Silver Spoons: Trouble With Words


1:30 pm - 2:00 pm, Saturday, November 1 on WPIX Antenna TV (11.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Trouble With Words

Season 3, Episode 19

Caitlyn Jenner helps solve the puzzle of Alfonso's poor school performance---the missing piece was the learning disability dyslexia. Alfonso: Alfonso Ribeiro. Dexter: Franklyn Seales. Rick: Ricky Schroder.

repeat 1985 English
Comedy Sitcom Family

Cast & Crew
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Ricky Schroder (Actor) .. Rick Stratton
Franklyn Seales (Actor) .. Dexter Stuffins
Alfonso Ribeiro (Actor) .. Alfonso Spears
Caitlyn Jenner (Actor) .. Self
Erin Gray (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Ricky Schroder (Actor) .. Rick Stratton
Born: April 13, 1970
Birthplace: Staten Island, New York, United States
Trivia: A Staten Island native, Rick Schroder was billed as Ricky Schroder in the fledgling stage of his acting career, which began when he was just a baby (working on commercials) and has persevered ever since. By the time he made his film debut at nine-years-old as the emotionally tortured son of a washed-up boxer (Jon Voight) in The Champ (1979), Schroder had more than 60 television appearances to his name, many of which had been filmed before he had even learned to speak. Schroder played another traumatized boy in The Earthling (1980) and fared well in several subsequent made-for-TV features, but his breakout role wouldn't come until the 1982 premiere of Silver Spoons. The NBC sitcom starred Schroder as young Ricky Stratten, the wealthy son of a toy-store mogul, and employed the winning '80s formula of single parent + wealth + cute kid + wacky best friend = hit.After the 1986 cancellation of Silver Spoons, the child actor officially became Rick Schroder and starred in several unremarkable small-screen features until landing the coming-of-age role of Newt Dobbs in the award-winning 1989 miniseries Lonesome Dove. This would become a trend for Schroder; despite his attempts to make a transition into the film world (his most notable successes being a supporting role in Crimson Tide [1995] and a performance opposite a very young Brad Pitt in Across the Tracks [1991]), the actor would find a much warmer reception in the television community. From bad seeds (1990's The Stranger Within and 1991's My Son, Johnny) to survivalists (1992's Miles From Nowhere and 1993's Return to Lonesome Dove), Schroder's roles were continually met with praise, and he seemed to have escaped the curse suffered by so many child actors.As an adult, Schroder was fatefully cast as Detective Danny Sorenson in ABC's long-running cop drama NYPD Blue. Though he was decried by NYPD Blue loyalists as little more than a former child sitcom star, it wasn't long before his aptitude at the dramatic role convinced both critics and audiences of his acting capability. When Schroder left the series in 2001, it was a great disappointment to the fan following he had developed during his time on the series. However, fans of Schroder weren't left entirely in the lurch; in 2002, Schroder joined the cast of Poolhall Junkies along with Rod Steiger and Chazz Palminteri, and also starred in the German-helmed Consequence in 2003.
Franklyn Seales (Actor) .. Dexter Stuffins
Born: July 15, 1952
Died: May 14, 1990
Birthplace: Calliaqua, St. Vincent
Trivia: Supporting actor Seales is best known as Dexter Stuffins in the TV sitcom Silver Spoons.
Alfonso Ribeiro (Actor) .. Alfonso Spears
Born: September 21, 1971
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Made his Broadway debut in 1983's The Tap Dance Kid, opposite Hinton Battle and Samuel E. Wright. Appeared in a Michael Jackson Pepsi commercial in 1984, as a background dancer. Won the first and only season of Celebrity Duets in 2006. Appeared in the video for Will Smith's "Wild Wild West." Ranked No. 95 on VH1's 100 Greatest Kid Stars countdown. Aspired to be a professional race-car driver until the birth of his daughter prompted him to change his priorities.
Caitlyn Jenner (Actor) .. Self
Born: October 28, 1949
Birthplace: Mount Kisco, New York, United States
Trivia: A track star and an Olympic champion at the 1976 Olympics, the former Bruce Jenner parlayed athletic success into a career in media, working as a spokesperson and news correspondent and also working in movies for a brief spell. After some time away from the spotlight, Jenner was reintroduced to a new generation in 2007 as a participant in the E! Network reality program Keeping Up With the Kardashians. The program depicted candid events from the lives of Jenner's stepdaughters -- the biological children of third wife Kris Jenner and her first husband, the late attorney Robert Kardashian and eventually followed Jenner's own children with Kris - Kendall and Kylie.In a 2015 episode of 20/20, after months of speculation, Jenner came out as a transgender woman and later made her debut as Caitlyn on the cover of Vanity Fair magazine, with plans to appear in her own reality show, I am Cait, on E!
Joel Higgins (Actor)
Born: September 28, 1943
Birthplace: Bloomington, Illinois, United States
Trivia: During college, he sang in coffee houses to earn tuition money. Worked for General Motors for six months after graduating college. Enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1968 and was stationed in Korea. Wrote jingles for Kool-Aid, Trident chewing gum, Coors beer and M&Ms. Made his Broadway debut in the musical Shenandoah in 1975. Appeared in the Broadway musical Angel in 1978, opposite Fred Gwynne; it closed after only five performances. Wrote the theme song to Lucille Ball's 1986 sitcom Life With Lucy. Was inducted to his high school's Hall of Fame in 2004.
Erin Gray (Actor)
Born: January 07, 1950
Birthplace: Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Trivia: Lead actress Erin Gray first appeared onscreen in the late '70s.
John Houseman (Actor)
Born: September 22, 1902
Died: October 31, 1988
Trivia: Before entering the entertainment industry, actor, producer, scriptwriter, playwright and stage director John Houseman, born Jacques Haussmann, first worked for his father's grain business after graduating from college, then began writing magazine pieces and translating plays from German and French. Living in New York, he was writing, directing, and producing plays by his early 30s; soon he had a stellar reputation on Broadway. In 1937, he and Orson Welles founded the Mercury Theater, at which he produced and directed radio specials and stage presentations; at the same time he was a teacher at Vassar. He produced Welles's never-completed first film, Too Much Johnson (1938). Houseman then went on to play a crucial role in the packaging of Welles's first completed film, the masterpiece Citizen Kane (1941): he developed the original story with Herman Mankiewicz, motivated Mankiewicz to complete the script, and worked as a script editor and general advisor for the film. Shortly afterwards, he and Welles had a falling out and Houseman became a vice president of David O. Selznick Productions, a post he quit in late 1941 (after Pearl Harbor) to become chief of the overseas radio division of the OWI. After returning to Hollywood he produced many fine films and commuted to New York to produce and direct Broadway plays and TV specials; in all, the films he produced were nominated for 20 Oscars and won seven. Later he became the artistic director of the touring repertory group the Acting Company, with which he toured successfully in the early '70s. He debuted onscreen at the age of 62 in Seven Days in May (1964), and then in the '70s and '80s played character roles in a number of films. As an actor he was best known as Kingsfield, the stern Harvard law professor, in the film The Paper Chase (1973), his second screen appearance, for which he won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar; he reprised the role in the TV series of the same name. He authored two autobiographies, Run-Through (1972) and Front and Center (1979).

Before / After
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