Brady Bunch Episodes
The Brady Bunch ran from September 26, 1969, through August 30, 1974.
In this time 117 half-hour episodes were produced. Guest stars include
Wes Parker, Don Drysdale, Deacon Jones, Joe Namath, Desi Arnaz, Jr.,
Davy Jones, Imogene Coca, Jim Backus, James McDivitt, Hal Smith,
Marian Ross, Herbert Anderson, Abbe Lane, Gigi Perreau, E.G. Marshall,
Jackie Coogan, Paul Winchell, Don Ho, Kym Karath, Hal Peary, and Melissa
Sue Anderson.
THE CANONICAL BRADY BUNCH EPISODE GUIDE
Copyright (C) 1994 by Tony L. Hill
(tony.hill@msbbs.mn.org)
Revision 1.01, 20 Feb 1994
May be distributed freely for non-commercial purposes.
(number at left is airdate order; number in brackets is
production code number; dates given are original air dates in the
United States)
PILOT
1. "The Honeymoon," 26 Sep 1969 [0]
Mike and Carol tie the knot. As the world
now knows, it's how they became the Brady bunch.
Barry Williams reports that shooting began for the
pilot on his 14th birthday, which works out to
September 30, 1968. This episode may have led to
Dabbs Greer being typecast; in addition to playing
the officiant here (and marrying Bobby and Tracy in
"The Bradys"), he played the Rev. Alden on the
long-running "Little House on the Prairie" and now
plays a minister on "Picket Fences."
FIRST SEASON
NOTE: The following six episodes were filmed as a group rather
than serially due to Florence Henderson's nightclub schedule.
2. "Dear Libby," 3 Oct 1969 [1]
Suspicions abound when a letter appears in an
advice column which suits America's favorite
blended family to a tee.
3. "Eenie, Meenie, Mommy, Daddy," 10 Oct 1969 [5]
Cindy is torn by having to choose which
parent to see her play the fairy princess in a
school play.
4. "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore," 17 Oct 1969 [6]
Now that Mike has a wife, Alice decides she's
no longer needed. The family convinces her
otherwise.
5. "Katchoo," 24 Oct 1969 [4]
Jan appears to be allergic to Tiger, the
family dog. (The original Tiger was killed during
the filming of this episode.)
6. "A Clubhouse Is Not a Home," 31 Oct 1969 [2]
The boys are reluctant to share their
clubhouse with their new sisters.
7. "Kitty Karry-All Is Missing," 7 Nov 1969 [3]
Bobby is accused of stealing Cindy's favorite
doll.
8. "A-Camping We Will Go," 14 Nov 1969 [12]
The boys bristle at the prospect of Carol and
the girls coming on their traditional all-male
camping trip.
9. "Sorry, Right Number," 21 Nov 1969 [9]
Fed up with rising phone bills, Mike has a
pay phone installed in the family room. Allan
Melvin makes his first appearance as Sam Franklin.
10. "Every Boy Does It Once," 5 Dec 1969 [14]
Bobby decides that Carol is an evil
stepmother and runs away.
11. "Vote for Brady," 12 Dec 1969 [13]
Greg and Marcia compete for class president.
12. "The Voice of Christmas," 19 Dec 1969 [15]
Santa Claus, played by Hal "Otis the Drunk"
Smith, promises Cindy that Carol's laryngitis will
be cured in time for Christmas.
13. "Is There a Doctor in the House," 26 Dec 1969 [10]
Trouble ensues when the Brady children each
want a doctor of the same gender as themselves.
Marian "Happy Days" Ross and Herbert "Dennis the
Menace" Anderson appear as the pediatricians.
14. "Father of the Year," 2 Jan 1970 [7]
Marcia enters Mike in a newspaper contest,
only to incur his wrath in the process.
15. "54-40 and Fight," 9 Jan 1970 [11]
The kids can't agree as to how to use their
accumulated books of trading stamps.
16. "Mike's Horror-Scope," 16 Jan 1970 [16]
Mike deals with a perfidy-inspiring client.
Guest appearance by Abbe Lane.
17. "The Undergraduate," 23 Jan 1970 [17]
Greg is in love with his math teacher. Guest
appearances by Gigi Perreau as the teacher and Wes
Parker as himself.
18. "Tiger! Tiger!," 30 Jan 1970 [19]
Tiger goes on paternity leave.
19. "The Big Sprain," 6 Feb 1970 [21]
Alice sprains her ankle while Carol is out of
town, leaving Mike to manage the household.
