Sunday, December 31, 2017

Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of January 1, 2018)

It's Sunday, so it is time for "Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows" for the coming week. This is where we list what sitcom stars are appearing on talk shows for the coming week, the stars are both current and past sitcom stars, so this is for all sitcom fans of all eras!
For the week of January 1-5, 2018, we have many current sitcom stars and past sitcom stars on TV talk shows! All times listed are Eastern. So get your DVRs (or whatever you use) ready! Ready? Here is all what you need to know for the coming week!


Monday, January 1
  • Will Smith (The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air) - Watch Will on a repeat of Jimmy Kimmel Live! at 11:35pm on ABC.
  • Aubrey Plaza (Parks and Recreation) - Aubrey appears on a repeat of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon at 11:34pm on NBC.
  • Billy Ray Cyrus (Still the King) - Billy Ray is a guest on a repeat of Last Call with Carson Daly at 1:35am on NBC.
  • George Lopez (Lopez/George Lopez) - George visits The Untitled Action Bronson Show at 11:30pm on Viceland.
  • Maya Rudolph (Up All Night) - Maya stops by LIVE! with Kelly and Ryan, so check your listings.
  • Dove Cameron (Liv and Maddie) - Dove appears on LIVE! with Kelly and Ryan, so check your listings.
  • Debra Messing (Will & Grace) - Debra is a guest on Harry, so check your local listings.
  • Kim Fields (The Facts of Life/Living Single) - Kim appears on a repeat of Steve, so check your local listings.
  • Tatyana Ali (Love That Girl!/The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air) - Tatyana is a guest on a repeat of Steve, so check your local listings.
  • Jenny McCarthy (Two and a Half Men/Jenny) - Jenny will be on ABC's Good Morning America sometime between 7-9am.
Tuesday, January 2
  • David Duchovny (Californication) - Catch David on a repeat of Jimmy Kimmel Live! at 11:35pm on ABC.
  • Patton Oswalt (The Goldbergs/The King of Queens) - Patton appears on a repeat of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon at 11:34pm on NBC.
  • Maz Jobrani (Superior Donuts/Better Off Ted/The Knights of Prosperity) - Maz drops by The Late Show with Stephen Colbert at 11:35pm on CBS.
  • John Lithgow (Trial & Error/Twenty Good Years/3rd Rock from the Sun) - John is a guest on a repeat of Late Night with Seth Meyers at 12:36am on NBC.
  • Debra Messing (Will & Grace) - Debra appears on a repeat of The Late Late Show with James Corden at 12:37am on CBS.
  • Elijah Wood (Wilfred) - Elijah is a guest on a repeat of Conan at 11pm on TBS.
  • JoAnna Garcia Swisher (Reba/Animal Practice/Better with You) - JoAnna appears on a repeat of Conan at 11pm on TBS.
  • Dylan McDermott (LA to Vegas) - Dylan stops by The Talk on CBS at 2pm ET/1pm CT-PT.
  • America Ferrera (Superstore) - America visits LIVE! with Kelly and Ryan, so check your listings.
  • Colleen Ballinger (Haters Back Off) - Colleen is a guest on LIVE! with Kelly and Ryan, so check your listings.
  • Kumail Nanjiani (Silicon Valley) - Kumail appears on a repeat of Harry, so check your local listings.
  • Corey Feldman (The Bad News Bears/Madame's Place) - Corey talks about the shocking aftermath of speaking out about pedophilia in Hollywood on The Dr. Oz Show, so check your local listings.
  • Nick Jonas (Jonas L.A.) - Nick is a guest on People Now at 8:30am.
  • Nico Santos (Supestore) - Nico appears on Home & Family on Hallmark Channel at 10am ET/PT.
Wednesday, January 3
  • America Ferrera (Superstore) - Watch America The Late Show with Stephen Colbert at 11:35pm on CBS.
  • Rainn Wilson (The Office) - Rainnn is a guest on a repeat of The Late Late Show with James Corden at 12:37am on CBS.
  • Amber Stevens West (Ghosted/The Carmichael Show) - Amber appears on a repeat of Last Call with Carson Daly at 1:35am on NBC.
  • Anna Faris (Mom) - Anna is a guest on a repeat of Conan at 11pm on TBS.
  • Yara Shahidi (black-ish/grown-ish) - Yara guest co-hosts The View on ABC at 11am ET/10am CT-PT. She will also be on ABC's Good Morning America sometime between 7-9am.
  • Katy Mixon (American Housewife/Mike & Molly) - Katy visits LIVE! with Kelly and Ryan, so check your listings.
  • Jason Biggs (Mad Love/Drexell's Class) - Jason appears on a repeat of The Wendy Williams Show, so check your local listings.
  • Wendy Raquel Robinson (The Game/The Steve Harvey Show) - Wendy is a guest on The Real, so check your local listings.
  • Alec Baldwin (30 Rock) - Alec will be on ABC's Good Morning America sometime between 7-9am.
Thursday, January 4
  • Martin Short (Mulaney/The Martin Short Show) - Catch Martin on a repeat of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon at 11:34pm on NBC.
  • Jason Segel (How I Met Your Mother) - Jason appears on a repeat of The Late Late Show with James Corden at 12:37am on CBS.
  • J. B. Smoove (The Millers/Bent/'Til Death/Curb Your Enthusiasm) - J. B. is a guest on a repeat of Conan at 11pm on TBS.
  • Whitney Cummings (Whitney) - Whitney appears on a repeat of Conan at 11pm on TBS.
  • Nolan Gould and Rico Rodriguez (Modern Family) - Nolan and Rico are guests on Steve, so check your local listings.
  • Yvonne Orji (Insecure) - Yvonne will be on New York Live on WNBC in New York at 11:30am ET.
  • Andrea Martin (Great News/Difficult People) - Andrea joins Clinton Kelly for some fun in the kitchen as they whip up a healthy meal on ABC's The Chew at 1pm ET/12pm PT/CT. She also talks about Great News on the BUILD Series at 12:30pm.
  • Joely Fisher ('Til Death/Ellen) - Joely appears on Home & Family on Hallmark Channel at 10am ET/PT.
  • Tom Hanks (Bosom Buddies) - Tom talks about The Post on NBC's Today sometime between 7-9am.
  • Yara Shahidi (black-ish/grown-ish) - Yara talks about grown-ish on the BUILD Series at 2pm.
  • Charles Esten (The Crew) - Charles talks about Nashville on the BUILD Series at 3:30pm.
Friday, January 5
  • Jerry Seinfeld (Seinfeld) - Watch Jerry on a repeat of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon at 11:34pm on NBC.
  • Michael Showalter (Wet Hot American Summer: Ten Years Later/Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp) - Michael is a guest on a repeat of Late Night with Seth Meyers at 12:36am on NBC.
  • Gael García Bernal (Mozart in the Jungle) - Gael appears on a repeat of The Late Late Show with James Corden at 12:37am on CBS.
  • Maria Bamford (Lady Dynamite) - Maria is a guest on a repeat of Last Call with Carson Daly at 1:35am on NBC.
  • Niecy Nash (The Soul Man/Getting On/Reno 911!) - Niecy guest co-hosts The View on ABC at 11am ET/10am CT-PT.
  • Kumail Nanjiani (Silicon Valley) - Kumail visits The Ellen DeGeneres Show, so check your local listings.
  • Mario Cantone (Sex and the City) - Mario appears on a repeat of The Wendy Williams Show, so check your local listings.
  • The Cast of Moesha - Brandy Norwood, Sheryl Lee Ralph, William Allen Young, Countess Vaughn, Shar Jackson, Marcus T. Paulk and Ray J reunite on a repeat of The Real, so check your local listings.
  • Yvette Nicole Brown (The Mayor/The Odd Couple/Community) - Yvette drops by Steve, so check your local listings.
  • Corey Feldman (The Bad News Bears/Madame's Place) - Corey appears on E!'s Daily Pop at 12pm. He will also be on People Now at 8:30am.
  • Marilu Henner (Taxi/Evening Shade) - Marilu talks about the Hallmark Movies & Mysteries original A Bone to Pick: An Aurora Teagarden Mystery on Home & Family on Hallmark Channel at 10am ET/PT.
  • Katrina Bowden (30 Rock) - Katrina talks about the Hallmark Channel original movie Love on the Slopes on Home & Family on Hallmark Channel at 10am ET/PT.
  • Madison Iseman (Still the King) - Madison talks about Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle on Home & Family on Hallmark Channel at 10am ET/PT.

All listings are subject to change. Visit our blog and main site for daily updated listings. Leave us comments on our message board or Tweet/Facebook us to let us know what you think of this Sunday feature! We do listen!


Sitcoms Airing This Week

Monday, January 1

The Big Bang Theory - "The Gyroscopic Collapse" (CBS, 8:00PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
After Leonard, Sheldon and Wolowitz celebrate the completion of the top secret air force project, they are met with an unpleasant surprise. Also, Amy is offered a summer position as a visiting researcher.

Young Sheldon - "Poker, Faith, and Eggs" (CBS, 8:30PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
When George Sr. is rushed to the emergency room, Meemaw (Annie Potts) comes to babysit, and the kids have an adventure getting to the hospital on their own.

Young Sheldon - "A Therapist, a Comic Book, and a Breakfast Sausage" (CBS, 9:00PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
After choking on a breakfast sausage, Sheldon wrestles with his fear of solid foods and discovers comic books for the first time.

Young Sheldon - "A Solar Calculator, a Game Ball, and a Cheerleader's Bosom" (CBS, 9:30PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
Sheldon struggles with newfound popularity after utilizing statistics to help the football team.


Tuesday, January 2

The Middle - "New Year's Revelations" (ABC, 8:00PM ET/PT)
As New Year’s Eve approaches, Sue admits to Frankie that she likes Sean Donahue and that she kissed him at the Christmas party. But she’s still trying to figure out if her kiss with Sean was a fluke or if it actually meant that he likes her. Meanwhile, Mike forces Axl and Brick to take a drive with him and Mike’s dad, Big Mike, and they are shocked to discover what is planned when they reach their final destination.

Fresh Off the Boat - "Big Baby" (ABC, 8:30PM ET/PT)
Honey is excited to attend a parenting class that encourages moms to listen to their babies taught by self-proclaimed child sage, Wilhelmina Page (Niecy Nash), but when her mother, Anne (Cheryl Hines), ridicules the idea, it exposes communication issues of their own. When Honey turns to Jessica for support, she is disappointed to find that even her best friend doesn’t have her back. Meanwhile, Louis and Marvin are thrilled when they get to go on the free cruise their wives won on “Wheel of Fortune,” but their boys’ trip quickly turns into a gambling getaway gone south. Back in Orlando, Eddie’s friends are wary of his new crush at school.

black-ish - "Working Girl" (ABC, 9:00PM ET/PT)
Bow struggles to adjust as she returns to work after maternity leave. Meanwhile, Ruby gives the twins a “workaround” plan to get out of doing homework.

Modern Family - "Catch of the Day" (ABC, 9:30PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
Phil’s convinced he is going to have a day of bad luck after failing to successfully complete his daily superstition. However, Claire is eager to make it to a concert and has no time for his silly notion. Meanwhile, Mitch is certain that Cam is undermining him during their kitchen renovation, and Jay is determined to get Gloria to admit she was in a car accident.

LA to Vegas - "Pilot" (Fox, 9:00PM ET/PT)
The crew and eccentric passengers of a budget airline take a roundtrip flight from Los Angeles to Las Vegas.

The Mick - "The Climb" (Fox, 9:30PM ET/PT)
Sabrina organizes a gathering of talented artists in the hopes of being able to impress them, which Mickey decides to co-host to help sway Ben's new friend's mother; Chip and Howard set off on a spontaneous camping trip.

Teachers - "Toxic Workplace" (TV Land, 10:00PM ET/PT)
It’s the end of the school year and tensions are high between the Teachers. They reach their breaking point when asbestos is discovered in Mrs. Adler’s trailer.


Wednesday, January 3

The Goldbergs - "The Goldberg Girls" (ABC, 8:00PM ET/PT)
Afraid she’ll be all alone in her old age, Beverly attempts to bond with other moms to form their own group like the TV show “The Golden Girls,” while Erica gets annoyed at Geoff’s romantic gestures, almost causing them to break up.

