The Facts of Life: Rough Housing


1:00 pm - 1:30 pm, Today on KTVX MeTV (4.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Rough Housing

Season 1, Episode 1

The Harvest Fair festivities are dampened by a misunderstanding over a tomboy's affections for the other girls. Cindy: Julie Anne Haddock. Mrs. Garrett: Charlotte Rae. Blair: Lisa Whelchel. Bradley: John Lawlor.

repeat 1979 English Stereo
Comedy Sitcom Spin-off Series Premiere Season Premiere

Cast & Crew
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Charlotte Rae (Actor) .. Edna Garrett
John Lawlor (Actor) .. Stephen Bradley
Lisa Whelchel (Actor) .. Blair Warner
Felice Schachter (Actor) .. Nancy
Molly Ringwald (Actor) .. Molly
Julie Piekarski (Actor) .. Sue Ann
Kim Fields (Actor) .. Dorothy `Tootie' Ramsey
Mindy Cohn (Actor) .. Natalie Green
Julie Anne Haddock (Actor) .. Cindy
Conrad Bain (Actor) .. Philip Drummond
Gary Coleman (Actor) .. Arnold Jackson
Todd Bridges (Actor) .. Willis Jackson

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Charlotte Rae (Actor) .. Edna Garrett
Born: April 22, 1926
Died: August 05, 2018
Birthplace: Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
Trivia: Even as a teenaged performer with the Shorewood Players, a Milwaukee community-theatre group, Charlotte Rae thrived in playing characters much older than herself. Example: at 16, Charlotte starred as Dolly Gallegher Levi in a Shorewood production of Thornton Wilder's The Merchant of Yonkers (her 28-year-old "Horace Vandergelder" was future Broadway director Morton DaCosta). Following graduation from Northwestern University, Rae made her Broadway bow in 1952's Three Wishes for Jamie. The following year, she scored a hit as Mrs. Peachum in the long-running off-Broadway revival of Brecht and Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera, and within three years she was portraying the ancient, wizened Mammy Yokum in Li'l Abner. She was a favorite of TV producer Nat Hiken, who hired her for several guest spots on The Phil Silvers Show. In 1961, Hiken cast the 35-year-old Charlotte as middle-aged hausfrau Sylvia Schnauzer, virago wife of officer Leo Schnauzer (played by fiftyish Al Lewis) on Car 54, Where are You? Rae's other TV series credits include the 1950s daytime drama From These Roots, the 1975 Norman Lear sitcom Hot L Baltimore and the 1976 Summer replacement The Rich Little Show. In 1978, Rae was cast as flibbertigibbet housekeeper Mrs. Garrett on the Gary Coleman series Diff'rent Strokes; the character struck such a responsive chord with audiences that she was spun off into her own starring sitcom The Facts of Life, in 1986. Rae remained with Facts as Mrs. Garrett until 1986, by which time she had been nominated for two Emmies (she has also received Obie and Tony nominations; an actual win is long overdue). More recently, Charlotte has provided voices for such animated offerings as Tom and Jerry: The Movie (1993) and TV's Itsy Bitsy Spider. An off-and-on nightclub and revue performer, Charlotte Rae took her one-woman "Broadway highlights" show on the road in 1994. Rae would continue to act in the decades to come, providing the voice of Nanny on the 101 Dalmations animated series, and appearing in films like You Don't Mess with the Zohan.
John Lawlor (Actor) .. Stephen Bradley
Trivia: A character actor who specialized in older, conservative everyman types -- often with a professional edge -- John Lawlor began his career essaying bit parts and supporting roles in B pictures such as The Gumball Rally and Jackson County Jail (both 1976) before signing on to play the venerable headmaster of the all-girls Eastman School Steven Bradley in season one of NBC's popular sitcom The Facts of Life (1979-1980). Lawlor bowed out after that first year, but subsequently moved into occasional film roles in features including John Boorman's Excalibur (1981), Blake Edwards' S.O.B. (1981), and Lawrence Kasdan's Wyatt Earp (1994).
Lisa Whelchel (Actor) .. Blair Warner
Born: May 29, 1963
Birthplace: Littlefield, Texas, United States
Trivia: A former Mouseketeer, Lisa Whelchel is best remembered for playing spoiled, little rich girl Blair Warner on the long-running sitcom Facts of Life (1979-1988).
Felice Schachter (Actor) .. Nancy
Born: November 17, 1963
