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Wikipedia

Happy Days

Happy Days is an American television sitcom that aired first-run on the ABC network from January 15, 1974, to July 19, 1984, with a total of 255 half-hour episodes spanning 11 seasons. Created by Garry Marshall, it was one of the most successful series of the 1970s. The series presented an idealized vision of life in the 1950s and early 1960s Midwestern United States, and it starred Ron Howard as Richie Cunningham, Henry Winkler as his friend Fonzie, and Tom Bosley and Marion Ross as Richie's parents, Howard and Marion Cunningham.[1] Although it opened to mixed reviews from critics, Happy Days became successful and popular over time.[2]

Happy Days
Also known asHappy Days Again
GenreSitcom
Created byGarry Marshall
Starring
Theme music composer
Opening theme
Ending theme
  • "Happy Days", performed by:
  • Jim Haas (1974–75)
  • The Ron Hicklin Singers (1975–83)
  • Bobby Arvon (1983–84)
Composers
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons11
No. of episodes255 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Producers
Camera setupSingle-camera (1974–75)
Multi-camera (1975–84)
Running time25 minutes
Production companies
Release
Original networkABC
Picture format35mm film
Audio formatMonaural
Original releaseJanuary 15, 1974 (1974-01-15) –
July 19, 1984 (1984-07-19)
Related

The series began as an unsold pilot starring Howard, Ross and Anson Williams, which aired in 1972 as a segment titled "Love and the Television Set" (later retitled "Love and the Happy Days" for syndication) on ABC's anthology show Love, American Style. Based on the pilot, director George Lucas cast Howard as the lead in his 1973 film American Graffiti, causing ABC to take a renewed interest in the pilot. The first two seasons of Happy Days focused on the experiences and dilemmas of "innocent teenager" Richie Cunningham, his family, and his high school friends, attempting to "honestly depict a wistful look back at adolescence".[2]

Initially a moderate success, the series' ratings began to fall during its second season, causing Marshall to retool it. The new format emphasized broad comedy and spotlighted the previously minor character of Fonzie, a "cool" biker and high school dropout.[2] Following these changes, Happy Days became the number-one program in television in 1976–1977, Fonzie became one of the most merchandised characters of the 1970s, and Henry Winkler became a major star.[3][4] The series also spawned a number of spin-offs, including Laverne & Shirley and Mork & Mindy.

Plot

Set in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, during the 1950s, the series revolves around teenager Richie Cunningham and his family: his father, Howard, who owns a hardware store; traditional homemaker and mother, Marion; younger sister Joanie Cunningham; Richie's older brother Chuck (briefly in seasons 1 and 2 only, disappearing from storylines afterward); and high school dropout, leather jacket clad greaser, mechanic and suave ladies' man Fonzie, who would eventually become Richie's best friend and the Cunninghams' over-the-garage tenant. The earliest episodes revolve around Richie and his friends, Potsie Weber and Ralph Malph, with Fonzie as a secondary character. However, as the series progressed, Fonzie proved to be a favorite with viewers, and soon more story lines were written to reflect his growing popularity; Winkler was top billed in the opening credits alongside Howard, by season 3.[5] Fonzie befriended Richie and the Cunningham family and, when Richie left the series for military service, Fonzie became the central figure of the show, with Winkler receiving sole top billing. In later seasons, other characters were introduced including Fonzie's young cousin, Chachi Arcola, who became a love interest for Joanie Cunningham.

The series' pilot was originally shown as Love and the Television Set, later retitled Love and the Happy Days for syndication, a one-episode teleplay on the anthology series Love, American Style, aired on February 25, 1972. Happy Days spawned successful television shows Laverne & Shirley and Mork & Mindy as well as three failures, Joanie Loves Chachi, Blansky's Beauties featuring Nancy Walker as Howard's cousin,[6] and Out of the Blue. The show is the basis for the Happy Days musical touring the United States since 2008. The leather jacket worn by Winkler during the series was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution for the permanent collection at the National Museum of American History.[7] The original, light grey McGregor windbreaker Winkler wore during the first season was eventually thrown into the garbage, after ABC relented and allowed the Fonzie character to wear a leather jacket.

