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Memories of "Family"

Last post 10-30-2007, 2:05 AM by Nancy. 11 replies.
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  •  03-07-2006, 1:21 PM 931

    Memories of "Family"

    I always loved Family and can't understand why there are no reruns on tv. Hopefully that will change soon. I"m looking forward to seeing dvd"s of episodes made like what has been happening with some classic tv shows.
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  •  03-07-2006, 1:21 PM 933 in reply to 931

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    Family was very ahead of it's time - I thought that they dealt with very controversial subject matters. My favorite episode is when Willy's friend Zeek was thrown out of his house when his father found out he was gay. Today, that episode would be run of the mill, but back then, it was pretty potent. It would be nice if they came out with the series on DVD.
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  •  03-07-2006, 1:21 PM 934 in reply to 933

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I loved the relationship between Buddy and Willy - I couldn't stand my older brothers - but Willy was so cool. He was also very HOT! Gary Franks did a wonderful job as Willy, and Kristy McNichol was great as Buddy. I couldn't wait from week to week to see the new episodes

    --kat livingston


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:22 PM 935 in reply to 934

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    Family was more like a continuing story , like a soap , than just a neatly wrapped up episode. The continuing conflict between Willie and His Father,played by the great actor James (Matthew's Dad) Broderick, was always interesting. He wanted His Son to use His potential and not "waste His life". His Son liked living life on His terms not His Father's. His Father did not approve of His girlfriend, played by Season Hubley. Willie continued His relationship,even marrying Her when Her life threatening illness became worse.Willie's love was so true He tried to cram a lifetime into the short time they had left. It showed Him as being more responsible & mature than His Father ever gave Him credit for. I too thought this show should be in reruns. Maybe someday.

    --Michael C.


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:22 PM 936 in reply to 935

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I used to watch Family all the way down in Argentina when I was growing up. I moved to the states right when the show ended. I returned to Argentina a few years later to catch it in re-runs. I still LOVED the show. Not until a TV station called 'Nostalgia Television' decided to air it in the US did I get to see (and TAPE :) this wonderful show again. 'Family' dealt with such deep issues as divorce, dropping out of school, alcoholism and sexual orientation, many which were rather advanced for Super70s TV. It featured stars like Sada Thompson as the matriarch.the mother we all loved, Kristy McNichol as the irrepressible Buddy, and movie-of-the-week-queen Mederith Baxter as the ever troubled Nancy. I only hope one day we are graced with this show on DVD!

    --sibie


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:22 PM 937 in reply to 936

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I remember I liked to watch the conflict between the Meredith Baxter Birney character and the mom, which seemed ongoing and funny. I would like to see the show again, Kristy was a really good actress also.

    --linda


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:23 PM 938 in reply to 937

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I loved the show Family. It was a great show that was way before our time. I remember enjoying watching the reruns as a child. I wish at the time I understood the concept of the VCR. Well I guess all I can do is hope they will rerun them again.

    --indyspaper


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:23 PM 939 in reply to 938

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    A fantastic show from beginning to end. Why don't the powers that be make it AVAILABLE ON DVD?? I would certainly buy the total series. Anybody know how to let the fans put pressure on for DVD release? [Editor's note: Keep posting here. I get messages from studios all the time that want to advertise here, so I know they are reading the feedback. If there seems to be a lot of chat about 'Family', they will have to consider it.]

    --BobG


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:23 PM 940 in reply to 939

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I loved the show Family from the Super70s. I felt like I knew them or wished they were my own family. I loved Buddy, and Willie and all the other's. Sada Thompson, Meredith Baxter-Birney, and James Broderick. I also loved the themes explored on the show, especially the ones about Buddy and her teen troubles. I pray that someone will release the entire series on DVD, I would really love to share that show with my family.

    --Rachel Hronis of Ashburn, Virginia


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:24 PM 941 in reply to 940

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I am a 34 year old "Family" fanatic! It was my fifth birthday (March 9th, 1976) when "Family" first aired. My mother and grandmother would watch it occasionally and I, in turn, got hooked. I think because I came from a broken home, was an only child, and had a mother who was married numerous times, and an alcoholic and drug-addict to boot, I bonded with the Lawrence's, and especially Kate, via the tube.