Trivia: Felice Schachter enjoyed two distinct periods of success in show business: a period of child stardom that witnessed her acting and modeling into her teens, and a second foray into the production-oriented end of film during adulthood. A model from infancy, the Queens native did commercial spots for Ivory Snow detergent, McDonald's, and Pampers, then received ballet and theatrical experience before a memorable one-season run (1979-1980) as glamorous Nancy Olson on the NBC prep school-themed situation comedy The Facts of Life. Schachter concurrently made guest appearances on Diff'rent Strokes and Alice, and the teen-oriented exploitation film Zapped!, before temporarily leaving the limelight and then returning in her late thirties and early forties to assume production duties on a series of assignments, working her way up from production coordinator to co-producer on projects including the Showtime cable movie The Twilight of the Golds (1997) and the urban drama Anne B. Real (2003).
Molly Ringwald (Actor) .. Molly
Born: February 18, 1968
Birthplace: Roseville, California, United States
Trivia: From the mid- to late '80s, slender, carrot-topped, and luscious-lipped Molly Ringwald was the reigning teen queen of mainstream films. At the peak of her popularity, Ringwald was on the cover of Time magazine and even had groups of adolescent girl fans, called "Ringlets," who would emulate her every move.The daughter of jazzman Bob Ringwald, the leader of the Great Pacific Jazz Band, Ringwald was raised in Sacramento, CA, where she was born February 14, 1968. She started performing as a toddler, although not as an actress. She embarked on a very early and brief career as a singer after her parents discovered that she had a remarkable ability to perfectly match the tune and phrasing of almost any song she heard. Ringwald began singing jazz with her father at state fairs, and by the age of six, she already had a jazz album, I Wanna Be Loved By You--Molly Sings. In the meantime, Ringwald began to develop an interest in acting: she was four when she started hanging around the local community theater and five when she started getting small parts, including the role of a preacher's child in Truman Capote's The Grass Harp. At the age of eight, Ringwald appeared on The New Mickey Mouse Club. Encouraged by her talent and driven by her father's desire to get better bookings for his band, Ringwald's family moved to L.A.'s San Fernando Valley. In 1979, the actress won a part on Norman Lear's sitcom The Facts of Life. Ringwald only lasted a season before she was let go, but her television work paved the way for subsequent screen roles.In 1982, Ringwald made an auspicious film debut in Paul Mazursky's acclaimed Tempest, earning a Golden Globe nomination for her portrayal of John Cassavetes' daughter. In order to prepare for the role, Mazursky had Ringwald and her family move to a flat in New York's Greenwich Village to help her develop the necessary New York accent and attitude. Her performance in the film attracted the attention of screenwriter/aspiring director John Hughes who cast her as the protagonist of Sixteen Candles (1984), his wistful chronicle of suburban teenaged angst. The film was a hit, and so was Ringwald. Hughes would cast her in two more teen films, The Breakfast Club (1985) and Pretty in Pink (1986), both of which were hugely popular with teen audiences. In addition to a solid film career, Ringwald -- who had become a household name -- also occasionally appeared in television movies. Despite her continued success through the early '90s, Ringwald felt her life had reached a crossroads; by 1992, she decided to sell her house, put her personal effects in storage, pack up seven suitcases, and exchange life in the L.A. fast lane for a more romantic existence in Paris, where she was busy shooting Seven Sundays (released in 1994). Ringwald, who had learned French while attending a French high school in Los Angeles, remained there, dividing her time between reading (she has been a voracious reader since childhood when she and her siblings would read stories to her blind father), writing short stories and screenplays, cooking, and hanging out with her French husband. She occasionally continued to act in American and internationally produced films and television projects that include George Hickenlooper's Some Folks Call It a Sling Blade (1993), Stephen King's The Stand (1994), and Teaching Mrs. Tingle (1999). Ringwald also continued to do stage work, appearing in an acclaimed 1998 off-Broadway production of Paula Vogel's How I Learned to Drive. She spoofed her own iconic persona by appearing in the 2001 comedy Not Another Teen Movie, and in 2008 she was cast as the mother in the Fox Family series The Secret Life of the American Teenager.