Episodes

SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedRankRating
First airedLast aired
116January 15, 1974 (1974-01-15)May 7, 1974 (1974-05-07)1621.5
223September 10, 1974 (1974-09-10)May 6, 1975 (1975-05-06)4917.5[a]
324September 9, 1975 (1975-09-09)March 2, 1976 (1976-03-02)1123.9
425September 21, 1976 (1976-09-21)March 29, 1977 (1977-03-29)131.5
527September 13, 1977 (1977-09-13)May 30, 1978 (1978-05-30)231.4
627September 5, 1978 (1978-09-05)May 15, 1979 (1979-05-15)428.5[b]
725September 11, 1979 (1979-09-11)May 6, 1980 (1980-05-06)1721.7
822November 11, 1980 (1980-11-11)May 26, 1981 (1981-05-26)1520.8[c]
922October 6, 1981 (1981-10-06)March 23, 1982 (1982-03-23)1820.6
1022September 28, 1982 (1982-09-28)March 22, 1983 (1983-03-22)2817.4[d]
1122September 27, 1983 (1983-09-27)July 19, 1984 (1984-07-19)[e]6313.9[8]

Cast

Actor Character Seasons
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Ep
Ron Howard Richie Cunningham Main Guest 170
Anson Williams Potsie Weber Main 211
Marion Ross Marion Cunningham Main 252
Tom Bosley Howard Cunningham Main 255
Henry Winkler Arthur "Fonzie" Fonzarelli Recurring Main 255
Don Most Ralph Malph Recurring Main Guest 168
Erin Moran Joanie Cunningham Recurring Main Recurring Main 234
Al Molinaro Al Delvecchio Recurring Main Guest 145
Scott Baio Chachi Arcola Recurring Main Recurring Main 131
Lynda Goodfriend Lori Beth Cunningham Recurring Main Guest 66
Cathy Silvers Jenny Piccolo Recurring Main Guest 55
Ted McGinley Roger Phillips Recurring Main 61
Linda Purl Ashley Pfister Main 19
Heather O'Rourke Heather Pfister Recurring 12
  Main
  Recurring
  Guest