Speechless - "N-E-- NEW Y-- YEAR'S E-- EVE" (ABC, 8:30PM ET/PT)
Jimmy convinces Maya to go on a much-needed night out together where they drink through Maya’s urge to rush home to the kids. Back at the house, Ray and Kenneth avoid being alone with their dates, while JJ, sidelined by a broken wheelchair, ends up getting more excitement than he expected. Meanwhile, Dylan spends her night trying to win the affection of the new family dog.

Modern Family - "He Said, She Shed" (ABC, 9:00PM ET/PT)
Claire’s request to build a “She Shed” in their backyard is denied by the homeowners association and only Luke and Phil know the real reason why. Meanwhile Pameron lets Cam in on a family secret that forces him to visit Mitch’s therapist to work through this new information.

American Housewife - "Blondetourage" (ABC, 9:30PM ET/PT)
Taylor enlists Oliver to help her carry out a scheme so she can ditch her less cool friend Ellen and go to a concert with her “blondetourage.” Meanwhile, Katie is devastated when Anna-Kat doesn’t need her as much anymore, which causes Katie to make some poor and desperate parenting decisions.

grown-ish - "Late Registration" (Freeform, 8:00PM ET/PT)
In the series premiere, Zoey Johnson arrives at California University certain she will be a hot shot on campus, but quickly learns she may have a little more growing to do.

grown-ish - "Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe" (Freeform, 8:30PM ET/PT)
Zoey starts to experience "fear of missing out" for the first time in her life when she tries to juggle her schoolwork, extracurricular activities and, of course, partying.


Thursday, January 4

The Middle - "Please Don't Feed the Hecks" (ABC, 8:00PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
After Frankie gives neighbor Nancy Donahue an old scarf that is just sitting around gathering dust, Nancy returns the favor by baking her a delicious apple pie. Believing she’s stumbled upon a way to get free and tasty meals, Frankie makes it her mission to find miscellaneous items around the house to give to her in exchange for some culinary delights. Meanwhile, Sue and Lexie prepare to move back into their college apartment but find that it’s been sublet to a man who refuses to leave; and Axl’s new job as the school bus driver gives him a chance to see how Brick’s high school sophomore year is treating him, and he discovers that Mike has refused to speak to Brick’s class on Career Exploration Day.

American Housewife - "The Pig Whisperer" (ABC, 8:30PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
Greg takes a stand against Katie’s protests and employs an uncharacteristically dishonest tactic in order to convince her to let them keep Anna-Kat’s beloved pet pig, Hans Gruber. Meanwhile, Oliver and Viv compete for the attention (and, ultimately, the money) of new neighbor Spencer Blitz; and Taylor considers leaving her boyfriend, Eyo, for an older guy.

The Big Bang Theory - "The Matriomonial Metric" (CBS, 8:00PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
To discover who would be most qualified to be best man and maid of honor at their wedding, Sheldon and Amy subject their friends to a series of secret experiments. Also, Penny reveals her true feelings about Amy.

Young Sheldon - "An Eagle Feather, A String Bean, and an Eskimo" (CBS, 8:30PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
When Sheldon moves to Dallas to attend a school for gifted children, the family struggles to cope with his absence.

Mom - "Teenage Vampires and a White Russian" (CBS, 9:00PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
Bonnie is upset when her brother, Ray (Leonard Roberts) is arrested and calls Adam instead of her to bail him out. Also, Christy gets fired from her job at the restaurant.

Life in Pieces - "Reading Egg Nurse Neighbor" (CBS, 9:30PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
When Sophia asks Matt and Colleen about having children, an animated sequence featuring the whole family as farm animals reveals that they have been struggling to have a baby. Also, Jen and Greg’s new neighbors aren’t as nice as they initially seem; Heather interferes with Tim’s hiring process at the office; and the whole family surprises Joan at her book reading, to her chagrin.

Superstore - "Viral Video" (NBC, 8:00PM ET/PT)
After a Cloud 9 employee posts a controversial video online, Dina (Lauren Ash) enlists Cheyenne to help police the rest of the staff's social media accounts. Meanwhile, Amy (America Ferrera) learns something about Jonah (Ben Feldman) that drives her to desperately pursue Instagram views, and Glenn (Mark McKinney) suspects Mateo (Nico Santos) of rewards card fraud.

The Good Place - "Leap to Faith" (NBC, 8:30PM ET/PT)
Michael (Ted Danson) receives a surprise visitor. Meanwhile, Eleanor (Kristen Bell), Chidi (William Jackson Harper), Tahani (Jameela Jamil) and Jason (Manny Jacinto) attempt to solve a riddle.

Will & Grace - "Friends and Lover" (NBC, 9:00PM ET/PT)
Will (Eric McCormack) and Grace (Debra Messing) try to convince themselves they are okay with dating the same man, the charismatic "Bad Boy of Bread" (special guest star Nick Offerman). Jack (Sean Hayes) and Karen (Megan Mullally) get an annoying commercial jingle stuck in their heads and must seek medical attention.

Great News - "Catfight" (NBC, 9:30PM ET/PT)
Frustrated by Greg (Adam Campbell) and Katie's (Briga Heelan) adorable office flirtation, Carol (Andrea Martin) invites Greg's girlfriend, Cat (guest star Jayma Mays), to work in an attempt to show Katie her competition and get her to admit her feelings for her boss. But Carol's plan backfires when she is won over by Cat's charms, sending Katie into a jealous spiral. Meanwhile, Chuck (John Michael Higgins) finds himself an unwitting champion of the alt-right.


Friday, January 5

none scheduled


Saturday, January 6

The Thundermans - "Z's All That" (Nickelodeon, 8:00PM ET/PT)
Phoebe and Max act as superhero mentors to one of their siblings but quickly regret selecting Nora after seeing Billy's surprisingly impressive skills.

Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn - "Dude, Where's My School?" (Nickelodeon, 8:30PM ET/PT)
When the quads destroy their school, they must join a new one midsemester; as they try to fit in at the new school, they must keep their friends from discovering they destroyed the old one everyone loved.


Sunday, January 7

The Simpsons - "Haw-Haw Land" (Fox, 8:00PM ET/PT)
The Simpsons go to a STEM conference; Lisa falls for a crooning jazz pianist; Bart discovers he has an affinity for chemistry.

Ghosted - "Snatcher" (Fox, 8:30PM ET/PT)
Max, Leroy, and Annie get lost in the woods while trying to find a creature that kills; Max's survival skills are put to the test; Barry helps with Capt. LaFrey's dating problems.

Family Guy - "Boy (Dog) Meet Girls (Dog)" (Fox, 9:00PM ET/PT)
Brian is smitten with a female show dog and enters a show dog competition in which the winner gets to breed her; Peter and Lois go to extreme measures to try to convince Chris that Arthur Valentine doesn't exist.

The Last Man on Earth - "Karl" (Fox, 9:30PM ET/PT)
Tandy and Todd come across a new survivor who has been trapped in a Mexican prison since the virus hit.

School of Rock - "Kool Thing" (Nickelodeon, 7:30PM ET/PT)
Tomika goes to great lengths to prove she is cool to the new girl in school, eventually lying about knowing a music superstar.

Complete TV Listings

Saturday, December 30, 2017

SitcomsOnline Digest: Mad About You Reboot in the Works?; Marathons and More for New Year's Eve and Beyond

Welcome to SitcomsOnline Digest! We're in yet another holiday weekend with a slow news week, and once again, no new home media news or releases (we hope that those sections will be back next week though!), but we do have news about another potential reboot of a 90s hit sitcom, a look at the busy week ahead on the small screen, and more. Let's get going!

HIGHLIGHTS FROM SITCOMSONLINE.COM AND AROUND THE WEB
  • Every series that was a hit in the 90s needs new episodes, or at least that's what Sony is thinking when it comes to Mad About You, as they want to bring that series back. (AV Club)
  • CBS doesn't seem to have any plans to bring back any of their successful 90s sitcoms (not that they really had that many to begin with), but they have been busy colorizing their old 50s and 60s sitcoms, and they've been performing rather decently when it comes to ratings. (Deadline)
  • Vox has their list of the 35 best TV episodes of 2017, so go take a look and check out what you may have missed from the shows you don't watch regularly. (Vox)
  • Make no mistake: sports leagues will do everything to cater to their TV audience, and that is demonstrated very clearly in the NFL cancelling their Sunday Night Football game that would have aired on NBC due to low ratings expectations that New Year's Eve would bring. (Yahoo)
  • Rose Marie, who was best known for her role on The Dick Van Dyke Show (and also starred in two seasons of The Doris Day Show), died this week. (CNN)
  • We mention some of them for your convenience in our Weekly Planner feature, but here is a larger list of all of the marathons that you can catch this weekend. (SitcomsOnline)

WEEKLY PLANNER (DECEMBER 31 - JANUARY 6)
  • Antenna TV is having a Newhart marathon all day on New Year's Eve, then that will be followed up with a Coach marathon on New Year's Day.
  • Antenna TV also starts their new completely revamped lineup on Tuesday, with several new series joining the lineup: Alice, Coach, Gimme a Break, Growing Pains, Head of the Class, The Hogan Family, Murphy Brown, and Silver Spoons, as well as the return of Benson, The Jack Benny Program, McHale's Navy, and Soap. You can find the complete printable schedule here.
  • Not included on that new Antenna TV lineup: All in the Family, Good Times, and Sanford & Son, but getTV will be airing them in their First Families of Funny block that will be airing weeknights starting Tuesday (after an all day marathon on Monday).
  • MeTV starts their new lineup on January 1, and while it isn't a complete makeover of the entire lineup like Antenna TV is doing, it does bring Diff'rent Strokes to the lineup.
  • If it's New Year's Eve and New Year's Day, it should come as no shock that Syfy is doing their Twilight Zone marathon.
  • Full House joins the Hallmark Channel lineup on Tuesday, after a marathon on Monday.
  • Not to be a broken record on series joining a lineup after a marathon on Monday, but the same can be said about The Nanny on COZI TV.
  • If you're looking for something fresh on TV this week as opposed to classic series joining a new network, most broadcast network primetime sitcoms return to new episodes starting Tuesday evening, with Fox even introducing a brand new comedy series (L.A. to Vegas).
  • Of course, it wouldn't be the weekend without the Weekend Binge on Decades, and this weekend it is Diagnosis Murder.

Friday, December 29, 2017

In Memoriam: Remembering the Sitcom Stars We Lost in 2017

Today we remember the sitcom actors, actresses, producers, directors, writers, composers and other crew members who died in 2017. Sadly, we just lost the legendary Rose Marie from The Dick Van Dyke Show on December 28. We lost stars from The Andy Griffith Show, Benson, Cheers, Chico and the Man, The Dick Van Dyke Show, Evening Shade, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., Happy Days, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Murphy Brown, Mork & Mindy, The Partridge Family, Soap, Three's Company and many more who are greatly missed. We thank them for the laughter and entertainment they brought us over the years.

Names are listed in alphabetical order by surname. Visit the IMDB and Wikipedia links for a full listing of their credits and other biographical information. View video interviews at the Archive of American Television links.


Greg Antonacci

Greg Antonacci (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor, director, producer and writer Greg Antonacci starred in Busting Loose and Makin It'. He died on September 20, 2017, in Massapequa, New York. Mr. Antonacci was 70.

Antonacci starred as Winnie Morabito in the 1977 CBS sitcom Busting Loose. The series starred Adam Arkin, Barbara Rhoades, Jack Kruschen, Pat Carroll, Danny Goldman, Steve Nathan, Paul Sylvan, Paul B. Price, Ralph Wilcox and Louise Williams.

He appeared as Tony Manucci in the short-lived 1979 ABC sitcom Makin' It. The series starred David Naughton, Denise Miller, Ellen Travolta, Lou Antonio, Ralph Seymour, Gary Prendergast, Rebecca Balding, Wendy Hoffman, Diane Robin and Jennifer Perito.

His sitcom guest appearances included Laverne & Shirley and Soap. He was best known for portraying Johnny Torrio in Boardwalk Empire in all of the seasons from 2010 to 2014, and as Frank Vincent's character's right hand man, Butch DeConcini in The Sopranos, from 2006 to the season finale in 2007.

