Friday, 1 November 2013

Family Matters

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Family Matters
Family Matters.jpg
GenreFamily/Teen sitcom
Created byWilliam Bickley
Michael Warren
Developed byRobert L. Boyett
Thomas L. Miller
StarringReginald VelJohnson
Jo Marie Payton
Rosetta LeNoire
Darius McCrary
Kellie Shanygne Williams
Jaimee Foxworth
Joseph & Julius Wright
Telma Hopkins
Bryton McClure
Jaleel White
Shawn Harrison
Michelle Thomas
Orlando Brown
Judyann Elder
Theme music composerJesse Frederick, Bennett Salvay
& Scott Roeme
(episodes 1–5: Bob ThieleGeorge David Weiss & George Douglas)
Opening theme"As Days Go By",
performed by Jesse Frederick
(episodes 1–5: "What a Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong)
Ending themeInstrumental theme,
composed by Jesse Frederick & Bennett Salvay (seasons 1–4)
Gary Boren (seasons 5–9)
Composer(s)Jesse Frederick &
Bennett Salvay (both; seasons 1–2)
Gary Boren (seasons 3–5 and 8)
Steven Chesne (seasons 4–7)
Country of originUnited States
Originallanguage(s)English
No. of seasons9
No. of episodes215 (List of episodes)
Production
Executiveproducer(s)Thomas L. Miller
Robert L. Boyett
William Bickley
Michael Warren (seasons 2–7)
David W. Duclon (seasons 3–8)
Camera setupFilmMulti-camera
Running timeapprox. 22–25 minutes
Productioncompany(s)Miller-Boyett Productions
Bickley-Warren Productions (seasons 3–9)
Lorimar Television (seasons 1–4)
Warner Bros. Television (seasons 5–9)
DistributorWarner Bros. Television Distribution
Broadcast
Original channelABC (1989–1997)
CBS (1997–1998)
Picture format480i (SDTV)
Audio formatStereo
Original runSeptember 22, 1989 – July 17, 1998
Chronology
Related showsPerfect Strangers (1986–1993)
Family Matters is an American sitcom about a middle-class African American family living in Chicago, Illinois, which ran for nine seasons. The series is a spin-off ofPerfect Strangers, but revolves around the Winslow family.[1] Midway through the first season, the show introduced the Winslows' nerdy neighbor Steve Urkel (played byJaleel White), who quickly became its breakout character and eventually a main character.[2] Family Matters aired from September 22, 1989, to September 19, 1997, on ABC, and on CBS from September 19, 1997, to July 17, 1998.
With nine seasons, Family Matters is the second longest-running U.S. sitcom with a predominantly African American cast. It follows The Jeffersons, which aired for 11 seasons. In terms of the number of episodes, Family Matters (with 215 episodes total) is ranked third after The Jeffersons (253 episodes) and Tyler Perry's House of Payne(254 episodes).

History[edit]

Family Matters originally focused on the character of police officer Carl Winslow and his family: wife Harriette Winslow, son Eddie Winslow, elder daughter Laura Winslow, and youngest child Judy Winslow (until Season 4).[3] In the pilot episode, the family had also opened their home to Carl's street-wise mother, Estelle Winslow (usually known as "Mother Winslow"). Prior to the start of the series, Harriette's sister, Rachel Crawford, and her infant son, Richie Crawford, had moved into the Winslow household after the death of Rachel's husband.
The Winslows' nerdy teenaged next-door neighbor, Steve Urkel, was introduced midway through the first season and quickly became the focus of the show.[4] The popular sitcom was a mainstay in ABC's TGIF lineup from 1989 until 1997, before it became part of the CBS Block Party lineup from 1997 until 1998. Family Matters was produced by Bickley-Warren Productions and Miller-Boyett Productions, in association with Lorimar Television (1989–1993), and later Warner Bros. Television(1993–1998). As the show progressed, episodes began to center more and more on Steve Urkel and other original characters also played by Jaleel White, including Steve's suave alter-ego Stefan Urquelle and his female cousin Myrtle Urkel.

