Cleghorne! Explained

Genre:Sitcom
Starring:
Composer:Tom Rizzo
Country:United States
Language:English
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:15 (3 unaired)
Executive Producer:
  • Steve Pepoon
  • David Silverman
  • Stephen Sustaric
Producer:
Runtime:22 - 24 minutes
Company:
Network:The WB

Cleghorne! is an American sitcom television series starring comedian Ellen Cleghorne that aired on The WB from September 10 to December 17, 1995. Garrett Morris and Alaina Reed Hall costarred as Ellen's character's parents, Sidney and Lena, with Steve Bean, Cerita Monet Bickelmann, Michael Ralph and Sherri Shepherd.

Among the first batch of original programming ordered by the newly launched WB network, the series was put on hiatus after 12 episodes in December 1995. The show was later cancelled with three episodes left unaired.

Synopsis

The series focuses on the life of Ellen Carlson (Cleghorne), a single mom who is raising her nine-year-old daughter Akeyla on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Comedic situations arise as Ellen tries to balance raising her daughter, running a local production company in SoHo, and the interference her overbearing parents, Sidney and Lena, who live next door.

Cast

Main

Recurring

Development

Cleghorne was the third black woman to be credited on Saturday Night Live (1991–1995), after Yvonne Hudson and Danitra Vance, and the first woman of color to appear on the series as a full-fledged cast member for longer than a single season.[1] She left to focus on her starring role in her own sitcom, Cleghorne!.[2] In 1995, Cleghorne! was among the first batch of original programming ordered by the newly launched WB network, then run by former Fox executives who had worked on shows like In Living Color, in which Cleghorne had also appeared.[1] The sitcom was also the first time two Saturday Night Live cast members of color (Cleghorne and original SNL cast member Morris) had worked together on a show after appearing on SNL.[1] The series was also the first television acting job for Shepherd,[3] who would later appear again with Morris on another WB sitcom The Jamie Foxx Show, and would eventually be known for her roles in the sitcoms Less than Perfect and 30 Rock, and as co-host of the ABC talk show The View.[4] [5]

Broadcast

Cleghorne! debuted on The WB on September 10, 1995, but was put on hiatus in December 1995 having aired 12 episodes.[2] [6] The show was later cancelled with three episodes left unaired.[2] [1] Cleghorne later said, "I don't think I was ready. In terms of being strong and saying, 'I can write, this is what I do,' and feel confident in that. And to be able to say, 'No, this does not work, this works better.'"[1]

Reception

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Cleghorne! has an approval ratings of 40% based on 5 reviews, with an average score of 0.85/10. Slate called Cleghorne! "part of a chapter in television history, a rare moment when black audience demographics were taken seriously by networks and advertisers. Aside from the 1970s, this period [in the 1990s] featured one of the highest concentrations of black scripted programming ever."[1]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: How SNL Ellen Cleghorne Laid the Groundwork for a Generation of Black Comedians. Andy. Hoglund. December 13, 2018. Slate. June 11, 2020.
  2. Web site: Saturday Night's Children: Ellen Cleghorne (1991-1995). Megh. Wright. August 14, 2012. Vulture. June 12, 2020. limited. https://web.archive.org/web/20190706112225/https://www.vulture.com/2012/08/saturday-nights-children-ellen-cleghorne-1991-1995.html. July 6, 2019. live.
  3. Web site: Sherri Shepherd on Overcoming Fear and if She Would Ever Go Back to The View. Teddy. Grant. August 27, 2018. Ebony. June 12, 2020.
  4. Web site: New ABC sitcom is Less Than Perfect. Scott D.. Pierce. October 1, 2002. Deseret News. June 12, 2020.
  5. Web site: Actress Sherri Shepherd Talks 30 Rock, Plan D, and Her Upcoming Stand-Up Show at Tempe Center for the Arts. Katrina. Montgomery. February 7, 2013. Phoenix New Times. June 12, 2020.
  6. Variety staff . WB Net Revamps Sunday Slate . . December 17, 1995 . June 3, 2020.