Just the Ten of Us
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| Just the Ten of Us | |
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Just the Ten of Us opening sequence |
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| Format | Sitcom |
| Created by | Steve Marshall Dan Guntzelman |
| Starring | Evan Arnold Frank Bonner Maxine Elliott Hicks Deborah Harmon Dennis Haysbert Bill Kirchenbauer Jason Korstjens and Jeremy Korstjens Heather Langenkamp Jamie Luner Lou Richards Matt Shakman Brooke Theiss Heidi Zeigler |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of episodes | 47 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 30 minutes (per episode) |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | ABC |
| Original run | April 26, 1988 – July 27, 1990 |
| External links | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
Just the Ten of Us is a situation comedy that aired on ABC, most notably as part of what would become that network's TGIF programming block. The series was a spin-off of Growing Pains, and was broadcast from 1988 until 1990.
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The series focuses on Graham Lubbock (Bill Kirchenbauer), a conservative Catholic gym teacher who would flip-out anytime a boy looked at one of his daughters, at the high school that Growing Pains characters Mike and Carol Seaver (Kirk Cameron, Tracey Gold) had attended; and the father of 8 children.
In the pilot episode (which aired on Growing Pains in the spring of 1988), Graham's contract is terminated, prompting Mike to lead a protest after he learns that he is trying to support a large family (including a baby that his wife, Elizabeth, just had). Word spreads, and Graham is offered a job at St. Augustine's Academy, an all-boys private Catholic school in Eureka, California; Graham promptly moves his family to California.
6 of Graham's children were girls, 4 of them teenagers. They were:
- Marie (Heather Langenkamp) - the oldest, most responsible, and most pious.
- Cindy (Jamie Luner) - Wendy's older twin, and the most ditzy (from Season 2 on).
- Wendy (Brooke Theiss) - Cindy's younger twin, and the most flirtatious of the 4.
- Connie - the Bohemian of the group.
His younger daughters were 8-year-old Sherry (Heidi Zeigler) and infant Melissa. By special arrangement, the older girls were allowed to attend St. Augustine's, much to the chagrin of the school's administration (and, of course, much delight of the male students).
Graham and Elizabeth's sons were 11-year-old Graham, Jr. (J.R.) and toddler Harvey.
The first season consisted of 4 episodes for a trial run in the spring of 1988. ABC was pleased with their success, and ordered a second season. The second season saw some changes: Cindy and Wendy had seemed to switch personalities, with Cindy become ditzy, and Wendy becoming the schemer; the show focused more and more on the 4 older girls. Episodes revolved around the family's efforts to save money, dating, and other typical family sitcom plots. In later episodes, the 4 teenage girls formed a singing group called "The Lubbock Babes" (partly to help bring in much-needed extra income).
The show ran for 3 seasons, and the final episode was conceivably the worst of the show's run, with the Graham bringing home a cow that he plans to slaughter, but the girls plot to put an end to that by getting the cow pregnant. In the end, they decide to keep the cow and its offspring.
Just the Ten of Us featured several actors who are well-known for other roles. Dennis Haysbert, who previously played Pedro Cerrano in Major League and Major League II and then David Palmer in 24, portrayed Duane, Coach Lubbock's assistant. Frank Bonner, who starred in WKRP in Cincinnati, was Father Hargis, headmaster of St. Augustine's.
ABC network politics, not ratings issues, cancelled Just the Ten Of Us in the spring of 1990. Since ABC was moving forward to prominently market their family-friendly Friday night sitcom lineup with the new TGIF moniker that fall, the brass decided that all 4 comedies were to be produced by Miller-Boyett Productions. The 3 current Friday stablemates of Just the Ten Of Us (as of the end of the 1989-90 season) were produced by that company: Full House, Family Matters, and Perfect Strangers. (Another non-Miller-Boyett show, Mr. Belvedere, had already been off the schedule for months, and aired its last episodes on Sunday nights that summer.) Warner Bros. Television and producers Guntzelman/Marshall entered a battle over their show's fate, and Ten's show runners had a solid case: the series consistently won its time slot, provided an excellent lead-in to newsmagazine 20/20, and had a great fan base carried over from Growing Pains viewership. When it came down to the network upfronts, ABC concluded that there would be no other suitable time slot for Just the Ten Of Us, and they had already committed to a new Miller-Boyett sitcom to join its existing three in the TGIF lineup: Going Places.
Alas, the show wasn't picked up for another season, with no other network as a prospect for giving it a new home. Just the Ten Of Us left ABC during summer reruns in late July, 1990, with fans shocked, but not for long, at least. Cable's USA Network picked up the entire series in reruns shortly after. For fans, it did help relieve the blow, and continued doing so, as USA aired the show on a daily basis until 1996.
Although ABC saw even greater success with its TGIF lineup in the 1990-91 season, the series that took Ten's place, Going Places, only lasted a single season before getting the Nielsen axe. In the wake of this action, the Head of Entertainment at ABC filed a press statement nearly 1 year after the abrupt cancellation of Just the Ten Of Us, where he was reported to admit that the network brass "moved too quickly" in cancelling the show.
The series had close ties with the Nightmare on Elm Street horror film franchise. 3 of the 4 teenaged daughters appeared in various Nightmare films:
- Heather Langenkamp starred in the original A Nightmare on Elm Street and A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors as Nancy Thompson, Freddy Krueger's nemesis; this character is killed off in Dream Warriors. In addition, Langenkamp plays herself in Wes Craven's New Nightmare. (When the Lubbocks enter their new home for the first time, Marie says, "this looks like something out of Nightmare on Elm Street," which was a nod to her character in the movie.)
- Brooke Theiss has a supporting role in A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master as "Deb," who goes on to be the last of Freddy's victims in the film.
In addition, the character "J.R." is often seen sporting a Nightmare on Elm Street t-shirt.
Two actors who would later be stars on Friends were previously guest stars on Just The Ten Of Us. Matt LeBlanc played in two episodes as the quarterback of the football team, and had a crush on Wendy's character. Matthew Perry was in an episode as the "fake" date for Wendy, so she could sneak out and go with her real date, a much older man. Interestingly enough, Perry's character also ended up having a crush on Wendy as well.
Perry had also appeared for 2 episodes of the mother series Growing Pains, in early 1989 as a boyfriend of Carol Seaver's, who ends up dying from injuries he sustained from a drunk-driving accident.
On the Friends spin-off show Joey, the character Bobbie claims that she burnt down the set of Just the Ten of Us in the episode "Joey and the Sex Tape".
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| Aliens in the Family • Baby Talk • Boy Meets World • Brother's Keeper • Camp Wilder • Complete Savages • Clueless • Dinosaurs • 8 Simple Rules • Family Matters • Full House • George Lopez • Getting By • Going Places • Hangin' with Mr. Cooper • Hi Honey, I'm Home! • Hope & Faith • The Hughleys • Just the Ten of Us • Less Than Perfect • Life With Bonnie • Married to the Kellys • Mr. Belvedere • Muppets Tonight • Odd Man Out • On Our Own • Perfect Strangers • Sabrina, the Teenage Witch • Step by Step • Teen Angel • Two of a Kind • Where I Live • You Wish |
Categories: TGIF (ABC) | 1988 television series debuts | 1990 television series endings | 1980s American television series | 1990s American television series | American Broadcasting Company network shows | American television sitcoms | Television spin-offs | Television series by Warner Bros. Television | Television shows set in California