Julie Piekarski (Actor) .. Sue Ann
Trivia: A photogenic actress best known for her one-season tenure as Sue Ann Weaver on the NBC sitcom The Facts of Life (c. 1979-1980), blonde-haired Julie Piekarski actually entered show business as one of the "New Mousketeers" on The New Mickey Mouse Club, then signed for her best-known role as beautiful prep school student Sue Ann Weaver. Like several of her co-stars, Piekarski left Facts after its first season (1979-1980), then made occasional guest appearances on such programs as Three's Company and ABC After School Specials and essayed a role in the telemovie The Miracle of Kathy Miller before working briefly as a reporter on KPLR television in Southern California and then marrying and starting a family.
Kim Fields (Actor) .. Dorothy `Tootie' Ramsey
Born: May 12, 1969
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: An actress best known as Dorothy "Tootie" Ramsey, the lone African American student and consummate gossip at the exclusive Eastland Preparatory School for Women on NBC's sitcom The Facts of Life (1979-1988), Kim Fields actually appeared on several popular series in the 1970s-2000s. The Big Apple native grew up in a single-parent household and began acting in commercials well before she reached her teens, making her most widely seen appearance on an advertisement for Mrs. Butterworth's syrup. She made her foray into acting with scattered guest appearances on Good Times in 1978 and signed for the Facts of Life role one year later, at the age of 10, when Norman Lear (the producer of both Times and Facts) tapped her for that part. Fields remained with the program for its entire nine-year run, a run that witnessed numerous changes in the show's lineup and format, including the replacement of star Charlotte Rae with Cloris Leachman, and a change of venue in 1985. About five years after Facts folded in 1988, Fields scored her second major coup with a much different multiseason role as Regine Hunter, a loose, money-hungry employee of a clothing boutique on the urban-oriented Queen Latifah sitcom Living Single (1993-1998). Fields spent the following years appearing in scattered features, such as the 2000 telemovie Hidden Blessings and the 2001 telemovie Facts of Life Reunion (which reunited her with several of her ex-costars), and making guest appearances on programs including The Drew Carey Show and The Division; she also took time out to start a family.
Mindy Cohn (Actor) .. Natalie Green
Born: May 20, 1966
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Of all the "break out" performers from the series The Facts of Life, Mindy Cohn was the most improbable. The others were all child actors with experience in performing, but Cohn never trained as an actress and knew little or nothing about the series when she first came to the attention of the producers. Born in Los Angeles, she was an ordinary high school student attending the Harvard-Westlake School when the makers of The Facts of Life, planning their first season, arrived there to observe and photograph an actual girls' school in operation. It was reportedly series star Charlotte Rae who first spotted Cohn, a student at the school, entertaining some friends, and brought her to the attention of the producers. All involved agreed that she was a "natural," one of those uncanny, untrained individuals who simply looked good and memorable and funny in front of the camera, in a manner comparable to the child performers they had already cast, and with that ability added something extra special in terms of verisimilitude -- and a good deal of wry humor -- to the cast they already had. And so Cohn was cast as Natalie Green and was one of the three original young first-season cast members to get spotlighted when the program moved to its second season, achieving stardom in the course of a seven-season run for the series. One very ironic moment came later in the run of the show when Cohn, who had always been on the heavy side and whose character had been conceived with that as an attribute, began to slim down. According to Cohn, in an interview for the DVD release of the first two seasons, the producers actually asked her to put the weight back on, if possible; when she refused, they came up with a compromise by having her character dress in clothes that made her look like she was still overweight. Since the series ended production, she has somewhat limited her acting work while earning a degree in cultural anthropology. Cohn has specifically taken parts that were devised to capitalize on her work from the series and has still found enough roles to keep her occupied. She has also been extremely busy as a voice artist, including portraying the role of Velma on Scooby-Doo.