Network change[edit]

In early 1997, CBS bought Family Matters and Step by Step for $40 million from ABC.[5] ABC then promised to pay Miller-Boyett Productions $1.5 million per episode for a ninth and tenth season of Family Matters. However, tensions had risen between Miller-Boyett Productions and ABC's parent company, Disney. Miller-Boyett thought that it would not be a big player on ABC after the network's recent purchase byDisney. In turn, Miller-Boyett Productions agreed to a $40 million offer from CBS a 22-episode season for both Family Matters and Step By Step. CBS scheduled Family Matters, along with Step By Step as a part of its new Friday line-up they called the "CBS Block Party" and put the "CBS Block Party" against ABC's TGIF lineup, where the two series originated. CBS cancelled Family Matters and Step By Step after one season, along with the rest of the "Block Party" lineup.

Cast[edit]

Main cast[edit]

Clockwise from bottom-left: Jaleel White as Steve, Kellie Shanygne Williams as Laura, Michelle Thomas as Myra, Darius McCrary as Eddie, Jo Marie Payton as Harriette and Reginald VelJohnson as Carl
ActorCharacterSeasons
123456789
Reginald VelJohnsonCarl WinslowMain
Jo Marie Payton*Harriette WinslowMain
Darius McCraryEdward "Eddie" WinslowMain
Kellie Shanygne WilliamsLaura WinslowMain
Jaimee FoxworthJudith "Judy" WinslowMain
Rosetta LeNoireEstelle "Mother" WinslowMainRecurring
Joseph Wright
Julius Wright
Richard "Richie" CrawfordMain
Telma HopkinsRachel CrawfordMainRecurringRecurring
Jaleel WhiteSteven "Steve" Urkel
Stefan Urquelle
Myrtle Urkel
RecurringMain
Bryton McClureRichard "Richie" CrawfordMainRecurring
Shawn HarrisonWaldo Geraldo FaldoRecurringMain
Michelle ThomasMyra MonkhouseRecurringMain
Orlando BrownJerry Jamal "3J" JamesonRecurringMain
Judyann Elder*Harriette WinslowMain
*Jo Marie Payton departed the series after the episode "Deck the Malls" (season 9, episode 11). Judyann Elder assumed the role of Harriette Winslow for the remainder of the season, beginning with "Crazy for You (Part 1)" (season 9, episode 14).
In the pilot episode, Judy Winslow was portrayed by Valerie Jones.

Episodes[edit]

Family Matters' average Nielsen ratings for its first eight seasons on ABC (1989–1997) was #32.
SeasonEpisodesFirst air dateLast air dateNielsen ranking
Season 122September 22, 1989April 30, 1990#32
Season 225September 21, 1990April 26, 1991#15[6]
Season 325September 20, 1991May 8, 1992#27[6]
Season 424September 18, 1992May 14, 1993#30
Season 524September 24, 1993May 20, 1994#30[6]
Season 625September 23, 1994May 19, 1995#34
Season 724September 22, 1995May 17, 1996#42
Season 824September 20, 1996May 9, 1997#50
Season 922September 19, 1997July 17, 1998#99

Production notes[edit]

Family Matters was created by William Bickley and Michael Warren (who also wrote for, and were producers of Perfect Strangers) and developed by Thomas L. Miller and Robert L. Boyett (also producers of Perfect Strangers), it was also executive produced by Bickley, Warren, Miller and Boyett. The series was produced by Miller-Boyett Productions, in association with Lorimar Television who co-produced the show until 1993, when Warner Bros. Television absorbed Lorimar (a sister company under the Time Warner banner). Starting with season three, the series was also produced by Bickley-Warren Productions.
The series was filmed in front of a live studio audience; the Lorimar-produced episodes were shot at Lorimar Studios (later Sony Pictures Studios) in Culver City, California, while the Warner Bros.-produced episodes were filmed at Warner Bros. Studios in nearbyBurbank.

