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Memories of the Fitzpatricks

Last post 03-07-2006, 1:32 PM by Slammin' Slamo. 1 replies.
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  •  03-07-2006, 1:32 PM 955

    Memories of the Fitzpatricks

    This show only ran for five months, but I saw every episode. I was so tired of "Happy Days" and "Laverne and Shirley" that I was willing to watch ANYTHING, and that's how I got hooked on "The Fitzpatricks." Also, the show was supposed to be set in Michigan, where I lived growing up, and so it was fun to watch a Hollywood studio's version of what was supposed to be the landscape of Flint, Michigan. I don't remember seeing any mountains in the real Flint, but, oh, well. The show tried to be a kind of "Walton's -like" depiction of a working class Irish Catholic family in the Super70s. There is a really good review of the show in a fall issue of "The New Yorker" and Broadcasting magazine ran a full page ad late in the year saying, "The FItzpatricks deserves a chance on television." I guess my favorite episode is the last one, where Mrs. Fitzpatrick gives birth. Mariclare Costello, who played the mom, was expecting just as the show started, so they wrote it into the script. The last episode ran on January 10, 1978, and I know that because I made an audiotape off the broadcast that night. Some other interesting tidbits..... I wrote the cast when the show ended, and received an autographed picture of Mariclare Costello. I wrote Philip Mandelker, the executive producer, and encouraged him to try another network, and he sent me a nice letter explaining some of the politics at CBS that led to its cancellation.... Kristy McNichol's brother, Jimmy, played one of the brothers, and he enjoyed some modest success in the next couple of years, but most notably, the next door neighbor girl was played by Helen Hunt, and you never see that on her bio, since it was such a short-lived TV show....John Rubinstein, who occasionally appeared on "Family" wrote the theme song... This show came out at a time when my own family life was falling apart as my parents divorced, and I guess I was looking for some way to have a vicarious family experience. I really did go on to get a life, it's just fun to remember something so obscure that I liked so much.

    --Stevek56


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  •  03-07-2006, 1:32 PM 956 in reply to 955

    Re: Memories of the Fitzpatricks

    don't remember much about the show except being totally enchanted by the actress playing Maureen - "Mo". That was Michele Tobin, who actually goes back to Bonanza as a child actor, but all I remember was my childhood crush on that teenager in tight sweaters and braces. It was a big family, with kids of all ages, and I have a vague memory of a waterwheel - a picturesque mill theme - but I'm not positive that was where they lived. For me the show was another chance to enjoy a show like Family, whose success probably led to this one getting the green light. But The Fitpatricks was scheduled in a time slot opposite Happy Days / Laverne & Shirley (and the Richard Pryor Show!) and it didn't last very long at all.

    Immediately following that 8-9 (est) block was the 9-10 Three's Company/Soap blockbuster versus M*A*S*H/One Day at a Time, and then at 10 Family itself, opposite Lou Grant and Angie Dickinson's Police Woman. Obviously it was a powerhouse night of network television.

    But I still remember The Fitzpatricks (which brought me here) and that childhood crush.

    --Sev


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