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| View Poll Results: Should Molly Ringwald have participated in "The Little Chill"? | |||
| Yes. |
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3 | 42.86% |
| No. |
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3 | 42.86% |
| She was very busy. |
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1 | 14.29% |
| Voters: 7. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#1 |
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Join Date: Dec 24, 2019
Location: Toronto
Posts: 3,811
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Should Molly Ringwald have participated in "The Little Chill"?
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#2 |
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Julie,Julie Anne,&Felice 4Ever
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Join Date: Dec 27, 2013
Posts: 16,914
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I wish she would have (because then we maybe could have had a two-parter with more details about ALL the girls), but I'm sure she had WAY more important things to do than go to a TV studio she'd never visited (the show had moved studios twice since she worked there) work on a set she had never been to, and visit a cast, half of whom she didn't even know. By the time of TLC, she knew exactly three people: Lisa, Mindy, and Kim. She'd met Nancy McKeon once.
So, I wish she would have, but I don't think she should have. It would be like going to a high school reunion where the reunion is held in a new building, none of the old teachers are there anymore, and you are not going to remember a good portion of the faces. She was very busy. |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jul 14, 2002
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IMO, the only way it would have worked would have been had Molly brought her guitar and had tried to pretend to be the next Joan Baez while wailing about the time she'd spent away from the others but THEN Jo would have either threatened to have smashed her guitar OR the audience would have heard the sound of a motorcyle running over said guitar!
It seemed Molly Parker had the LEAST sense of humor about herself of any of the characters- including Miss Mahoney, Mr. Bradley, Blair and Nancy! |
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#4 | |
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Quote:
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#5 | |
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Julie,Julie Anne,&Felice 4Ever
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Quote:
I think a TLC two-parter could have worked if they brought in Molly early for the first episode, reacquainting her with her old friends: Blair, Tootie, and Natalie. We get several Molly-centric flashbacks. They explore her music and have her play a song or two, on a guitar that's in tune. (Heck, they would already have an episode like this with Stacey Q, anyway). The girls convince Molly that after the reunion, she needs to head to Hollywood because of her musical talent. Then, in the last act of the first episode, we're reintroduced to Cindy, Nancy, and Sue Ann, who arrive on time for the reunion. We get a couple more flashbacks. The action continues in the second episode. The girls have the slumber party, Sue Ann sneaks downstairs, Jo overhears, just as before. At the end of the episode, the Lost Girls depart, Molly thanking the girls for giving her the courage to start her career in Hollywood, and Sue Ann about to confess her lies to the girls (but stopped by Jo). This gives us an additional 24 minutes of time to explore the girls: we would get about 18 minutes of uninterrupted Molly, and then about six additional minutes for Cindy and Nancy. We learn about Cindy's life (her fashion career in NYC, and how she went down that path after gymnastics), we learn about Nancy's life (her college studies, her time with Roger). The screen time for each Lost Girl is thus expanded, and we get two major storylines, plus b-plots, in a two-part episode. |
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#6 | |
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Julie,Julie Anne,&Felice 4Ever
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Quote:
Molly didn't have to train Nancy McKeon, but she did have to work alongside her, briefly, for one episode. It's clear from her comments that she felt awkward, although its debatable how that came across on screen. Her part was so small, after the redlining of the script, that it's hard for me to tell if it's awkwardness or the part is so small that there's no time for any chemistry or warmth. I don't think Molly is giving Jo icy stares, but they have no lines together, and Molly's lines don't defend Jo from Margo, only telling Margo to lay off. I think it would have helped for the director to include a shot of Molly laughing at the "pie bit", because then we, the audience, would have known that Margo's star had truly fallen: Margo's own table-mate is laughing at her pieing. Then Molly doesn't come across as a Margo supporter, and is at least as guilt-free as Mrs. Garrett. But, of course, the producers were so concerned about the Core Four and Mrs. G at this point that we did not get a shot of Molly laughing. Before the final script changes, we would have had a bit more Molly, and maybe would have gotten that brief shot. Unfortunately, they pared her part back very far, and she felt humiliated, vowing never again to do her "worst job ever". |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Dec 06, 2007
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I woulda loved it so I voted yes. I understand why she declined though
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__________________
Some of my favorite theme songs: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-e...89CsiJpV_irnNw Last edited by Lorimar Television; 03-14-2022 at 01:02 AM. |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Dec 24, 2019
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I don't think Molly would have gone back to a role that a few months earlier called it her "worse job ever".
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#9 | |
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Julie,Julie Anne,&Felice 4Ever
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Quote:
I know Norman Lear wasn't a producer for the show anymore, but what if they had asked him to reach out to her? Might have made a difference. Who knows? |
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#10 | |
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Julie,Julie Anne,&Felice 4Ever
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Quote:
(But then Nick at Nite couldn't have aired their promo where they claimed Molly had been locked away by Mrs. Garrett.) |
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#11 |
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I'm sure the writers could have found a way to have had Jo rent a new one/ fahgett about her having sold it JUST for this episode to give the viewers the satisfaction of SOMEone standing up to Molly's warbling via either Jo's threat to shut it down or hearing the sound of a motorcycle crush a guitar!
Sorry, but her character was NOT missed by me and I doubt even the other Lost Girls were as rudderless without her presence as she'd have liked to have believed!
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#12 | |
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Julie,Julie Anne,&Felice 4Ever
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Quote:
The character of Molly could grate, admittedly, but her character just needed fine tuning (much like her guitar). Her line in "Overachieving", "Because I'm going to be the president of General Motors," is genuinely funny, and gets major laughs/applause from the studio audience. With good writing, Molly could shine. They needed to tweak the character: make her not so militantly feminist, make her dialog more natural, and give her the political lines (Natalie's funny line, "In or out of the government?", properly belonged to Molly; why that switch was made, I will never know). I never believed there were "too many girls" at Eastland: if Saved By the Bell could have six students, Eight is Enough could have eight kids, Just the Ten of Us could have eight kids, and Head of the class could have more than twelve students, then The Facts of Life could have seven... or even eight, if they wanted to add Nancy McKeon. By falsely insisting that there were "ten, twelve" girls on the show, NBC executive Warren Littlefield is dishonest (or can't count), and creates a straw man from which to attack the first season. But his premise is false because viewers can count to seven. Also, while I am NOT a fan of Molly's warbling on The Facts of Life, I have heard her singing on the Disney Christmas album, and under the right music direction, she was extremely talented, which shocked me to my core. |
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#13 |
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Maude Finlay and Ann Romano were very vocal feminists but they were FUNNY and DID have senses of humor about themselves.
Alas, Molly Parker did NOT and that's why she was burden instead of a boom to the comedy (and that line you quoted was virtually the vaguely funny line she ever said). |
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#14 |
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Join Date: Apr 12, 2015
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I think the timing was everything. In 1986, Molly's popularity was at it's peak, coming off "Pretty In Pink" earlier that year, she was the IT girl at the time. Facts was beneath her so to speak at that time, sort of like when Clooney laughed at the idea of appearing in the reunion movie in 2001 when his career was at it's height and the idea of revisiting a sitcom he'd done 15 years earlier was inconceivable.
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#15 | |
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Quote:
At least Molly Parker never said this that another Molly said. https://www.facebook.com/IamMollyRin...7591799283622/ |
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