His producer credits included It's a Living, It Takes Two, Brothers and The Royal Family. He directed episodes of It's a Living, Brothers (1984), The Tortellis, Normal Life, Perfect Strangers and Herman's Head. He wrote episodes of Busting Loose, It's a Living, Brothers (1984) and The Royal Family.


Peter Baldwin

Peter Baldwin (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Director Peter Baldwin worked on Sanford and Son, Newhart and The Wonder Years. He died on November 19, 2017, at his home in Pebble Beach, California. Mr. Baldwin was 86.

Baldwin's sitcom directing credits included The Dick Van Dyke Show, Please Don't Eat the Daisies, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., The Andy Griffith Show, The Partridge Family, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Love American Style, The Brady Bunch, Sanford and Son, The Bob Newhart Show, Chico and the Man, C.P.O. Sharkey, Benson, Life with Lucy, Too Close for Comfort, Family Ties, Small Wonder, My Two Dads, Full House, Newhart, The Hogan Family, Murphy Brown and Blossom. He won an Emmy Award for his work on The Wonder Years in 1989.


Jack Bannon

Jack Bannon (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Jack Bannon guest starred in The Beverly Hillbillies, Petticoat Junction and other sitcoms. He died on October 25, 2017, in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. Mr. Bannon was 77.

Bannon made guest appearances in various roles in 15 episodes of Petticoat Junction and 5 episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies. Some of his other sitcom guest appearances included Green Acres, The Andy Griffith Show, Here's Lucy, Barney Miller, The Love Boat, We Got It Made, Newhart, Designing Women, Charles in Charge, Night Court, Empty Nest and The Golden Girls.

He starred as Art Donovan in the 1977-1982 CBS newspaper drama Lou Grant. He played Buck Williams in the 1982 medical drama Trauma Center.


Chris Bearde

Chris Bearde (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Writer, producer and director Chris Bearde was one of the creators of That's My Mama. He died suddenly at his home in Westlake Village, California, of a cardiac arrest on April 23, 2017. Mr. Bearde was 80.

Bearde and Allan Blye created That's My Mama, which aired from 1974 to 1975 on ABC. The series starred Clifton Davis, Theresea Merritt, Theodore Wilson, Lynne Moody, Joan Pringle, Lisle Wilson, Jester Hairston, DeForest Covan and Ted Lange.

Some of his other credits included Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, The Andy Williams Show, The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour, The Gong Show and Sherman Oaks (1995-1997).


Shelley Berman

Shelley Berman (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Actor Shelley Berman played Larry David's father in Curb Your Enthusiasm. He died from Alzheimer's disease-related complications at his home in Bell Canyon, California, in the early morning of September 1, 2017. Mr. Berman was 92.

He appeared as Albert in the short-lived 1991-1992 NBC sitcom Walter and Emily. The series starred Brian Keith, Cloris Leachman, Christopher McDonald, Matthew Lawrence, Edan Gross and Sandy Baron.

Berman appeared in 13 episodes as Nat David, the father of Larry David, in Curb Your Enthusiasm from 2002 to 2009.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included Car 54, Where Are You?, Bewitched, Mister Roberts, Get Smart, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Love, American Style, Brothers (1984), Night Court, The Munsters Today, Civil Wars, Living Single, Friends, Chicago Sons, Arli$$, Lizzie McGuire, The King of Queens, Entourage and Hannah Montana.


Jack Blessing

Jack Blessing (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Jack Blessing was known for his roles in The Naked Truth and George Lopez. He died on November 14, 2017, of pancreatic cancer at his home in Chatsworth, California. Mr. Blessing was 66.

Blessing starred as Chip Frye in the short-lived 1983 CBS sitcom Small & Frye. The series starred Darren McGavin, Debbie Zipp, Bill Daily, Warren Berlinger, Victoria Carroll and Dick Wilson.

He starred as Mr. Donner in the first season (1995-1996) of The Naked Truth. The series starred Téa Leoni, Jonathan Pennter, Holland Taylor and Amy Ryan.

He had a recurring role as Jack Powers in 20 episodes of George Lopez from 2002 to 2007.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included Goodtime Girls, M*A*S*H, Family Ties, Amen, Day by Day, Living Dolls, Empty Nest, Babes, The Golden Girls, Roseanne, Civil Wars, Dream On, The Larry Sanders Show, Cybill, Everybody Loves Raymond, Home Improvement, It's Like, You Know... and Mike & Molly.

He played MacGilicuddy in the ABC detective comedy/drama Moonlighting in 1988-1989.


Joseph Bologna

Joseph Bologna (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Joseph Bologna starred in the musical comedy/drama Rags to Riches and the short-lived Married with Children spin-off series Top of the Heap. He died on August 13, 2017, in Duarte, California, from pancreatic cancer. Mr. Bologna was 82.

Bologna starred as Nick Folet in the 1987-1988 NBC musical comedy/drama Rags to Riches. The series starred Douglas Seale, Kimiko Helman, Tisha Campbell, Bridget Michele, Bianca DeGarr, Heidi Zeigler and Heather McAdam.

He appeared in two 1991 episodes of the Fox sitcom Married with Children as Charlie Verducci. The spin-off series Top of the Heap aired for seven episodes in April-July 1991. It starred Matt LeBlanc, Rita Moreno, Leslie Jordan and Joey Adams.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included Daddy Dearest, Caroline in the City, Temporarily Yours, Cosby, Jenny, The Simple Life, The Nanny, Arli$$ and According to Jim.


David Cassidy

David Cassidy (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor and singer David Cassidy was best known for his role as Keith Partridge in The Partridge Family. He died on November 21, 2017, at a Fort Lauderdale, Florida, area hospital of liver failure. Mr. Cassidy was 67.

Cassidy's early television guest appearances included The Survivors, Ironside, The F.B.I., Marcus Welby, M.D., Bonanza, Medical Center and The Mod Squad.

He starred as Keith Partridge in The Partridge Family, which aired on ABC from 1970 to 1974. The popular musical sitcom aired for 4 seasons and 96 episodes. Cassidy played the oldest of the five children. His stepmother Shirley Jones played his mother, Shirley Partridge. The series also starred Susan Dey, Danny Bonaduce, Jeremy Gelbwaks (1970-1971), Brian Forster (1971-1974), Suzanne Crough and David Madden.

The Partridge Family released eight studio albums during the show's run. The Partridge Family's biggest hit was the song "I Think I Love You", which was ranked #1 on US Billboard Hot 100 in December 1970. Other hits included "Doesn't Somebody Want to Be Wanted", "I'll Meet You Halfway", "I Woke Up in Love This Morning", "It's One of Those Nights (Yes Love)", "Am I Losing You", "Looking Through the Eyes of Love", "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" and "A Friend and a Lover". Cassidy also had much solo success with performances around the world. He released twelve studio albums, three live albums, six compilation albums, two soundtrack albums and twenty-four singles.

Cassidy received an Emmy nomination for his role as Officer Don Shay in a 1978 episode of Police Story titled "A Chance to Live." The episode was the pilot for the spin-off series David Cassidy: Man Undercover. The short-lived 1978-1979 NBC police drama also starred Wendy Rastatter, Elizabeth Reddin, Simon Oakland, Ray Vitte and Michael A. Salcido. He also performed the show's theme song titled "Hard Times (Hard Crimes)".

In 2009, he co-starred with his half-brother Patrick in the short-lived ABC Family sitcom Ruby & The Rockits. The series was created by his half-brother Shaun. It also starred Alexa Vega, Austin Butler, Katie A. Keane and Kurt Doss.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included The Love Boat, Blossom, The John Larroquette Show, Malcolm in the Middle and Less Than Perfect. He also wrote and performed the theme song for The John Larroquette Show. Some of his other drama guest appearances included Fantasy Island, Matt Houston, Tales of the Unexpected, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Flash, The Agency and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.


Bill Dana

Bill Dana (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor, comedian and screenwriter Bill Dana starred in The Bill Dana Show, No Soap, No Radio and Zorro and Son. He died on June 15, 2017, at his home in Nashville, Tennessee. Mr. Dana was 92.

Dana starred as Jose Jimenez in the 1963-1965 NBC sitcom The Bill Dana Show. The series starred Jonathan Harris, Gary Crosby, Don Adams and Maggie Peterson. Dana had earlier appeared as Jimenez, a bumbling but endearing bellhop, in nine episodes of Make Room for Daddy from 1961-1963.

He starred as Mr. Plitzky in the short-lived 1982 ABC sitcom No Soap, No Radio. The series starred Steve Guttenberg, Hillary Bailey, Fran Ryan, Jerry Maren, Stuart Pankin, Edie McClurg and Phil Rubenstein.

He appeared as Bernardo in the short-lived 1983 CBS sitcom Zorro and Son. The series starred Henry Darrow, Paul Regina, Gregory Sierra, Richard Beauchamp, Barney Martin, John Moschitta, Catherine Parks and Pete Leal.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included The Courtship of Eddie's Father, Get Smart, Love, American Style, Too Close for Comfort, The Facts of Life, Lenny, The Golden Girls and Empty Nest.


Paul De Rolf

Paul De Rolf (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor, choreographer and dancer Paul De Rolf worked on Petticoat Junction and The Beverly Hillbillies. He died from Alzheimer's disease in Australia on June 22, 2017. Mr. De Rolf was 74.

De Rolf worked as an actor, choreographer and dancer on Petticoat Junction and The Beverly Hillbillies. He appeared in various roles in nine episodes of Petticoat Junction and six episodes of The Beverly Hillibllies. He also worked as a choreographer for 1941 and The Karate Kid Part II.


Miguel Ferrer

Miguel Ferrer (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Miguel Ferrer starred in On the Air and LateLine. He died on January 19, 2017, at his Los Angeles, California, home of throat cancer. Mr. Ferrer was 61.

Ferrer starred as Bud Budwaller in the short-lived 1992 ABC sitcom On the Air. The series starred Ian Buchanan, David L. Lander, Nancye Ferguson, Gary Grossman, Marla Jeanette Rubinoff, Marvin Kaplan, Mel Johnson Jr., Tracey Walter, Kim McGuire, Raleigh and Raymond Friend, Buddy Douglas and Irwin Keyes.

He starred as Vic Karp in the 1998-1999 NBC sitcom LateLine. The series starred Al Franken, Megyn Price, Robert Foxworth, Catherine Lloyd Burns, Sanaa Lathan and Ajay Naidu.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included Hooperman, Will & Grace and 3rd Rock From the Sun.


June Foray

June Foray (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Voice actress June Foray was known for her work on The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show and Looney Tunes. She died on July 26, 2017, at a hospital in Los Angeles, California. Ms. Foray was 99.

Foray provided the voice of Rocky J. Squirrel and Natasha Fatale in The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show. Some of her other voice credits included Mister Magoo, The Flintstones, George of the Jungle, Heathcliff, The Smurfs, Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears, DuckTales and The Looney Tunes Show.

Some of her sitcom credits included The Ray Milland Show (aka Meet Mr. McNutley), Bewitched, Green Acres, The Brady Bunch, Get Smart and The Duck Factory.


Dominic Frontiere

Dominic Frontiere (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Television and film composer Dominic Frontiere worked on The Flying Nun and That Girl. He died on December 21, 2017, in Tesuque, New Mexico. Mr. Frontiere was 86.

Frontiere composed the theme music and worked on some episodes of The Flying Nun. He later worked on That Girl.

His other television composing credits included The Outer Limits, Branded, 12 O'Clock High, The Invaders, The Rat Patrol, Iron Horse, The Name of the Game, The Young Rebels, The Immortal, Search, Vega$ and Matt Houston.


Stephen Furst

Stephen Furst (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Stephen Furst starred in Delta House, Have Faith and Misery Loves Company. He died on June 16, 2017, from complications related to diabetes at his home in Moorpark, California. Mr. Furst was 63.

He reprised his role of Kent "Flounder" Dorfmann from the 1978 film National Lampoon's Animal House in the 1979 ABC sitcom Delta House. The series starred John Vernon, Bruce McGill, James Widdoes, Josh Mostel, Peter Fox, Gary Cookson, Richard Seer, Susanna Dalton, Wendy Gldman, Brian Patrick Clarke, Lee Wilkof, Peter Kastner and Michelle Pfeiffer.

