PARTRIDGE FAMILY 2200 A.D.
(CBS, September 7- December 21, 1974)
Hanna-Barbera Productions, Columbia Pictures Television
MAIN CAST:
Susan Dey – Laurie
Partridge (2 episodes)
Sherry Alberoni –
Laurie Partridge, various
Danny Bonaduce – Danny
Partridge
Suzanne Crough –
Tracy Partridge
Brian Foster – Chris
Partridge
Joan Gerber – Connie
Partridge, various
Chuck McClendon –
Keith Partridge
John Stephenson –
Reuben Kincaid, various
Julie McWhirter –
Marion, various
Frank Welker –
Veenie, Orbit, various
The family that plays
together stays together—especially if that play involves a recording contract.
Created by Bernard Slade, The Partridge Family followed the
adventures of a talented family that formed a band and embarked on a performing
career. It was loosely based on the real-life band family The Cowsills, who were popular in the late
60s and early 70s. Initially, The Cowsills were considered to play themselves,
but as they were not trained actors and older than what the producers wanted
that idea was abandoned.
The Partridges and their funky bus. |
In the pilot episode,
widowed mother Shirley Partridge (Shirley
Jones) was convinced by her children Keith (David Cassidy, Jones’ real-life
step-son), Laurie (Susan Dey), Danny (Danny Bonaduce), Chris (Jeremy Gelbwaks for season 1,
Brian Foster for the remainder) and Tracy (Suzanne Crough) to sing on a
recording they were making in their garage. Danny went out and secured the
family’s agent, Reuben Kincaid (Dave
Madden), and soon they were off and touring in their multicolored school
bus. Wes Farrell served as the
show’s music producer and studio musicians, referred to as The Wrecking
Crew, provided the sound of the family. Cassidy and Jones were the only
members of the cast who actually sang on the recordings.
In concert. |
The Partridge
Family debuted on ABC on September 25,
1970. Screen Gems, who
produced the show, heavily promoted it through a wide array of merchandising
including posters,
comic books, board games
and, naturally, albums
of the songs that appeared in the episodes. Cassidy quickly became a teen idol
and incorporated Partridge songs
along with his original works when he toured. Bonaduce also scored his own
record deal, although Bruce Roberts
provided most of the vocals. The show performed well, earning first place in
its timeslot until ABC moved it to air opposite CBS’
All in the Family. The
ratings plummeted and ABC cancelled the show after its fourth season.
Judy Jetson, ace reporter. |
Meanwhile, Hanna-Barbera was
looking to revive The Jetsons with an updated version similar to what they did for The Flintstones with The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show. Elroy
would have been going off to high school while Judy was an ace reporter, and
they would have been surrounded by a new assortment of Space Age friends. They
proposed the show to CBS’ Fred
Silverman, but Silverman wanted to acquire The Partridge Family instead in the hopes of bringing their
audience over to CBS. Since the network would see just as much of a return from
a new Jetsons as they already did
from airing reruns, Silverman had Hanna-Barbera retool their proposal to incorporate
the characters. The Partridges had previously appeared on Hanna-Barbera’s Goober
and the Ghost Chasers in several episodes in 1973.
The resulting series
was essentially The Partridge Family set
in The Jetsons world. The family
remained virtually unchanged from their live counterparts in personality and
appearance (with the exception of Reuben, who ended up resembling an aged
George Jetson), but were given Space Age fashions, instruments and their school
bus became a domed spaceship with the same color scheme. Dey, Bonaduce, Crough
and Foster were all retained to voice their respective characters. However, Dey
only recorded two episodes before she left the production to film a movie and
was replaced by Sherry Alberoni. Jones would claim in a 2008 radio interview
that she never knew an animated series existed. Joan Gerber instead played her
character.
Futuristic stage. |
Cassidy and Madden were also absent; their characters
played by Chuck McClendon and John Stephenson, respectively. However, Madden did record dialogue for the cartoon and
was set to star in it, but the producers decided to replace him. New characters
included Laurie’s half-green, half-blue Martian friend, Marion (Julie
McWhirter), Keith’s Venusian blue friend, Veenie, and the family’s pet robot
dog, Orbit (both Frank Welker). The characters were designed by Dick Bickenbach.
Ad for the series. |
Partridge Family 2200 A.D. debuted on CBS on September 7, 1974. It
was written by Buddy
Atkinson, Jim
Begg, Barry
E. Blitzer, Larz
Bourne, Dick
Conway, Rance
Howard, Jack
Mendelsohn, John
Fenton Murray, Ray Parker and
William Raynor.