Characters

Main

  • Richie Cunningham – The protagonist for the first seven years of the series (1974–80). When Ron Howard left the show due to his burgeoning directorial career, Richie was written out by leaving to join the United States Army. He marries his girlfriend, Lori Beth, in season eight by phone, while Fonzie stands in for him in the wedding.[9] Howard returned for guest appearances as Richie during the show's final season. He came back with Lori Beth and their son, Richie Jr., and Ralph in the season 11 two-part episode, "Welcome Home", and then left for California with Lori Beth and Richie Sr. to pursue a career in screenwriting. He also returned in "Passages", when he and his family attended Joanie and Chachi's wedding.[10]
  • Marion Kelp-Cunningham – Wife of Howard Cunningham, mother of Richie and Joanie, and a traditional homemaker. She is the only character who is allowed to call Fonzie by his real first name, Arthur, which she does affectionately.[11] She sometimes gets tired of being at home, such as in "Marion Rebels" where she gets into an argument with Howard and briefly gets a job as a waitress at Arnold's.[12] In "Empty Nest" when Joanie left for Chicago to pursue her music career, Marion had "empty nest syndrome" and was thrilled when her and Howard's niece, K.C., moved in with them.[13] Marion was one of only four characters to remain with the show throughout its entire run.
  • Howard Cunningham – Husband of Marion Cunningham, father of Richie and Joanie, business owner of a hardware store called "Cunningham's Hardware", he is a lodge member, and family man. Frequently seen reading the daily newspaper in his easy chair.[1] Enjoys driving his beloved 1948 DeSoto Suburban. In "Letting Go", he did not want Joanie to go to Chicago, still seeing her as his "little girl". But after talking with Fonzie and realizing how much she has grown up, he supports her going.[14] In "Passages", Howard says that he is proud of Richie and Joanie in Joanie and Chachi's wedding. Howard is one of only two characters (the other being Fonzie) to appear in every episode of the series.
  • Joanie Cunningham – Richie's younger sister. In early seasons, she is sometimes snooping on Richie's activities and would occasionally be sent to her room by her parents. She is affectionately called "Shortcake" by Fonzie. Later on, Joanie briefly joins a motorcycle gang after going on a date with a boy, whom she considered to be "dull". In "Smokin' Ain't Cool", Joanie started smoking in order to be in a cool club, until Fonzie sets her straight. For years, Fonzie's cousin, Chachi, had been chasing her until she eventually agreed to a date with him. She and Chachi would eventually form a band together; and in "Letting Go", they leave for Chicago to pursue their music career (which spun off the short-lived series Joanie Loves Chachi). Joanie, however, eventually left the band to return home to pursue a teaching career.[15] She and Chachi then broke up for a time until Chachi proposes to her and they get married in the series finale.
  • Arthur Fonzarelli, a.k.a. The Fonz or Fonzie – Initially a secondary or recurring character, billed in the end credits, during the first season, he became a popular breakout character and was promoted to front billing by the second season. Fonzarelli's "Fonzie" nickname and comeback phrase, "Sit on it", were created by the show's producer, Bob Brunner.[16][17][18] Known for being especially cool and for his catchphrases "(H)eyyyy!" and "Whoa!" His coolness gave him special powers, such as making machinery (such as Arnold's jukebox and other vending machines, electric lights, and car engines) function by pounding on them with his fist, or getting the attention of girls by snapping his fingers. His parents abandoned him as a child and his grandmother raised him from the age of four.
  • Warren "Potsie" Weber – Richie's best friend and an aspiring and talented singer. He is somewhat more carefree and worldly than Richie in early seasons, then in mid-seasons, he becomes more often paired with Ralph for plots, and the two became inseparable. In later seasons, his character evolves to increasingly emphasize his dimwitted side, and Ralph would often say to him "You're such a Potsie". Potsie often lightheartedly mentioned the supposed hatred his father (who never appeared on the show) had for him. Potsie remained with the show after Richie and Ralph joined the Army; however, he was seen less frequently. While Potsie's character became underdeveloped in these later episodes (and he, along with Ralph, was one of the few characters absent from the finale), he is mentioned to regularly bowl with the Cunninghams and still continues his position as assistant manager of Cunningham Hardware and as pledge master of the Leopard Lodge. His nickname is explained in the 6th episode, "The Deadly Dares", originating in childhood, via his mother, as he enjoyed making clay pottery.
