The Family Man (American TV series) explained

Genre:Sitcom
Creator:William Bickley
Michael Warren
Developer:Thomas L. Miller
Robert L. Boyett
Director:Richard Correll
Mark Linn-Baker
Judy Pioli
Starring:Gregory Harrison
John Buchanan
Scott Weinger
Matthew Brooks
Ashleigh Blair Sterling
Al Molinaro
Gail Edwards
Josh Byrne
Edward Winter
Peter Parros
Adam Biesk
Nancy Everhard
Theme Music Composer:Jesse Frederick
Bennett Salvay
Composer:Jesse Frederick
Bennett Salvay
Steven Chesne
Country:United States
Language:English
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:22
Executive Producer:Thomas L. Miller
Robert L. Boyett
William Bickley
Michael Warren
Ross Brown
Producer:Martha Williamson
James O'Keefe
Chuck Tately
Kevin White
Joe Fisch
Myron Lee Nash
Company:Catalina Television
Miller-Boyett Productions
Lorimar Television
Camera:Film
Multi-camera
Runtime:30 mins. (approx)
Channel:CBS

The Family Man is an American sitcom that aired on CBS from September 11, 1990, to July 17, 1991. The series, starring Gregory Harrison, was created by William Bickley and Michael Warren, who also served as executive producers with Thomas L. Miller and Robert L. Boyett. Martha Williamson served as supervising producer, with Ross Brown as co-executive producer. In addition to being produced by Lorimar Television and Miller-Boyett Productions, the show was also under the Catalina Television marque (Harrison's production company).

Lasting for 22 episodes, The Family Man originally aired on Saturday nights at 8 p.m. alongside the established Miller-Boyett series The Hogan Family, which had moved to CBS from NBC.

Premise

The Family Man was Harrison's first television starring vehicle since his most-popular role of Dr. "Gonzo" Gates on Trapper John, M.D. in 1986, just before that series ended. Harrison assumed this series directly from Lorimar Television after playing the featured role of businessman Michael Sharpe in the ninth (final) season of the CBS drama Falcon Crest, another Lorimar show.

Harrison played Los Angeles fire captain Jack Taylor, a recent widower trying to hold his family together with inept help from his father-in-law Joe Alberghetti (Al Molinaro, also returning to series TV after many years off, and in his third Miller/Boyett sitcom). Joe's stay with the family after his daughter Teri's death was supposed to be temporary, but by the end of the pilot, after Jack and his kids showed how much they needed him in their lives, he decided to permanently move out from New York City. Jack's four children were 16-year-old Jeff (John Buchanan), headstrong and athletic; 14-year-old Steve (Scott Weinger), the resident troublemaker who was working to improve himself and his self-image; 11-year-old Brian (Matthew Brooks), who had the hardest time dealing with his mother's death; and wise-beyond-her-years 6-year-old Allison (Ashleigh Blair Sterling), who could do no wrong.

Stories focused on Jack's unique relationships with each of his children, the problems and adjustments of a suddenly-motherless household, and the misadventures and scrapes of the growing brood. Jack's high-demand job as fire captain also had prominence; his charges and best buddies at the firehouse included Gus Harbrook (Edward Winter), Eddie Cooper (Peter Parros), and the younger Ted Reinhard (Adam Biesk), who could always be counted on to shake things up. They also joined him for poker night in almost every episode. Adding some adult female perspective was the Taylors' next-door neighbor Hilary Kozak (Gail Edwards), a divorcee whose young son Patrick (Josh Byrne) was Allison's best friend. Hilary was originally a potential love interest for Jack, but it never quite happened.

Upon the show's return in June 1991, after a seven-month hiatus, firefighters Gus and Ted were dropped from the cast, leaving only Eddie regularly in evidence at Jack's poker nights as well as at the firehouse. The rest of the cast remained intact, but coming into the picture was pretty local news reporter Jill Nichols (Nancy Everhard), who first met the stolid fire captain on assignment during an interview. Sparks flew instantly and they began dating.

