View Full Version : Ann Romano- Angriest TV Character Ever?
seventies_sitcoms 01-09-2005, 02:29 PM It seems like Bonnie Franklin was always running around screaming her head off on this show? "Damn it, Barbara", "Damn it, Julie!" What was her deal? I'll bet if this show was made today there would be an episode where Ann goes to the doctor and gets a prescription for Prozac, Zoloft, or something.
mstewart 01-09-2005, 06:18 PM It seems like Bonnie Franklin was always running around screaming her head off on this show? "Damn it, Barbara", "Damn it, Julie!" What was her deal? I'll bet if this show was made today there would be an episode where Ann goes to the doctor and gets a prescription for Prozac, Zoloft, or something.
The character of Ann Romano was a head strong and quite high tempered. That's what made the character quite interesting. A matter of fact I loved her snide sarcastic remarks she would make.
Ann sure knew how to go off.
jamesanthony 01-10-2005, 02:48 PM The character of Ann Romano was a head strong and quite high tempered. That's what made the character quite interesting. A matter of fact I loved her snide sarcastic remarks she would make.
Ann sure knew how to go off.
What I remember more about her than her tirades were her various soliloquies about her life- I think it was the first year 6 show where she spends the whole show scrubbing the floor and talking to herself about her life. In a sense she was a very groundbreaking female character on tv, she definitely wasn't a goody goody like Mary Tyler Moore or Edith Bunker or some longsuffering wife like Louise Jefferson or Florida on Good Times. Does anyone remember if any of her temper flares were ever attributed to PMS?
mstewart 01-10-2005, 11:53 PM What I remember more about her than her tirades were her various soliloquies about her life- I think it was the first year 6 show where she spends the whole show scrubbing the floor and talking to herself about her life. In a sense she was a very groundbreaking female character on tv, she definitely wasn't a goody goody like Mary Tyler Moore or Edith Bunker or some longsuffering wife like Louise Jefferson or Florida on Good Times. Does anyone remember if any of her temper flares were ever attributed to PMS?
No she was basically a quick tempered person. Julie was the same way. On the four part episode when Julie ran away Ann stated to her that she inherited her temper and stubborness.
You are right she was a groundbreaking character but was not highly recognized as that. The same season that ODAT premired Lee Grant starred in a sitcom about a divorced woman. The show was Fay. It lasted about six weeks. The problem with Fay that it did not show the pain and struggle of a divorced woman that ODAT did. Ann Romano was a recent divorced woman who did not really knew how to handle herself on her own. She went from being under her parents roof at age 17 and right into marriage shortly thereafter motherhood. That was the reason why she left her husband, Ed, because she did not know who she was. The woman had no job skill and level of education was high school. Somehow she manage to get a job as an account executive for an advertising firm (Connors and Davenport) while raising her teenage daughters and herself as well. As you watch Ann develop she end up opening up her own agency and got prettier as the seasons went on. Fay did not show those struggles. Fay was the first attempt to show a female star as a divorced woman but One Day At A Time truly was the groundbreaker and Ann Romano was a role model in many respects to women who had to go on their own with not much skills and somehow manage to pull it off.
Did not mean to go on so long with this.
Pug Lover 01-17-2005, 05:02 PM I always found Julie to be the angriest character on the show. :mad:
mstewart 01-17-2005, 07:26 PM I always found Julie to be the angriest character on the show. :mad:
Julie was just plain drama and thinking the whole world was centered around her. She did things on a whim with no forethought whatsoever. But that's what made ODAT good during the years that MacKenzie Phillips was on the show. The episodes featuring Julie was powerful and made the show move in an interesting way.
Brian Damage 01-19-2005, 12:41 PM I was fine with Ann blowing up. She was a single mom living in a new town. Her girls were a bit rambunctious.
senor boogie woogi 02-20-2005, 11:47 PM Hola!
To me ODAAT was very realistic, and she was a real mother, with two teenage daughters with no husband. This lady took no crap from anybody. I liked the way they did Julie (M. Phillips). Even through the character, you can tell of her addictions and troubles. You knew the character smoked pot, had sex with boyfriends, did crappy in school and called her mom "bitch" under her breath on occasion.
I have also heard a comparison stating that ODAAT was "Good Times" for white people. James Evans would of beat Julie's ass black and blue and would of kept her off the junk (maybe). JJ Evans was a dumbass, but he was fairly respectful and did have a career as an artist. Julie was a basketcase with no direction.
I wonder if Ann liked Eddie Van Halen as a son in law? And how did that mad woman end up marrying Dr. Johnny Fever?
Senor
pscisme 02-21-2005, 07:50 PM Hola!