20. "Brace Yourself," 13 Feb 1970 [20]
Marcia is chagrined at having to wear braces,
especially after she suspects a beau dumps her
therefor.
21. "The Hero," 20 Feb 1970 [22]
Peter is egoistic after saving a small girl
in a toy store.
22. "The Possible Dream," 27 Feb 1970 [24]
Marcia's diary inadvertently winds up in the
hands of Desi Arnaz Jr., one of its subjects.
23. "To Move or Not To Move," 6 Mar 1970 [18]
The kids conspire to prevent their house from
being sold. (Your editor once pulled similar
machinations.)
24. "The Grass Is Always Greener," 13 Feb 1970 [8]
Mike and Carol switch roles for a day to
settle whose jobs are hardest. Robert Reed really
slipped on an egg as Mike did while this was being
rehearsed.
25. "Lost Locket, Found Locket," 20 Mar 1970 [23]
Jan receives a mystery locket in the mail,
which disappears mysteriously as well.
SECOND SEASON
26. "The Dropout," 25 Sep 1970 [26]
Greg decides to drop out of school to devote
himself to baseball. Guest appearance by Don
Drysdale as himself.
27. "The Babysitters," 2 Oct 1970 [27]
Mike and Carol work themselves into a frenzy
the first time they leave the kids alone.
28. "The Slumber Caper," 9 Oct 1970 [30]
Marcia is accused of maligning her teacher,
causing her slumber party to be cancelled. When
the party is held anyway, the boys make trouble.
Guest appearance by E.G. Marshall as the school
principal and Florence Henderson's and Robert
Reed's daughters as Marcia's friends.
29. "The Un-Underground Movie," 16 Oct 1970 [29]
Greg casts the family as denizens of colonial
Plymouth, Mass. for a school-project movie.
30. "Going, Going ... Steady," 23 Oct 1970 [25]
Marcia gets her first boyfriend.
31. "Call Me Irresponsible," 30 Oct 1970 [33]
Greg gets a job as a flunky at Mike's
architectural firm and screws up big-time.
32. "The Treasure of Sierra Avenue," 6 Nov 1970 [28]
The boys find $1100 in a wallet and are
confounded by the notion of having to share it with
the girls.
33. "A Fistful of Reasons," 13 Nov 1970 [35]
Peter takes on a bully who taunts Cindy. A
Brady classic. "Baby talk, baby talk, it's a
wonder you can walk."
34. "The Not-So-Ugly Duckling," 20 Nov 1970 [38]
Jan finds herself unattractive.
35. "The Tattletale," 4 Dec 1970 [32]
Cindy confounds nearly all the rest of the
cast with her snitching. Susan Olsen's most-hated
episode.
36. "What Goes Up ..." 11 Dec 1970 [36]
Bobby develops and conquers a fear of heights
in 22 minutes.
37. "Confessions, Confessions," 18 Dec 1970 [31]
The rest of the kids try to take the rap for
Peter breaking Carol's favorite vase. "Mom always
says, 'don't play ball in the house.'"
38. "The Impractical Joker," 1 Jan 1971 [34]
Jan pranks out the whole cast, but it
backfires when Greg's borrowed mouse becomes a
casualty.
39. "Where There's Smoke," 8 Jan 1971 [41]
Carol joins a crusade against smoking after
Greg is caught smoking. This is the first musical
episode. Barry Williams claims he started smoking
as a result of this episode.
40. "Will the Real Jan Brady," 15 Jan 1971 [42]
Jan tries to change her personality with a
brown wig.
41. "The Drummer Boy," 22 Jan 1971 [40]
Bobby's drums drive the family to dementia;
meanwhile, Peter's masculinity is called into
question by his singing. Guest appearance by
Deacon Jones as himself.
42. "Coming Out Party," 29 Jan 1971 [37]
Jan tells the family she's a lesbian. No,
Cindy and Carol develop tonsillitis. (As Barry
Williams points out, the doc uses the same tongue
depressor on both.)
43. "Our Son, the Man," 5 Feb 1971 [43]
Greg puts childhood behind him by hustling
older women, wearing shades, and turning Mike's den
into a psychedelic parlor.
44. "The Liberation of Marcia Brady," 12 Feb 1971 [44]
Marcia joins the heretofore all-male Frontier
Scouts, while Peter does likewise with the
Sunflower Girls.
45. "Lights Out," 19 Feb 1971 [45]
Cindy fears the dark after seeing a
magician's assistant disappear. Later Peter does
the same to her in his act.
