Here's a much-trafficked blog entry from 2010. It's mostly about old TV shows:
Above: Sherilyn Fenn. Yes, she could NEVER be mistaken for Uncle Arthur. More about her in a moment.
There is a little known tradition in TV series. The tradition has no name, so I just call it the "That's NOT Uncle Arthur!" effect.
If you watch TV shows, you know what I mean. You're watching an old show
and suddenly, a familiar character is acting a strange way.
Let me explain.
OK, here's Uncle Arthur:
Here's
a description. There is an episode of BEWITCHED with Paul Lynde NOT
playing Uncle Arthur -- he's this nervous driving instructor. Here's a
clip from the first time Lynde appeared on the show. It's
from the very first season.
This is a bit of the 1965 Bewitched season 1 episode 26 titled "Driving is the Only Way to Fly."
Paul Lynde would return the following fall, in his new role as the recurring Uncle Arthur character.
This is the Uncle Arthur Effect.
OK,
here's another example if what I mean. Harry Morgan appeared on M*A*S*H as 2
characters. The first: a one-time appearance as Major General Bartford
Hamilton Steele. Here he is in his 1974 episode:
And
the next season, he returned in a different role: that of Commanding
Officer Colonel Sherman T. Potter. He would stay with the series until
its demise in 1983 -- and would reprise his role in the short-lived
spin-off series After M*A*S*H.
So, how many times have actors wandered in, played a guest part -- and then are asked to return for a regular role in a series?
Above
is Vincent Gardinia, who played Frank Lorenzo in ALL IN THE FAMILY. But
before he played Frank, he played two other characters in 2 earlier
episodes of the sitcom.
And
the same thing with veteran character actor (and ubiquitous cartoon
voice talent) Allan Melvin. Melvin was, like, in a zillion shows like
PHIL SILVERS, DICK VAN DYKE, ANDY GRIFFITH and GOMER PYLE USMC. With
both VAN DYKE and GRIFFITH, he played different characters before being
brought in as a semi-regular character.
Alex Borstein, maybe best known for her long running gig as a great comedic character actress in Mad TV, played "Drella," a sarcastic harp player in the first few episodes of the Gilmore Girls
series. It was the producer's hope that she play the second banana role
of Sookie, but her Fox TV contract prevented that commitment. She
returned a 3 years later to GG as "Miss Celine," and is now featured in Amazon's Mrs. Maisel series.
Sherilyn Fenn played 2 characters in Gilmore Girls:
she was first cast in a pilot-within-the-series as Jess' mother figure
and then, later on, a semi regular role as an ex-lover of series regular
Luke
And then there's Dennis Franz. Back before NYPD Blue, he was on Hill Street Blues
for a short multi-episode arc. He played Detective Sal Benedetto, a
drug-hooked, crooked cop for 5 episodes. He returned two years later,
portraying Detective Norman Buntz for the remaining two years of Hill Street's network run, and starred in the 12 episode spin-off series Beverly Hill Buntz.
Freema
Agyeman played Adeola Oshodi, a "red shirt" who had to die in "Army of
Ghosts" to emphasis the danger of the invading Cybermen in Doctor Who. (To quote Guy Fleegman in Galaxy Quest:
"I'm just "Crewman Number Six." I'm expendable. I'm the guy in the
episode who dies to prove how serious the situation is. I've gotta get
outta here.") In less than a year, Freema was back, this time in her new
continuing role as series regular Martha Jones.
And on it goes.
That's all I can think of. But there must be more. Please let me know.
-- This is an edited rerun blog entry from June 16, 2010.
2 comments:
Carl Reiner created "The Dick Van Dyke Show" and would periodically appear as Alan Brady, the comic Rob and company were writing for. In a 1964 episode he played an artist who painted Laura's portrait -- and used his imagination to render her nude.
On "Quincy", they had a flashback showing the character's long-deceased wife. Later, Quincy remarried -- and the new character was the same actress.
In the DePatie Freleng "Inspector" shorts, they did one toon with a three-headed villain echoing a silent character from their "Shot in the Dark" opening credits. That one-off trio became the Brothers Matzoriley, good guys who had their own series of segments on the "Super Six" Saturday morning series.
In the movie "Whistling in the Dark", comic detective Red Skelton outwits inept henchman Rags Ragland. In the sequel, "Whistling in Dixie", Ragland returned as the original thug and as his respectable (if equally inept) twin brother. In the third and final film, "Whistling in Brooklyn", Ragland only played the twin, now settled in as Skelton's sidekick.
Wendie Barrie was George Sanders's romantic interest in three "The Saint" movies -- as a different character each time.
Maud Adams was Christopher Lee's mistress in "The Man With the Golden Gun", then was promoted to titular femme fatale in "Octopussy".
WOW! Thanks for all of that.
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