  • Ralph Malph – In the first season, Ralph was intended as more of a secondary character, billed in the end credits, along with Winkler and Moran, but by season 2, Ralph was from billed with them. Richie, Potsie and Ralph often were intertwined as episode protagonists. Ralph and Potsie would became roommates by the fifth season. Ralph was occasionally seen wearing his red GEMS club jacket, especially in the early seasons, but nothing was ever mentioned of it or the club. Known for saying "I still got it!" after delivering one of his jokes. Ralph left with Richie after the 1979–80 season to join the Army. Ralph returned as a guest star in the final season, although he is absent in the finale (along with Potsie)—he is mentioned as having left to continue college to become an optometrist like his father.
  • Mitsumo "Arnold" Takahashi (Noriyuki "Pat" Morita) (seasons 3, 10–11: 26 episodes) is the owner of Arnold's Drive-In season three (1975–76). He obtained the moniker when he purchased Arnold's restaurant and people thought it was named after him, explaining that it was too costly to buy enough letter signs needed to rename it "Takahashi". He moonlighted as a martial arts instructor, teaching self-defense classes at the drive-in after hours. Morita also played "Arnold" as a guest star in 1977 and 1979 before returning as a recurring character after Al Molinaro departed in 1982.
  • Chachi Arcola (Scott Baio) – Fonzie's younger cousin and later Al Delvecchio's stepson. Fonzie acts as his older brother/father figure. He has much of Fonzie's smoothness and charisma, "wah wah wah" being his catchphrase. Chachi becomes "one of the guys" , joining Richie, Potsie, Ralph, and Fonzie in their antics and as their bandmate/drummer. After Richie and Ralph leave the show (season 7 finale), Chachi and Fonzie often find trouble or plot-conflicts together. Chachi has a crush on Joanie Cunningham from the moment he meets her in season 5, but she initially thinks of him as a little kid, calling him pejorative terms like "shrimp" or "drip". But as they enter high school, she too begins to find him attractive and begin dating. In season 11, they break-up, but as the season progresses, they reunite. The series finale features Chachi and Joanie's wedding.
  • Al Delvecchio – From seasons four to nine (1976–82), Al became the new owner and cook of the drive-in diner, after Arnold got married the previous season. Al later married Chachi's mother Louisa, thereby becoming Chachi's stepfather and Fonzie's uncle. Molinaro left Happy Days in 1982 to take his "Al" character to Joanie Loves Chachi, and he returned as Al in three later episodes of Happy Days. Known for sighing "Yeeep, yep, yep, yep, yep" when he was disappointed or when things did not go his way.
  • Jenny Piccolo (Cathy Silvers) – Joanie's boy-crazy best friend (1980–83), frequently mentioned but never seen in early episodes. She made her first on-screen appearance in the eighth season and remained a recurring character through the ninth season, becoming a regular during the tenth season in 1983. She returned as a guest star in the 1984 series finale.[19] Jenny's father, played by Cathy Silvers' real-life father Phil Silvers, appeared in one episode.
  • Roger Phillips (Ted McGinley) – Marion's nephew; coach and teacher at Jefferson High, until "Vocational Education" where he became principal at Patton High.[20] Introduced in 1980 after Richie left the show as a recurring character.
  • Lori Beth Allen-Cunningham (Lynda Goodfriend) – Richie's girlfriend and later his wife (1977–82). She married Richie by phone in season eight. Fonzie helped Lori Beth deliver her baby in "Little Baby Cunningham". She returned as a guest star in the final season, where she is revealed to be pregnant with her second baby.
  • Ashley Pfister (Linda Purl) – Divorced mother who becomes Fonzie's steady girlfriend until they break up offscreen sometime before "Where the Guys Are". (Purl also portrays Richie's part-time girlfriend Gloria in season 2.)