To me ODAAT was very realistic, and she was a real mother, with two teenage daughters with no husband. This lady took no crap from anybody. I liked the way they did Julie (M. Phillips). Even through the character, you can tell of her addictions and troubles. You knew the character smoked pot, had sex with boyfriends, did crappy in school and called her mom "bitch" under her breath on occasion.
I have also heard a comparison stating that ODAAT was "Good Times" for white people. James Evans would of beat Julie's ass black and blue and would of kept her off the junk (maybe). JJ Evans was a dumbass, but he was fairly respectful and did have a career as an artist. Julie was a basketcase with no direction.
I wonder if Ann liked Eddie Van Halen as a son in law? And how did that mad woman end up marrying Dr. Johnny Fever?
Senor
mstewart's message is the most accurate in this thread, but the above is definitely most INTERESTING!
a whole lotta truth here, though Ann took A LOT OF CRAP from ALL KINDS OF PEOPLE, just as we all do because we have to in order to make a living and survive in our crazy world=in fact, all the crap Ann had to take was a big reason for her anger.
what makes the above quote so interesting is how the author keeps veering onto and off the set of this sitcom:Julie or MacKenzie?
Dr. Fever or Dr. Sam?
and by the way, Ann never had to deal with Eddie Van Halen as a son-in-law, she had to deal with BOYD GAINES, a bonafide Broadway Musical star!
great job on the messages of this thread-very wacky and very thought provoking. Bravo, Senor!
mstewart 02-21-2005, 09:46 PM mstewart's message is the most accurate in this thread, but the above is definitely most INTERESTING!
a whole lotta truth here, though Ann took A LOT OF CRAP from ALL KINDS OF PEOPLE, just as we all do because we have to in order to make a living and survive in our crazy world=in fact, all the crap Ann had to take was a big reason for her anger.
what makes the above quote so interesting is how the author keeps veering onto and off the set of this sitcom:Julie or MacKenzie?
Dr. Fever or Dr. Sam?
and by the way, Ann never had to deal with Eddie Van Halen as a son-in-law, she had to deal with BOYD GAINES, a bonafide Broadway Musical star!
great job on the messages of this thread-very wacky and very thought provoking. Bravo, Senor!
Thanks for the compliment. I was a very avid fan of the show and of Bonnie Franklin. Which message was accurate. I put two on this thread.
Plbrown 03-25-2005, 12:58 AM Maybe she was bi-polar...I remember a couple episodes
when Ann would talk to only to herself...the birthday
episode, she talks to herself in the mirror about turning
(40)?? I'm not quite sure of the age.
catlover79 06-24-2007, 09:00 PM It's a trademark of all Norman Lear shows - people constantly YELLING. Not that it couldn't be funny at times, but all the time was just annoying. I think Ann Romano could have held her own in a shouting match with the Bunker/Stivics, Maude and Walter, and the Evans family. Bring the earplugs!! :eek: :lol:
And Redheads are usually known for their tempers, so it kind of fits.
catlover79 06-25-2007, 04:29 PM And Redheads are usually known for their tempers, so it kind of fits.
My best friend from high school is a natural redhead. She said to me once, "I'm redheaded, German, and an Aries - that's the TRIPLE CROWN of tempers!!" :lol: She's right, too! :rofl:
mstewart 06-25-2007, 05:46 PM It's a trademark of all Norman Lear shows - people constantly YELLING. Not that it couldn't be funny at times, but all the time was just annoying. I think Ann Romano could have held her own in a shouting match with the Bunker/Stivics, Maude and Walter, and the Evans family. Bring the earplugs!! :eek: :lol:
I wanted to see Ann Romano go at it with Archie Bunker, George Jefferson (the first four season of the Jeffersons), Willona Woods and Maude Findlay. The latter would had been the ultimate battle.
catlover79 06-25-2007, 06:07 PM I wanted to see Ann Romano go at it with Archie Bunker, George Jefferson (the first four season of the Jeffersons), Willona Woods and Maude Findlay. The latter would had been the ultimate battle.
I can just see Ann Romano and Willona Woods (or Ann and Maude) get into a knockdown, dragout, no holds barred, hairpulling fight. :argue: :smash:
mstewart 06-26-2007, 01:38 AM I can just see Ann Romano and Willona Woods (or Ann and Maude) get into a knockdown, dragout, no holds barred, hairpulling fight. :argue: :smash:
Willona would had got ghetto on Ann and she would had storm out and said like she did with Sam when they got into, "If I don't leave this room I am going to say something else stupid."
Ann and Maude would had an all out shouting, screaming, name calling showdown that even Walter nor Barbara could stop them.
Ann would had taken Archie down like the way Irene does and Edith began doing it as the series progressed.
George would had put her out and slammed the door in Ann's face.
Florida would had got on Ann's nerves.
James and her deep down would had got along because they share struggles in surviving in life.
Her and Gloria Bunker-Stivic would had got along great. Ann is Gloria's kind of woman.
