Coordinates | 35°0′41.69″N135°46′5.47″N |
---|---|
Show name | Punky Brewster |
Caption | Main title card |
Genre | Sitcom |
Creator | David W. Duclon |
Starring | Soleil Moon FryeGeorge GaynesSusie GarrettCherie Johnson T. K. CarterAmi Foster Casey Ellison |
Theme music composer | Gary PortnoyJudy Hart Angelo |
Opentheme | "Every Time I Turn Around" performed by Gary Portnoy |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Num seasons | 4 |
Num episodes | 88 |
List episodes | List of Punky Brewster episodes |
Executive producer | David W. Duclon |
Producer | Rick HawkinsLiz Sage |
Camera | Multi-camera |
Runtime | 22–24 minutes |
Company | Lightkeeper ProductionsNBC Productions (1984–1986)Columbia Pictures Television (1987–1988) |
Distributor | Coca-Cola Telecommunications (1987-1988)Columbia Pictures Television Distribution (1988-1996)Columbia TriStar Television (1996-2002)NBC Enterprises 2001-2004Sony Pictures Television (2002-Present) NBCUniversal International Television Distribution (2004-Present) |
Channel | NBC (1984–1986) Syndicated (1987–1988) |
Audio format | Stereo |
First aired | |
Last aired | |
Status | Ended |
Related | It's Punky Brewster |
Punky Brewster was an American sitcom about a girl named Punky Brewster (Soleil Moon Frye) being raised by her foster parent (George Gaynes). The show ran on NBC from September 16, 1984 to September 7, 1986 and again in first-run syndication from September 26, 1986 to May 27, 1988.
The building was run by photographer Henry Warnimont (Police Academys George Gaynes), an elderly widowed gentleman who is something of a grouch. Punky quickly became friends with Cherie Johnson (Cherie Johnson), a young girl who lived upstairs in Henry's building with her grandmother, Betty Johnson (Susie Garrett), who worked as an RN at the local Cook County Hospital. Henry discovers Punky in the empty apartment across from his, and hears her story.
The relationship between the two blossoms, despite red tape from social workers, who ultimately rally to Henry's side. As their day in court approached, Punky was forced by the state to stay at Fenster Hall, a shelter for orphaned and abandoned children, which made her realize all the more how close she had grown to Henry. Finally, their day arrived, and the court approved Henry to become Punky's foster dad, and later on her real father by adopting her legally.
Punky's other friends are geeky Allen Anderson (Casey Ellison) and stuck-up rich girl Margaux Kramer (Ami Foster). During the NBC run, Punky's teachers were regularly seen; in the first season, cheerful Mrs. Morton (Dody Goodman) and in the second season, hip Mike Fulton (T.K. Carter). Mike formed a close relationship with Punky and her friends, and was also portrayed as a social crusader of sorts.
Also in the first season, Margaux's socialite mother, played by Loyita Chapel, appeared on a recurring basis, and there was a kooky maintenance man in the Warnimont building named Eddie Malvin (Eddie Deezen) who only showed up in the first several episodes.
Beginning in 1984, NBC aired the sitcom on Sundays. Because the show had many young viewers and was scheduled after football games (which tended to run overtime), six fifteen-minute episodes were produced. This was done rather than joining a full-length episode in progress, because that would disappoint children watching the program. Also, NBC felt that showing Punky Brewster later tended to put them up at a time parents may have considered too late for their children.
Many memorable episodes and storylines took place during the second season, which built up the show's popularity among young viewers. The most crucial development of the second season began on the February 2, 1986 episode, the first installment of a five-part storyline. In the five-part episode "Changes", Henry's downtown photography studio was destroyed in a fire, and it seemed for a time that he would not be able to recover from its aftermath and resume his career. As a result of his stress, Henry ended up hospitalized for a bleeding ulcer.
During this time, Betty and Cherie made arrangements for Punky to stay with them until Henry recovered. Unfortunately, everyone's stability was halted when bureaucratic social worker Simon P. Chillings (guest star Timothy Stack) showed up, found out about Henry's condition and ultimately deemed the worst - not only did he find the Johnsons unsuitable to care for Punky in the meantime, but he felt that Henry was unfit to be her legal guardian in the long term, due to his health, age, and uncertain financial future. Chillings made Punky a ward of the state yet again, and she returned to Fenster Hall.