46. "The Winner," 26 Feb 1971 [46]
Bobby is dejected when he's the only family
member to never have won anything. Hal "Santa
Claus" Smith makes his second Brady appearance as
the TV host.
47. "Double Parked," 5 Mar 1971 [47]
The women and children rally to save a
neighborhood park while Mike works to destroy it.
Jackie Coogan makes a brief appearance.
48. "Alice's September Song," 12 Mar 1971 [48]
Alice's old flame shows up and tries to bilk
her.
49. "Tell It Like It Is," 26 Mar 1971 [39]
Carol writes a magazine article about the
family which encounters mixed reviews.
THIRD SEASON
50. "Ghost Town USA," 17 Sep 1971 [49]
The Bradys head for the Grand Canyon and are
held prisoner in a ghost town by an old prospector,
played by Jim Backus.
51. "Grand Canyon or Bust," 24 Sep 1971 [50]
The Bradys escape from the ghost town and
arrive at the Grand Canyon. Bobby and Cindy wander
off.
52. "The Brady Braves," 1 Oct 1971 [51]
Bobby and Cindy encounter an Indian boy. His
grandfather, portrayed by Jay Silverheels, honors
the family in a tribal ceremony.
53. "The Wheeler-Dealer," 8 Oct 1971 [53]
Greg buys a lemon car from a slick friend.
54. "My Sister, Benedict Arnold," 15 Oct 1971 [57]
Greg feels Marcia has betrayed him by dating
his athletic rival. Greg responds in kind.
55. "The Personality Kid," 22 Oct 1971 [54]
Peter comes to conclude that he has no
personality. He tries on a bunch of others.
56. "Juliet Is The Sun," 29 Oct 1971 [52]
Marcia lands the part of Juliet in a school
play and becomes possessed by Shannen Doherty.
57. "And Now a Word from Our Sponsor," 5 Nov 1971 [59]
The Bradys star in a soap commercial. Paul
Winchell guests as the quirky director.
58. "The Private Ear," 12 Nov 1971 [58]
Peter upsets the bunch by bugging
conversations with Mike's tape recorder. (Little
did we know this was going on for real in the White
House. If only Dick were a Brady fan...)
59. "Her Sister's Shadow," 19 Nov 1971 [55]
Eve Plumb's career will forever be
encapsulated by those four words: Marcia, Marcia,
Marcia, MARCIA! Twenty years later, Melanie
Hutsell built a career on the same line.
60. "Click," 26 Nov 1971 [60]
Greg wins a spot on the football team, but an
injury threatens his career.
61. "Getting Davy Jones," 10 Dec 1971 [63]
Marcia tries to line up Davy Jones to sing at
her school prom. Her teacher is played by Marcia
Wallace, who now plays Bart Simpson's teacher.
62. "The Not-So-Rose-Colored Glasses," 24 Dec 1971 [61]
Jan causes a catastrophe when she fails to
wear her new glasses.
63. "The Teeter-Totter Caper," 31 Dec 1971 [56]
Thwarted from adult activities, Bobby and
Cindy try to set a new teeter-totter record to show
that kids can do things too.
64. "Big Little Man," 7 Jan 1972 [62]
Bobby is in a twist over his limited stature.
65. "Dough-Re-Mi," 14 Jan 1972 [64]
Greg lands a gig to record his "sure-fire hit
song," but Peter's voice changes unexpectedly.
66. "Jan's Aunt Jenny," 21 Jan 1972 [66]
Jan feels her life is over when she realizes
she may grow up to look like Carol's aunt Jenny,
played by Imogene Coca.
67. "The Big Bet," 28 Jan 1972 [65]
Greg loses a bet to Bobby, who proceeds to
milk Greg to the hilt.
68. "Power of the Press," 4 Feb 1972 [68]
Peter uses his column in the school paper to
butter up his teacher.
69. "Sergeant Emma," 11 Feb 1972 [69]
Alice's cousin Emma takes Alice's place for a
week and runs the family ragged. Emma is also
played by Ann B. Davis.
70. "Cindy Brady, Lady," 18 Feb 1972 [67]
Cindy has a secret admirer, who turns out to
be a surprise even to himself.
71. "My Fair Opponent," 3 Mar 1972 [71]
Marcia plays Henry Higgins to a plain Jane
who then turns on Marcia.