Furst starred as Father Gabriel "Gabe" Podmaninski in the short-lived 1989 ABC sitcom Have Faith. The series starred Joel Higgins, Ron Carey, Frank Hamilton, Francesca Roberts and Todd Susman.

In 1995, he starred in the short-lived Fox sitcom Misery Loves company. The series starred Dennis Boutsikaris, Julius Carry, Christopher Meloni, Wesley Jonathan and Kathe Mazur.

Furst starred as Dr. Elliot Axelrod on St. Elsewhere from 1983-1988. He starred as Centauri diplomatic attaché Vir Cotto in the science fiction series Babylon 5 from 1994 to 1998.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included Newhart, The Jeffersons, Throb, Doctor Doctor, Sydney, Dream On, Nurses, Davis Rules, Good Advice and Scrubs.


Dick Gautier

Dick Gautier (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Dick Gautier was known for his roles as Hymie the Robot in Get Smart and as Robin Hood in the short-lived TV When Things Were Rotten. He died on January 13, 2017, at an assisted living facility in Arcadia, California, following a long illness. Mr. Gautier was 85.

Gautier played Hymie, the C.O.N.T.R.O.L. robot, in Get Smart from 1966-1969. The series starred Don Adams, Barbara Feldon, Edward Platt, Dave Ketchum (1966-1967), Stacy Keach Sr. (1966-1967), Berine Kopell (1966-1969) and King Moody (1966-1969).

He starred as Hal Walters in the 1967 CBS sitcom Mr. Terrific. The series starred Stephen Strimpell, John McGiver and Paul Smith.

He appeared as Jerry Standish in the short-lived 1973 ABC sitcom Here We Go Again. The series starred Larry Hagman, Diane Baker, Nita Talbot, Chris Beaumont, Leslie Graves and Kim Richards.

Gautier starred as Robin Hood in the short-lived 1975 ABC sitcom When Things Were Rotten. The Mel Brooks comedy starred Dick Van Patten, Bernie Kopell, Richard Dimitri, Henry Polic II, Misty Rowe, David Sabin, Ron Rifkin and Jane A. Johnston.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included The Baileys of Balboa, Gidget, The Patty Duke Show, Bewitched, Love on a Rooftop, The Flying Nun, The Debbie Reynolds Show, The Doris Day Show, Love, American Style, Good Heavens, The Love Boat, Happy Days, Too Close for Comfort, Alice, Life with Lucy, She's the Sheriff and Charles in Charge.


Brad Grey

Brad Grey (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Television and film producer Brad Grey worked on many sitcoms in the 1980s and 1990s. He died on May 14, 2017, from cancer at his Holmby Hills home in Los Angeles, California, with his family by his side. Mr. Grey was 59.

Grey was one of the executive producers for It's Garry Shandling's Show, The Jeff Foxworthy Show, The Naked Truth, Alright Already, The Larry Sanders Show, NewsRadio, The Steve Harvey Show and Just Shoot Me!. He was the the chairman and CEO of Paramount Pictures from 2005 to 2017.


Robert Guillaume

Robert Guillaume (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Emmy Award-winning actor Robert Guillaume was best known for his role as Benson DuBois in Soap and the spin-off Benson. He died on October 24, 2017, at his home in Los Angeles, California, from prostate cancer. Mr. Guillaume was 89.

Guillaume's early sitcom guest appearances included Julia, Sanford and Son, All in the Family, The Jeffersons and Good Times. In 1970, he appeared in an episode of Marcus Welby, M.D..

His first starring role was as Benson in the ABC sitcom Soap. Benson was the wisecracking cook/butler for the wealthy Tate family. He appeared in 50 episodes of the series from 1977-1980. The series also starred Robert Mandan, Katherine Helmond, Diana Canova, Jennifer Salt, Jimmy Baio, Arthur Peterson, Cathryn Damon, Richard Mulligan, Billy Crystal, Ted Waas, Robert Urich and Jay Johnson. Guillaume won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series in 1979.

The Benson character was very popular, so he he got his own spin-off series in 1979. Benson worked for Jessica's (Katherine Helmond) cousin, Governor James Gatling (James Noble), as the head of household affairs. Although his last name wasn't mentioned on Soap, it was revealed to be DuBois in the spin-off. Benson aired for 7 seasons and 158 episodes on ABC from 1979-1986. The series also starred Missy Gold, Inga Swenson, René Auberjonois (1980-1986), Ethan Phillips (1980-1985), Caroline McWilliams (1979-1981), Lewis J. Stadlen (1979-1980), Didi Conn (1981-1983) and Billie Bird (1984-1986). Guillaume won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for the role in 1985.

Guillaume starred as marriage counselor Edward Sawyer in the short-lived 1989 ABC sitcom The Robert Guillaume Show. The series was about a single father with two children who begins an interracial relationship with Ann (Wendy Phillips), a white woman who has a daughter of her own. The series also starred Hank Rolike, Kelsey Scott and Marc Joseph.

He starred as Detective Bob Ballard in the 1991-1992 NBC sitcom Pacific Station. Detective Bob Ballard was a wisecracking veteran cop who had been assigned to Pacific Station in Venice, California. The series also starred Richard Libertini, Joel Murray, Ron Leibman, Megan Gallagher and John Hancock.

Guillaume played Isaac Jaffe in the 1998-2000 ABC comedy/drama Sports Night. Isaac Jaffe was the managing editor of the late-night Sports Night program for the fictional Continental Sports Channel (CSC). Guillaume suffered a mild stroke midway through the first season on January 14, 1999. This event was worked into his character and the season's story arc. The short-lived but critically acclaimed series also starred Peter Krause, Josh Charles, Felicity Huffman, Joshua Malina, Sabrina Lloyd, Greg Baker, Kayla Blake, Timothy Davis Reed, Jeff Mooring and Ron Ostrow.

Some of his other sitcom guest appearances included The Love Boat, A Different World, Saved by the Bell: The College Years, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Goode Behavior, Moesha and 8 Simple Rules.

He was also known for his voice work. He provided the voice of Detective Catfish in the short-lived 1992 CBS animated sitcom Fish Police. His other television voice credits included The Addams Family, Captain Planet and the Planeteers and The Proud Family. He was the narrator for the HBO series Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child. He was the voice of Rafiki in the movie The Lion King and its sequels and spin-offs.


Glenne Headly

Glenne Headly (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actress Glenne Headly starred in Encore! Encore! and Future Man. She died on June 8, 2017, of complications from a pulmonary embolism in Santa Monica, California. Ms. Headly was 62.

Headly starred as Francesca Pinoni in the 1998-1999 NBC sitcom Encore! Encore!. The series starred Nathan Lane, Joan Plowright, Trevor Fehrman, Ernie Sabella and James Patrick Stuart.

She appeared as Diane Futturman in 5 episodes of the Hulu comedy Future Man in 2017. The series stars Josh Hutcherson, Eliza Coupe, Derek Wilson and Ed Begley Jr.

Some of her sitcom guest appearances included Frasier, Parks and Recreation and The League.


Blake Heron

Blake Heron (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Blake Heron starred in Nick Freno: Licensed Teacher. He died on September 8, 2017, in La Crescenta-Montrose, California. Mr. Heron was 35.

Heron starred as Jordan Wells in the second season (1997-1998) of The WB sitcom Nick Freno: Licensed Teacher. The series starred Mitch Mullany, Clinton Jackson, Charles Cyphers, Jane Sibbett, Christina Vidal, Giuseppe Andrews, Andrew Levitas, Malinda Williams and Donna D'Errico.

His television guest appearances included Picket Fences, Cybill, Good vs Evil, Early Edition, ER, Boston Public, The Practice, Justified and Criminal Minds. His film credits included Shiloh and We Were Soldiers.


John Hillerman

John Hillerman (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor John Hillerman was best known for his starring role as Jonathan Quayle Higgins III in Magnum, P.I.. He died on November 9, 2017, at his Houston, Texas, home of Cardiovascular disease. Mr. Hillerman was 84.

He starred as John Elliot in the 1977-1978 CBS sitcom The Betty White Show. The series starred Betty White, Georgia Engel, Caren Kaye, Alex Henteloff, Barney Phillips and Charles Cyphers.

Hillerman's best known role was as Jonathan Quayle Higgins III in the 1980-1988 detective drama Magnum, P.I.. Hillerman won an Emmy Award for the role in 1983.

He joined the cast of The Hogan Family as Lloyd Hogan, the father of Sandy (Sandy Duncan) and Michael Hogan (Josh Taylor), in the final season which aired in 1990-1991 on CBS.

His sitcom guest appearances included Maude, The Bob Crane Show, Soap, Nobody's Perfect, One Day at a Time and The Love Boat.


Rance Howard

Rance Howard (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Character actor Rance Howard made guest appearances in many sitcoms. He was the father of Ron and Clint Howard. He died on the morning of November 25, 2017, in Los Angeles, California, from heart failure spurred on by a West Nile virus infection. Mr. Howard was 89.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included The Andy Griffith Show, Laverne & Shirley, Happy Days, Mork & Mindy, Coach, Seinfeld, Married with Children, Just Shoot Me! and That's So Raven.

He starred as Henry Boomhauer in the 1967-1969 CBS adventure series Gentle Ben, which starred his son Clint as Mark Wedloe.


Earle Hyman

Earle Hyman (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Earle Hyman was known for his role as Russell Huxtable in The Cosby Show. He died on November 17, 2017, at the Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood, New Jersey. Mr. Hyman was 91.

Hyman's early television guest appearances included The United States Steel Hour, Espionage, East Side/West Side, The Nurses, Playdate, The Defenders, Seaway and Madigan.

He appeared in 40 episodes of The Cosby Show as Dr. Heathcliff (Cliff) Huxtable's (Bill Cosby) father, Russell Huxtable. He was married to Anna Huxtable (Clarice Taylor). The 1984-1992 NBC sitcom also starred Phylica Rashad, Sabrina Le Beauf, Lisa Bonet, Malcolm-Jamal Warner, Tempestt Bledsoe, Keshia Knight Pulliam, Geoffrey Owens (1986-1992) and Raven-Symoné (1989-1992). Hyman received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Guest Performer in a Comedy Series in 1986. He also appeared in an episode of the spinoff series, A Different World.

Hyman was also known for his voice work on the animated series ThunderCats. He provided the voices of the hero Panthro and the villains Red-Eye and Ancient Spirits of Evil in the series which aired in syndication from 1985 to 1989.

Some of his film credits included The Bamboo Prison, Afrikaneren, The Possession of Joel Delaney, The Super Cops, Coriolanus, Julius Caesar and Fighting Back.

He had a long and distinguished career on Broadway. He was nominated for Broadway's 1980 Tony Award as Best Featured Actor in a Play for Edward Albee's The Lady from Dubuque. Some of his other stage credits included Run, Little Chillun, Anna Lucasta, Moon on a Rainbow Shawl, Othello and A Raisin in the Sun.


Clifton James

Clifton James (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Clifton James starred in Lewis & Clark He died on April 15, 2017, in Gladstone, Oregon, from complications of diabetes. Mr. James was 96.

James starred as Silas Jones in the 1981-1982 NBC sticom Lewis & Clark. The series starred Gabe Kaplan, Guich Koock, Ilene Graff, Michael McManus, Wendy Holcombe, Amy Linker, David Hollander and Aaron Fletcher.

He made guest appearances on The Phil Silvers Show and Night Court. His film credits included Live and Let Die, The Man with the Golden Gun, Silver Streak and Eight Men Out.


Anne Jeffreys

Anne Jeffreys (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actress Anne Jeffreys starred in Topper. She died on September 27, 2017, at her home in Los Angeles, California. Ms. Jeffreys was 94.

Jeffreys starred as Marion Kerby in the 1953-1956 CBS/ABC/NBC sitcom Topper. The series starred Robert Sterling, Leo G. Carroll, Lee Patrick, Kathleen Freeman (1953-1954), Thurston Hall and Edna Skinner (1954-1955).