Minor/recurring

  • Marsha Simms (Beatrice Colen) (seasons 1–3, 5; 22 episodes) – A carhop waitress in the first 3 seasons with comic sides and plot development appearances. She returned for a flashback (guest) appearance in the episode "Our Gang".
  • Bobby Melner (Harris Kal) (seasons 8–11; 19 episodes) – Friend of Chachi and Joanie seen in episodes after Richie and Ralph left the show. He is a student in Fonzie's auto shop class, as well as in Roger's health class. At one point, he was also on the Jefferson High basketball team, and performed in a band with Joanie and Chachi.
  • K.C. Cunningham (Crystal Bernard) (season 10; 15 episodes) – Howard's niece. She moved in with Howard and Marion after Joanie left for Chicago. She left an all-girls boarding school in Texas because it closed down. Her parents are always traveling. She also became friends with Jenny and she went on her first date with Melvin.
  • Leopold "Flip" Phillips (Billy Warlock) (seasons 9 & 10; 13 episodes) – Roger's rebellious younger brother. He usually wears a shirt cut off over his bellybutton.
  • Tommy (Kevin Sullivan) (seasons 8–11; 13 episodes) – Another friend of Chachi and Joanie in episodes after Richie and Ralph left the show. Like Bobby, Tommy is a student in Fonzie's auto shop class, as well as in Roger's health class. At one point, he was also on the Jefferson High basketball team, and performed in a band with Joanie and Chachi.
  • Heather Pfister (Heather O'Rourke) (season 10; 12 episodes) – Ashley Pfister's daughter. Initially did not get along with Fonzie, but gradually learned to accept him as a father figure.
  • Charles "Chuck" Cunningham (Gavan O'Herlihy, Randolph Roberts) (seasons 1 & 2; 11 episodes) – The oldest son of Howard and Marion Cunningham and older brother of Richie and Joanie, Chuck is a college student and basketball player. He is rarely seen and disappears without explanation in season three, never to be seen nor referenced again after season 2's "Fish and Fins". The character's disappearance gave rise to the term "Chuck Cunningham Syndrome", used to describe TV characters that disappear from shows without an in-universe explanation and are nowhere to be seen or mentioned again.[21] Gavan O'Herlihy played Chuck, but then he asked to leave the series.[22] He was replaced by Randolph Roberts. In several late-season episodes, Howard and/or Marion make reference to being "very proud of our two children", with no on-screen reference to Chuck.
  • Eugene Belvin (Denis Mandel) (seasons 8 & 9; 10 episodes) – Nerdy classmate of Joanie and Chachi, and twin brother of Melvin Belvin. Is in Fonzie's auto shop class, and has a crush on Jenny Piccolo. Despite being a general stooge to his classmates at Jefferson High, he frequently tags along with Joanie and Chachi's circle of friends.
  • "Bag" Zombroski (Neil J. Schwartz) (seasons 1–4; 9 episodes) – A Jefferson High schoolmate, drummer of Richie's band and a leader of a jacket club called "The Demons".
  • Police Officer Kirk / Army Reserve Major Kirk (Ed Peck) (seasons 3–10; 9 episodes) – Fonzie's nemesis and antagonist, who's eager to demonstrate his inflated sense of authority, and on the watch for delinquents and "pinkos" (communists). Kirk took over as acting Sheriff following the untimely death of Sheriff Flanaghan.
  • Wendy (Misty Rowe) (season 2; 8 episodes) – A carhop from Arnold's in season two. She was paired with Marsha Simms in 5 episodes.
  • Trudy (Tita Bell) (seasons 1-4; 8 episodes) Jefferson High classmate, Potsie's & Fonzie's date in various episodes
  • Melvin Belvin (Scott Bernstein) (seasons 9 & 10; 8 episodes) – Nerdy classmate of Joanie and Chachi, and twin brother of Eugene Belvin. Like his brother, Melvin frequently tags along with Joanie's and Chachi's circle of friends. He once went on a date with K.C. Cunningham.
  • Leather Tuscadero (Suzi Quatro) (seasons 5 & 6; 7 episodes) – Musician; younger sister of Pinky Tuscadero, and a former juvenile delinquent; formed her own girl group called "Leather and the Suedes". Richie, Ralph, Potsie and Chachi become her (nameless) backup band. They perform "The Fonzie", a new dance song on Chicago's Sock Hop, teen TV dance show.
  • Jennifer Jerome (Lorrie Mahaffey) (seasons 5 & 6; 6 episodes) – Potsie's steady girlfriend. Mahaffey was Anson Williams' then wife.
  • Laverne De Fazio (Penny Marshall) and Shirley Feeney (Cindy Williams) (seasons 3, 6 & 7; 5 episodes) – Dating interest of Fonzie, Laverne, and her friend, Shirley, appeared prominently in three episodes during season three ("A Date with Fonzie", "Football Frolics", and "Fonzie the Superstar"), which led to the two starring in the spin-off series Laverne & Shirley; they also make guest appearances in season six's "Fonzie's Funeral (Part 2)" and season seven's "Shotgun Wedding" (Part 1) (the second part of "Shotgun Wedding" concluded on a crossover episode of Laverne and Shirley.)
  • Louisa Arcola-Delvecchio (Ellen Travolta) (seasons 8–11; 5 episodes) – Mother of Chachi Arcola; aunt of Fonzie. She married Al Delvecchio and they moved to Chicago.
  • Gloria (Linda Purl) (season 2; 5 episodes) – Richie's occasional girlfriend in season two.
  • Dr. Mickey Malph (Alan Oppenheimer, Jack Dodson) (season 3 & 4, 7; 4 episodes) – Ralph's father, an optometrist and, like his son, a self-styled comedian. Briefly separated from his wife Minnie, but apparently resolved issues with her after a talk with Ralph. It was Dr. Malph who convinced Fonzie to wear glasses after he started having vision problems.
  • Raymond "Spike" Fonzarelli (Danny Butch) (seasons 2–4; 4 episodes) – Fonzie's cousin (often referred to as his nephew, but Fonzie explains that he couldn't be his nephew as Fonzie was an only child) and his copycat. He went on a date with Joanie in "Not with My Sister, You Don't" and made only fleeting appearances before the introduction of Chachi. The kinship between Spike and Chachi was never explained.
  • Grandma Nussbaum (Frances Bay) (seasons 3, 9, 10 & 11: 4 episodes) – Chachi Arcola and Fonzie's grandmother. Grandma Nussbaum was played by Lillian Bronson in the season 3 episode, "Fonzie Moves In". She has been married several times, and now enjoys playing mahjong & canasta
  • Carol "Pinky" Tuscadero (Roz Kelly) (season 4; 3 episodes) – Former girlfriend of Fonzie and a traveling demolition derby driver.
  • Clarence (Gary Friedkin) (season 10; 3 episodes) – A cook at Arnold's who is referred to several times throughout the show, but never actually seen until the episode "A Woman Not Under the Influence". There, it is revealed that Clarence is a little person. Clarence seems to have a good relationship with Al, but also frequently upsets him while goofing off in the kitchen.
  • Bill "Sticks" Downey (John-Anthony Bailey) (season 3; 2 episodes) – Friend of Fonzie, Richie, Potsie and Ralph and drummer for their band, hence his nickname "Sticks", though he claimed he got the nickname because he was skinny.