72. "The Fender Benders," 10 Mar 1972 [70]
Jackie Coogan guests as a crusty curmudgeon
who tries to take the family for a ride after a
minor accident with Carol.
FOURTH SEASON
73. "Hawaii Bound," 22 Sep 1972 [72]
The family vacations in Hawaii. Bobby finds
a cursed tiki. Don Ho cameos with a serenade of
"Sweet Someone" for Bobby and Cindy.
74. "Pass the Tabu," 29 Sep 1972 [73]
Greg is nearly obliterated in a surfing
episode, supposedly because of the tiki. A
tarantula crawls on Peter. Barry Williams was in
fact injured filming this scene, and Susan Olsen
almost drowned filming the boat scene.
75. "The Tiki Caves," 6 Oct 1972 [74]
Vincent Price plays a crazy archaeologist who
takes the boys prisoner when they try to return the
tiki to a burial ground in a remote area of Oahu.
76. "Today I Am A Freshman," 13 Oct 1972 [75]
Marcia arrives at high school and puts on
airs. Peter's volcano disrupts Marcia's booster
club meeting.
77. "Cyrano de Brady," 20 Oct 1972 [76]
Peter engages Greg's help in winning the girl
of his dreams, Kerry, but it backfires. They stage
a second drama for the girl's benefit. Kerry is
played by Kym Karath, who played Gretl, the
youngest Von Trapp, in the film "The Sound of
Music."
78. "Fright Night," 27 Oct 1972 [77]
The kids work at scaring each other, but
things turn ugly when they go after Alice.
79. "The Show Must Go On," 3 Nov 1972 [81]
The family performs at a school benefit.
Mike reads "The Day Is Done" with farcical help
from the boys. Carol and Marcia sing "Together
Wherever We Go." Frank DeVol, composer of the
show's theme song, makes a brief appearance.
80. "Jan, the Only Child," 10 Nov 1972 [80]
Jan wills the other children out of her life.
She recants by episode's end.
81. "Career Fever," 17 Nov 1972 [78]
Mike is thrilled to overhear Greg's plan to
become an architect, but Greg can't tell Mike the
truth.
82. "Goodbye, Alice, Hello," 24 Nov 1972 [83]
Alice leaves for good after the kids are
discordial to her. The kids then plot to win her
back.
83. "Greg's Triangle," 8 Dec 1972 [86]
A flirt tries to sway Greg to pick her as
head cheerleader. Marcia is also up for the spot.
Spoiler: Greg picks a third candidate, played by
the current Mrs. Tom Hanks.
84. "Everybody Can't Be George Washington," 22 Dec 1972 [85]
Peter is put off by being cast as Benedict
Arnold in a school play.
85. "Love and the Older Man," 5 Jan 1973 [84]
Marcia develops a crush on her dentist.
86. "Law and Disorder," 12 Jan 1973 [79]
Bobby becomes power-crazy when he is named
hall monitor.
87. "Greg Gets Grounded," 19 Jan 1973 [89]
Greg is banned from driving the Brady cars
after a careless incident, but protests that Mike's
"exact words" did not preclude him from driving
other cars.
88. "Amateur Nite," 26 Jan 1973 [92]
The kids enter a variety show contest after a
cash flow problem forces them to postpone
delivering their parents' anniversary gift. A
Brady classic... "It's a Sunshine Day." The banker
was Hal "The Great Gildersleeve" Peary.
89. "Bobby's Hero," 2 Feb 1973 [87]
Bobby idolizes Jesse James.
90. "The Subject Was Noses," 9 Feb 1973 [90]
One of the epiodes which makes people
embarrassed to be Brady fans. Marcia's nose swells
up and her ego deflates when she gets hit with a
football and Doug Simpson ditches her. Nicholas
Hammond, who played Simpson, went on to become TV's
Spiderman.
91. "How to Succeed in Business," 23 Feb 1973 [91]
Peter loses his first job at Martinelli's
bike shop but fears to tell Mike and Carol. Mike
consoles him, "Why, I've been fired lots of times."
92. "The Great Earring Caper," 2 Mar 1973 [88]
Peter and Cindy set off to find Carol's
missing earrings.
93. "You're Never Too Old," 9 Mar 1973 [93]
The kids try to match Mike's grandfather and
Carol's grandmother, played by Robert Reed and
Florence Henderson.
94. "You Can't Win 'Em All," 16 Mar 1973 [82]
Bobby and Cindy vie to appear on a TV game
show. Chris Knight's father guests as the TV
host.