Despite Punky's efforts to escape from Fenster, a trick pulled by Margaux in which she dressed up and pretended to be Punky, and advocacy from Mike Fulton, Chillings ended up placing Punky with a new foster family, the fabulously wealthy Jules and Tiffany Buckworth (Robert Casper and Joan Welles). Things gradually returned to normal though, as Henry was back on his feet following surgery, opened up a glitzy new studio at the local mall and therefore was able to reunite with Punky. At the conclusion of the story arc, Henry officially adopted Punky.
Andy Gibb guest-starred twice on PB: once as himself, hosting a pre-teen beauty pageant; and once as a music-instructor hired by Henry for Punky...who persuades the young man to go out for a recording contract. (They run afoul of a con-artist instead, and sic the Better Business Bureau on him.)
The final episode of the second season was notable for centering around the very recent, real-life Challenger Space Shuttle tragedy. Punky and her friends watched the live coverage of the shuttle launch in Mike Fulton's class, and after the explosion occurred, Punky is traumatized and finds her dreams to become an astronaut are crushed, until she is visited by special guest star Buzz Aldrin. Although the episode received high ratings, NBC would, in the following weeks, decide to cancel the show.
as Punky|right|175px]]Henry's photography studio at the mall continued to see much success, so much that by the end of the third season he received an offer from the magnate of Glossy's, a photo studio franchise, for a $100,000 buyout of Warnimont's which also included the offer of Henry becoming manager of the Glossy's location. Henry accepted, but soon found that his creativity and business style was not being appreciated by his new employers. He quit Glossy's, but then decided to give into Punky's and Cherie's dream to run their own teen hangout/burger establishment, and invested into another mall property which ended up being splashed with as much color and originality as Punky's bedroom. All involved, which even included Betty and Margaux, unanimously decided on christening it "Punky's Place". Into season four, much of the action continued to take place at the mall, with Henry, Punky and her friends' efforts to keep their new restaurant afloat and the many teenage misadventures which passed through at Punky's Place.
The dog that follows Punky around is named Brandon, after Tartikoff himself.
The primary focus of the episode was on Mike and T.C.'s learning to trust and look out for each other, while many other denizens of Fenster were introduced who would have also comprised the cast of the spin-off. Mike's boss was Rita J. Sanchez (Rosana DeSoto), and his other boys, who he treated as if they were his own sons, were aspiring heavyweight boxer Lester "Sugar" Thompson (Martin Davis), sweet little Dash (Benji Gregory), nerdy intellectual Lyle (Gabriel Damon), who supposedly did Mike's tax forms for him; and huge, hulking Conan (B.J. Barie). When Fenster Hall did not transpire as a regular series by the time of NBC's 1985-86 upfronts, T.K. Carter then continued his role as Mike Fulton on Punky Brewster the following season, now serving as Punky's fourth grade teacher in addition to his work at Fenster. This was perhaps due to Carter's contract with the producers, in addition to the fact that his portrayal of Fulton received positive reception with test audiences and regular ones alike when the Fenster Hall pilot was screened.
It's Punky Brewster!, an animated spin-off with the original cast appeared on NBC on Saturday mornings. The cartoon was produced by Ruby-Spears. It ran from September 14, 1985 to December 6, 1986, for a total of 26 episodes. However, through reruns, it remained in the regular Saturday-morning lineup through the 1988-89 season. The series was later syndicated by Claster Television as part of a package featuring the DIC series Maxie's World (the "lead" program), and Beverly Hills Teens.
{| class=wikitable ! DVD Name !! Ep# !! Release Date |- | Season One | align="center"|22 | June 1, 2004 |- | Season Two | align="center"|22 | February 8, 2005 |- | Season Three | align="center"|22 | July 25, 2006 |- | Season Four | align="center"|22 | February 26, 2008 |}
Category:1984 television series debuts Category:1988 television series endings Category:1980s American television series Category:American television sitcoms Brewster, Punky Category:English-language television series Category:First-run syndicated television programs in the United States Category:NBC network shows Category:Television series by NBC Universal Television Category:Television series by Sony Pictures Television Category:Television shows set in Chicago, Illinois Category:Television series revived after cancellation
ca:Punky Brewster de:Punky Brewster es:Punky Brewster fr:Punky Brewster it:Punky Brewster he:פאנקי השובבה nl:Punky Brewster no:Punky - ei jente med tæl pl:Punky Brewster pt:Punky BrewsterThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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