Notable guest stars

  • Hank Aaron, the Atlanta Braves home run king, appeared in season 7, episode 19
  • Adam Arkin in one of his first TV roles, as Bo, a disgruntled boyfriend that threatens Richie at a lodge dance (season 2, "Fonzie Joins the Band")
  • Frankie Avalon appeared as himself (in season 9), singing his signature song "Venus" to a swooning Jenny Piccolo at the Leopard Lodge's annual "Poo Bah Doodah" musical
  • Ed Begley Jr. as a leader in the "Demons" (jacket club) (season 1, episode 6 "The Deadly Dares")
  • Dr. Joyce Brothers (season 5, episode 19) appears as herself, trying to help Fonzie's dog, Spunky, out of a depression
  • Julie Brown made her television debut in the seventh-season episode "Ahhh Wilderness" as one of three girls who went camping with Richie, Fonzie et al.
  • Leslie Browne as Colleen, a talented ballerina that wins Fonzi's heart (season 6), but must pursue her dreams in New York City
  • Didi Conn a Jefferson High student who convinces Richie he caught mono from Fonzi's girl (season 2)
  • Jeff Conaway as Rocko, a leather jacket wearing greaser who intimidates Richie at Arnold's while playing pinball (season 3, ep 6 )
  • Morgan Fairchild (season 5, episode 10) as a snooty, rich socialite who tries to humiliate Fonzie
  • Herbie Faye appeared as 'Pop' in the 1974, season 1 episode "Knock Around the Block"
  • Lorne Greene made a brief walk-on cameo during the season five premiere, which took place in Hollywood
  • Tom Hanks a karate black-belt and disgruntled third grade classmate seeking revenge on Fonzie for pushing him off a swing; just as Fonzie is about to be given a community leader award
  • John Hart (TV's The Lone Ranger) appeared in season 9, episode 17 where Fonzie meets his childhood idol (Hart's last acting job)
  • Clint Howard as Moose, a burglar who robs Arnold's (cash register) after hours, with Spike's help in "Bringing Up Spike" (season 3)
  • Diana Hyland as Adriana Prescott, a married bon vivant/swinger that Fonzi dates until he learns of her marital status and open marriage arrangement
  • Christopher Knight as Binky, Joanie's date on the season five episode "Be My Valentine"
  • Cheryl Ladd appeared in "Wish Upon a Star" (season 2), playing the part of Cindy Shea, a 'wholesome' Hollywood starlet with whom Richie wins a Homecoming date
  • Anne Lockhart college gal on Spring Break in a rented cabin on Lake Whitefish, "3 On A Porch" (season 3)
  • June Lockhart as Judge McBride, who presides over the small claims court case of H. Cunningham vs. A. Fonzarelli, in "Two Angry Men" (season 3)
  • Dave Madden (of The Partridge Family) as compromised game show host, Jack Whippet, who gives a reluctant Richie the answer to a $5,000 baseball-trivia jackpot prize, (season 2) "Big Money"
  • Michael McKean and David L. Lander, of Laverne & Shirley, portrayed their "Lenny" and "Squiggy" characters in the sixth-season episode "Fonzie's Funeral (Part 2)"
  • Eddie Mekka, also from Laverne & Shirley, portrayed his "Carmine" character in the season four's "Joanie's Weird Boyfriend" and the season six's "Fonzie's Funeral (Part 2)"
  • Maureen McCormick (Marcia Brady of The Brady Bunch) as "Hildie" the Eastchester girlfriend of Dragon's drag-racer, Doolie, that Richie must race in his dad's Desoto, (season 2, episode 16)
  • James Millhollin, a character actor, made the last television appearance of his career as Mr. Rudi in the 1979 episode "Potsie Quits School"
  • James Randi ("The Amazing Randi") appeared as himself in the episode "The Magic Show" (season 6)[23]
  • Tony Randall uncredited cameo, as a man who's a 'werewolf', (onscreen) in a movie that Richie, Joanie and their dates are watching, (season 2, ep 8) "Not With My Sister, You Don't"
  • Buffalo Bob Smith (and Bob Brunner as Clarabell the Clown) appeared in the episode "The Howdy Doody Show" (season 2); the characters come to town looking for Howdy Doody look-alikes
  • Craig Stevens, the star of detective show Peter Gunn played Ashley Pfister's father in "Hello Pfisters" (season 10)
  • Danny Thomas appeared in the episode "Grandpa's Visit" (season 5) as Sean Cunningham, Howard's father.
  • Charlene Tilton appeared in the episode "They Shoot Fonzies, Don't They?" (season 4) as Jill Higgins, who challenges Fonzie and Joanie at a dance marathon until Fonzie might have to get a crewcut.
  • Dick Van Patten as Phil Hunsberger, a bank loan officer, in "Fonzie the Salesman" (season 3) and embittered, vice principal Connors ("The Graduation" ssn 4)
  • Robin Williams appeared in two episodes as Mork from Ork; in season five's "My Favorite Orkan", Mork wants to take Richie back to Ork with him to study earthlings, which led to the spin-off Mork & Mindy; season six's "Mork Returns" aired during the height of the popularity of Mork and Mindy
  • Lyle Waggoner appeared in the episode "Dreams Can Come True" (season 8) as Bobby Burns, host of the game show of the same name, on which Marion appears as a contestant, and again in the episode "Like Mother, Like Daughter" (season 11) as Frederick Hamilton, Marion's former college boyfriend

