The Odd Couple

The Odd Couple




🛑 👉🏻👉🏻👉🏻 INFORMATION AVAILABLE CLICK HERE👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻




















































«Стра́нная па́рочка» — американский многокамерный ситком канала CBS, основанный на одноимённой пьесе …
Основано на: пьесе «Странная парочка » Нила Саймона
Данные предоставлены: Wikipedia · Freebase
Текст из Википедии, лицензия CC-BY-SA
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple_(1970_TV_series)
No. of episodes: 114 (list of episodes)
Original network: ABC
No. of seasons: 5
Original release: September 24, 1970 –, March 7, 1975
The Odd Couple, formally titled onscreen Neil Simon's The Odd Couple, is an American sitcom television series broadcast from September 24, 1970, to March 7, 1975, on ABC. It stars Tony Randall as Felix Unger and Jack Klugman as Oscar Madison, and was the first of several sitcoms developed by Garry Marshall for Paramount Television. The show is based on the 1965 play of the same name, which was written by Neil Simon, as well as on the play's
The Odd Couple, formally titled onscreen Neil Simon's The Odd Couple, is an American sitcom television series broadcast from September 24, 1970, to March 7, 1975, on ABC. It stars Tony Randall as Felix Unger and Jack Klugman as Oscar Madison, and was the first of several sitcoms developed by Garry Marshall for Paramount Television. The show is based on the 1965 play of the same name, which was written by Neil Simon, as well as on the play's 1968 film adaptation. Felix and Oscar are both divorced. They share a Manhattan apartment, and their different lifestyles inevitably lead to conflicts and laughs.

In 1997, the episodes "Password" and "The Fat Farm" were ranked No. 5 and No. 58, respectively, on TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time. The show received three nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series. Its fourth season, from 1973 to 1974, remains the most recent nominee for a show that aired during a Friday time slot.
Opening narration and credit sequence
Related appearances by Klugman and Randall
https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple
Дата выпуска: 18 марта 2008
Жанр: соул, альтернативный рок, …
Продюсер: Danger Mouse
Длительность: 39:11
The Odd Couple — второй альбом американской группы Gnarls Barkley, номинировавшийся на премию «Грэмми». Выпущен в интернете 18 марта 2008 года, а в магазинах — 25 марта. Дата релиза пластинки была передвинута самими музыкантами из-за того, что в начале марта альбом просочился в сеть.
Wikipedia · Текст по лицензии CC-BY-SA
The Odd Couple - Season 1 - Episode 2
The Odd Couple S05E09 The Paul Williams Show
The Odd Couple - Se2 - Ep10 - Odd Man Out
Перевести · 24.09.1970 · Created by Jerry Belson, Garry Marshall. With Tony Randall, Jack Klugman, Al Molinaro, …
Перевести · 19.02.2015 · Created by Danny Jacobson, Joe Keenan, Matthew Perry. With Matthew Perry, …
Перевести · 16.05.1968 · Directed by Gene Saks. With Jack Lemmon, Walter …
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple_(film)
Overview
Plot
Production and casting
Release and reception
The Odd Couple is a 1968 American Technicolor buddy comedy film in Panavision, written by Neil Simon, based on his 1965 play of the same name, produced by Howard W. Koch and directed by Gene Saks, and starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau. It is the story of two divorced men—neurotic neat-freak Felix Ungar and fun-loving slob Oscar …
The Odd Couple (2015 TV series) 1 Matthew Perry. 2 Thomas Lennon. 3 Lindsay Sloane. 4 Yvette Nicole Brown. 5 Wendell Pierce.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple_(…
When was the first episode of the Odd Couple?
When was the first episode of the Odd Couple?
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. The Odd Couple, formally titled onscreen Neil Simon's The Odd Couple, is an American sitcom television series broadcast from September 24, 1970, to March 7, 1975, on ABC.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple_(…
The success of the 1968 film version of the stage play of The Odd Couple, which starred Jack Lemmon as Felix and Walter Matthau as Oscar, catalyzed production of the television show. Mickey Rooney and Martin Balsam were also considered for the part of Oscar and Dean Martin and Art Carney for Felix (Carney had originated the role on Broadway).
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple_(…
Why was the odd couple never renewed for another season?
Why was the odd couple never renewed for another season?
