Brand New Life Explained

Creator:Chris Carter
Director:Eric Laneuville
Steve Robman
Don Weis
Starring:Barbara Eden
Don Murray
Shawnee Smith
Byron Thames
Jennie Garth
Alison Sweeney
David Tom
Eric Foster
Theme Music Composer:Steve Tyrell
Opentheme:"Brand New Life" performed by Jill Colucci
Country:United States
Language:English
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:6 (including the pilot)
Producer:Eric Laneuville
George W. Perkins
Executive Producer:Chris Carter
Runtime:120 minutes (pilot)
60 minutes (per episode)
Company:Walt Disney Television
NBC Productions
Network:NBC

Brand New Life is an American comedy-drama television series starring Barbara Eden and Don Murray and produced by Walt Disney Television and NBC Productions that aired on NBC as part of The Magical World of Disney during the 1989–90 television season.[1]

The series originally premiered as a two-hour television movie pilot entitled Brand New Life: The Honeymooners on September 18, 1989, as part of NBC Monday Night at the Movies and its ratings success led to the commissioning of a weekly series. Afterwards, the show's regular timeslot was on Sunday nights on NBC's The Magical World of Disney from October 1, 1989, to April 15, 1990. The series also marked Barbara Eden's first television series since Harper Valley PTA (1981–1982) and is also her third collaboration with Don Murray, having previously starred together in the television films Return of the Rebels (1981) and The Stepford Children (1987).

The theme song "Brand New Life" was written by Steve Tyrell and performed by Jill Colucci.

Synopsis

Barbara McCray (Barbara Eden) is a struggling divorced mother of three teenagers working part-time as a waitress while studying to become a court reporter, who meets and marries Roger Gibbons (Don Murray), a wealthy attorney and widower with three teenagers of his own. Together, they set up housekeeping in his Bel Air home and stories follow the comedic and dramatic incidents of blending two families with contrasting social backgrounds.

Cast

Episode list

TV movie pilot

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Series

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External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Television. The New York Times.