Production

Happy Days originated during a time of 1950s nostalgic interest as evident in 1970s film, television, and music. In late winter of 1971, Michael Eisner was snowed in at Newark airport where he bumped into Tom Miller, head of development at Paramount. Eisner has stated that he told Miller, "Tom, this is ridiculous. We're wasting our time here. Let's write a show." The script treatment that came out of that did not sell. But in spite of the market research department telling them that the 1950s theme would not work, they decided to redo it, and this was accepted as a pilot.[24] This unsold pilot was filmed in late 1971 and titled New Family in Town, with Harold Gould in the role of Howard Cunningham, Marion Ross as Marion, Ron Howard as Richie, Anson Williams as Potsie, Ric Carrott as Charles "Chuck" Cunningham, and Susan Neher as Joanie. Paramount passed on making it into a weekly series, and the pilot was recycled with the title Love and the Television Set (later retitled Love and the Happy Days for syndication), for presentation on the television anthology series Love, American Style.[25] Also in 1971, the musical Grease had a successful opening in Chicago, and by the following year became successful on Broadway. Also in 1972, George Lucas asked to view the pilot to determine if Ron Howard would be suitable to play a teenager in American Graffiti, then in pre-production. Lucas immediately cast Howard in the film, which became one of the top-grossing films of 1973. With the movie's success generating a renewed interest in the 1950s era (although, the film was set in 1962), TV show creator Garry Marshall and ABC recast the unsold pilot to turn Happy Days into a series. According to Marshall in an interview, executive producer Tom Miller said while developing the sitcom, "If we do a TV series that takes place in another era, and when it goes into reruns, then it won't look old." This made sense to Marshall while on the set of the show.[26]

Gould had originally been tapped to reprise the role of Howard Cunningham on the show. However, during a delay before the start of production he found work doing a play abroad and when he was notified the show was ready to begin production, he declined to return because he wanted to honor his commitment.[27] Bosley was then offered the role.