Throughout its run, The Odd Couple was juggled several times around ABC's programming schedule, never reaching the Top 30 in the Nielsen ratings. However, ABC continually renewed the show because the ratings for the summer reruns were high.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple_(…
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple_(2015_TV_series)
The Odd Couple GenreSitcom Developed by Matthew Perry Danny Jacobson Joe Keenan Starring Matthew Perry Thomas Lennon Lindsay Sloane Yvette Nicole Brown Wendell Pierce Theme music composerNeal Hefti Composers Bruce Miller Jason Miller Country of originUnited States Original languageEnglish No. of seasons3 No. of episodes38 Productio…
Не удается определить ваше расположение.
Не удается получить доступ к вашему текущему расположению. Для получения лучших результатов предоставьте Bing доступ к данным о расположении или введите расположение.
Не удается получить доступ к расположению вашего устройства. Для получения лучших результатов введите расположение.

The Odd Couple, formally titled onscreen Neil Simon's The Odd Couple, is an American sitcom television series broadcast from September 24, 1970, to March 7, 1975, on ABC. It stars Tony Randall as Felix Unger and Jack Klugman as Oscar Madison, and was the first of several sitcoms developed by Garry Marshall for Paramount Television. The show is based on the 1965 play of the same name, which was written by Neil Simon, as well as on the play's 1968 film adaptation. Felix and Oscar are both divorced. They share a Manhattan apartment, and their different lifestyles inevitably lead to conflicts and laughs.
Title card from the first season (note the Neil Simon credit in the title).
25-26 minutes (Excluding commercials)
In 1997, the episodes "Password" and "The Fat Farm" were ranked No. 5 and No. 58, respectively, on TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time.[4] The show received three nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series. Its fourth season, from 1973 to 1974, remains the most recent nominee for a show that aired during a Friday time slot.[citation needed]
The success of the 1968 film version of the stage play of The Odd Couple, which starred Jack Lemmon as Felix and Walter Matthau as Oscar, catalyzed production of the television show. Mickey Rooney and Martin Balsam were also considered for the part of Oscar and Dean Martin and Art Carney for Felix (Carney had originated the role on Broadway).
Eventually Tony Randall (as Felix) and Jack Klugman (as Oscar) were hired; Klugman had replaced Walter Matthau as Oscar in the original Broadway production, and Randall had also appeared as Felix in other productions the play. Randall, who was hired first, had still wanted Mickey Rooney to play Oscar. Co-executive producer Garry Marshall, had to lobby hard to get Klugman successfully hired. Once the casting was in place, the show's writers (Marshall, Jerry Belson, Jerry Paris, Bob Brunner, Mark Rothman and Lowell Ganz, among others) came up with a multitude of situations for Felix and Oscar to be in, while staying true to the soul of the play, which always reverted to the human tensions between the two that created the comic situations.
The show premiered on ABC on September 24, 1970. The first season was filmed at Paramount studios using the single-camera method and a laugh track, utilizing the same apartment set seen in Paramount's 1968 film version. Klugman and Randall both expressed displeasure with using a laugh track without a live audience. Marshall also disliked the practice; theatre veteran Randall particularly resented the process of having to wait several seconds between punchlines in order to allot enough space for the laughter to be inserted. The production team eventually experimented with omitting the laugh track altogether for Season One's 21st episode, "Oscar's New Life" (laughter was subsequently added for syndication in order to maintain continuity). By the second season, ABC relented, and the show was then filmed with three cameras and performed like a stage play in front of a live studio audience, with laugh sweetening completed during post-production.
The change also required construction of a new, larger apartment set with a new layout, within a theatre at Paramount.[5]
Randall and Klugman both enjoyed the spontaneity that came with performing in front of a live audience; any missed or blown lines usually went by without stopping (they would be reshot during post-production). In addition, it gave the show a certain edge that had been lost during the first season, although the actors had to deliver lines more loudly, since they were on a larger sound stage, as opposed to a quiet studio with only minimal crew present.[6]
Klugman later recalled, "We spent three days rehearsing the show. We sat around a table the first day. We tore the script apart. We took out all the jokes and put in character. The only reason we leave in any jokes is for the rotten canned laughter. I hated it. I watch the shows at home, I see Oscar come in and he says, 'Hi,' and there is the laughter. 'Hey,' I think, 'what the hell did I do?' I hate it; it insults the audience."[7]
Throughout its run, The Odd Couple was juggled several times around ABC's programming schedule, never reaching the Top 30 in the Nielsen ratings. However, ABC continually renewed the show because the ratings for the summer reruns were high.
