An upper-class white man adopts two street-wise black boys.Hilarity Ensues.
Diff'rent Strokes (1978–86) made a star ofGary Coleman as Arnold Jackson, the younger of the two boys. Todd Bridges was his older brother Willis and Conrad Bain was the proper white man, Mr. Drummond. As one of NBC's few late-'70s hits, it quickly launched a spinoff inThe Facts of Life the following year.First Lady Nancy Reagan made a guest appearance in aVery Special Episode about drug abuse, and ABC'sWebster was aFollow the Leader rival. Ironically,Diff'rent Strokes itself actually moved to ABC when it got canceled by NBC. The theme was co-written and performed by Alan Thicke.
Unfortunately, this show is best remembered now both for itsspecial episodes and theunhappy fates of its three leading kid actors (Coleman, Bridges, and Dana Plato, who played Mr. Drummond's daughter); it's such stories that theFormer Child Star trope is built upon. Coleman's is parodied in the musicalAvenue Q.
Arnold: "Weren't you a kid once?" |
"You're a lily-livered weak sister with no guts!" |