She appeared as Jill Johnson in the short-lived 1958 ABC sitcom Love That Jill. The series starred Robert Stirling, James Lydon, Betty Lynn, Polly Rose, Barbara Nichols, Nancy Hadley and Kay Elhardt.

Some of her sitcom guest appearances included The Bob Cummings Show, My Three Sons, Love, American Style and Getting On. Her starring drama roles included The Delphi Bureau, Finders of Love Loves, General Hospital and Port Charles.


Daniel Licht

Daniel Licht (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Television and film composer Daniel Licht was known for his work on the Showtime series Dexter and several sitcoms. He died on August 2, 2017, of sarcoma at his home in Topanga, California. Mr. Licht was 60.

Licht worked as a composer for the 2005 Fox sitcom Kitchen Confidential and the 2005-2006 ABC sitcom Jake in Progress. His other sitcom composing credits included Oliver Beene, Romantically Challenged, Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23 (pilot only) and Modern Family. His drama credits included Dexter, Cashmere Mafia, Body of Proof and The Red Road.


Howard Leeds

Howard Leeds (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Writer and producer Howard Leeds was one of the creators of The Facts of Life, Silver Spoons and Small Wonder. He died on February 11, 2017, at his home in Los Angeles, California, after a long-term illness. Mr. Leeds was 97.

Leeds worked as a writer for many sitcoms from the 1950s to 1980s, including Meet Millie, How to Marry a Millionaire, Bachelor Father, The Bob Cummings Show, Ensign O'Toole, Make Room for Daddy, McHale's Navy, My Three Sons, The Bill Dana Show, Bewitched, That Girl, The Doris Day Show, Julia, The Ghost & Mrs. Muir, The Brady Bunch, Barney Miller and Grady. He received an Emmy nomination in 1956 for his work on the comedy/variety series The George Gobel Show.

He created his first sitcom The Queen and I in 1969. The short-lived CBS series starred Larry Storch, Billy DeWolfe, Carl Ballantine, Pat Morita, Barbara Stuart, Dave Morick, Liam Dunn and Dave Willock.

Leeds was a producer and story consultant for the 1964-1965 CBS sitcom My Living Doll. The series was about a lifelike adult android being cared for by a psychiatrist. It starred Bob Cummings, Julie Newmar, Jack Mullaney and Doris Dowling.

In 1979, he wrote "The Girls School" episode of Diff'rent Strokes with Ben Starr, Dick Clair and Jenna McMahon. The episode was for pilot for the spinoff The Facts of Life. Leeds worked as a writer on 33 episodes of Diff'rent Strokes from 1978-1984. He also served as a producer from 1979-1984.

He helped Martin Cohan and Ben Starr create the sitcom Silver Spoons in 1982. The series aired for four seasons on NBC before moving to first-run syndication for the fifth and final season. It starred Ricky Schroder, Joel Higgins, Erin Gray, Franklyn Seales, Jason Bateman (1982-1984), Corky Pigeon (1983-1985), Alfonso Ribeiro (1984-1987) and John Houseman. Leed provided the story for one episode.

Leeds was the creator and producer for the syndicated sitcom Small Wonder. The series aired for four seasons from 1985-1989. It starred Dick Christie, Marla Pennington, Jerry Supiran, Tiffany Brisette, Paul C. Scott and Emily Schulman. Leeds wrote one episode. He was also one of the writers of the theme song lyrics.

Some of his other producing credits included The Bill Dana Show, The Ghost & Mrs. Muir, The Brady Bunch and Grady. He worked as a production executive for Reg Grundy Productions from 1976 to 1978.


Rose Marie

Rose Marie (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Rose Marie was best known for her role as television comedy writer Sally Rogers in The Dick Van Dyke Show. She died on December 28, 2017, in Van Nuys, California. She was 94.

She starred as Bertha, a friend of Ruth and Eileen Sherwood, in the 1960-1961 CBS sitcom My Sister Eileen. The series starred Elaine Stritch, Shirley Bonne, Leon Belasco, Jack Weston, Raymond Bailey and Stubby Kaye.

Rose Marie starred as Sally Rogers in the 1961-1966 CBS sitcom The Dick Van Dyke Show. Sally Rogers and Maurice "Buddy" Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam) were comedy writers with Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke) for The Alan Brady Show. Sally and Buddy were close friends of Rob and his wife Laura (Mar Tyler Moore). The classic series ran for five seasons and 158 episodes. Rose Marie received three Emmy nominations for the role. She reprised her Sally Rogers role with Morey Amsterdam in a October 7, 1993 episode of Herman's Head. In 2004, she reunited with the cast for The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited.

She starred as Myrna Gibbons in The Doris Day Show from 1969-1971 (Seasons 2-3) on CBS. She joined the cast in the second season as Myrna Gibbons, a secretary at Today's World magazine and a friend of Doris. The series starred Doris Day, Denver Pyle (1968-1970), Fran Ryan (1968), James Hampton (1968-1969), Philip Brown (1968-1971), Naomi Stevens (1968-1969), McLean Stevenson (1969-1971), Paul Smith (1969-1971), Kaye Ballard (1970-1971), Bernie Kopell (1970-1971), John Dehner (1971-1973) and Jackie Joseph (1971-1973).

She appeared as Mitzi Balzer in the short-lived 1994 Fox sitcom Hardball. The series starred Bruce Greenwood, Mike Starr, Joe Rogan, Phill Lewis, Chris Browning, Dann Florek, Steve Hytner, Alexandra Wentworth, Adam Hendershott and Dave Sebastian Williams.

Some of her sitcom guest appearances included The Bob Cummings Show, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, Valentine's Day, Occasional Wife, The Monkeers, Hey, Landlord, My Three Sons, Chico and the Man, The Love Boat, Mr. Belvedere, Murphy Brown, Scorch, Caroline in the City, Wings, Suddenly Susan and The Hughleys.

She was a 14-year panelist on the game show The Hollywood Squares.


Rodger Maus

Rodger Maus (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Art director and production designer Rodger Maus worked on M*A*S*H. He died on March 16, 2017, in Palm Springs, California. Mr. Maus was 84.

He was the art director for 103 episodes (1973–1978) of the 251 episode television series M*A*S*H. He worked on 15 episodes of Nanny and the Professor in 1971. He was also known for his work on Irwin Allen produced series, including Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, The Time Tunnel, Lost in Space and Land of the Giants.


Mary Tyler Moore

Mary Tyler Moore (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Actress Mary Tyler Moore was best known for her roles as Laura Petrie in The Dick Van Dyke Show and as Mary Richards in The Mary Tyler Moore Show. She died from cardiopulmonary arrest complicated by pneumonia on January 25, 2017, at Greenwich Hospital in Greenwich, Connecticut. Ms. Moore was 80.

Moore's first television appearance was as "Happy Hotpoint", a tiny elf dancing on Hotpoint appliances in TV commercials during The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet. She appeared in 39 Hotpoint commercials in five days. Her first regular television role was as a mysterious and glamorous telephone receptionist named Sam on Richard Diamond, Private Detective in 1959. Some of her early drama guest appearances included Steve Canyon, Bronco, Bourbon Street Beat, Johnny Staccato, Overland Trail, 77 Sunset Strip, The Millionaire, Checkmate, Wanted: Dead or Alive, Riverboat, The Deputy, Surfside 6, Lock Up, The Hawaiian and Thriller. Her early sitcom guest appearances included The George Burns Show, The Tab Hunter Show and Bachelor Father.

She landed the role of Laura Petrie, a former dancer turned New Rochelle homemaker, wife and mother, in The Dick Van Dyke Show in 1961. The classic sitcom aired for five seasons on CBS from 1961-1966. The series starred Dick Van Dyke, Rose Marie, Morey Amsterdam and Larry Matthews. The supporting cast included Richard Deacon, Ann Morgan Guilbert, Jerry Paris and Carl Reiner. Moore won a Golden Globe Award for Best TV Star - Female in 1965. She won an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Comedy Series" in 1966. She received Emmy nominations in 1963 and 1964. The series won a total of 15 Emmy Awards. Van Dyke and Moore reunited for a one-hour variety special called Dick Van Dyke and the Other Woman in 1969. They reunited again for a 1979 episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Hour. In 2004, the surviving cast members reunited for the CBS TV movie The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited.

Moore starred as Mary Richards, a thirtyish single woman who worked as a local news producer at WJM-TV in Minneapolis, in The Mary Tyler Moore Show. The popular sitcom aired on CBS for seven seasons from 1970-1977. The series starred Edward Asner, Ted Knight, Gavin MacLeod, Valerie Harper (1970-1974), Cloris Leachman (1970-1975), Georgia Engel (1973-1977) and Betty White (1973-1977). Moore won three Emmy Awards for "Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series" in 1973, 1974 and 1976. The show won "Outstanding Comedy Series" three years in a row from 1975-1977.

She appeared as Mary Richards in six episodes of the spin-off series Rhoda from 1974-1977. She made two guest appearances in the spin-off Phyllis in 1975-1976. Moore and Harper reunited for the ABC TV movie Mary and Rhoda in 2000. CBS aired two retrospective specials: Mary Tyler Moore: The 20th Anniversary Show in 1991 and The Mary Tyler Moore Reunion in 2002.

Moore later starred in several short-lived sitcoms. She played Mary Brenner in the 1985-1986 CBS sitcom Mary. Her character was a 40-ish divorcée working at a second rate tabloid, The Chicago Eagle. The series starred James Farentino, Katey Sagal, John Astin, Carlene Watkins, James Tolkan, David Byrd, Harold Sylvester and Derek McGrath.

In 1988, she starred as Annie McGuire in the CBS sitcom Annie McGuire. She played a newlywed with Nick (Denis Arndt). Both had kids from previous marriages and were trying to balance their jobs. The series also starred Eileen Heckart, John Randolph, Adrien Brody, Cynthia Marie King and Bradley Warren.

Some of her sitcom guest appearances included Frasier (voice), The Naked Truth, King of the Hill (voice), The Ellen Show, That '70s Show and Hot in Cleveland.

She had her own comedy/variety series with Mary in 1978 and The Mary Tyler Moore Hour in 1979. In 1995, she starred as Louise "the Dragon" Felcott in the 1995 CBS newspaper drama New York News.

Moore also had many film credits. She played Miss Dorothy Brown in 1967's Thoroughly Modern Millie. She was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress for her role as Beth Jarrett in 1980's Ordinary People. Some of her other film credits included What's So Bad About Feeling Good?, Don't Just Stand There!, Change of Habit, Six Weeks, Just Between Friends and Flirting with Disaster. Her TV movies included Like Mother, Like Son, Run a Crooked Mile, Heartsounds, The Gin Game (reuniting her with Dick Van Dyke), Finnegan Begin Again and Stolen Babies. She won an Emmy Award for her role in Stolen Babies in 1993.


Erin Moran

Erin Moran (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actress Erin Moran was best known as Joanie Cunningham in Happy Days and its spin-off Joanie Loves Chachi. She died on April 22, 2017, in New Salisbury, Indiana, from complications of stage four squamous cell carcinoma of the throat. Ms. Moran was 56.

Moran's first television starring role was as Jenny Jones in the final season (1968-1969) of the CBS adventure series Daktari. She was a seven-year-old orphan who became part of the Tracy household. The series starred Marshall Thompson, Cheryl Miller, Yale Summers (1966-1968), Hedley Mattingly, Hari Rhodes and Ross Hagen (1968-1969).

Some of her early sitcom guest appearances included The Courtship of Eddie's Father, My Three Sons and Family Affair. Her early drama guest appearances included Death Valley Days, O'Hara, U.S. Treasury, The Smith Family, Bearcats!, Gunsmoke, The F.B.I. and The Waltons.

Her first sitcom starring role was as Janie Robinson in the short-lived 1972 CBS sitcom The Don Rickles Show. She played the daughter of Don Robinson (Don Rickles) and Barbara Robinson (Louise Sorel). The series also starred Robert Hogan, Judy Cassmore, Joyce Van Patten and Barry Gordon.