Julie Anne Haddock (Actor) .. Cindy
Trivia: Actress Julie Anne Haddock enjoyed a brief run of fame in the mid- to late '70s, making her presence known on television and in feature films. She began her acting career with a tenure NBC's family-oriented seriocomedy Mulligan's Stew, as one of several children in the overcrowded Mulligan household, but that program bowed two months after it debuted in October 1977, when it failed to connect with an audience. Haddock found greater success as the cute but tomboyish Cindy Webster on the first season of the NBC prep school sitcom The Facts of Life, and in the meantime branched out into supporting roles in feature films, with parts in the earnest Robert Duvall drama The Great Santini (1979) and the lackluster all-star comedy Scavenger Hunt (1979). Following those assignments, however, Haddock permanently bowed out of acting; she later settled in Southern California and raised a family there.
Conrad Bain (Actor) .. Philip Drummond
Born: February 04, 1923
Died: January 14, 2013
Birthplace: Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Trivia: Wryly humorous Canadian character actor Conrad Bain was all wrapped up in such athletic pursuits as hockey and speed skating when, in his junior year of high school, he suddenly became fascinated with acting. He studied at Alberta's Banff School of Fine Arts, served in the Canadian army during World War II, then resumed his training at New York's American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He worked at the Stratford (Ontario) Shakespeare Festival and in live television before scoring his first real success in the 1956 Broadway revival of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh. In the early 1970s, Bain began popping up in such New York-based films as Lovers and Other Strangers (1970) and Woody Allen's Bananas (1973). He gained national fame in the TV role of stuffy next-door neighbor Dr. Arthur Harmon on the Norman Lear sitcom Maude (1974-78). Bain was later awarded top billing as wealthy Phillip Drummond, foster father to Gary Coleman and Todd Bridges, on Diff'rent Strokes. His most recent regular-series assignment was as presidential aide Charley Ross on the George C. Scott TV vehicle Mr. President (1987). Conrad Bain's identical twin brother Bonar Bain occasionally guested on Conrad's various TV series. Conrad died at 89 in early 2013.
Gary Coleman (Actor) .. Arnold Jackson
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.
Todd Bridges (Actor) .. Willis Jackson
Born: May 27, 1965
Birthplace: San Fernando, California, United States
Trivia: Actor Todd Bridges is probably best known as big brother Willis on the classic '80s sitcom Diff'rent Strokes. He was only 13 years old when he was cast in the series in 1978, though he had already cut his teeth in the world of television on shows like Little House on the Prairie and The Waltons. Even before that, Bridges had scored gigs in commercials, and his family had relocated from San Francisco to L.A. to support his young career when he was just six. He stayed with Diff'rent Strokes until 1986, when the series ended, and like a lot of child stars, Bridges had a hard time transitioning into the world of adult acting. He began to struggle with drug problems and trouble with the law, and the struggles forced the actor to move his career to the back burner as he battled to become free of addiction. With time and work, however, Bridges did surmount his problems and emerged ready to take on the world of acting again. He began a production company with his brother, Little Bridge Productions, and began working behind the camera too, directing 2003's Blackball. Additionally, Bridges has toured the country, speaking at schools on the dangers of drug and alcohol abuse.

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