Freeman (TV pilot) explained

Genre:Sitcom
Creator:Bernie Kukoff, Jeff Harris, Paul Mooney
Director:Hal Cooper
Country:United States
Language:English
Network:American Broadcasting Company
Executive Producer:Bernie Kukoff, Jeff Harris, Paul Mooney[1]
Company:Kukoff-Harris Productions, Harry Stoones Inc.
Runtime:22–24 minutes

Freeman is an American sitcom pilot created by Bernie Kukoff, Jeff Harris, and Paul Mooney. It premiered on ABC on June 19, 1976, but was not picked up for a full series.

Plot

Freeman revolves around the conflict between the Wainrights, a middle class, New York-based family which has seemingly found its dream house in an affluent Connecticut suburb, and Freeman, the house's recalcitrant, African American erstwhile inhabitant, who just happens to be a ghost.[2]

Cast

Reception

Variety critic Bob Knight (aka Bok)[3] commends the cast as a whole, while viewing Gilliam's performance in the title role—not to mention the ubiquitous "trick" camerawork—as both overdone and underwhelming.

Gilliam appeared without his upper teeth and gave the role an overplayed Fred Sanford flavor, so the pilot had a strained sound despite good playing by Beverly Sanders, Linden Chiles and Jimmy Baio [...] Sanders was especially telling with her timing and delivery. Melinda Dillon as a late-arriving ghost-finder had the choicest material in her brief appearance and made the most of it [... T]he standard now-you-see-him, now-you-don't camera tricks were worked overtime, with no indication that that threadbare gimmick could keep "Freeman" going very long as a series.[4]
Almost diametrically opposed is the take offered by Michigan Chronicle columnist Bill Lane.
Stu Gilliam scored mightily in his television film role of 'Freeman,' the ghost who became a permanent guest in the home of a white family. A lot of laughs when Gilliam cracked that oldtimer on the show, 'Don't let the doorknob hitcha where the bulldog bitcha.' And just think, Gilliam got the role when the producers, calling on Godfrey Cambridge, found the latter bedded down with the flu.[5]

Sadly for all those connected with the show, it was Variety's view that evidently prevailed at ABC; no additional episodes—nor even news—of this prospective series ever surfaced.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Goldberg, Lee (1991). Unsold TV Pilots: The Almost Complete Guide to Everything You Never Saw on TV, 1955-1990. Secaucus, NJ: Carol Publishing Group. p. 71. .
  2. https://www.newspapers.com/image/?clipping_id=97904155 "Comic Sparks Fly on 'Freeman'"
  3. Landry, Robert J. (January 9, 1974). "Variety's Four-Letter Signatures, The Dog-Tags of Its Critics". Variety. p. 26. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  4. Bok (June 23, 1976). "Television Reviews: Freeman". Variety.
  5. Lane, Bill (July 10, 1976). "Bill Lane in Hollywood". Michigan Chronicle. p. A8. Retrieved March 19, 2022.