95. "A Room at the Top," 23 Mar 1973 [94]
Mike and Carol each promise the attic to
Greg and Marcia for a bedroom without consulting
the other.
FIFTH SEASON
96. "Adios, Johnny Bravo," 14 Sep 1973 [98]
Greg is offered a job as a pop music idol.
The last musical episode.
97. "Mail Order Hero," 21 Sep 1973 [96]
Bobby tells his friends he and Joe Namath are
friends and then is called to deliver. Namath
guests as himself.
98. "Snow White and the Seven Bradys," 28 Sep 1973 [95]
The Bradys stage a benefit performance in
their backyard for Cindy's teacher. The teacher is
played by Frances Whitfield, the cast members' on-
set teacher.
99. "Never Too Young," 5 Oct 1973 [99]
Bobby gets his first kiss, but may have been
exposed to the mumps. (Ouch! That could eliminate
the possibility of another generation of Bradys.)
The girl is played by Melissa Sue Anderson, in the
role which got her the audition for "Little House
on the Prairie."
100. "Peter and the Wolf," 12 Oct 1973 [100]
Peter poses as Greg's older friend to impress
Greg's girlfriend. This backfires when their
charade is uncovered in front of Mike and Carol and
a Mexican couple. The actor who played Greg's date
is the sister of Cathie Lee Gifford and not nearly
as annoying.
101. "Getting Greg's Goat," 19 Oct 1973 [101]
Greg secretes the rival school mascot in his
bedroom. The funniest Brady episode ever.
102. "Marcia Gets Creamed," 26 Oct 1973 [104]
Marcia, Jan, and Peter all get jobs in an ice
cream parlor, but major sibling rivalry erupts.
103. "My Brother's Keeper," 2 Nov 1973 [105]
Bobby offers to be Peter's slave after a
small accident.
104. "Quarterback Sneak," 9 Nov 1973 [103]
Greg's football rival dates Marcia in order
to steal Greg's play book.
105. "Try, Try Again," 16 Nov 1973 [106]
Jan finds she's not proficient at anything
she tries.
106. "The Cincinnati Kids," 23 Nov 1973 [102]
The bunch visits a new amusement park in
Ohio. Barry Williams treats this episode
extensively in his book. Robert Reed saved the
cast from a roller coaster accident.
107. "The Elopement," 7 Dec 1973 [97]
The girls become convinced that Alice is
eloping with Sam the butcher.
108. "Miss Popularity," 21 Dec 1973 [109]
Jan enters (and wins) a popularity contest,
but alienates her supporters thereafter.
109. "Kelly's Kids," 4 Jan 1974 [107]
A pilot for a contrived spin-off about a
multicultural blended family starring Ken Berry and
Brooke Bundy. Todd Lookinland (Matt) is Mike's
brother (but you knew that). (Sherwood Schwartz
finally got this on the air in 1985 as "Together We
Stand.")
110. "The Driver's Seat," 11 Jan 1974 [108]
Marcia bets Greg she can outscore him on her
driving test.
111. "Out of This World," 18 Jan 1974 [110]
Peter and Bobby discover UFOs in the
backyard. Astronaut James McDivitt makes a cameo
appearance. Frank and Sadie Delfino, stand-ins for
the four younger children, play the Kaplutians in
Bobby's dream.
112. "Welcome Aboard," 25 Jan 1974 [112]
Robbie Rist joins the cast as Carol's nephew
Oliver. The other kids decide he's a jinx. (Since
stations air them in production code order, the
following episode is shown before this one. This
is perhaps the only case where this problem causes
a continuity error.)
113. "Two Petes in a Pod," 8 Feb 1974 [111]
Chris Knight doubles as Arthur, a student who
looks exactly like him. Hilarity erupts when Pete
and Arthur both make dates for Pete on the same
night.
114. "Top Secret," 15 Feb 1974 [115]
Bobby and Oliver are convinced that Sam the
butcher is a spy.
115. "The Snooperstar," 22 Feb 1974 [113]
Marcia traps Cindy for snooping in her diary.
Cindy is led to believe that she's the new Shirley
Temple. Natalie Schaefer guests as Mike's eccentric
client.
116. "The Hustler," 1 Mar 1974 [114]
Trouble with a B as Bobby takes up pool. Jim
Backus appears as Mike's boss, Mr. Phillips. (See correction to follow.)
Note from Brent Tucker: According to the book "Growing
Up Brady" the boss's name is actually "Mr. Matthews,"
and the official episode number is #116, not #114.
