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Laverne & Shirley

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Laverne & Shirley was a popular American television situation comedy which ran on ABC from 1976 to 1983. It starred Penny Marshall as Laverne De Fazio and Cindy Williams as Shirley Feeney, roommates who, as the series began, worked in a Milwaukee, Wisconsin brewery. It was a spinoff of Happy Days, as the two lead characters were originally introduced on that show as acquaintances of Fonzie.

Vaguely located in the same time period as Happy Days, Laverne & Shirley started in approximately 1955, and when the series ended, it was 1968.

Laverne & Shirley was the longest-running television series with female leads until the supernatural comedy-drama Charmed broke that record in its eighth season in January 2006.

Opening sequence

In the beginning, the girls are skipping down the street, arm in arm, reciting a hopscotch chant: "One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight! Schlemiel! Schlimazel! Hasenpfeffer Incorporated!" The theme song is entitled "Making Our Dreams Come True" and is performed by Cyndi Grecco. The opening sequence is very popular and has been parodied in many pop culture outlets, including the movie Wayne's World. The sequence has also been parodied in other languages, on Friends in a Spanish-language track under the title Laverne y Shirley and on Saturday Night Live, in Japanese, under the name Rabun to Shuri.

Location and setting

For the first five seasons, from 1976 to 1980, the show was set in Milwaukee during the mid-1950s to early 1960s. Brewery bottlecappers Laverne and Shirley lived in a basement apartment, and visible from their window were the feet of street pedestrians. The two women could communicate with upstairs neighbors Lenny and Squiggy by screaming up the dumbwaiter shaft connecting their apartments. Also living in the building was Laverne's father, Frank, proprietor of the Pizza Bowl, and landlady Edna Babish. Shirley maintained an on-again, off-again romance with dancer/singer Carmine Ragusa.

In 1980, all of the remaining characters in Laverne & Shirley, and therefore the setting of the show, moved from Milwaukee to Los Angeles. Laverne and Shirley took jobs at a department store in the gift wrapping department, Frank and Edna opened a country and western restaurant called Cowboy Bill's, and Carmine started doing singing telegrams and working as an actor. From this point until the end of the show's run, Laverne & Shirley was set in the mid-1960s. With each season, a new year passed in the timeline of the show, starting with 1965 in the 1980-81 season, and ending in 1968 in 1983. The opening credits of the California seasons features the cast toasting at New Year's, and visible on a large banner is the year depicted in that season.

When the show moved to California, Ed Marinaro was cast as Sonny, a stunt man and love interest for Laverne. He had previously been cast years earlier as Laverne's cousin during an episode where the cast visited Frank's mother. Leslie Easterbrook was cast in the role of Rhonda, a bubble-headed bleach blonde who usually started sentences with the words "Rhonda says...". The move to Los Angeles is largely considered to be the show's "shark-jumping" moment.

Near the end of the show Cindy Williams was unhappy because she believed that the studio favored Marshall over her. Williams ultimately decided to leave due to pregnancy, and by that time Laverne & Shirley's ratings had already declined considerably. Despite Williams' noticeable pregnancy during the sixth season and Shirley's marriage the next, no on-screen reference to Williams' condition was ever made.

In the final season, Shirley falls in love and marries Walter Meany (making her Shirley Feeney Meany). With Shirley gone, Laverne tried to go it alone, and a new opening was shot with Laverne watching children singing the famous "Schlemiel! Schlimazel!" lines. But the series did not survive the loss of one of the title leads, and was subsequently canceled.

Characters

Michael McKean and David Lander portrayed Laverne and Shirley's obnoxious yet lovable greaser neighbors, Leonard "Lenny" Kosnowski and Andrew "Squiggy" Squiggmann. Betty Garrett played Edna Babish, the girls' landlady. She eventually fell in love with Laverne's father, Frank De Fazio (played by Phil Foster), and married him. Edna later left Frank after she met a Texan named "Big Ed". In many episodes, Shirley's singing and dancing boyfriend, Carmine "The Big Ragu" Rugusa (played by Eddie Mekka) provided a little romance and a strong right arm for the gang. The Big Ragu was also the former Golden Gloves boxing champion of Milwaukee.

Full character list

Shirley's Boo Boo Kitty
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Shirley's Boo Boo Kitty

Frank De Fazio
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Frank De Fazio

Ratings

Soon after Laverne & Shirley premiered in 1976, it became the most-watched American television program, even surpassing Happy Days' television ratings. At the time Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams were among television's best-paid actresses. Laverne & Shirley kept their #1 spot for quite some time but many believe nepotism between Garry and Penny Marshall had a negative influence the last few seasons of the show, and also was one of the main reasons Cindy Williams left the show. Other obsevers believed that the show should never have "moved" to California, and instead should have found better writers.

The program was so successful at the time that it spawned a merchandise franchise. Mattel released two models of Laverne & Shirley dolls, and one model of Lenny & Squiggy dolls. Hot Wheels created a Shotz Brewery delivery van, and several novelty toys were sold such as Halloween costumes, jigsaw puzzles, coloring books, and other toys.

Dramatic acting and real-life issues

Laverne cries after her fireman boyfriend dies.
Laverne cries after her fireman boyfriend dies.

Though generally viewed as a slapstick comedy, the cast proved their dramatic acting ability in Episode #104, Why Did The Fireman..?. The episode guest starred Ted Danson as Randy, a firefighter and Laverne's steady boyfriend who is killed on duty. Laverne in shock, refuses to accept his death and waits up all night for him to come home. The father-daughter scene between Penny Marshall (Laverne) and Phil Foster (Frank De Fazio) in which he consoles his daughter is an example of the dramatic acting uncharacteristic for the series yet evident in this episode. This episode was directed by Joel Zwick and was written by Roger Garrett.

The show took on other serious subjects, such as class differences in The Society Party, Guilty Until Proven Not Innocent, The Debutante Ball, and Testing Testing. Another issue the show focused on was how women were treated in the 1950s. Often women were expected to be forever virgins, and were unwelcome in the work place. In the episode Once Upon a Rumor, Laverne (Penny Marshall) stated "It isn't fair, a guy with a reputation is a hero. A girl with reputation is a "bimbo". In the episode The Bully Show, a blind date traps Laverne in her apartment and attempts to rape her.

Trivia

Magazine covers

Magazine Covers
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Magazine Covers

The show's success led to its characters appearing on the covers of several entertainment and popular-culture magazines. Laverne and Shirley were featured on the cover of TV Guide a total of five times. Penny Marshall was featured twice on the cover of People magazine, and Cindy Williams was featured once. Characters from the show also appeared on the covers of Redbook, Star, PhotoPlay, TV Times, Super Mag, Cracked and many others (some of which are no longer in print).

Episode list

Episode # Prod # Air Date Title _____ ______ ____________ ___________ ___________________________________________

External links

 


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