She was cast at the age of 13 in 1974 to play Joanie Cunningham in Happy Days. Joanie was the daughter of Howard (Tom Bosley) and Marion Cunningham (Marion Ross), and the younger sister of Chuck (Gavan O'Herlihy and Randolph Roberts) and Richie Cunningham (Ron Howard). Fonzie (Henry Winkler) affectionately called her "Shortcake." She was the girlfriend and eventual wife of Charles "Chachi" Arcola (Scott Baio). The popular series ran for 11 seasons and 255 episodes from 1974-1984. It also starred Anson Williams (1974-1983), Donny Most (1974-1980), Pat Morita (1975-1976, 1982-1983), Al Molinaro (1976-1982), Lynda Goodfriend (1977-1982), Cathy Silvers (1980-1983) and Ted McGinley (1980-1984). Moran returned for the Happy Days: 30th Anniversary Reunion in 2005 on ABC.

ABC decided to spin-off Joanie and Chachi into their own series in 1982. Joanie Loves Chachi aired for two seasons (1982, 1982-1983) and 17 episodes before Moran and Baio returned to Happy Days. It starred Al Molinaro, Ellen Travolta, Art Metrano, Robert Pierce, Derrel Maury and Winifred Freedman.

Some of her later television guest appearances included Hotel, Glitter, The Love Boat, Murder, She Wrote, and The Bold and the Beautiful. In 2008, she appeared as a contestant on the VH1 reality series Celebrity Fit Club. She appeared on many game shows, including The Hollywood Squares, Match Game/Hollywood Squares Hour, Weakest Link, Hollywood Squares, Pyramid and The Singing Bee.

She made her feature-film debut in 1968 in How Sweet It Is! with Debbie Reynolds. Some of her other film credits included 80 Steps to Jonah, Watermelon Man, Galaxy of Terror, Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star, Broken Promise and Not Another B Movie. Her TV movie credits included Stanley vs. The System, Lisa, Bright and Dark and 1981's Twirl with Lisa Whelchel.


Robert Michael Morris

Robert Michael Morris (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Robert Michael Morris starred in The Comeback and Running Wilde. He died on May 30, 2017, in Downey, California. Mr. Morris was 77.

Morris starred as Mickey Deane, Valerie Cherish's hairdresser since the late 1980s and her closest friend, in the reality television spoof The Comeback. The 2005 and 2014 HBO series starred Lisa Kudrow, Malin Åkerman, Robert Bagnell, Lance Barber, Laura Silverman and Damian Young.

He starred as Mr. Lunt, the nanny, in 2010-2011 Fox sitcom Running Wilde. The series starred Will Arnett, Keri Russell, Stefania LaVie Owen, Mel Rodriguez and Peter Serafinowicz.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included Will & Grace, Arrested Development, The Class, How I Met Your Mother, 2 Broke Girls, Happily Divorced, The Middle and Better Things.


Jim Nabors

Jim Nabors (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor, singer and comedian Jim Nabors was best known for his role as Gomer Pyle in The Andy Griffith Show and Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.. He died at his Honolulu, Hawaii, home on November 30, 2017. He was suffering from health issues regarding his immune system as a result of contracting hepatitis B in India. Mr. Nabors was 87.

Nabors first appeared as Gomer Pyle in the December 24, 1962, episode of The Andy Griffith Show titled "The Bank Job". Gomer Pyle was a simple-minded and gentle gas station attendant at Wally's filling station. He was known for the catchphrases "Shazam!", "Gawwww-leeeee", "Sur-prise, sur-prise, sur-prise!" and "shame, shame, shame!" He would appear in 23 episodes until 1964. The classic series starred Andy Griffith, Ronny Howard, Don Knotts and Frances Bavier. In 1986, Nabors reunited with the cast for the NBC TV movie Return to Mayberry.

The Gomer Pyle character became very popular during the year and a half he appeared on the show. After Howard McNear returned to the series in 1964, Andy Griffith proposed a spin-off series. Gomer leaves Mayberry to join the United States Marine Corps, which stationed him at Camp Henderson, California. Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. ran for five seasons and 150 episodes on CBS from 1964 to 1969. The series also starred Frank Sutton and Ronnie Schell. Nabors appeared as Gomer Pyle in a cameo role in a 1966 episode of The Lucy Show. He appeared as Gomer Pyle for the final time in a 1991 episode of the ABC sitcom Hi Honey, I'm Home!.

Nabors' rich baritone voice made him a popular guest on variety shows such as The Carol Burnett Show. He was considered Carol Burnett's good luck charm and appeared in the season premiere of every season of the series. Some of his other variety show appearances included The Steve Allen Show, The Danny Kaye Show, The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, The Dean Martin Show, The Leslie Uggams Show, The Johnny Cash Show, The Flip Wilson Show, The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour and The Sonny & Cher Show.

He hosted and starred in the variety series The Jim Nabors Hour on CBS from 1969-1971. The series featured his Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. co-stars Frank Sutton and Ronnie Schell. He hosted another variety series in 1978 called The Jim Nabors Show. He received a Daytime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Host or Hostess in a Talk, Service or Variety Series.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included I'm Dickens, He's Fenster, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Valentine's Day, Aloha Paradise and The Love Boat.

He was a friend of Burt Reynolds. He starred in three of his movies: The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Stroker Ace and Cannonball Run II.

Nabors also had much success as a singer. He recorded 28 albums and numerous singles. His certified gold albums were Jim Nabors Sings Love Me With All Your Heart (1966), Jim Nabors Sings the Lord's Prayer (1968) and Jim Nabors Christmas Album (1990). He was known for performing Back Home Again in Indiana prior to the start of the Indianapolis 500 from 1972 to 2014, except for occasional absences due to illnesses or scheduling conflicts.


Martin Ransohoff

Martin Ransohoff (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Producer Martin Ransohoff worked on The Beverly Hillbillies and Mister Ed. He died on December 13, 2017, at his Bel Air home in Los Angeles, California. Mr. Ransohoff was 90.

Ransohoff worked an executive producer on The Beverly Hillibllies. He co-founded the film production company Filmways, Inc. with Edwin Kasper (Kasper left the firm in 1957) in 1952. He made the short-lived sitcom Co-Ed Fever in 1979.


Della Reese

Della Reese (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Actress and singer Della Reese starred as Tess in Touched by an Angel and as Della Rogers in Chico and the Man. She died peacefully at her Los Angeles, California, home on November 19, 2017. Ms. Reese was 86.

Reese hosted her own talk show early in her career called Della. It aired for 197 episodes from June 9, 1969 to March 13, 1970. She became the first black woman to guest host The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson in 1970.

Some of her early television appearances included The Mod Squad, The Bold Ones: The New Doctors, Police Woman, McCloud, Petrocelli, The Rookies and Sanford and Son.

She joined the cast of Chico and the Man in the fall of 1976. She played Della Rogers, the owner of the diner across from Ed's Garage and Ed's landlady. The ABC sitcom ran for four seasons and 88 episodes from 1974-1978. It starred Jack Albertson, Freddie Prinze (1974-1977), Scatman Crothers, Bonnie Boland (1974-1975), Isaac Ruiz (1974-1977), Ronny Graham (1975-1976), Gabriel Melgar (1977-1978) and Charo (1977-1978). Reese first guest starred as The Judge in the 1975 episode "The Juror."

Reese appeared as Judge Caroline Phillips in six episodes of the 1982-1983 ABC sitcom It Takes Two. The series starred Richard Crenna, Patty Duke Astin, Helen Hunt, Anthony Edwards, Billie Bird, Richard McKenzie and Randy Dreyfuss.

She joined the cast of Charlie & Co. for four episodes in early 1986 as Charlie's (Flip Wilson) sister-in-law, Aunt Rachel. The 1985-1986 CBS sitcom also starred Gladys Knight, Fran Robinson, Kristoff St. John, Jaleel White, Ray Girardin, Richard Karron, Kip King, Terry McGovern and Eddie Velez.

Reese starred with Redd Foxx in the 1991-1992 CBS sitcom The Royal Family. Al Royal and his wife Victoria were an Atlanta couple looking forward to retirement until his daughter and her family move back home. The series also starred Mariann Aaida, Sylver Gregory, Larenz Tate, Naya Rivera, Jackée Harry and Barry Shabaka Henley.

Her best known role was as the supervisor Tess in the religious supernatural drama Touched by an Angel, which aired on CBS from 1994-2003. It ran for nine seasons and 212 episodes. It also starred Roma Downey, John Dye and Valerie Bertinelli (2001-2003). Reese performed the show's theme song titled "Walk with You." She received two Emmy nominations for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series in 1997 and 1998 and a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television in 1998. She also appeared in six episodes of the spin-off series Promised Land in 1996-1998.

Some of her other sitcom guest appearances included Welcome Back, Kotter, The Love Boat, 227, Night Court, Married People, Dream On, Designing Women and That's So Raven.

She played the mother of B. A. Baracus (Mr. T) in a 1985 episode of The A-Team. Some of other drama guest appearances included Medical Center, Insight, Crazy Like a Fox, The Young Riders, MacGyver, L.A. Law, Picket Fences, Detroit 1-8-7 and Signed, Sealed, Delivered.

Her film credits included Psychic Killer, Harlem Nights (with Redd Foxx), A Thin Line Between Love and Hate, Beauty Shop, If I Had Known I Was a Genius and Expecting Mary.


Don Rickles

Don Rickles (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Stand-up comedian and actor Don Rickles starred in C.P.O. Sharkey. He died of kidney failure on April 6, 2017, at his home in Beverly Hills, California. Mr. Rickles was 90.

Rickles starred as Don Robinson in the short-lived 1972 CBS sitcom The Don Rickles Show. Robinson was a New York advertising-agency executive who had a wife named Barbara (Louise Sorel) and a young daughter, Janie (Erin Moran). The series also starred Robert Hogan, Judy Cassmore, Joyce Van Patten and Barry Gordon.

He starred as Chief Petty Officer (C.P.O.) Sharkey in the NBC sitcom C.P.O. Sharkey. The series ran for two seasons and 37 episodes from 1976-1978. Sharkey was an abrasive, sharp-tongued 24-year veteran who was in charge of a company of new seaman recruits at Navy Training Center in San Diego. It starred Peter Isacksen, Jeff Hollis, Tom Ruben, David Landsberg, Elizabeth Allen (1976-1977), Harrison Page, Barry Pearl (1976-1977), Philip Simms (1977-1978), Richard Beauchamp, Jonathan Daly, Beverly Sanders and Richard X. Slattery (1977-1978).

Rickles played Al Mitchell in the short-lived 1993 Fox sitcom Daddy Dearest. He was the obnoxious father of Dr. Steven Mitchell (Richard Lewis). Al was a used car salesman who was recently separated from his wife Helen (Renée Taylor). The series also starred Sydney Walsh, Alice Carter, Carey Eidel, Jeffrey Bomberger and Barney Martin.

Some of his 1960s sitcom guest appearances included Hennesey, The Addams Family, The Dick Van Dyke Show, The Munsters, The Beverly Hillbillies, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., The Andy Griffith Show, F Troop, Gilligan's Island, The Lucy Show, I Dream of Jeannie, Get Smart and The Mothers-in-Law. His later guest appearances included Archie Bunker's Place, Gimme a Break! (a spin-off attempt), Newhart, The Larry Sanders Show, The Single Guy, Murphy Brown, The Bernie Mac Show and Hot in Cleveland.

He also starred in a number of films. His prominent film roles included Run Silent, Run Deep (1958) and Kelly's Heroes (1970). He appeared in the popular Beach Party film series. He was the voice of Mr. Potato Head in the Toy Story franchise.

Rickles was sarcastically known as Mr. Warmth for his poking fun at people of all ethnicities and walks of life. He won a Primetime Emmy Award for the 2007 documentary Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project.


Rita Riggs

Rita Riggs (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Costume designer Rita Riggs was known for her work for Norman Lear sitcoms. She died on June 5, 2017, in Los Angeles, California. Ms. Riggs was 86.

Riggs worked as the costume designer for Sanford and Son, One Day at a Time, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, Maude, The Jeffersons, All in the Family and Good Times.


Bob Schiller

Bob Schiller (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Emmy-winning writer Bob Schiller worked on I Love Lucy and All in the Family. He died on October 10, 2017, in Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, California. Mr. Schiller was 98.

Schiller's television writing career began in 1950 with The Garry Show Show. Some of his early sitcom writing credits included That's My Boy, The Jimmy Durante Show, December Bride, Professional Father and It's Always Jan.