    In the mid-eighties "Family" re-runs were aired at 2:00 in the morning on a Canadian station, and being a teen insomniac, I'd watch it every week-night and even tape each episode for posterity. I still have some of those tapes!

    My favourite episode is probably the pilot. It was much darker and bittersweet than the later episodes, especially the 1979 and 1980 seasons. The theme song was different, too: sad, melancholy. I loved the episodes with Season Hubley as Willy's troubled girlfriend, and the episode titled "The Sleeping Gypsey" with Dina Manoff as Buddy's free-spirited and artsy friend.

    Another favourite is the episode where Kate discovers she is pregnant and spends the episode coming to terms with this late-in-life surprise only to miscarry. It's really gut-wrenching.

    Some personal anecdotes: I did my senior year-long independent study in English class on Henry David Thoreau just because Kate quoted him when she was trying to get Buddy to understand "Mara's" (Dina Manoff)

    non-conforming ways:

    "If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far-away. "

    And I guess this is testament to how different "Family" was from any other television show at the time; it was as literate as "Charlie's Angels" was vapid.

    Another anecdote: when I was seventeen or so, and my mother was at the height of her addictions, she read my diary and discovered that I had actually confided that I wished Kate and Doug Lawrence were my real parents! During one of Mum's drug-induced tirades she lashed out at me and sarcastically apologized for not being "THE MOTHER ON FAMILY!!"

    One episode that I only viewed once and which alluded to a troubled relationship between Kate and her mother "Hattie" made a big impression on me, but for the life of me, I can't remember why Kate was so hard on her mom. Does anyone out there remember what the issues were there?

    And before I sign out, is anyone out there as big a fan of the show as I am and know the floor plans of 1230 Holland Street like I do? Pathetic, I know. (I actually used to doodle the big, blue house on my binders in high school) I've often said if I came into a large sum of money I would have an architect design and build that house right down to the most infinitesimally (spelling?) small detail!

    In closing, I just have to say that I find it astounding that this site exists and that I am not the only "Family" freak out there! I could go on and on about the virtues and talents of Kristy McNichol, James Broderick, and Gary Frank, but that will have to wait 'til another time.

    And Sada Thompson, if you ever read this, just know that Kate Lawrence saved my young life. I held on through years of mental anguish and every kind of abuse you could imagine telling myself that someday I would be as strong and gentle a woman as Kate herself. Was I dangerously close to blurring the line between fantasy and reality? Doesn't matter. I got through it all, and in this case the ends justifies the means. Bet ya didn't know a TV role could have such an impact on a young viewer, huh?

    --Annie Laurie


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:25 PM 942 in reply to 940

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I don't have a favorite episode. I couldn't be asked to choose, I LOVED them all and I anxiously await some network to put it back into syndication. With all the satelite and cable networks in existence I can't believe none of them have been smart enough to add this classic to their line-up. Not intended to offend anyone just desperate for the return of my favorite show.

    --KimH


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  •  10-30-2007, 2:05 AM 2794 in reply to 941

    Re: Memories of "Family"

    I can totally understand what you are saying.  I was a soon-to-be divorced mother of a new baby when I found "Family" on the t.v. and I watched it religiously every week; I couldn't wait for it to come on.  I realize now there were a lot of other people who loved that family too, and - like myself - wished their own families were a little more like them.  Sada Thompson was the hub of it all, she was a modern thinking woman with a traditional base.  She was intelligent, fair, kind and cared deeply about her children and husband; Sada if you are still alive and read this I want to say also, that you were a great comfort to me.  I saw in you character traits that I wanted to emulate; you were a good 'role model' for many young girls who didn't have one. I loved the Meredith Baxter character because I felt her pain and disappointment. I'll never forget the line she said to her (ex) husband in one show "I refuse to continue to play Wendy to your Peter Pan."  It was a quote I could totally relate to as my husband was just a child too - emotionally - who really couldn't appreciate what he had and really had no idea how to be a father or husband.  It helped me to watch her try to cope with the loss and pain, as I was going through it too.. She was torn with feelings for him but it was an unrealistic relationship; just like I felt at the time.  Bless the powers that put that show on in the mid-Super70s - it would have been a harder thing to bear the break-up of my marriage without looking forward to that great "Family" every week.  I loved every episode.   
    Nancy
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