francie" (Sunshine's mother) did not make it onto this disc, so I can't share any "goodies" from them.  Next up, the coveted "Nancy Meets Laverne"!

Sunday, December 15, 2019

"Shotgun Wedding: Part 1"

Image result for "Shotgun Wedding: Part 1" happy days
Jumping the cow
Happy Days: "Shotgun Wedding: Part 1"
September 11, 1979
C+


Fred Fox, Jr., who'd had Richie and Potsie cross over for the high school dance contest, wrote this seventh-season-opener for Happy Days, which was one of 237 (!) HD episodes that Jerry Paris directed, and he also did the "Bachelor Party" episode for L & S's first season, which had Fonzie guest-starring.  So they certainly had experience crossing over with the sister show, but throwing the girls into the middle of the episode for a few minutes doesn't entirely work.  I mean, it makes things more entertaining but it does Flanderize Laverne and Shirley in ways that they hadn't yet been on their own show.

The Cunninghams are going camping, and meanwhile Fonzie wants to hook up (I honestly can't think of a '70s or '50s equivalent phrase) with two stereotypical Swedish farmer's daughters he's never met, even though their father likes to shoot traveling salesman.  And although Richie smooches goodbye with his girlfriend Lori Beth, I guess they have one of those Carmine & Shirley understandings, because she's dating while he's out of town (for three days!) and he has no qualms about smooching with one of the farmer's daughters (the blonde one).  The two sisters are "desperate" because of their overprotective father, who of course shows up with his shotgun and wants Fonzie and Richie to marry Helga and Inga.  How will the guys get out of this one?

"But what I really want to do is direct," and other captions that write themselves.
Fortunately, around the midpoint, wearing a cow suit and fleeing a bull, Richie gets stung by bees and Fonzie twists his ankle, so they are rescued by Laverne and Shirley, who are also camping in the vicinity.  Shirley is happy to play candy-striper, while Laverne definitely has a "bedside manner."  Laverne kisses Fonzie and mounts Richie (who's face-down), and she and Shirley accidentally further injure the guys.  They're a bit shrill and simplified here, without (I know it's weird to type this) any of the nuances that they would get on their own series, where a half hour episode would allow time for "this week's lesson" and other non-slapstick.  That said, they certainly perk up the episode, which otherwise is full of tired gags.  (And the cow-suit routine would be done better and more raunchily five years later in the movie Top Secret!)

The bottle-cappers' brief appearance is not only fortunate for the viewer but for the guys, since Fonzie claims to be engaged to Laverne DeFazio.  We saw him look pretty cozy limping around the room with Shirley (remember, Henry and Cindy used to date), but there is of course no question who he's going to pick of the two female friends that could plausibly get to the farm quickly.  He went out with Laverne on the double date four long seasons ago (maybe two or three years HD-time, since Kennedy is now president) and she would be more willing to lie for him, especially if they could smooch some more.  Richie catches on and claims to be "practically married" to Shirley Feeney.  And we know he enjoyed both of their dates, although the second one was two seasons ago.  (Note that Joanie is now almost 17, and I swear she was 12 or 13 in Season One, but Happy Days was ridiculously retconned by this point, ask brother Chuck.)  Richie is sent to go get the girls, while Fonzie must remain in front of the shotgun and the two disappointed Swedish girls, who were totally up for marriage to strangers.

Part 2 would of course see the return of Vicki Frederick (who two months later would be Sutra on the infamous Mork & Mindy Raquel Welch two-parter) as Helga and April Clough as Inga, as well as F. William Parker as their papa Vernon.  Parker was only 38 at the time, making him eight and twelve years older than his "daughters."  (And one year older than Penny Marshall, although she still looked cute and sexy at this point, again showing off her legs in shorts.)

Angel Face

Once again, I'm reluctantly writing another non-obituary for a star of Laverne & Shirley .  Three times in just over three years is ...