117. "The Hair-Brained Scheme," 8 Mar 1974 [116]
In the final episode, Bobby's hair tonic
turns Greg's hair orange on graduation day. Robert
Reed refused to appear in this episode. Oliver
speaks the last dialogue of the series. And the
word "sex" is used for the only time in the series.
WHO'S WHO IN THE ORIGINAL CAST
Michael Paul Brady .......... Robert Reed
b. Robert Rietz, 19 Oct 1932,
Highland Park, Ill.
d. 12 May 1992, Pasadena, Calif.
Carol Ann Tyler Martin Brady Florence Henderson
b. 14 Feb 1932, Dale, Ind.
Gregory Brady ............... Barry Williams
b. Barry Blenkhorn, 30 Sep 1954,
Santa Monica, Calif.
Marcia Martin Brady ......... Maureen McCormick
b. 5 Aug 1956, Encino (L.A.), Calif.
Peter Brady ................. Christopher Knight
b. 7 Nov 1957, New York, N.Y.
Jan Martin Brady ............ Eve Plumb
b. 29 Apr 1958, Burbank, Calif.
Robert Brady ................ Michael Lookinland
b. 19 Dec 1960. Mt. Pleasant, Utah
Cynthia Martin Brady ........ Susan Olsen
b. 14 Aug 1961, Santa Monica, Calif.
Alice Nelson ................ Ann B. Davis
b. 5 May 1926, Schenectady, N.Y.
THE BRADY BUNCH VARIETY HOUR
28 November 1976
The Bradys reunited for this special which served as the
basis for a second Brady Bunch series. The family had abandoned
the middle class and now starred in a variety show. The special
and series were produced by Sid & Marty Krofft of "H.R. Pufnstuf"
and "Donny and Marie" fame without involvement of the producers
of the original series. The part of Jan was played by Geri
Reischl.
The special didn't have much of a plot, except a few scenes
based around how Mike couldn't act. One horrible scene involved
Peter lying to a girlfriend in order to dump her. Songs included
"Baby Face/Love To Love You Baby" (all); "One" (all); "Corner of
the Sky" (Williams); "What I Did For Love/The Way We Were"
(Henderson); an art song by Tony Randall; and a finale medley of
"Cheek to Cheek," "Dance with Me," "T.S.O.P.," "The Hustle,"
"Attitude Dancing," and "Shake Your Booty." (no lie!)
THE BRADY BUNCH HOUR
1. January 23, 1977
Farrah Fawcett and Lee Majors somehow wind up sleeping in
the Brady living room. The plot centered on getting them to
appear on the Brady show. Songs included "Yankee Doodle Dandy"
(all); "Razzle Dazzle" (the Hudson Brothers. YES, THE HUDSON
BROTHERS!); "Send in the Clowns" (Henderson, of course).
2. February 27, 1977
Bobby hires Milton Berle as the Bradys' resident comedian.
The rest of the family is put off by Berle's rather dated humor
and gags. "So you're giving me the pink slip," Berle concludes.
"We're giving you all the clothes back," deadpans Bobby. Tina
Turner was on hand to sing "Rubber Band Man." ("Private Dancer"
was still seven years away.) Chris Knight sang "Sing" with a
puppet. Henderson sang "Evergreen," and the show ended with a
medley of heart songs. (The organ, not the girl group.)
3. March 4, 1977
Greg decides to move out of the house. Regular irregular
Rip Taylor plays his rental agent. The apartment has a three-
legged couch ("Good for your posture," notes Taylor), which was
multi-function. "Where's the bedroom," asked Greg. "You're in
it," said Taylor. "And where's the bathroom?" "You're in it.
Oh the BATHROOM -- the bathroom is down the hall. And that's all
yours too. Along with a few other people." (I'm not kidding.
The writing was really this bad.) Greg decides to move back
home.
Henderson and Williams sang a tandem, she singing "Traces"
and he singing Eric Carmen's "All By Myself." It was easily the
most poignant moment in this series. Maureen McCormick sang
"Time In A Bottle." The cast sang "Sunny Side Up," and "It's Not
Where You Start." The show ended with a medley of "Make Someone
Happy," "I Want To Be Happy," and "Happy Days."
[The next revision of this guide will contain descriptions of the
other four variety hours as well as the subsequent revivals.
Please send any comments/corrections to tony.hill@msbbs.mn.org or
by earth mail to the address below.]
Tony Hill
PO Box 14995
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55414
Last update: 5 January 95