Theme song and opening credits[edit]

The show's original theme was Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World"; it was scrapped after the fifth episode of season one, though it was heard only in the pilot episode in syndicated reruns. The second theme, "As Days Go By," written by Jesse Frederick, Bennett Salvay and Scott Roeme, and performed by Frederick, was the theme for the majority of the series until 1995 (this was heard in season one episodes in ABC Family and syndicated airings). A longer version of "As Days Go By" can be heard in the first three seasons, though in syndicated reruns the short version is heard (in ABC Family airings, the long theme was used for all of the season 1-3 episodes).
The Family Matters house in Chicago(depicted as the Winslow family home) in 2010. The structure to the left did not exist at the time the show's exterior shots were filmed.
The opening sequence begins with a shot of the Chicago Lakefront (the John Hancock Center can be seen in the center), then a shot of the Winslow home. In the opening titles, the main characters were shown around the Winslow home (though in some shots featured some characters in other places as well, such as Rachel at the Rachel's Place restaurant during the season two through four version, or Waldo at Vanderbilt High School hall during the season four through six version). The opening credits during the first three seasons feature a scene showing the Winslow family riding their bicycles across a bridge over theChicago River; an allusion to parent series Perfect Strangers, which featured a scene of Balki and Larry (played by Bronson Pinchot and Mark Linn-Baker) riding a tour boat underneath the same bridge in its own opening credits from season three until the end of that series. Clips of episodes were shown after the bike scene and before the house shot in the season one through three versions.
The house shown at the beginning and the end of the opening credits (as well as in establishing shots for scenes set at the Winslow house) is located at 1516 W. Wrightwood Avenue in Chicago, Illinois (41.92891°N 87.666779°W). The closing shot at the end of the credits with the Winslow family at the piano (which also was shown during the closing credits when there was no tag scene), in which the shot pans outside the house and the camera zooms out showing neighborhoods and the northside Chicago skyline (Wrigleyville) in the background, was originally used in the pilot episode "The Mama Who Came to Dinner" (though the scene featuring the Winslows before the pan was redone twice in seasons two and five).
The role of Richie as a baby was credited as being played by "Joseph Julius Wright" in season 1, with Julius' name made to appear as Joseph's middle name in the titles – the duo was credited this way because the show's producers did not want audiences to know that Richie was then played by twins – the role of Richie as a baby was played by two children because California state law regulates the number of work hours for a young child, therefore it is common for the role of one baby in a TV or film production to be played by twins (another Miller-Boyett series, Full House, credited Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in the same manner in its opening sequences until that show's seventh season). In season five, after Telma Hopkins left the show, Jaleel White was given special billing in response to the popularity he earned as Steve Urkel. Appearing last in the credits, he was credited as "[and] Jaleel White as Steve Urkel" (Hopkins was credited similarly as "And Telma Hopkins as Rachel" prior to season five). In season seven, the opening theme song and credit sequence were dropped entirely – though it was brought back for one episode: "Talk's Cheap", the eighth episode of that same season – for all other episodes during seasons seven through nine, the names of the show's main cast members, as well as co-executive producers and executive producers were shown during each episode's teaser scene.

Crossovers with other TGIF shows[edit]

Family Matters is set in the same "TV universe" as several other TV shows related to ABC's TGIF:
  • Perfect Strangers — Before Family Matters, Harriette Winslow was originally the elevator operator at the Chicago Chroniclenewspaper office in the third and fourth seasons of Perfect StrangersFamily Matters was a spin-off series given to this character in 1989. In the second episode of Family Matters, Harriette was fired as elevator operator at the Chronicle, but was soon re-hired as "Chief of Security", which explained her absence from dealings with the Perfect Strangers cast.
  • Full House — In the 1991 episode "Stephanie Gets Framed", Steve Urkel helps Stephanie Tanner (Jodie Sweetin) deal with her anxiety after she has to wear eyeglasses.
  • Boy Meets World — In the episode "Beauty and the Beast" Urkel sent a chain letter to his friend Cory Matthews, (Ben Savage) who lived in Philadelphia. In an episode of Boy Meets World, Cory says he receives a chain letter from his friend Steve. The two never actually appeared together on either show.
  • Step by Step — In the original ABC broadcast, the ending gag of Family Matters' third season episode "Brains Over Brawn" is crossed over with the opening of the second episode of Step By Step, "The Dance". Urkel's jet-propelled flight pack causes him to fly through the Winslows' roof as one show ends, and crash-land in Port Washington, Wisconsin, where the Lambert-Foster family is enjoying a barbecue as the other show opens. Urkel goes on to help his science-fair pen pal, Mark Foster (Christopher Castile), and lifts Al Lambert's (Christine Lakin) spirits after her potential date dumps her just before a school dance. He reprises his "Do the Urkel" dance in the scene where Al gives the guy who dumped her his comeuppance. Urkel also makes a brief cameo in the 1997 episode "A Star Is Born", snapping a clapperboard on the set of the movie that Al was cast in over her two sisters.
  • Meego - In this short-lived series, Steve makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the second episode "Love and Money" where he angrily retrieves a television set stolen by Meego. He then appears in the third episode "The Truth About Cats and Dogs" helping out at a model car derby competition.

