Julia (1968 TV series) explained

Genre:Sitcom
Camera:Single-camera
Creator:Hal Kanter
Director:Don Ameche
Luther James
Fletcher Markle
Coby Ruskin
Barry Shear
Ezra Stone
Bernard Wiesen
Hollingsworth Morse
Starring:Diahann Carroll
Lloyd Nolan
Marc Copage
Michael Link
Betty Beaird
Lurene Tuttle
Theme Music Composer:Elmer Bernstein
Composer:Jeff Alexander
Elmer Bernstein
Country:United States
Language:English
Num Seasons:3
Num Episodes:86
List Episodes:List of Julia episodes
Executive Producer:Hal Kanter
Producer:Hal Kanter
Company:Hanncarr Productions
Savannah Productions
20th Century-Fox Television
Runtime:24 minutes
Channel:NBC

Julia is an American television sitcom and the first weekly series to star an African-American woman in a non-stereotypical role. Previous television series featured African-American lead characters, but the characters were usually servants. The show starred actress and singer Diahann Carroll, and ran for 86 episodes on NBC from September 17, 1968, to March 23, 1971. The series was produced by Savannah Productions, Inc., Hanncarr Productions, Inc., and 20th Century-Fox Television.

During pre-production, the proposed series title was Mama's Man.[1] The series was among the few situation comedies in the late 1960s that did not use a laugh track; however, 20th Century-Fox Television added one when the series was reissued for syndication and cable rebroadcasts in the late 1980s.

Julia was among the first acquisitions made by ASPiRE for its inaugural season in 2012.[2]

Synopsis

In Julia, Carroll played widowed single mother, Julia Baker (her husband, Army Capt. Baker, an O-1 Bird Dog artillery spotter pilot had been shot down in Vietnam), who was a nurse in a doctor's office at a large aerospace company. The doctor, Morton Chegley, was played by Lloyd Nolan, and Julia's romantic interests by Paul Winfield and Fred Williamson. Julia's son, Corey (Marc Copage) was approximately six to nine years old during the series run. He had barely known his father before he died. Corey's best friend was Earl J. Waggedorn, whom Corey almost always addressed and referred to precisely by his full name, though other characters (particularly his mother) would refer to him simply as Earl. The Waggedorns lived downstairs in the same apartment building, with father, police officer Leonard (Hank Brandt), stay-at-home mother Marie (Betty Beaird), and two sons, Earl and an infant whose first name is never revealed.

The first two seasons included nurse Hannah Yarby (Lurene Tuttle), who left to be married at the beginning of the third season, just as the clinic's manager, Brockmeyer, ordered downsizing — and removal of minorities from employment. (Chegley let Yarby go but kept Julia in defiance of the manager's edict. She was also kept after Chegley reminded Brockmeyer that such a move was a violation of the Civil Rights Act, which was just five years old at that point.) The second and third season included Richard (Richard Steele), a boy some one or two years older than Corey. Chegley's uncle, Dr. Norton Chegley (also played by Lloyd Nolan), made three appearances. The series' first episode was filmed in October 1967, a year before the pilot was picked up.

Cast

Controversy

Although Julia is remembered today as groundbreaking, during its original run the series was derided by many critics for being apolitical and unrealistic. In 1968, Diahann Carroll remarked: "At the moment we're presenting the white Negro. And he has very little Negroness."[4] The Saturday Review's Robert Lewis Shayon wrote that Julia's "plush, suburban setting" was "a far, far cry from the bitter realities of Negro life in the urban ghetto, the pit of America's explosion potential."[5] Gil Scott-Heron's "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" refers to Julia in the same breath as Bullwinkle, implying that the character was something of a cartoon. Ebony published a somewhat more supportive assessment of the program: "As a slice of Black America, Julia does not explode on the TV screen with the impact of a ghetto riot. It is not that kind of show. Since the networks have had a rash of shows dealing with the nation's racial problems, the light-hearted Julia provides welcome relief, if, indeed, relief is even acceptable in these troubled times."[6] The series also came under criticism from African-American viewers for its depiction of a fatherless Black family due to the father's death in American military service. Excluding a Black male lead, it was argued, "rendered the series safer" and "less likely to grapple with issues that might upset white viewers."[7]

Nielsen ratings

Season Rank Rating
1) 1968–1969
  1. 7
24.6
2) 1969–1970
  1. 28
20.1
3) 1970–1971 Not in the Top 30

Cancellation

Julia received good ratings the first two seasons but dropped out of the top 30 most-watched shows during season 3. In 1971, the series was canceled, reportedly because of Carroll's and series creator and executive producer Hal Kanter's desire to work on other projects.[8] Kanter created and produced the short-lived The Jimmy Stewart Show for NBC the following season.

Awards and nominations

YearAwardResultCategoryRecipient
1969 Nominated Best Edited Television Program John Ehrin (For episode "Mama's Man")
Outstanding Single Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role Ned Glass (For episode "A Little Chicken Soup Never Hurt Anybody")
Diahann Carroll; this nomination made Carroll the first African-American woman to earn an Emmy nomination in this category[9]
Lloyd Nolan
Hal Kanter
1970 Lurene Tuttle
1969
Won Diahann Carroll
1970 Nominated Best TV Actress – Musical/Comedy Diahann Carroll
1969 Won Actress of the Year Diahann Carroll
2003 Won Groundbreaking Show Diahann Carroll

Notes and References

  1. Book: Weiner, Ed . The TV Guide TV Book: 40 Years of the All-Time Greatest Television Facts, Fads, Hits, and History . registration . 1992 . Harper Collins . New York . 0-06-096914-8 . 174 .
  2. Web site: Magic Johnson's Multi-Million Dollar Aspire Network Projected To See Great Success. MadameNoire.
  3. News: Few Movies Have Escaped Cop on 'Julia'. Muncie Evening Press. Muncie, Indiana. February 15, 1969. November 13, 2021. 35. Newspapers.com.
  4. Book: Morreale, Joanne . Critiquing The Sitcom . Aniko Bodroghkozy . 2003 . Syracuse University Press . Syracuse, New York . 0-8156-2983-4 . 138 .
  5. Book: Farber, David R. . The Columbia Guide to America in the 1960s . Beth L. Bailey . 2001 . Columbia University Press . New York . 0-231-11372-2 . 400 . registration .
  6. 'Julia': Television network introduces first black family series. Ebony. November 1968. Johnson Publishing Company. 68. en.
  7. Book: Spigel, Lynn . Private Screenings: Television and the Female Consumer. Denise Mann . 1992 . University of Minnesota Press . Minneapolis, Minnesota . 0-8166-2052-0 . 161 .
  8. Book: Acham, Christine . Revolution Televised: Prime Time and the Struggle for Black Power. University of Minnesota Press. 2004. 126. 0-8166-4431-4.
  9. Web site: Diahann Carroll on African-American Emmy Nominees: "We're a Little Behind". Kate Stanhope. 23 September 2013. TVGuide.com.