View Full Version : This needs to be reaired...on The Hub


Ryan Chamberlain
08-30-2011, 09:59 AM
Seriously. They need to extend their sitcom schedule and this would be a perfect show to do it with. It focused on a family just trying to make it by...I would adore to see this on the air again. Someone needs to start a petition for them to air it. :)

Anyone agree?

tlc38tlc38
06-15-2012, 07:47 PM
I agree. Count me in! I've always thought this was an awesomely underrated show. It's always reminded me of an updated-sitcom-version of Little House on the Prairie with Dorothy Jane Torkelson as Laura Ingalls.

MacLeaper
01-27-2014, 03:53 PM
You're comparing The Torkelsons to Little House on the Prairie? Interesting comparison. I've seen the latter but I haven't really seen the former. But I've heard of The Torkelsons and I'm pretty sure I've caught bits of it on TV when it originally aired- but I don't really recall much on this. What was the main premise?

tlc38tlc38
01-29-2014, 10:44 AM
You're comparing The Torkelsons to Little House on the Prairie? Interesting comparison. I've seen the latter but I haven't really seen the former. But I've heard of The Torkelsons and I'm pretty sure I've caught bits of it on TV when it originally aired- but I don't really recall much on this. What was the main premise?

Synopsis taken from Wikipedia:

Living in Pyramid Corners, a fictional suburb of Vinita, Oklahoma, Millicent Torkelson (Connie Ray) did what she could to survive financially, after her husband, Randy (Gregg Henry) left the family. Randy later returned and was seen in several episodes, and the two parents ended up divorcing. The pilot episode deals with Millicent being so far in debt that she even has appliances in her home repossessed. In order to support her family, Millicent gets a boarder named Wesley Hodges (William Schallert), who ends up living with them for the year in the house basement.

Millicent's children were 14-year-old Dorothy Jane (Olivia Burnette), sweet and exceptionally articulate for her age, who also served running commentary throughout the show by having talks with the "Man in the Moon" by her bedroom window; 12-year-old Steven Floyd (Aaron Michael Metchik), the athletic second oldest; 10-year-old Ruth Ann (Anna Slotky), who was musically inclined; 8-year-old Chuckie Lee (Lee Norris), the bug collector, always recognizable with his thick-rimmed glasses; and the youngest, 6-year-old Mary Sue (Rachel Duncan), who acted as if nothing was ever wrong. The pilot also involves Dorothy Jane meeting the new neighbor for the first time, 18-year-old Riley Roberts (Michael Landes), and becoming completely infatuated with him. Throughout the remainder of the first season Riley remains oblivious to the torch Dorothy Jane carries for him, mainly due to their age difference (she was a freshman in high school, and he a senior), but the two develop a strong connection nonetheless. Another neighbor of the Torkelsons was Kirby Scroggins (Paige Gosney), a pesky but well-meaning teenage boy clad in plaid who was forever chasing an uninterested Dorothy Jane. Dorothy Jane is also quite embarrassed by her family and their situation, even though she would never let someone else make fun of them.

The pilot also featured Ernie Lively as Jacob "J.W." Presley, a butcher who is smitten with Millicent. In the pilot episode, Benj Thall and Elizabeth Poyer played Steven Floyd and Ruth Ann Torkelson. All these actors were originally going to be part of the show permanently, as they were credited in the pilot's opening sequence, but thereafter, the children were subsequently recast and the character of J.W. was dropped entirely.


Almost Home (season 2 title):

After ending its first season on June 16, 1992, the series was retooled and renamed Almost Home. Premiering on February 6, 1993, the second incarnation features the Torkelsons relocating to Seattle after Millicent accepts a job as a nanny. In this series, Steven Floyd and Ruth Ann did not appear nor were they mentioned. Millicent took the other three children to live with Brian Morgan (Perry King) and his two kids; Gregory (Jason Marsden) and Molly (Brittany Murphy). Brian ran a successful clothing catalog/magazine titled Molly Gregory, a business started by his late wife and so-named after both his children.

There was some initial resistance from Molly and Gregory to warm up to the Torkelson clan moving in, as they felt somewhat alienated by their down-home ways and devotion to cheerful, southern hospitality. Slowly but surely they adjusted, with Gregory becoming a trusted ally to all the kids, and Molly helping Dorothy Jane to fit into her world of shallow, status-conscious people, albeit feebly. Brian and Millicent often clashed over parenting methods, but would usually learn a valuable lesson from each other in the end. The novel practice of having Dorothy Jane talk to the "Man in the Moon" about her issues and dreams, from her bedroom window, remained. This incarnation of the show ended on June 6, 1993.

With the retooling of the show's format and title change, the revamped Almost Home also transitioned from being shot on film to being recorded on tape.