Just One of the Guys (1985) dir. by Lisa Gottlieb
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Just One of the Guys (1985) dir. by Lisa Gottlieb
Unlike Jose Ferrer and Mel Ferrer, Audrey Meadows and Jayne Meadows were related — Audrey, best known for her role as Alice Kramden on The Honeymooners (CBS, 1955-’56), was Jayne’s younger sister.
Both made appearances on network series in the ’70s and ’80s, including guest-star-filled shows like The Love Boat and Hotel, but Jayne Meadows was also a regular on the short-lived sitcom It’s Not Easy, which ABC canceled after five episodes in the fall of ’83. The series centered on divorced parents, Jack (Ken Howard) and Sharon (Carlene Watkins), who live across the street from each other in order to easily share custody of their two children. The kids reside with Jack and his mother, played by Meadows, while Sharon lives with her new husband, Neal (Bert Convy), and his son from his previous marriage.
Two Marriages debuted on ABC as a summer series a month prior to It’s Not Easy, but the trials and tribulations of its neighboring families — one nuclear (Michael Murphy and Janet Eilber played the parents), one blended (led by Tom Mason and Karen Carlson) — weren’t accompanied by a laugh track. After ten episodes it too was canceled, although teen heartthrob C. Thomas Howell and teen heartthrob in training Kirk Cameron wouldn’t be collecting unemployment checks for long.
One month after Two Marriages aired its final episode, ABC decided to give its “two neighboring families intertwine comedically and/or dramatically” concept one more try with the TV movie Love Thy Neighbor. Turner Classic Movies’s website explains the setup like this: “A serio-comedy casting John Ritter and Penny Marshall as next door suburbanites who overcome their mutual dislike for one another and are drawn into an unlikely affair when his wife runs off with her husband, leaving them to cope with their children and their houses.”
Bert Convy played Marshall’s husband in the film, and one of their sons was played by Bobby Jacoby, the younger brother of Billy Jacoby, Convy’s son on It’s Not Easy. “Jacoby” was a stage name, however; the former child actors have since reverted to using their birth surname, Jayne.
It’s Not Easy - ABC - September 29, 1983 - October, 27, 1983
Sitcom (10 episodes - 5 unaired)
Running Time: 30 minutes
Stars:
Ken Howard as Jack Long
Bert Convy as Neal Townsend
Carlene Watkins as Sharon Townsend
Jayne Meadows as Ruth Long
Billy Jayne (Jacoby) as Matthew Townsend
Evan Cohen as Johnny Long
Rachel Jacobs as Carol Long
Silver Spoons (1982) - Pilot intro
Ricky Stratton is a spoiled rich kid who lives the life that many kids dream of, but he still suffers from the problems that many teens do.
365 Day Movie Challenge (2019) - #132: Bloody Birthday (1981) - dir. Ed Hunt
The second half of the double feature that I scheduled for my birthday last month, which began with 711 Ocean Drive (1950), was filled with a screening of the cult horror favorite Bloody Birthday. I didn’t know anything about the film, but based on the poster, I figured that at least it would provide some good chuckles. All you need to know is that three children born at the exact same time (Elizabeth Hoy, Billy Jayne, Andrew Freeman) form a miniature serial-killing squad in their town as they approach their collective tenth birthday. Much mayhem goes down as the astrologically aligned trio gleefully slaughters bothersome adults and teens with gruesome aplomb. Academy Award-winning actor José Ferrer has a fairly insubstantial cameo as the doctor who delivered the babies that grew up to be bite-sized murderers, but Susan Strasberg is a hoot as the bespectacled teacher whose strict classroom rules spell the end for her. There are better low/middle-budget horror films than Bloody Birthday, but as a way to ring in the twenty-seventh anniversary of my birth, it provided fiendishly satisfying entertainment.