Her and Mike Stivic would had an all out argument and debate. Two screamers in the same room.
TJAMES03 08-21-2007, 05:38 AM Maybe Ann was a little angry because of the time that she lived in, she had to do what was expected of her and not what she REALLY wanted and the frustrations came out in anger sometimes. By the time that she was on her own and doing her own thing, she had realized that she had made a lot of choices based on what other people wanted and not what she wanted.
ComedyGuy 10-14-2007, 03:28 PM IMHO the angriest TV character would be Margret Houlihan on M*A*S*H, she was mean and spiteful especially towards RADAR and thats why I HATE her character.
Nighthawk76 10-29-2007, 02:36 PM Ann certainly had a temper, but it was nothing compared to Archie Bunker's. :lol:
GeorgiaSenator 04-04-2010, 02:05 PM Among all leading "ladies" and prime characters she was the angriest, nasties and most feministic I can think of. She needed some psychological help and had a severve problem with hate and anger. A very poor role model for young girls.
It seems like Bonnie Franklin was always running around screaming her head off on this show? "Damn it, Barbara", "Damn it, Julie!" What was her deal? I'll bet if this show was made today there would be an episode where Ann goes to the doctor and gets a prescription for Prozac, Zoloft, or something.
Retro4Life 04-04-2010, 02:57 PM Among all leading "ladies" and prime characters she was the angriest, nasties and most feministic I can think of. She needed some psychological help and had a severve problem with hate and anger. A very poor role model for young girls.
Most people who remain calm at all times are able to do so because they either have little stress in their lives or have "backup" that helps them cope with it, in the form of close family, friends, wealth or some combination of the three. Ann had none of these.
Ann was on her own for the first time in her life, dealing with the stress of a divorce, the fear of raising two daughters alone, the uncertainty of the shaky job market, the loneliness of having no adult to turn to for moral or financial support and the pressure of being a woman in the 70's with the sexual revolution, drug use, etc.
My strong guess is that just about ANYONE placed in that situation would be upset a lot, and yes, yelling too.
As for her being a "poor role model", well, I disagree. She held a job, kept a home for her family, counseled them, tried to instill values in them, formed friendships, was financially independent and managed to maintain her own set of values. She made mistakes, yes, but what human being doesn't?
I think she was a very good role model for young women, personally.
Dr. Thong 04-04-2010, 07:55 PM It's a trademark of all Norman Lear shows - people constantly YELLING. Not that it couldn't be funny at times, but all the time was just annoying. I think Ann Romano could have held her own in a shouting match with the Bunker/Stivics, Maude and Walter, and the Evans family. Bring the earplugs!! :eek: :lol:
What did you say...?
catlover79 04-04-2010, 11:27 PM What did you say...?
My point exactly!! :lol:
Dr. Thong 04-05-2010, 10:47 AM My point exactly!! :lol:
MONIKA, WILL YOU SPEAK UP???
DJM77 04-18-2010, 06:51 PM I think Thelma Harper (Mama's Family) might have been angrier and more quick tempered than any other female character mentioned. Thelma Harper and Archie Bunker would have made an interesting couple! :crazy:
catlover79 04-19-2010, 12:39 PM I think Thelma Harper (Mama's Family) might have been angrier and more quick tempered than any other female character mentioned. Thelma Harper and Archie Bunker would have made an interesting couple! :crazy:
YIKES!! You'd need a hearing aid after being in the same room with them!! :crazy: :lol:
Pug Lover 05-03-2010, 08:33 PM I would hardly call Ann Romano the angriest TV character ever.In fact I found her to be among the more loving TV mothers.Very reasonable.
If she was as angry and nasty as some have claimed,she would've slapped her daughters across the face when they yelled at her.
Rezny@gmail.com 05-03-2010, 10:20 PM Another angry character would have to be Frank Barone ("Everybody Loves Raymond")
If she was as angry and nasty as some have claimed,she would've slapped her daughters across the face when they yelled at her.
Well……..
K008NO_l9SU
https://youtu.be/K008NO_l9SU
If she was as angry and nasty as some have claimed,she would've slapped her daughters across the face when they yelled at her.
Well……..
K008NO_l9SU
https://youtu.be/K008NO_l9SU
I started wondering if Pug Lover knew that episode and was being humorously sarcastic, or if they really didn’t know. Pug, if you’re lurking, let me know.
I would hardly call Ann Romano the angriest TV character ever.In fact I found her to be among the more loving TV mothers.Very reasonable.
If she was as angry and nasty as some have claimed ,she would've slapped her daughters across the face when they yelled at her.
The fact that Ann's parenting wheelhouse included physical and verbal abuse seemed undercut her stature as an icon of empowerment (that being a strong single-mother raising two daughters).
|