Laverne & Shirley: The Dating Game


1:30 pm - 2:00 pm, Today on KSCW Catchy Comedy (33.2)

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About this Broadcast
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The Dating Game

Season 6, Episode 6

"Dating Game" host Jim Lange takes pity on Lenny and Squiggy and selects them as contestants.

repeat 1980 English
Comedy Family Sitcom Spin-off

Cast & Crew
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Michael McKean (Actor) .. Leonard `Lenny Kosnowski
David L. Lander (Actor) .. Andrew `Squiggy' Squiggman
Ilene Graff (Actor) .. Monique
Frank Ashmore (Actor) .. Bachelor No. 1
Jim Lange (Actor) .. Jim Lange
Phil Foster (Actor) .. Frank DeFazio

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Michael McKean (Actor) .. Leonard `Lenny Kosnowski
Born: October 17, 1947
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: You knew him as Lenny Koznowski, the nasal, nerdish pal of Andrew "Squiggy" Squigman (David L. Lander) on the hit TV series Laverne and Shirley. Show-biz insiders knew Michael McKean as an intelligent, versatile actor and writer. Shedding himself of the "Lenny" image after Laverne and Shirley folded in 1983, McKean became involved in several ensemble comedy projects with such kindred spirits as Harry Shearer, Rob Reiner and Christopher Guest. In the 1984 "rockumentary" spoof This Is Spinal Tap, McKean played the cockney-accented heavy metal musician David St. Hubbins. Apparently McKean enjoyed posing as an Englishman, inasmuch as he has done it so often and so well since Spinal Tap, most recently as Brian Benben's snippish boss on the cable TV sitcom Dream On. In the early '90s, McKean was one of the stars of another, less memorable TV comedy, Grand, and appeared for two season on Saturday Night Live. He continues to land film roles, usually in comedies, including the successful The Brady Bunch Movie (1995).
David L. Lander (Actor) .. Andrew `Squiggy' Squiggman
Born: June 22, 1947
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Born in Brooklyn, David L. Lander was raised in Bronx. Lander attended drama classes at Carnegie Tech, where he befriended fellow student Michael McKean. The two budding comedians joined a Hollywood improv group called the Credibility Gap (another member was Harry Shearer), gaining a huge fan following with their manic appearances on an LA radio station. Hired by producer Gary Marshall as writers/consultants for the '70s TV sitcom Laverne and Shirley, Lander and McKean immediately wrote themselves into the first show. Lander played Andrew "Squiggy" Squiggman and McKean portrayed Lenny Kosnowski, two adenoidal, terminally stupid truck drivers for Milwaukee's Shotz Brewery. The boys remained with the series from 1976 to 1983, then pretty much went their separate ways. Lander played comic character roles in films, and was prominently featured in the off-the-wall television efforts of David Lynch, notably the 1992 series On the Air, in which he was cast as unintelligible TV director Vladja Gochktch. Since providing the voice of the title character in the 1970 animated cartoon series Will the Real Jerry Lewis Please Sit Down?, Lander has been a busy and versatile voiceover artist, most recently as Lechner in the USA Network's Tattooed Teenage Alien Fighters from Beverly Hills (1994-95). Also for USA, he played the recurring role of Elvis the mechanic in the 1995 series Pacific Blue. David L. Lander's credits are sometimes confused with those of British actor David Lander.
Ilene Graff (Actor) .. Monique
Born: February 28, 1949
Frank Ashmore (Actor) .. Bachelor No. 1
Born: June 17, 1945
Jim Lange (Actor) .. Jim Lange
Born: August 15, 1932
Died: February 25, 2014
Phil Foster (Actor) .. Frank DeFazio
Born: March 29, 1914
Died: July 08, 1985
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: American actor Phil Foster started out as a stand-up comedian when he was quite young. Most of his early routines were slapstick, and the material was drawn from his life growing up in a Brooklyn neighborhood. After working the nightclub circuit through the 1940s, Foster began appearing on television variety shows such as Ed Sullivan. In the 1970s, he became a regular on Laverne and Shirley. Beginning in 1954, he made infrequent journeys into feature films. Foster made his final feature film, Sno-Line in 1985.

Before / After
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Happy Days
1:00 pm