The Fonz and Steve Urkel have been mentioned as characters
who went from secondary status (or, in Urkel's case, a single
appearance on "Family Matters") into the star of the show, for
all intents and purposes. How about a few others?
Dallas: The Romeo-and-Juliet relationship of Bobby and Pam was
supposed to be the initial hook. But J.R. and his shenanigans quickly
upstaged them; no wonder 80 percent of the audience tuned in to
find out who shot him.
Lost In Space: The real appeal was the byplay between Dr. Zachary
Smith and the robot (voice of Dick Tufeld and his famous "Danger, Will
Robinson!").
Dark Shadows: Barnabas grew into the star as we learned how he became
a vampire, and Angelique remained his tormentor.
Good Times: What other reason to watch than Jimmie Walker's "Dy-no-mite!"?
The Carol Burnett Show: Tim Conway and Harvey Korman provided so many of
the show's funniest moments, especially when they tried to break each other up.
77 Sunset Strip: Probably would not have grabbed the teen audience had it not been
for Edd "Kookie" Byrnes and his comb. Quickly: do you remember anything else about
that show (other than the Jack Webb-produced last season with Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as the
only remaining regular)?
General Hospital: Luke and Laura. Need I say more?
Wheel Of Fortune: The model upstages the emcee. That hadn't happened since Bess
Myerson became better known than host Randy Merriman on "The Big Payoff" in the '50s.
I could argue that Eddie Haskell was the real reason, in retrospect, to watch "Leave It To
Beaver." Likewise, Maynard G. Krebs on "Dobie Gillis." Both of them added a touch of spice
to liven up the otherwise-bland proceedings.
Comments?
who went from secondary status (or, in Urkel's case, a single
appearance on "Family Matters") into the star of the show, for
all intents and purposes. How about a few others?
Dallas: The Romeo-and-Juliet relationship of Bobby and Pam was
supposed to be the initial hook. But J.R. and his shenanigans quickly
upstaged them; no wonder 80 percent of the audience tuned in to
find out who shot him.
Lost In Space: The real appeal was the byplay between Dr. Zachary
Smith and the robot (voice of Dick Tufeld and his famous "Danger, Will
Robinson!").
Dark Shadows: Barnabas grew into the star as we learned how he became
a vampire, and Angelique remained his tormentor.
Good Times: What other reason to watch than Jimmie Walker's "Dy-no-mite!"?
The Carol Burnett Show: Tim Conway and Harvey Korman provided so many of
the show's funniest moments, especially when they tried to break each other up.
77 Sunset Strip: Probably would not have grabbed the teen audience had it not been
for Edd "Kookie" Byrnes and his comb. Quickly: do you remember anything else about
that show (other than the Jack Webb-produced last season with Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as the
only remaining regular)?
General Hospital: Luke and Laura. Need I say more?
Wheel Of Fortune: The model upstages the emcee. That hadn't happened since Bess
Myerson became better known than host Randy Merriman on "The Big Payoff" in the '50s.
I could argue that Eddie Haskell was the real reason, in retrospect, to watch "Leave It To
Beaver." Likewise, Maynard G. Krebs on "Dobie Gillis." Both of them added a touch of spice
to liven up the otherwise-bland proceedings.
Comments?