He worked extensively with fellow writer and producer Bob Weiskopf on many television series beginning in 1953. Their credits in the 1950s included The Bob Cummings Show, I Love Lucy, The Ann Sothern Show (which they also created), The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour and Pete and Gladys. They were writers for 53 episodes of I Love Lucy for the fifth and sixth seasons from 1955-1957. In 1956, they received an Emmy nomination for the episode L.A. at Last.

Their credits in the 1960s and 1970s included The Lucy Show, The Good Guys, Love, American Style, All's Fair (which they also created) and All in the Family. They worked on variety series such as The Red Skelton Show, The Carol Burnett Show and The Flip Wilson Show. In 1970, they won an Emmy Award for their work on The Flip Wilson Show.

They worked together on 17 episodes of All in the Family from 1977-1979. They won an Emmy Award in 1978 for their work on the episode Cousin Liz, which dealt with Edith Bunker's inheritance of a valuable tea service from her deceased cousin Liz and her decision, upon learning that Liz's "roommate" Veronica is really Liz's surviving longtime companion, to give Veronica the service.

Schiller and Weiskopf later worked on the All in the Family spin-off series Archie Bunker's Place from 1979-1980. They also worked on Checking In, Sanford and He's the Mayor. Their producing credits included The Good Guys, All's Fair and Maude.


Roger Smith

Roger Smith (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actor Roger Smith starred in Mister Roberts. He died on June 4, 2017, at the Sherman Oaks Hospital in Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California, from complications from Parkinson's disease. Mr. Smith was 84.

Smith starred as Lieutenant Douglas Roberts in the 1965-1966 NBC sitcom Mister Roberts. The series starred Steve Harmon, Richard X. Slattery, George Ives, Richard Sinatra, Ronald Starr and Roy Reese.

He appeared as Doyle Hobbs in Father Knows Best from 1957-1958. He starred starred as Jeff Spencer in the television detective series 77 Sunset Strip from 1958-1963. He guest starred in a 1964 episode of The Farmer's Daughter.


Tam Spiva

Tam Spiva (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Writer Tam Spiva was known for his work on The Brady Bunch. He died on April 30, 2017, at his home in Pacific Palisades, California. Mr. Spiva was 84.

Spiva wrote nine episodes of The Brady Bunch from 1970-1973: "The Big Sprain," "The Slumber Caper," "A Fistful of Reasons," "Grand Canyon or Bust," "The Brady Braves," "Hawaii Bound," "Pass the Tabu," "The Tiki Caves," and "Peter and the Wolf." He was the script editor for 50 episodes from 1971-1973. His other television credits included six episodes of Gentle Ben in 1967-1968, The FBI and Dan August.


Jay Thomas

Jay Thomas (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Emmy award-winning actor Jay Thomas was known for his roles in Mork & Mindy, Cheers, Love & War and Murphy Brown. He died of throat cancer on August 24, 2017, at his Santa Barbara, California home. Mr. Thomas was 69.

Thomas' television career began with his role as Remo DaVinci in Mork & Mindy. He appeared in the second and third seasons from 1979-1981. Reno and his sister, Jeanie (Gina Hecht), owned the The New York Delicatessen in season 2 and DaVinci's Restaurant in season 3, where Mork (Robin Williams) and Mindy (Pam Dawber) spent a lot of their time.

He had a recurring role as Eddie LeBec in 9 episodes of Cheers from 1987-1989. Eddie LeBec was a Boston Bruins goalie who began dating Carla Tortelli (Rhea Perlman). They later married, and had twin boys named Elvis and Jesse. In 1989, Eddie was killed by a Zamboni when he saved the life of another member of the ice show.

Thomas appeared as Jerry Gold in 9 episodes of Murphy Brown from 1989-1998. Jerry Gold was a tabloid talk show host, who became a friend of Murphy's and an occasional love interest, despite their significantly different journalistic values. Thomas won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series in 1990 and 1991 for the role.

He starred as Russell Meyers in the 1990-1991 ABC sitcom Married People. Russell was a freelance writer and house-husband who was married to Elizabeth (Bess Armstrong), who worked as an attorney. The series also starred Ray Aranha, Barbara Montgomery, Chris Young and Megan Gallivan.

Thomas starred as Jack Stein in the 1992-1995 CBS sitcom Love & War. Jack Stein was a columnist for the New York Post. He had an on-again, off-again romance with Wallis "Wally" Porter (Susan Dey), a Chicago restaurateur. Dey was dropped from the show after the first season. Annie Potts joined the cast as Dana Palladino, who bought Porter's restaurant and also became a love interest for Jack. The series also starred John Hancock (1992), Charlie Robinson, Joel Murray, Michael Nouri, Suzie Plakson and Joanna Gleason.

In 1999, Thomas starred in the short-lived WB sitcom Katie Joplin. He played Glen Shotz, a radio station general manager. The series also starred Park Overall, Jim Rash, Jesse Head, Ana Reeder, Simon Rex and Majandra Delfino.

Some of his sitcom guest appearances included The Love Boat, Family Ties, The Golden Girls, Open House, Cybill, Bless This House, Ink, Working, The Simple Life, Run of the House, Retired at 35 and Shake It Up.

He had a recurring role as Marty Grossman in Ray Donovan. Some of his other drama credits included Spenser: For Hire, Almost Grown, Freddy's Nightmares, Hercules, Fantasy Island (1999), The Education of Max Bickford, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Joan of Arcadia, Boston Legal and Cold Case.

Thomas starred as Bill Meister in Mr. Holland's Opus. He played the Easter Bunny in The Santa Clause 2 and The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause. Some of his other film credits included C.H.U.D., Straight Talk, A Smile Like Yours, Labor Pains and Underdogs.

Thomas also worked as a radio talk show host. He was heard in New York in the mid-1970s on Top 40 station 99X, and in Los Angeles beginning in 1989 on KPWR "Power 106". He began hosting The Jay Thomas Show on SiriusXM Satellite Radio in 1999.


Elena Verdugo

Elena Verdugo (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actress Elena Verdugo was best known for her role as Consuelo Lopez in Marcus Welby, M.D.. She died on May 30, 2017, in Los Angeles, California. Ms. Verdugo was 92.

Verdugo starred as Millie Bronson in the 1952-1956 CBS sitcom Meet Millie. The series, which began on radio, was about a wisecracking Manhattan secretary from Brooklyn. It also starred Florence Halop, Earl Ross, Ross Ford, Marvin Kaplan, Roland Winters, Isabel Randolph and Virginia Vincent.

She appeared in the recurring role of Audrey, the widowed sister of Harry Grafton (Phil Silvers), in 8 episodes of the CBS sitcom The New Phil Silvers Show in 1964. Harry Grafton was a plant foreman at the Osborne Corporation. The series also starred Stafford Repp, Sandy Descher, Herbie Faye, Ronnie Dapo and Buddy Lester.

Verdugo starred as Lynn Hall in the short-lived 1964-1965 CBS sitcom Many Happy Returns. Lynn Hall was a complaint department employee at the fictitious Krockmeyer's Department Store in Los Angeles. The series starred John McGiver, Richard Collier, Eliinor Donahue, Jesslyn Fax, Mark Goddard, Mickey Manners and Andrea Sacino.

She starred as Alice Henderson in the 1965-1966 NBC sitcom Mona McCluskey. The series was about Mona (Juliet Prowse) trying to balance her acting career with her marriage to Mike (Denny Scott Miller), who preferred that they live on his smaller Air Force salary. The series also starred Herb Rudley, Bartlett Robinson and Robert Strauss.

Some of her sitcom guest appearances included The Gale Storm Show: Oh! Susanna, The Bob Cummings Show, Petticoat Junction and Love, American Style.

Verdugo was best known for her role as Consuelo Lopez in the 1969-1976 ABC medical drama Marcus Welby, M.D.. Consuelo Lopez was Dr. Marcus Welby's (Robert Young) and Dr. Steven Kiley's (James Brolin) dedicated and loving nurse and office manager. Vergudo received two Emmy nominations for "Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in Drama" in 1971 and 1972 and a Golden Globe nomination for "Best Supporting Actress - Television" in 1973. Verdugo reunited with Young in the 1984 TV movie The Return of Marcus Welby, M.D..

She earlier starred as Gerry in the short-lived 1963 western Redigo. Gerry was the manager of the Gran Quivera Hotel in Mesa, New Mexico. The series starred Richard Egan, Roger Davis, Rudy Solari and Mina Martinez.


Trish Vradenburg

Trish Vradenburg (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Writer Trish Vradenburg worked on several sitcoms in the 1980s. She died on April 17, 2017, in Washington, Disctrict of Columbia, from a heart attack. Ms. Vradenburg was 70.

Her sitcom writing credits included a 1985 episode of Kate & Allie, three episodes of Everything's Relative in 1987, two episodes of Designing Women in 1987 and a 1988 episode of Family Ties. Her episodes dealt with topics including abortion, homosexuality, race relations and high school reunions.


Ann Wedgeworth

Ann Wedgeworth (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actress Ann Wedgeworth was known for her roles as Lana Shields in Three's Company and as Merleen Elldridge in Evening Shade. She died on November 16, 2017, after a long illness at a nursing home in North Bergen, New Jersey. Ms. Wedgeworth was 83.

Wedgeworth had main roles on several daytime soap operas. She starred as Angela 'Angie' Talbot on The Edge of Night from 1966-1967 and as Lahoma Vane Lucas on Another World from 1970 to 1973. She also appeared in the Another World spinoff series, Somerset.

Some of her early television guest appearances included Kraft Theatre, Startime, The Defenders, Hawk, and Bronk.

She had a recurring role as Lana Shields in nine episodes in the first half of the fourth season (1979-1980) of Three's Company. Lana was a promiscuous older female neighbor who pursued Jack Tripper (John Ritter) and was in turn pursued by Mr. Furley (Don Knotts). In 1998, she was interviewed for the E! True Hollywood Story on Three's Company.

Wedgeworth starred as the good-natured but ditzy Bootsie Westchester, wife of Wild Bill Westchester (Jerry Hardin), in the 1982-1983 CBS sitcom Filthy Rich. The Linda Bloodworth-Thomason created series also starred Slim Pickens, Forrest Tucker, Delta Burke, Dixie Carter, Charles Frank, Michael Lombard, Nedra Volz and Vernon Weddle.

Her longest running role was on Evening Shade, which aired on CBS from 1990-1994. She starred as Merleen Elldridge, the lusty wife of Dr. Harlan Elldridge (Charles Durning). The Linda Bloodworth-Thomason created series also starred Burt Reynolds, Marilu Henner, Hal Holbrook, Ossie Davis, Elizabeth Ashley, Michael Jeter, Jay R. Ferguson, Charlie Dell, Candace Hutson and Jacob Parker.

Some of her later televison guest appearances included One Life to Live, The Twilight Zone, The Equalizer and Roseanne. Her film credits included Scarecrow, Bang the Drum Slowly, Law and Disorder, One Summer Love, Thieves, Handle with Care, No Small Affair, My Science Project, Sweet Dreams, The Men's Club, A Tiger's Tale, Made in Heaven, Far North, Steel Magnolias, Hard Promises, Love and a .45 and The Whole Wide World.

Wedgeworth was also known for her work on Broadway and off-Broadway productions. She won the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play for Chapter Two in 1978. Some of her other credits included Make a Million, Period of Adjustment, Blues for Mister Charlie, The Last Analysis, Thieves and A Lie of the Mind.


Adam West

Adam West (IMDB/Wikipedia/Archive of American Television)

Actor Adam West was best known for his role as Batman in the 1960s series Batman. He died on June 9, 2017, in Los Angeles, California, following a brief battle with leukemia. Mr. West was 88.

West's early television guest appearances included The Philco-Goodyear Television Playhouse, Grand Jury, Lawman, Sugarfoot, Cheyenne, Bronco, Colt .45, 77 Sunset Strip, Maverick, Hawaiian Eye, Bourbon Street Beat, Johnny Midnight, Overland Trail, Bonanza, Michael Shayne and The Rifleman.