Syndication[edit]

In September 1993, Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution began distributing Family Matters for broadcast in off-network syndication; most television stations stopped carrying the show by around 2002, though some stations in larger markets such asWTOG in Tampa, Florida continued to air Family Matters until as recently as 2005. In 1995, reruns of the series began airing on TBS Superstation, where it ran until 2003.
From 1997 to 2002, reruns of the series aired on WGN America. In 2003, ABC Family picked up the series and aired it for five years until March 2008, when ABC Family removed the show from their line-up. BET aired reruns briefly in December 2009. As of March 1, 2013, they air re-runs again. MTV2 also began airing re-runs on September 7, 2013. The show aired on Nick at Nite, a U.S. cable network, from June 29, 2008 to December 31, 2012. ABC Family and Nick at Nite airings cut the tag scenes at the end of all episodes, despite the fact that many episodes during the series have tag scenes during the closing credits. In Canada the series also aired onCTV.

DVD releases[edit]

Warner Home Video has released the first three seasons of Family Matters on DVD in Region 1.[7][8][9] Season 4 will be released on February 4, 2014.[10]
The first 3 seasons are also available for digital download on Amazon.com and the iTunes Store.[citation needed]
DVD NameEp #Release Date
The Complete 1st Season22June 8, 2010[7]
The Complete 2nd Season25February 14, 2012[8]
The Complete 3rd Season25February 12, 2013[9]
The Complete 4th Season24February 4, 2014[10]

Awards and nominations[edit]

YearAwardResultCategoryRecipient
1991BMI Film & TV AwardsWonBMI TV Music AwardBennett Salvay
1992BMI TV Music AwardBennett Salvay
1996Emmy AwardNominatedOutstanding Individual Achievement in Special Visual EffectsKelly Sandefur
(For episode "Send in the Clone")
1994NAACP Image AwardsWonOutstanding Youth Actor/ActressJaleel White
1995Outstanding Youth Actor/ActressJaleel White
1996NominatedOutstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy SeriesJaleel White
1997Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy SeriesJaleel White
1996Nickelodeon Kids' Choice AwardsNominatedFavorite Television Show
-
Favorite Television ActorJaleel White
2008TV Land AwardsNominatedFavorite Character(s) Who "Went Missing"Jaimee Foxworth
1990Young Artist AwardNominatedBest Young Actor Starring in a Television SeriesDarius McCrary
Best New Television Series
-
WonBest Young Actor Guest Starring in a Television SeriesRandy Josselyn
1991NominatedBest Young Actress Supporting or Re-Occurring Role for a TV SeriesJaimee Foxworth
Best Young Actress Starring in a Television SeriesKellie Shanygne Williams
Best Young Actor Starring in a Television SeriesDarius McCrary
WonOutstanding Young Comedian in a Television SeriesJaleel White
1992NominatedOutstanding Young Comedienne in a Television SeriesKellie Shanygne Williams
1993NominatedOutstanding Young Comedienne in a Television SeriesKellie Shanygne Williams
Outstanding Young Comedian in a Television SeriesDarius McCrary
Best Young Actress Recurring in a Television SeriesCherie Johnson
Best Young Actor Recurring in a Television SeriesPatrick J. Dancy
Best Young Actor Co-starring in a Television SeriesShawn Harrison
WonBest Young Actor Recurring in a Television SeriesBumper Robinson
(Tied with Aeryk Egan for Brooklyn Bridge)

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