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That Girl links and theme songs at Sitcoms Online / That Girl Photo Gallery
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#1 |
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I read recently that the producers wanted the last episode series finale to be the wedding of Donald and Ann. But Marlo was adamant that the series not end in a wedding as she thought that would send the wrong message to her female viewers that happy endings only came through marriage. I mean, practically the whole final season was devoted to the wedding planning. Last week Donald had his bachelor's party. I'm waiting for the Antenna TV's Saturday showings to get to the final episode in a couple of weeks so I can see how it actually ends. But in the meantime, how does the show actually end?
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#2 |
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I think the last episode was when Don and Ann got stuck in an elevator and the show had different clips of the series over the years.
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#3 |
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22 Years On Sitcoms
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Yep. I think she was on her way to a women's rights meeting (and maybe she was dragging Don to it) and they got stuck on the elevator.
I recently saw a fascinating old A&E Biography from 2001 on the series, and yes, Marlo would not allow them to marry; and, it was her Daisy Productions show. Totally off-topic, but the really memorable thing in that special for me was that she revealed how she loved and adored Lew Parker (Lew Marie on the show). He fell ill around 1972, and when she visited him in the hospital, he asked her to deliver his eulogy. |
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#4 |
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Thanks for the replies and information, guys! Interesting about the last episode with a stuck elevator. Wouldn't it have been funny if they had been on their way to the wedding instead and got stuck in the elevator! Now that would have been an ending!
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#5 | |
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Quote:
A while back, I found all 5 seasons (unopened) for about 3 or 4 dollars a set at a thrift store. |
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#6 |
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I think most of the young women who were fans of the series wanted to see Ann and Don marry in the final episode. That said, it was very common in those days for a series to end with no concluding episode. My point, the fact that the series did not end with the actual marriage ceremony accomplished nothing and Marlo's attempting to take credit for something she didn't do is little more than self-indulgent.
As Michael pointed out "the whole final season was devoted to the wedding planning", so the fact that the characters were getting married was firmly established. If Ann had turned down the proposal, that would have been something, and Marlo could reasonably take credit for it. If her character had received a job offer from Hollywood and she wanted to pursue that dream ending the engagement or at least considering ending the engagement (with no final determination made), even that would have been something, but the way the series ended sent no message. I understand why from a business perspective the series would not end on a down note, namely the potential of adversely effecting syndication value. Marlo and the other producers recognized that fact and finished the series in the way most series of that era ended. I like the series don't get me wrong, but there was nothing liberating about it. The character of Ann had a boyfriend from episode one, she was a virgin throughout the series run (there were numerous episodes on this topic), how unrealistic a relationship fact was that, two 30ish young people living in Manhattan, in the late 1960's, with their own apartments no less! |
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#7 | |
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#8 | |
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Quote:
I also understand Duster76's point about two young attractive single people living in Manhattan in the late 60s being so chaste and prim. Many people would not have lived separate like that even then. But TV was still pretty conservative in the 1960s so I understand that. However, That Girl didn't end its run till 1971 when a lot of young people were living together. |
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#9 | |
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I loved That Girl and I loved Lew Parker as Ann's father. I never knew she delivered his eulogy. That is very touching to hear. |
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#10 | |
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To put your comments into the vernacular of that day, Ann Marie was saving herself for marriage. Ok, but going back to the statement Michael opened with, "Marlo was adamant that the series not end in a wedding as she thought that would send the wrong message to her female viewers that happy endings only came through marriage". It can be reasonably inferred from Marlo's comments that she was nor necessarily suggesting waiting for marriage. |
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#11 | |
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#12 |
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Maybe viewers were annoyed with the "right" message that the Ann character sent.
I thought Ann and probably Don were too fickle. Both were so wishy-washy. Maybe that was considered to be romantic back then. I like the show, but I have a hard time rewatching the episodes. |
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