Like the live series, plots tended to revolve around Danny with the rest of his
family being sucked in like a vortex when one of his schemes or inventions
backfired. Hoyt Curtin
handled all the incidental music while a band of studio performers supplied the
weekly song cues. Although some of the same talent that brought life to Josie and the Pussycats were retained for the show, no
consideration was given for any kind of album release due to the fact that the
live Partridge albums had already
declined in popularity and there would be no Cassidy on vocals to help sell it.
Danny with Orbit at snack time. |
2200 A.D. ended up becoming a disappointing failure, both in the
ratings and from a creative standpoint. With the live show being cancelled
months earlier with poor ratings, and most of its audience now too old for
cartoons even if they were still watching the original at the end, CBS’ gambit
on a built-in fanbase didn’t pay off. 2200
A.D. was cancelled mid-season, and it was replaced in March of 1975 by
reruns of Pebbles & Bamm-Bamm. Hanna-Barbera
would finally get their Jetsons revival in syndication in 1985.
Collecting souvenirs. |
Like Jeannie, this show was owned by Screen Gems, now part of Sony Pictures Television, due to
their owning the rights to The Partridge
Family. In 1977, the series was retitled The Partridge Family in Outer Space and was included in the
serialized Fred Flintstone and Friends
series, which was co-produced by Screen Gems’ successor Columbia
Pictures Television. In 2005, the episodes “My Son, the Spaceball Star” and
“Car Trouble” became the only two episodes released to home media after they
were included as bonus features in The Partridge Family: The Complete First
Season DVD set.
EPISODE GUIDE (“*” denotes
repeated song):
“My Son, the Spaceball Star” (11/30/74) – Danny pretends to be on the
spaceball team in order to keep his mother from being disappointed.
Song: “Gypsy Girl”
“Danny, the Invisible Man” (9/7/74) – Danny uses a Plutonian
invisibility gadget to impress a girl, but begins to experience side effects
back on Earth as he keeps randomly disappearing.
Song: “Keep Rockin On”
“The Incredible Shrinking Keith” (9/21/74) – Danny’s invention
accidentally causes Keith to shrink.
Song: “You Make It So Easy”
“If This is Texas—It Must be Doomsday” (9/14/74) – The family’s gig in
Texxas ends up being a lifetime one.
Song: “Love My Life Away
With You”
“Cousin Sunspot” (9/28/74) – Cousin Sunspot uses a voice changer in
order to join the band, but it begins to transform him into a giant chicken.
Song: “Later On”
“The Dog Catcher” (10/12/74) – Orbit attempts to avoid the dog catcher
in order to avoid paying for a new license.
Song: “One More Chance”
“The Wax Museum” (10/5/74) – Thieves steal wax figures of the family
in order to create duplicates and make a fortune with their own family.
Song: “Take Good Care of
Her”
“Laurie’s Computer Date” (10/26/74) – Laurie forces Keith and Danny to
take her to the ball after scaring off her date, and they find her a computer
date instead—with a clunky robot.
Song: “Suzy, Don’t Give Me
Your Number”
“Movie Madness” (11/2/74) – When the family’s rocket crashes in
Hollywood, Keith is drafted to star in a movie and success begins to go to his
head.
Song: “Keep Rockin’ On”
“The Pink Letter” (11/9/74) – Danny mails Laurie’s angry letter to her
boyfriend, not knowing he later called with a good excuse.
Song: “Gypsy Girl”*
“Cupcake Caper” (10/19/74) – Connie has to find the ring she lost
while baking before her mother comes to visit.
Song: “You Make It So
Easy”*
“Orbit the Genius” (11/16/74) – Orbit’s quiz show career is cut short
when he’s stolen by a two-headed foreign agent.
Song: “Love My Life Away
With You”*
“The Switch” (11/23/74) – Danny accidentally causes Keith to exchange
bodies with a gorilla.
Song: “Late At Night”
“Car Trouble” (12/7/74) – Danny’s poor flying record lands him in debt
for 20 years.
Song: “One More Chance”*
“The Roobits” (12/14/74) – Danny’s scheme of raising cute alien pets
backfires when they start reproducing at a high rate.
Song: “Suzy, Don’t Give Me
Your Number”*
“Let’s All Stick Together” (12/21/74) – Danny accidentally throws out
of a priceless antique entrusted to Connie, and repairing it causes the family
to become stuck together with super glue.
Song: “Take Good Care of
Her”*
Originally posted in 2016. Updated in 2020.
Originally posted in 2016. Updated in 2020.
2 comments:
The mother's name was Shirley in the cartoon too! I am certain and so many sources claim it was Connie,however I remember distinctly it being Shirley. There is proof in The Partridge Family Season 1 dvd which contains two episodes of the animated series. She is definitely refereed to as "Shirley". I always enjoyed this show.
I'll double check on that. Thanks.
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