Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Three's Company

Encyclopedia : T : TH : THR : Three's Company


Three's Company was a popular American sitcom that ran from 1977 to 1984 on ABC.

Basic description

The show was a remake of the British sitcom Man About the House and revolved around two women and a man sharing an apartment together. Jack Tripper moved into the apartment that Chrissy Snow and Janet Wood were sharing together after they found him sleeping in their shower after a party. To be allowed to stay in the apartment, Jack let the landlord, Stanley Roper (and subsequently, Ralph Furley), believe he was gay. Stanley's wife Helen knew that Jack was not gay from the second episode on, but didn't mind. Stanley never found out, frequently calling Jack "one of the girls." Ralph, who tried on several occasions to "persuade" Jack to convert to heterosexuality, didn't find out Jack wasn't gay until the last episode, when he took credit for "curing" him.

The show was set in Santa Monica, California, and usually focused on three sets: the trio's apartment, the landlord's apartment and the local pub/restaurant called "The Regal Beagle." In later seasons, "The Beagle" was seen less frequently, as "Jack's Bistro" became the setting for many scenes.

Summary

The series revolved around sexual double entendres, misunderstandings and Jack's clumsiness. One episode involved Jack going to the hospital to have a tattoo removed, but before he leaves for the operation Janet overhears Jack and Larry discussing a friend's vasectomy. She believes that Jack is the one having the vasectomy and tries to talk him out of it. Mr. Furley, on the other hand, believes Jack is going in for a sex-change operation when Jack's suitcase opens and spills dresses all over the floor (the suitcase was actually Janet's and she simply hadn't unpacked it yet) and because Jack told Mr. Furley he was going in to "get rid of something I never should have had in the first place."

This use of "comedy of errors" attracted many fans, including Lucille Ball, who was such a huge fan of the show that she hosted a retrospective during the series run.

Pilots

Three pilot episodes were shot for Three's Company, a rarity for American television. The show was recast several times at the instruction of ABC's Fred Silverman. The first pilot featured Ritter as "David", Valerie Curtin as "Jenny", and Suzanne Zenor as "Samantha." The second pilot featured Ritter and DeWitt in as Jack and Janet, but Susan Lanier played Chrissy.

Spinoffs

Three's Company spawned two spinoffs, The Ropers, revolving around Jack's former landlords, and Three's a Crowd, the further adventures of Jack as he settles down. Neither was as popular and both were swiftly cancelled. These spin-offs were based on, respectively, the Man About the House spin-offs George and Mildred and Robin's Nest. Unlike their U.S. counterparts, these had been very successful, both ultimately having a longer run than Man About the House.

Usually in the 1960s and 1970s, midseason television programs were cancelled after their original six-episode run in the spring. Network observers did not believe that Three's Company would go anywhere after its first six shows. They were proved wrong when it racked in record ratings, breaking barriers at the time as the highest-rated midseason show ever broadcast on network television. ABC gladly renewed the show for a formal television season, giving it a permanent primetime spot during the 1977-1978 year. Ratings continued to climb throughout the years. The very first episode, "A Man About the House", hit #28 overall. The first time a Company episode hit the #1 spot was the airing of "Will the Real Jack Tripper...", which aired February 14, 1978. The most watched Company episode aired on March 13, 1979, immediately preceding the series premiere of its spinoff, The Ropers. The episode, entitled "An Anniversary Surprise", centered around Stanley selling the apartment, and the Ropers moving out. It attraced a superb 38.4 rating (29 million households), making the episode one of the most watched telecasts ever. Here is how the show ranked overall in popularity throughout its seven-year run among all television programs:

  1. Spring 1977: #11
  2. 1977-1978: #3
  3. 1978-1979: #1
  4. 1979-1980: #2
  5. 1980-1981: #8
  6. 1981-1982: #4
  7. 1982-1983: #6
  8. 1983-1984: #31

Sources

Broadcast history

Trouble on the set

Suzanne Somers became a popular star through her role as dumb-blonde Chrissy Snow in the series. She eventually caused friction on the set in 1980 when, after demands for a heavily increased salary ($100,000 a week) were not met, she went on strike and was absent for several taping days. Eventually, co-stars Joyce DeWitt and John Ritter refused to work with her because of this, but, unwilling to fire the actor for fears her absence would cause ratings to decline, the producers of the series retained Somers, who was still under contract, to appear in just the one-minute tag scene of select episodes. According to scripts, she had returned to her hometown of Fresno to care for her sick mother, and in the tag scene she would be seen on the telephone talking to one of the roommates (usually Janet) who would recount that episode's adventures to her. In the story, Chrissy's place in the apartment was taken by her cousin, Cindy (Jenilee Harrison). Somers' scenes were taped on separate days from the show's regular taping; she did not appear on set with any of the show's other actors. This arrangement continued for one season, but after her contract expired it was not renewed and she disappeared from the series.

As Cindy, Jenilee Harrison was unable to fill the shoes of the original roommate on the series. The producers' solution was another replacement, Terri (Priscilla Barnes), a clever, sometimes sassy nurse who was introduced in the sixth season. She was the last of the series' three blondes.

End of the series

Towards the end of the series, promos were released hinting that Jack and Janet would be married. However, in the last episode Janet married another man, Phillip; Terri moved for a job in Hawaii; and Jack moved out to live with his new girlfriend, Vicky. This led to the one-season spinoff series Three's a Crowd.

DVD Releases

Season Releases
DVD Name Release Date Ep # Additional Information
Season 1 November 11 2003 6 (No Bonus Features due to John Ritter's Death)
Season 2 May 4 2004 25 Audio commentary, Best of Janet, Chrissy, Ropers, pilot Episode, Tribute to John Ritter Featurette, gag reels, and trivia game.
Season 3 November 2 2004 22 Pilot Episode #2, Remembering John Ritter Interview, Audio Commentary, Original Promo Pieces with John Ritter, Richard Kline and Dave Powers Interview.
Season 4 May 3 2005 25 Nancy Morgan Ritter Interview, Hosted by Joyce DeWitt, Audio commentary, Interviews with Don Knotts, Richard Kline, and Ann Wedgeworth, Best of Jack, Janet, Chrissy, Larry, and Mr. Furley from Season 4.
Season 5 November 15 2005 22 Jenilee Harrison interviews Of Farce and Censors: All-new interviews with producers George Sunga & George Burditt and writer Kim Weiskopf, Best of Jack, Janet, Cindy, Larry, and Furley.
Season 6 March 7 2006 26 Lucille Ball Presents The Best Of Three's Company, Laughs Around the World: Episode in Polish, Audio Commentary with Director Dave Powers on Jack Bares All.
Season 7 July 25 2006 22 Don Knotts: A Tribute, Parlez-Vous Three's Company, Audio Commentary with Richard Kline. Season 7 Best of Jack, Janet, Terri, and Larry.
Season 8 October 10 2006 22

The show has been in local syndication since 1982. It debuted on cable in 1992 on TBS and ran through 1999. Then Nick at Nite bought the show in 2000 and have a 7 year term with other Viacom networks such as TV Land and TNN. The show currently airs on TV Land.

Cast

Joyce DeWitt, John Ritter, and Suzanne Somers
Enlarge
Joyce DeWitt, John Ritter, and Suzanne Somers

Recurring Cast

Three's Company in other media

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: