Posts with tag jane curtin
Posted Jun 12th 2008 9:41AM by Jane Boursaw
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Celebrities, Reality-Free, Private Eye Shows

Remember
Susan Saint James? She was honored this week with a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame, and it's about time, I say. The 61-year-old actress is pictured here, with husband Dick Ebersol.
California First Lady
Maria Shriver was on hand to compliment Saint James for her decades of volunteer work to support the Special Olympics and people with disabilities.
Saint James told ET, "When your name gets called, it's indelible, it's permanent. It's just a compliment of the highest order."
So let's go back a few years to honor this talented actress (this is where
David Letterman starts stroking his chin and the picture gets fuzzy)...
Continue reading Susan Saint James gets a star - VIDEO
Posted Apr 17th 2008 1:42PM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Saturday Night Live, Video, Retro Squad, TV Squad Lists, Reality-Free
As AOL Television continues their look at the 50 Best TV Comedies -- Ever with numbers 30-21, we here at TV Squad are also looking at television comedy, but with a slightly skewed difference. Last week, we took a look at the numerous stand-up comedians who became sitcom stars. In this installment we look at one particular TV comedy that made stars out of a number of actors and actresses.
I'm talking about NBC's Saturday Night Live. Since its premiere in 1975, the late-night sketch show has given us a slew of actors and actresses who have made the move onto both the big and small screen. Sometimes the move was towards more comedy, sometimes it was a switch to more serious roles, other times it was a little bit of both. And, while many of those who made it are still in the public eye these days, some of the greatest of those who came from Studio 8H had their careers snuffed out way too early.
The amount of those who rose to the top varied from cast to cast. Some casts, like the very first one, produced a whole slew of talent who went on to bigger and better things. Others, like the first casts from 1980-85 and the mid-1990s, produced very little in the way of big stars.
Continue reading The Not Ready for Prime-Time Players who made it to the big time: 1975-1985
Posted Mar 20th 2007 3:05PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, ABC, OpEd, Celebrities, Pickups and Renewals

Of all the original Not Ready for Prime Time Players from
Saturday Night Live, who knew that Jane Curtin was going to be the one to have the most consistent and sustainable entertainment career? Think about it: John Belushi and Gilda Radner are dead, Lorraine Newman and Garrett Morris have fallen off the face of the earth, and Chevy Chase and Dan Aykroyd show up as guest actors on TV from time to time, but that's about it. Curtin, on the other hand, had hit sitcoms in the '80s (
Kate & Allie) and the '90s (
Third Rock from the Sun) and continues to get interesting roles in new shows, the last of which was the crazy mother in last year's failed ABC comedy
Crumbs.
Well, now
she's back in another ABC comedy pilot, called
Nice Girls Don't Get the Corner Office. She plays the feared assistant of a nice woman who tries to make it in corporate America (Jayma Mays). I can see her in that kind of role; Curtin has always been good at playing the prim and proper woman who has a streak of something sexy or mean or evil underneath.
Continue reading Jane Curtin is back with new ABC comedy
Posted Jan 4th 2007 9:40AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, TV on DVD, OpEd
This review is for the Canadian DVD release, which has season 1 (6 episodes) and season 2 (22 episodes). The American version only includes the first season (though the American release does have two things missing from the Canadian version: an interview with Susan Saint James and writer Bill Persky, and a gag reel).
Kate & Allie is one of my favorite shows. Yeah, I know, what's a 41 year-old guy doing loving some show about two divorced women raising their families together? The show was not only well-written and cast (Susan Saint James, Jane Curtin, Allison Smith, Ari Meyers, and Fred Koehler), but it had a lot of smart things to say about family, relationships, and living in New York City (the show was one of the few sitcoms actually filmed in New York, at the Ed Sullivan Theater).
Continue reading DVD Review: Kate & Allie, seasons 1 and 2
Posted Feb 18th 2006 11:17AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, ABC, Programming
Crumbs' two week hiatus just got
extended indefinitely by ABC. The new Fred Savage comedy was off the schedule during the Olympics but now it doesn't
appear to be returning anytime soon. Instead, ABC will stretch next week's episode of
Dancing with the Stars
to two hours. The network has scheduled movies,
Sweet Home Alabama and
Bringing Down the House, on
the following Thursdays, March 2 and 9. Then, ABC launches the Simon Cowell competition
American Inventor and,
starting March 23,
Extreme Makeover: Home Edition comes to Thursdays.
It's actually a bit of a
surprise that
Crumbs is shelved. It's the highest-rated comedy on ABC these days, even ahead of
The George
Lopez Show. There are eight episodes of
Crumbs that are left to air so maybe we'll see it back on the
schedule this summer. Or on iTunes.
[
The Futon Critic]
Posted Jan 31st 2006 11:16AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, TV on DVD
A couple of months ago I told you that Universal was putting one
episode - yeah, that's one as in "one less than two" - of Kate & Allie was going to be
included in the season one set for Gimme A Break! Well, now Universal has announced that the entire first season of Kate
& Allie will be released on May 2! No word yet on extras or box art.
The first season was only six episodes long, but still, I'm a happy camper today.
Posted Jan 13th 2006 8:58AM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, ABC, Programming, OpEd
Crumbs is a show that is trying
really hard to be something different than your standard sitcom. The problem is, it's probably trying a little
too hard.
Here's the gist: Suzanne Crumb (Jane Curtin) is just getting out of a mental health care
facility after having a nervous breakdown. She's not quite all the way back but has decided to leave. Her son Mitch
(Fred Savage), a famous "movie writer" who is in the closet -- he's even sleeping with his therapist -- comes
home to Connecticut to help her ease back into everyday life. He's also returned to mend fences with his brother Jody
(Eddie McClintock), who hasn't forgiven him for running away after their brother Patrick died in a boating accident,
the basis for Mitch's hit movie. Why did Suzanne lose her marbles? Because her husband Billy (William Devane) left her
for a younger woman -- a restaurant reviewer who is now having their baby -- and abandoned the restaurant he ran
with Jody, who is the chef.
Continue reading Crumbs: Pilot