Genre: | Situation comedy |
Creator: | Ron Leavitt |
Starring: | Camille Guaty Al Santos Brenda Strong Keri Lynn Pratt Megan Fox Mindy Cohn Marika Dominczyk Antonio Sabato Jr. |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 7 |
Opentheme: | "Jump in the Line" by Harry Belafonte |
Executive Producer: | Ron Leavitt Marty Adelstein |
Camera: | Multi-camera |
Runtime: | 30 minutes |
Company: | Warner Bros. Television |
Network: | The WB |
The Help is an American sitcom television series which premiered on The WB on March 5, 2004.[1] The show was a raunchy comedy that focused on the hard-luck life of a beauty school dropout who must work for the wealthy, spoiled Ridgeway family. The rest of the hired help are also quirky. The WB only aired seven episodes, the show ending on April 16, 2004, and canceled it in May 2004.
It was the last television series created by Ron Leavitt before his death from lung cancer in 2008.[2]
Maria is studying to be a beautician when she has to come home to nurse her sick mother. After her mother's death, Maria is forced to take her place as the wealthy Ridgeway family's maid. She soon discovers not only a class struggle between the Ridgeways and the help, but also an all-out war among the servants.
All seven episodes were directed by Gerry Cohen.
The premiere of The Help was the most watched program in the Friday 9:30–10:00 time slot on The WB in the 2003–04 season.[3] The premiere was more popular among women than men aged 12–34 (2.0/8 versus 1.3/5).[3]
Despite the premiere being the best performance in the time slot of the season on The WB the critics had nothing positive to say. Virginia Heffernan of The New York Times said the show "comes off like a school play, clumsily blocked, loudly acted and nearly shouted down by obligatory laughter and applause".[1] Robert Bianco of USA Today pointed out that "this is the kind of show that opens with a doggie-doo joke and still finds a way to go downhill".[4] Perhaps the harshest was Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe: "The WB's claim that 'The Help' is a 'biting satire' is only half true. No, it's not a satire, but yes, it does indeed bite. And it will be biting the dust before long, unless it can find a new cast, new writers, new producers, a new set, and an entirely new premise."[5] In her review of the 2003–04 season Kay McFadden, television critic for The Seattle Times, classified The Help as "Never should have aired".[6]