Showing posts with label Fred Willard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Willard. Show all posts

Monday, October 14, 2019

"Good Time Girls"

"Good Time Girls"
Related imageNovember 30, 1976
C+

Greg Antonacci returns as Hector, here unable to take a hint when the girls repeatedly reject him.  As revenge, he writes their names and number on the restroom wall of a pool hall.  This leads to them being attacked by two leering accountants.  Yet, they are unable to be honest with Hector and end up telling him that they don't want to lose him as a friend by going out with him.

The best part of this episode is of course when Laverne and Shirley dress in drag, in what turns out to be Lenny and Squiggy's clothes, to take their phone number off the wall.  I like the guys' guesses on who these two strangely familiar fellas are, and then Squiggy reacting as if he's been caught exposed by having women in a men's room.  Note that Lucille honks offscreen and we learn, one, she's divorced, and two, she's still planning to take Carmine to Europe.

Fred Willard this time plays the Man in Bathroom, with a fake mustache.  Bruce Kimmel, who's Scott, would have two later roles.  Stephen Nathan, who would write three later episodes, appears onscreen as Kevin.  Laura Levine would write one other episode.

Monday, September 23, 2019

"Dog Day Blind Dates"

Image result for "Dog Day Blind Dates""Dog Day Blind Dates"
March 9, 1976
B-

This episode's title references Dog Day Afternoon, which came out the previous September, and the girls are held up at the Pizza Bowl by bumbling crooks that they're on a double date with.  The pizzeria has closed early at the dates' request, but Lenny & Squiggy linger, adding some humor in an uneven episode.  Also, when Laverne thinks that the crooks will kill them, she suggests that she and Shirley "vo-de-oh-do-do" (a term that was already established on the series at this point) with Lenny & Squiggy so as not to die as virgins.  This despite the fact that Laverne earlier described the guys as friends she wasn't proud to admit to.  Still, it's a contrast to Shirley, who won't pet on the first date and doesn't want to lie on the floor next to Lenny, although she has to when it's "boy-girl-boy-girl."

I think this the first episode where I didn't hear Williams trying to fit in with a bad Northeast-Coast accent, as if being from New York or New Jersey equates with being low-class.  (Watch the '50s-set "skating rink" scene of The Brady Variety Hour from November of that year for an egregious example.)  And it's as good a time as any to say that I'd forgotten that the girls' last names appear onscreen this season, as if the show is really called Laverne DeFazio & Shirley Feeney.  Good thing they didn't continue this with Mork from Ork & Mindy McConnell.

This is Dale McRaven's only L & S script, although I did recognize the name from Mork & Mindy.  James Burrows would direct seven more episodes.

Bo Kaprall is a nameless Cop here but would play Officer Norman Hughes six times in the next couple years.  Guich Koock, who plays Buck, would go on to Carter Country, where his accent would make more sense, although Buck admits he's not actually from Arizona.  (The "Phoenix"/"Kleenex" rhyme is the main thing I remember about this episode, so I guess they couldn't make him Texan or something.)  And Fred Willard is instantly recognizable as Charles here; he would be a nameless Man in Bathroom later that year.

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 ...