In the final first-run episode, "Felix Remarries", Felix finally wins his ex-wife Gloria back and they remarry, as Oscar regains the freedom of living alone again. The final scene unfolds in this way, as the two say their goodbyes:
The 114 episodes went on to syndication and home video. There were some minor changes made in the development of the series. In both TV series and play, Felix's last name was spelled Unger but in the film it is spelled Ungar. In the stage play, Felix is a news writer for CBS (in the film he writes the news for "television"), while in the TV series he is a commercial photographer. (His slogan, which he is quick to vocalize, is "Portraits a specialty".) His wife is named Frances in the play and in the film, but is Gloria in the TV series.[citation needed]
In the play and the film, Oscar has at least two children (including a son "Brucey"), who are referred to but not seen. In the series, Oscar is childless. In the play and the film, Felix has a son and a younger daughter. In the series, the children's birth order is reversed, and they are named Leonard and Edna, after Tony Randall's real first name and his own sister's.
The Pigeon Sisters (Monica Evans as Cecily and Carole Shelley as Gwendolyn, reprising their roles from the Broadway stage play and film) made four appearances during the first season. The sisters were never seen after that, but were occasionally mentioned later on. Oscar gained a steady girlfriend during that latter part of the first season and half of the second, Dr. Nancy Cunningham (portrayed by Joan Hotchkis), an attractive doctor, whose colleague, Dr. Melnitz (played by Bill Quinn in several episodes), is a curmudgeonly and sarcastic older physician who treats both Felix and Oscar. Felix also gained a girlfriend in the third season, Miriam Welby (played by Elinor Donahue), and they lasted into the fifth season, presumably breaking up before Felix remarried Gloria in the series finale. Christopher Shea appeared in three episodes of the first season as Philip, Felix and Oscar's 11-year-old neighbor. Oscar's occasional good-time girlfriend, "Crazy Rhoda Zimmerman", is often referred to but never appears onscreen.
The TV show also featured their ex-wives. Janis Hansen played Felix's ex-wife, Gloria (named Frances in the play and film) and Jack Klugman's real life wife Brett Somers as Blanche, Oscar's ex. (The couple separated in real life during the final season of the show.) There were many episodes in which Felix felt he had made a mistake by not fighting harder for Gloria, and took comically drastic measures to try to win her back. In contrast, Oscar was quite happy to be divorced from Blanche, and she from him, as the two constantly traded sarcastic barbs. The only major drawback from Oscar's point of view was the alimony he was ordered to pay. Willie Aames and later Leif Garrett made a few appearances as Felix's son, Leonard. Pamelyn Ferdin and later Doney Oatman appeared as Felix's teenaged daughter, Edna.
The two other major supporting characters, Officer Murray Greshler and Myrna Turner, Oscar's secretary, were played by Al Molinaro and Penny Marshall (Garry's sister) respectively. Alice Ghostley played Murray's wife Mimi in one episode of the first season when Felix quickly outstays his welcome after he moves out of Oscar's apartment following a falling-out. She appeared once in the second season as played by Jane Dulo. Garry Walberg, Ryan McDonald and Larry Gelman played Oscar's poker cronies Homer "Speed" Deegan, Roy, and the bald, bespectacled Vincent "Vinnie" Barella, rounding out the rest of the regulars. Ryan McDonald left the show after the seventh of the first season's eight episodes in which there was a poker game, and the character of Roy was mentioned occasionally after that, but never seen again.
Garry Walberg (who later appeared with Klugman on the series Quincy M.E.) as "Speed", and Larry Gelman as Vinnie, each made several scattered guest appearances after the first season. Richard Stahl appeared in nine episodes as, among other things, a pet-shop owner, a florist, a psychiatrist, and a non-denominational monk, never playing the same role twice. Actor Herbie Faye appeared five times on the series in different roles. Oscar's mother appeared in two different episodes, played once by Elvia Allman, and once by Jane Dulo, both veteran actresses. Veteran character actor John Fiedler who played Vinnie in the 1968 film version, made two appearances in different roles.
The show often had celebrity guest stars, who reflected the cultural leanings either of Oscar or Felix, often playing themselves or occasionally fictional characters. For Oscar, country guitar legend Roy Clark played an old practical joke-playing friend, who nonetheless, has enormous musical talent, as even Felix acknowledges. Sportscaster Howard Cosell (2 episodes) and then ABC television producer Roone Arledge (1 episode) played themselves.
Pop singer Jaye P. Morgan played herself as one of Oscar's many girlfriends. For Felix, Opera singer Marilyn Horne played a shy, mousy co-worker of Oscar (named Jackie); opera singers Martina Arroyo and Richard Fredricks appeared as themselves. Other celebrities appearing as themselves included Edward Villella, Monty Hall, Richard Dawson, Wolfman Jack, David Steinberg, Hugh Hefner, Rodney Allen Rippy, John Simon, Bubba Smith, Deacon Jones, and Allen Ludden and Betty White (married in real life). In one episode, noted tennis frenemies and one-time real-life competitors Bobby Riggs and Billie Jean King appeared as themselves.
Singer-songwriter Paul Williams appeared in an episode where Felix's daughter Edna wanted to run away to follow Williams on tour. (Williams dissuades her.)[8] Dick Clark made an appearance as himself, a radio disc jockey who calls Oscar in a contest, where he wins a new car (The New Car, episode 76). Neil Simon (the author of the play which the series is based upon) makes an uncredited appearance in the fifth-season episode Two on the Aisle,[9] as does Bob Hope in The Hollywood Story.
During its original run the show had mediocre ratings at best (the show was never among the Top 30 programs on the Nielsen ratings list during its entire run). Nonetheless, both actors were nominated for Emmy Awards in each year of the show's run. Jack Klugman won two Emmy Awards for his work (in 1971 and 1973), and Tony Randall won an Emmy as well (in 1975; upon accepting the award, he commented on the fact that he wished he "had a job", for the show had recently been cancelled).
Klugman was nominated for a Golden Globe in 1972 and won one in 1974. The show itself was also nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series in the years 1971, 1972 and 1974. To date, these are the last Emmy nominations to a sitcom airing on a Friday night.
For the first three seasons, the program's opening credit sequence consisted of Felix and Oscar in various humorous situations around New York City such as Felix trying to help an old lady cross the street to no avail, Oscar walking into wet cement while ogling a girl with a revealing dress, Oscar eating a hot dog and getting chili on his shirt, and both cavorting around a Maypole. The end of the introduction title sequence (for the series' entire run) showed the duo sitting on a park bench in front of the William Tecumseh Sherman Monument in Grand Army Plaza at West 58th Street and Fifth Avenue, where Oscar throws his lunch wrapper on the ground and Felix beckons him to pick it up.
Halfway through the show's debut season, a "prologue" was added to the intro, featuring a narration (featuring voice actor Bill Woodson) retelling how Felix and Oscar came to live together:
"On November 13, Felix Unger was asked to remove himself from his place of residence." (Unger's unseen wife slams door, only to reopen it and hand Felix his pan.) "That request came from his wife. Deep down, he knew she was right, but he also knew that someday, he would return to her. With nowhere else to go, he appeared at the home of his childhood friend, Oscar Madison. Sometime earlier, Madison's wife had thrown him out, requesting that he never return. Can two divorced men share an apartment without driving each other crazy?"
ABC apparently added the narration because it did not want the audience to speculate about a homosexual subtext, given changing perceptions of masculinity at the time. ABC insisted that every episode mention that the characters were both divorced. It was retconned that Oscar had been thrown out of his home like Felix, when several episodes had shown that Oscar had lived in the same apartment before and during his marriage (as in the original play and film). Later, the opening narrative stated that when Felix moved into Oscar's apartment, Oscar was already divorced.
In another case, the fourth episode showed Felix and Oscar meeting during jury duty.[10] Later, the opening narration included a retcon that they were childhood friends. During the second season, the narration changed it to them being simply friends"; the "sometime earlier" part was also changed to "several years earlier" at the same time. Later, in an episode aired in 1973, the two were in the Arm
Avanti Bare Real Feel Non Latex Condoms
Mainstream Celebrity Sex
Sexy Milf Video
Cock Xxx
Black Girl Porn
The Odd Couple (1970 TV series) - Wikipedia
The Odd Couple — Википедия
The Odd Couple (TV Series 1970–1975) - IMDb
The Odd Couple (TV Series 2015–2017) - IMDb
The Odd Couple (1968) - IMDb
The Odd Couple (film) - Wikipedia
The Odd Couple (2015 TV series) - Wikipedia
The Odd Couple


Report Page