Good Times: Florida Gets a Job


2:00 pm - 2:30 pm, Sunday, November 30 on WCCO Decades (4.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Florida Gets a Job

Season 6, Episode 1

In the Season 6 opener, Alderman Davis will recommend Florida for a job if JJ will help with his campaign.

repeat 1978 English
Comedy Sitcom Spin-off

Cast & Crew
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Esther Rolle (Actor) .. Florida Evans
Jimmie Walker (Actor) .. James `J.J.' Evans Jr.
Ja'net Dubois (Actor) .. Willona Woods
BernNadette Stanis (Actor) .. Thelma Evans
Janet Jackson (Actor) .. Penny Gordon Woods
Gary Coleman (Actor) .. Gary
Janet Maclachlan (Actor) .. Sandra
Albert Reed (Actor) .. Alderman Davis
Ben Powers (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Esther Rolle (Actor) .. Florida Evans
Born: November 08, 1920
Died: November 17, 1998
Birthplace: Pompano Beach, Florida, United States
Trivia: The ninth in a family of 18 children, Esther Rolle left her family's Florida home for New York once she came of age. She worked her way through Hunter College, Spellman College and the New School for Social Research. Even after her 1962 New York stage debut in The Blacks, Esther was compelled to hold down a day job in the city's garment district. She appeared in such Broadway productions as The Crucible and Blues for Mr. Charlie, and toured extensively with Robert Hooks' Negro Ensemble Company. Her breakthrough role was Florida the maid in the 1972 Norman Lear sitcom Maude. Though she balked at playing a domestic, Rolle was impressed by Florida's independence and pugnaciousness. In February of 1973, the Florida character was spun off into her own series, Good Times, the saga of a tightly-knit black family surviving in the Chicago projects. Rolle welcomed the series as an opportunity to depict a poor but proud African-American family with a strong father figure (played by John Amos) at the center. But when Amos, upset that co-star Jimmie "J.J." Walker was dominating the series, left Good Times in 1974, Rolle echoed the words of such groups as the National Black Media Coalition in chastising the renovated series, wherein an irresponsible, wisecracking teenaged cut-up was now "head" of the household. When her contract ran out in 1977, Esther joined John Amos in bolting Good Times. After a year of pursuing other projects -- one of which, the made-for-TV film Summer of My German Soldier, won Rolle an Emmy -- she was back on Good Times, having been assured that she would be given full script approval and that the J.J. character had matured. But by this time, audiences had wearied of Good Times, and the series was cancelled in 1979. Since that time, Rolle has hardly wanted for work: her most recent credits include the strong role of Idella in the 1989 Oscar-winner Driving Miss Daisy, the starring part of the black owner of a Jewish deli in the 1990 sitcom Singer and Son, and a guest appearance as the dying Mammy in the 1994 Gone with the Wind sequel Scarlet. In addition, Esther Rolle has been nominated honorary chairperson of the President's Committee on the Employment of the Handicapped, and has been honored with several Image Awards from the NAACP.
Jimmie Walker (Actor) .. James `J.J.' Evans Jr.
Born: June 25, 1947
Birthplace: Bronx, New York, United States
Trivia: Thin, jug-eared, and rubber-faced black comedian Jimmie Walker is best remembered for playing J.J. on the sitcom Good Times (1974-1979). His exuberant "Dyno-mite!!" was briefly a popular catch phrase back then. Walker made his feature film debut in Sing Thanksgiving (1974). Following the demise of his show, Walker embarked upon a modest film career and carried on with his standup career. He occasionally showed up on television talk shows and in 70's retrospectives, not afraid to poke fun at his '70s persona.
Ja'net Dubois (Actor) .. Willona Woods
Born: August 05, 1938
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Black supporting actress Ja'net DuBois first appeared onscreen in 1970.
BernNadette Stanis (Actor) .. Thelma Evans
Born: December 22, 1953
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Entered Miss Black America pageants as a teen, and as Miss Brooklyn eventually won first runner-up in the Miss New York State contest. Auditioned for role of Thelma Evans on the CBS comedy series Good Times while still in college. Won the part and made her TV-series debut when it premiered in 1974. In the late 1990s, appeared in a hip-hop music video for Camp Lo with former Good Times costar Jimmie Walker. Produced several plays, including Whatever Happened to Black Love. In 2006 released first book, Situations 101: Relationships The Good, The Bad & The Ugly.
Janet Jackson (Actor) .. Penny Gordon Woods
Born: May 16, 1966