His first television starring role was as Sgt. Steve Nelson in the police drama Robert Taylor's Detectives. He appeared in the final season of the series, which aired in 1961-1962 on NBC. The series starred Robert Taylor as Capt. Matt Holbrook and Tige Andrews as Lt. John Russo.

West's 1960s television drama guest appearances included Perry Mason, Laramie, Gunsmoke, The Outer Limits, The Virginian and The Big Valley.

He starred as Bruce Wayne and his alter ego, Batman, in the 1966-1968 ABC action/adventure/comedy series Batman. The popular campy show ran for three seasons and 120 episodes. The series starred Burt Ward, Alan Napier, Madge Blake, Neil Hamilton, Stafford Repp and Yvonne Craig (1967-1968). A theatrical film titled Batman (also known as Batman: The Movie) was released in 1966.

In 2003, West and Ward reunited for the CBS television movie Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt. West voiced an animated version of Batman on The New Adventures of Batman, Super Friends: The Legendary Super Powers Show and The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians.

West starred as Captain Rick Wright in the short-lived 1986 NBC sitcom The Last Precint. Captain Rick Wright led a group of misfit police academy rejects at Los Angeles' 56th precinct. The series starred Jonathan Perpich, Rick Ducommun, Ernie Hudson, Randi Brooks, Vijay Amritraj, Pete Willcox, Keenan Wynn, Hank Rolike, Lucy Lee Flippin, Wings Hauser, Yana Nirvana, Geoffrey Elliott and James Cromwell.

He made guest appearances in many sitcoms. His credits included Guestward Ho!, The Real McCoys, Petticoat Junction, Bewitched, Love, American Style, Alice, Operation Petticoat, Laverne & Shirley, The Love Boat, Nurses, The Adventures of Pete & Pete, Hope & Gloria, Pauly, The Wayans Bros., Murphy Brown, Jenny, NewsRadio, The Drew Carey Show, Yes, Dear, The King of Queens, George Lopez, 30 Rock, The Big Bang Theory (200th episode) and Powerless.

West was also known for his voice work. He voiced Mayor Adam West, the lunatic mayor of Quahog, Rhode Island, on Family Guy beginning in 2000 (season 2). He voiced a cat-obsessed version of himself, who is famous for playing a superhero called Catman, and who actually believes he is Catman, in the Nickelodeon animated series The Fairly OddParents. He provided his voice in two episodes of The Simpsons. Some of his other voice credits included The Rugrats, The Critic, Animaniacs, The Batman and Futurama.


Bernard 'Bud' Wiser

Bernard 'Bud' Wiser (IMDB)

Writer and producer Bernard 'Bud' Wiser worked on All in the Family, One Day at a Time and Who's the Boss?. He died April 16, 2017, surrounded by his family at his home in Studio City, California. Mr. Wiser was 87.

Wiser served as a producer of One Day at a Time for six seasons of the long-running CBS sitcom. He also wrote 25 episodes of the series from 1976-1983. He was a script consultant for an additional 30 episodes.

He worked as a producer and supervising producer for Who's the Boss? for the first two seasons from 1984-1986. He wrote eight episodes of the series from 1984-1989.

Wiser's other sitcom writing credits included Chico and the Man, Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers, All in the Family (2 episodes - "Gloria's Boyfriend" and "Prisoner in the House"), That's My Mama (2 episodes), Rhoda, The Practice (1976), All's Fair (4 episodes), A Different World, Charles in Charge (3 episodes), Growing Pains, Dear John, Brooklyn Bridge and Coach.

He served as a supervising producer for The New Lassie syndicated series in 1989-1990. He also wrote four episodes.


Francine York

Francine York (IMDB/Wikipedia)

Actress Francine York made guest appearances in many sitcoms. She died on January 6, 2017, in Van Nuys, California, from cancer. Ms. York was 80.

Some of her sitcom guest appearances included Bringing Up Buddy, I'm Dickens, He's Fenster, My Favorite Martian, Hazel, My Brother the Angel, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., Green Acres, The Courtship of Eddie's Father, The Odd Couple, Bewitched, Love, American Style, Mama's Family, Mr. Belvedere, Even Stevens, The King of Queens, Hot in Cleveland and The Mindy Project.


Sitcoms Airing Tonight / Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows

Friday, December 6

Happy's Place - "Ho-Ho Howey" (NBC, 9:15PM ET/PT)
When the tavern's health insurance is threatened to be canceled, Gabby has a plan; she'll persuade her friend Danny to host his company party at Happy's, but the catch is everyone must call Bobbie "Gabby" and Gabby "Bobbie."

Lopez vs Lopez - "Lopez vs Santa" (NBC, 9:45PM ET/PT)
While Mayan tries to track down the perfect Christmas gift for Chance, George has to settle a feud with Santa that stretches back to George's childhood; Quinten tries to shake Rosie out of her holiday blues.

Bob Hearts Abishola - "We Were Beggars, Now We Are Choosers" (The CW, 8:00PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
After Abishola gives her previous suitor a second chance, Uncle Tunde goes behind Auntie Olu's back to warn Bob about the other man who's courting his niece.

Bob Hearts Abishola - "Ice Cream for Breakfast" (The CW, 8:30PM ET/PT) (Repeat)
Bob must gain the confidence to fight for Abishola when she goes on another date with Chukwuemeka; Uncle Tunde finds an unlikely friend in Dottie in the aftermath of his fight with Auntie Olu.

Children Ruin Everything - "Chores" (The CW, 9:00PM ET/PT)
Astrid and James question the effectiveness of their own parenting when they meet one of Felix's friends with impeccable manners; Astrid and James worry about the types of adults their kids will become.

Children Ruin Everything - "Feelings" (The CW, 9:30PM ET/PT)
James, feeling left out when Ennis makes a new friend, inserts himself in Ennis' dodgeball tournament; Astrid struggles to get Viv to control her emotions, especially when frustrations at work make it hard to lead by example.

Complete TV Listings


Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows (Week of December 2)

Friday, December 6

  • Ralph Macchio (Eight Is Enough) - Watch Ralph on a repeat of Jimmy Kimmel Live! at 11:35pm on ABC.
  • Ben Stiller (Arrested Development) - Ben is a guest on a repeat of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon at 11:35pm on NBC.
  • Rita Moreno (One Day at a Time/Happily Divorced/9 to 5) - Rita appears on a repeat of Late Night with Seth Meyers at 12:36am on NBC.
  • Emily Osment (Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage/Young Sheldon/Young & Hungry/Hannah Montana), Tien Tran (How I Met Your Father) and Vinny Thomas (Platonic) - Emily, Tien and Vinny are guests on a repeat of After Midnight at 12:37am on CBS.
  • Hilary Swank (Camp Wilder) - NBC's Today catches up with Hilary in the 10am hour.
  • The Cast of Sex Lives of College Girls - The Sex Lives of College Girls creator Mindy Kaling is joining Drew on The Drew Barrymore Show, so check your local listings. Then, the case of the show, Pauline Chalamet, Alyah Chanelle Scott, Amrit Kaur, Mia Rodgers and Gracie Lawrence are all chatting about the latest season of the hit show.
  • Ryan Destiny (grown-ish) and Brian Tyree Henry (HouseBroken/Atlanta) - Ryan and Brian talk about their new film The Fire Inside on Sherri, so check your local listings.
  • Steve Howey (Reba) - Steve talks about NBC's Happy Place on Access Daily with Mario & Kit, so check your local listings.
  • Krysten Ritter (Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23) - Krysten discusses her film Sonic 3 on The Talk on CBS at 2pm ET/1pm CT-PT.
  • Melissa Joan Hart (Baby Daddy/Sabrina the Teenage Witch/Clarissa Explains It All) - Melissa is a guest on New York Living on WPIX in New York at 10:05am.


New on DVD and Blu-ray

Friends - The Complete Series (4K UHD) Young Sheldon - The Complete Series Veep - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) I Love Lucy - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Seinfeld - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)

09/10 - Rick and Morty - The Complete Seasons 1-7
09/10 - The Ropers - The Complete Series (VEI)
09/10 - Ted - Season One (Blu-ray) (DVD)
09/17 - The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet - Video Scrapbook
09/17 - Top Cat - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
09/24 - Friends - The Complete Series (4K UHD)
09/24 - Young Sheldon - The Complete Seventh Season (DVD) / The Complete Series (DVD) (Blu-ray)
10/08 - Curb Your Enthusiasm - The Complete Twelfth Season / The Complete Series
10/22 - Veep - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
11/05 - I Love Lucy - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
11/12 - The King of Queens - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) (2024 Release)
11/19 - SpongeBob SquarePants - The Complete Fourteenth Season
11/26 - Looney Tunes Collector's Choice - Volume 4 (Blu-ray)
12/03 - Angel (1960-1961) - The Complete Series, Volume 1
12/17 - Seinfeld - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) (4K UHD)
02/04 - Bewitched - The Complete Series - 60th Anniversary Special Edition (Blu-ray)

More Recent and Upcoming TV DVD and Blu-ray Releases / TV Shows on DVD, Blu-ray and Prime Video / DVD Reviews Archive


Recent SitcomsOnline.com News Blog Posts

12/06 - Apple TV+ New Comedy Government Cheese; Prime Video Sets Half-Hour Police Drama
12/05 - Marlon Wayans to Guest Star on Poppa's House on CBS; Mo Returning to Netflix
12/04 - STARZ Comedy Thriller Sweetpea Renewed for Season 2; Bel-Air to End After Next Season
12/03 - Pluto TV Holiday Schedule; SNL December Hosts and Musical Performers
12/02 - Scripps Networks (Laff, Bounce, ION) Holiday Schedule; First Look at Watson on CBS
12/01 - Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of December 2, 2024)
11/30 - SitcomsOnline Digest: Desperate Housewives Creator Has Prequel Idea; Finale Date Set for The Talk
11/29 - Abbott Elementary Aces the Test on Multi-Platform; Dancing with the Stars' Resurgence
11/28 - 2024 Thanksgiving TV Marathons
11/27 - Henry Danger The Movie Premieres in January; Dexter: Original Sin Trailer
11/26 - The Way Home Returns for Season 3; Matthew Broderick and Son to Guest Star on Elsbeth
11/25 - Peacock's Laid Premieres December 19; Jon Hamm Drama Gets Season 2 Before Series Premiere
11/24 - Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of November 25, 2024)
11/23 - SitcomsOnline Digest: HBO Renews It's Florida, Man; Simpsons Voice Actor Announces Retirement
11/22 - NBC's Happy's Place Gets Full Season; HBO Renews It's Florida, Man for Another Zany Season
11/21 - The CW Midseason 2025 Schedule; Voice of Milhouse Leaving The Simpsons
11/20 - NBC Midseason 2025 Schedule; Apple TV+ Announces The Studio
11/19 - Antenna TV's Thanksgiving on the Eastside: The Jeffersons Marathon; Fox Midseason 2025 Schedule
11/18 - Conan O'Brien to Host Oscars for First Time; Celebs for Season 3 of Special Forces: World's Toughest Test
11/17 - Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of November 18, 2024)
11/16 - SitcomsOnline Digest: HBO Orders Kaley Cuoco Comedy from Hacks Creators; Reboot of Friday Night Lights in the Works
11/15 - Bookie Season 2 Premieres December 12 on Max; Apple TV+ Mythic Quest Is Back in January
11/14 - CBS Midseason 2025 Schedule; Reasonable Doubt Renewed for Season 3 on Hulu
11/13 - Harlem Season 3 Drops in January; James Acaster HBO Comedy Special
11/12 - ABC Midseason 2025 Schedule; Jim Gaffigan Gets First Hulu Comedy Special
11/11 - We Got Time Today, A New Tubi Talk Show; Bill Maher Gets 13th HBO Special
11/10 - Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of November 11, 2024)
11/09 - SitcomsOnline Digest: Two New Sitcoms in the Works at CBS; The CW Adds Bob ♥ Abishola to Lineup
11/08 - CBS Orders Full Season for Poppa's House; The CW Acquires Bob ♥ Abishola Reruns; Remembering Alan Rachins of Dharma & Greg
11/07 - A Very Merry MeTV 2024 Schedule; Stranger Things Final Season in 2025
11/06 - Outer Banks to End with Season 5; Nothing to See Here Season 2 on Netflix