Hello, Larry | |
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Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Dick Bensfield Perry Grant |
Written by | Dick Bensfield Perry Grant George Tibbles |
Directed by |
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Starring | McLean Stevenson Joanna Gleason Kim Richards George Memmoli Donna Wilkes Krista Errickson Ruth Brown Meadowlark Lemon Fred Stuthman John Femia |
Composers | John LaSalle Tom Smith |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 38 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Dick Bensfield Perry Grant George Tibbles |
Producers | Rita Dillon Woody Kling Patricia Fass Palmer George Tibbles |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company | T.A.T. Communications Company |
Original release | |
Network | NBC |
Release | January 26, 1979 (1979-01-26) – April 30, 1980 (1980-04-30) |
Related | |
Diff'rent Strokes |
Hello, Larry is an Americansitcom television series created byDick Bensfield andPerry Grant, starringMcLean Stevenson. It aired onNBC from January 26, 1979, to April 30, 1980. Its broadcast run consisted of 38 episodes over two seasons.
WhenHello, Larry was created, Bensfield and Grant were veteran writers with résumés going back toThe Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet andThe Andy Griffith Show. They had also worked onOne Day at a Time, aCBS sitcom about a single woman raising two teenage daughters alone. The show was produced byWoody Kling and directed by Doug Rogers.
Larry Alder (McLean Stevenson) is a radio talk show host who leftLos Angeles after beingdivorced, and moved toPortland, Oregon, with his two teenage daughters, Diane (played in the first season byDonna Wilkes and in the second season byKrista Errickson) and Ruthie (played byKim Richards). The supporting cast consisted of producer Morgan (Joanna Gleason) and engineer Earl (George Memmoli).[1]
The first five episodes, shown at a later primetime slot, centered on Larry at the radio station and his smart-aleck remarks to callers. In these early episodes, Larry is described byFred Silverman as "a buffoon, the cliché TV father".[2] After that point, a "complete turnaround in the direction of the series" was made, concurrent with a move to an earlier time slot, to put the emphasis on the relationship between Larry and his daughters.[2]
In its new earlier timeslot,Hello, Larry aired immediately after NBC's hitDiff'rent Strokes. In the hope of raising the popularity ofHello, Larry, crossovers were created between the two series. By episode 10, "The Trip: Part 2", Larry Alder and Phillip Drummond were revealed to be old Army buddies (with Drummond's company becoming the new owners of Larry's radio station).[3] Some contemporary articles have incorrectly stated thatHello, Larry was aspin-off ofDiff'rent Strokes, with the crossover episodes constituting abackdoor pilot;[4] in fact, theDiff'rent Strokes episodes were broadcast whileHello, Larry was already on the air, and the relationship between Larry and Drummond was the result ofretconning in both series.
The trend to focus on Larry and his daughters continued into the second season, with Morgan and Earl being seen less frequently. The show's opening theme lyrics in the second season were changed; the line “the calls are comin' in, you'd better start to grin” in reference to Larry's radio career gave way to “you're raising them just fine, but keep an open mind” when the stories became more focused on the Alder household.[5]
In addition, various supporting characters were added in the apartment building where Larry and the girls lived; these included a neighbor, Leona (Ruth Brown), who usually did not approve of Larry's parenting; Tommy (John Femia), a purportedly worldly wise teenage boy who became a love interest for Ruthie; Larry's widowed father (Fred Stuthman), who moved in with the younger Alders; and formerHarlem Globetrotters playerMeadowlark Lemon as himself, running a local sporting-goods store in the series (believed to be an attempt to boost ratings with African-American audiences who had tuned in forDiff'rent Strokes).[6] None of these changes, nor a two-part episode in which Larry's ex-wife Marian (Shelley Fabares) tried to reconcile with him, were enough to save the show.
Season | Time slot (ET) |
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1978–79 | Friday at 10:00 pm(Episode 1) Friday at 9:30 pm(Episodes 2–5) Friday at 8:30 pm(Episodes 6–14) |
1979–80 | Friday at 8:30 pm(Episodes 1, 3–6) Friday at 8:00 pm(Episode 2) Wednesday at 9:30 pm(Episodes 7–24) |
Hello, Larry was greeted by viewers who had high expectations based on series star McLean Stevenson's previousM*A*S*H association, and was launched the year after Fred Silverman, a man known to launch television hits, had just joined NBC as its president and CEO. By January 1978, Stevenson already had two unsuccessful sitcoms under his belt since leavingM*A*S*H—The McLean Stevenson Show, which also aired on NBC, in 1976–77, andIn the Beginning, which aired at the beginning of the 1978 season onCBS.
The show immediately gained a reputation as a poorly written, unfunny sitcom. A month into its run,Hello, Larry was being lampooned by Johnny Carson on the show's own network;[7] and even after its early retooling toward the relationship with Larry and his daughters, the series was not gaining a strong ratings following. Television reviewers were baffled atHello, Larry's renewal for the 1979 season, citing its poor writing and a shallow supporting cast.[6]
Hello, Larry was described as a television series that (depending on the writing emphasis) tried either to be offensive or funny, and accomplished neither.[6] It was negatively compared withWKRP in Cincinnati for its angle in radio and the early emphasis on racy humor, and then withOne Day at a Time as writing shifted to Larry bringing up his daughters as a single father.[8]Hello, Larry was canceled in the Spring of 1980 after its second season, having aired 38 episodes.
TV Guide ranked the series No. 12 on their "50 Worst Shows of All Time" list in 2002.[9] The show has been used as shorthand for badness. In one example, from 2000,Arianna Huffington said that "John McCain's return to theSenate will be the chilliest reception for a war hero since McLean Stevenson tried to talk his way back ontoM*A*S*H afterHello, Larry tanked."[10]