Birthplace: Gary, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Of the many siblings of mega-star Michael Jackson, Michael's youngest sister Janet is one of the few with enough genuine talent to succeed without her family ties. Jackson's fame rests largely on her successful, elaborately produced music videos, wherein the talented singer and dancer projects a more accessible, realistic image than her otherworldly brother. She is also a skilled and agreeable actress, as witness her series-TV stints on Good Times (1977-78), Diff'rent Strokes (1981-82) and Fame (1984). In 1993, Janet Jackson made her movie debut as a South Central L.A. beautician in director John Singleton's Poetic Justice (1993); the film was no classic, but Janet dominated every scene she was in, even those shared with notorious rap artist Tupac Shakur.
Gary Coleman (Actor) .. Gary
Born: February 08, 1968
Died: May 28, 2010
Birthplace: Zion, Illinois, United States
Trivia: African-American child star Gary Coleman grew up in Zion, IL, where his father worked as a forklift operator and his mother was a nurse. Before reaching the age of five, Coleman had undergone three operations for a congenital kidney defect known as nephritis. As a result of his medical condition, he would never grow any taller than 4'8". His smallness proved to be a professional advantage when he began appearing in Chicago-area TV commercials; even at the age of nine, he could still pass as a precocious five-year-old. In 1978, Coleman auditioned for a proposed television revival of the old Little Rascals comedy series. Though the project fell through, ABC chief executive Fred Silverman was enchanted by the talented tyke. Silverman cast Coleman as Arnold Jackson on the upcoming sitcom Diff'rent Strokes, which moved to NBC along with Silverman in the fall of 1978. It was this extraordinarily popular series, coupled with the precocious Coleman's spirited TV talk show appearances, that catapulted the ten-year-old to stardom. Within a year of Diff'rent Strokes' debut, Gary Coleman Productions was formed, for the purpose of starring the youngster in theatrical features like On the Right Track (1981) and made-for-TV movies like Scout's Honor (1980) and The Kid With the Broken Halo (1982). This last project was spun off into the Saturday-morning cartoon series The Gary Coleman Show (1983), with Coleman providing his own voice. An instinctive comic performer and extremely quick study, Coleman rapidly grew weary with the rigors of show business. As he grew older, Coleman's spontaneous cuteness faded. After the cancellation of Diff'rent Strokes in 1986, Coleman found the going decidedly rough. Occasionally he'd play a "stunt" part like a villainous gang leader on the TV series 227, in addition to appearances on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, The Drew Carey Show and other programs, but his short stature and ever-diminishing acting range made him difficult to cast. He still remained in the public eye, albeit as the central character in a bitter legal squabble between himself and his parents. Gary Coleman's later TV appearances were largely confined to a series of late-night commercials for a "psychic" telephone service, though he made headlines in 2003 when he ran in the Recall Election for Governor of the State of California, placing 8th behind winner Arnold Schwarzenegger and 6 others. Coleman died of cranial bleeding following a fall in late May 2010. He was 42 years old.
Janet Maclachlan (Actor) .. Sandra
Born: August 27, 1933
Trivia: African American actress Janet MacLachlan began appearing in films in 1968, usually in such "relevance"-oriented productions as Uptight (1968) and tick...tick...tick (1970). MacLachlan went on to co-star on TV as suburbanite Jackie Bruce in the weekly sitcom Love Thy Neighbor, then was seen in the 1979 TVer Friends as Mrs. Jane Summerfield. Her best-known TV role was as caustic housekeeper Polly Swanson in the 1980-81 episodes of Archie Bunker's Place. Janet MacLachlan's 1990s credits include character roles in the theatrical feature Hearts and Souls (1993) and the made-for-cable movie Tuskegee Airmen (1995).
Albert Reed (Actor) .. Alderman Davis
Born: January 28, 1910
Ben Powers (Actor)
Born: July 05, 1950
Died: April 06, 2015
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: A descendant of Harriet Powers, an African-American slave who created a series of quilts that are on display in museums like the Smithsonian. Became an actor after an injury ended an aspiring football career. Worked with the Trinity Repertory Theatre in Providence, R.I. First TV role was in 1975, appearing in Robert Penn Warren's "Brother to Dragons" on the PBS series Great Performances. Was cast in the short-lived 1977 revival of NBC's variety show Laugh-In. Appeared in the last season (1978-79) of the iconic CBS comedy Good Times as Keith Anderson. Made film debut in the 1980 comedy Cheech and Chong's Next Movie.
Gerren Keith (Actor)
Born: March 18, 1941
Birthplace: Kansas City, Missouri

Before / After
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Good Times
1:30 pm
Good Times
2:30 pm