Broadcast history

Amidst a third-place ratings slump in spring 1990, CBS was planning a major shakeup for that fall's schedule; in dire need of youth demographics (which are attractive to advertisers, resulting in the Get Ready for CBS campaign), the network sought to occupy 5 out of 7 nights a week with an 8-9PM comedy block aimed at children and families. While already underway in greenlighting other such projects (Uncle Buck, Lenny), CBS turned to Lorimar Television, and by extension, Miller-Boyett Productions and their associates, to contribute to the rejuvenation of youth-oriented shows on the schedule. William Bickley and Michael Warren, long-time associates of Miller and Boyett who had launched Family Matters on ABC the previous year, sought out to create a new series for the CBS deal which featured with a widower raising his kids with the help of his father-in-law, as a modern-day variation of My Three Sons. Bickley and Warren gave the father three sons, but to be original to the concept, a young daughter was added to the brood, and the father was given the high-voltage career of a fire chief (which still matched the exciting career of aviation engineer for Steve Douglas of My Three Sons). The original working title was Five Alarm Family.

Miller-Boyett was having great success at ABC with their established and new programs alike (Perfect Strangers, Full House, Family Matters), resulting in blockbuster ratings on the network's TGIF lineup. The producers also had The Hogan Family running at NBC, which was nearing the end of its fifth season. Although still drawing in decent ratings, NBC decided to make room for shows with even younger demographics, and sold the series off. In April 1990, Lorimar cut a deal which moved The Hogan Family to CBS that fall, providing a companion series for CBS' new Miller-Boyett project. CBS naturally paired the two sister series on the same night (Saturday, when it was assumed families with young children would be home to watch), and given the success of back-to-back Miller-Boyett shows on ABC, optimism was high. When the new project was announced on CBS' schedule in May, it was still referred to as Five Alarm Family. Shortly after, to be further indicative of Harrison's role, Bickley and Warren changed the title to The Family Man.

The series ran 10 episodes for the first half of the season, but after the December 1, 1990 telecast, CBS put both The Family Man and its older-sister show The Hogan Family on hiatus due to low ratings. While it was determined in the intervening period that The Hogan Family had no future on its new home at CBS, the network felt willing to give The Family Man another chance. Originally, CBS was planning to return the series on a weeknight in March 1991, pairing it with the upcoming Steven Spielberg cartoon Family Dog, and collectively promoting the scheduling as "The Family Hour". Family Dog fell behind in production, however (it remained shelved before finally having a short run on CBS in the summer of 1993), causing the network to delay The Family Man as well until they could find a "protected time slot" (i.e., one preceded by a hit lead-in) for the show.[1]

The decision was then made to bring it back in the summer, airing on both Mondays and Wednesdays at 8:30/7:30, with two new episodes airing per week. Monday episodes were to feature story lines that brought the adults of the cast to the forefront (including the new affair of Jack and Jill), while Wednesday episodes focused on the kids. With tailor-made episodes fitting both the older Monday demographics (with a Major Dad lead-in) and younger Wednesday demos (lead-in by half-hour repeats of Rescue 911), CBS was sure that The Family Man would find its audience after all. The network even went ahead and ordered 13 additional episodes to premiere mid-way through the 1991-92 season if the summer ratings climbed. The show resurfaced on the CBS schedule Monday, June 10, 1991, with twelve more episodes ahead for the summer. The ratings didn't improve with all the changes, and in mid-July, after the last completed episode aired, The Family Man was canceled. Seeing that the series was possibly heading for an eleventh hour renewal based upon its summer performance, CBS included footage of Harrison as his Family Man character Jack Taylor in promos for the 1991-92 network campaign, The Look of America. By the time they aired, both Harrison series (including True Detectives) had been canceled, but his footage remained in the fall promos.

The Family Man finished #113 out of 141 prime time shows for the 1990–91 season Nielsen rankings.

Theme music and presentation

The series' theme music was composed by Miller-Boyett mainstay artists Jesse Frederick and Bennett Salvay. Unlike their works on most other shows from Miller-Boyett, The Family Mans theme was instrumental. It did, however, maintain the uplifting, inspirational sound that was prevalent on its sister programs; this was complete with scenes of the cast frolicking, having fun and working around the sunny Los Angeles setting of the show, and the signature sweeping aerial pullbacks.

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date

Awards and nominations

YearAwardResultCategoryRecipient
1991 Young Artist Awards Nominated Exceptional Performance by a Young Actress Under Nine Ashleigh Sterling
Best Young Actor Starring in a New Television Series Scott Weinger
1992 Best Young Actor Starring in a Television Series Scott Weinger

References

Notes and References

  1. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-06-10-ca-454-story.html CBS in the 'Family' Way Again : Miller-Boyett Sitcom Gets Another Go in Prime Time