Production and scheduling notes

  • Jerry Paris, who played next-door neighbor Jerry Helper on The Dick Van Dyke Show and directed 84 episodes of that series,[28] directed every episode of Happy Days from season three on, except for three episodes in season three ("Jailhouse Rock", "Dance Contest" and "Arnold's Wedding").[29]
  • Producer and writer Bob Brunner created Arthur Fonzarelli's "Fonzie" nickname and his iconic comeback phrase, "Sit on it."[16][17][18]
  • Beginning in September 1979 until the show went out of production, reruns of the show were syndicated under the title Happy Days Again.
  • Happy Days was produced by Miller-Milkis Productions, a teaming of Thomas L. Miller with former film editor Edward K. Milkis, which became Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions when Robert L. Boyett joined the company in 1980, and was the first-ever show to be produced by the company's most recent incarnation, Miller-Boyett Productions, which followed Milkis's resignation from the partnership. It was also produced by Henderson Productions and was one of the popular shows produced in association with Paramount Television.
  • In its 11 seasons on the air, Happy Days is the second-longest-running sitcom in ABC's history (behind The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, which ran 14 seasons, from 1952 to 1966), and one of the longest-running primetime programs in the network's history. It is also unique in that it remained in the same time slot, leading off ABC's Tuesday night programming at 8:00 p.m. Eastern/Pacific (7:00 p.m. in the Central and Mountain zones) for its first ten seasons. That half-hour became a signature timeslot for ABC, with Who's the Boss? instantly entering the top 10 when it was moved from Thursdays and staying in that time slot for six seasons, followed by the equally family-friendly sitcom Full House (another Miller-Boyett co-production). That sitcom also hit the top 10 immediately after inheriting the Tuesday at 8:00/7:00 p.m. slot and then stayed there for four seasons.
  • Happy Days also proved to be quite popular in daytime reruns; they joined the ABC daytime schedule in 1975, airing reruns at 11:30 a.m. ET (10:30 a.m. CT/MT/PT), being moved to 11:00/10:00 a.m. in 1977, paired with Family Feud following at 11:30/10:30 a.m. It was replaced on the daytime schedule by reruns of its spin-off, Laverne & Shirley, in April 1979.
  • CBS programming head Fred Silverman scheduled the Maude spin-off Good Times directly against Happy Days during their respective second seasons in an attempt to kill the ABC show's growing popularity. In a way this move backfired on Silverman, as he was named president of ABC in 1975, thus forcing him to come up with a way to save the show he tried to kill the year before. After having knocked Happy Days out of the top 20 programs on television his last year at CBS, Silverman had the series at the top of the Nielsen ratings by 1977 (see below). Good Times was later cancelled in 1979.
  • Ron Howard later revealed that many of the exterior scenes filmed in Happy Days were actually shot in Munster, Indiana.
  • The official series finale ("Passages") aired on May 8, 1984. But there were five "leftover" episodes that ABC didn't have time to air during the regular season due to the Winter Olympics and the spring run of a.k.a. Pablo. Four of these aired on Thursday nights during the summer of 1984; the fifth ("Fonzie's Spots") aired on September 24, 1984.

Production styles

The first two seasons of Happy Days (1974–75) were filmed using a single-camera setup and laugh track. One episode of season two ("Fonzie Gets Married") was filmed in front of a studio audience with three cameras as a test run. From the third season on (1975–84), the show was a three-camera production in front of a live audience (with a cast member, usually Tom Bosley, announcing in voice-over, "Happy Days is filmed before a live audience" at the start of most episodes), giving these later seasons a markedly different style. A laugh track was still used during post-production to smooth over live reactions.

Garry Marshall's earlier television series The Odd Couple had undergone an identical change in production style after its first season in 1970–71.

Sets

 
Richie and Fonzie view his destroyed motorcycle in his living room, 1976. Fonzie's apartment was over the Cunninghams' garage.

The show had two main sets: the Cunningham home and Arnold's/Al's Drive-In.

In seasons one and two, the Cunningham house was arranged with the front door on the left and the kitchen on the right of screen, in a triangular arrangement. From season three on, the house was rearranged to accommodate multiple cameras and a studio audience.

The Cunninghams' official address is 565 North Clinton Drive, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[30] The house that served as the exterior of the Cunningham residence is actually located at 565 North Cahuenga Boulevard (south of Melrose Avenue) in Los Angeles,[31] several blocks from the Paramount lot on Melrose Avenue.

The Milky Way Drive-In, located on Port Washington Road in the North Shore suburb of Glendale, Wisconsin (now Kopp's Frozen Custard Stand), was the inspiration for the original Arnold's Drive-In; it has since been demolished. The exterior of Arnold's was a standing set on the Paramount Studios lot that has since been demolished. This exterior was close to Stage 19, where the rest of the show's sets were located.

The set of the diner in the first season was a room with the same vague details of the later set, such as the paneling, and the college pennants. When the show changed to a studio production in 1975, the set was widened and the entrance was hidden, but allowed an upstage, central entrance for cast members. The barely-seen kitchen was also upstaged and seen only through a pass-through window. The diner had orange booths, downstage center for closeup conversation, as well as camera left. There were two restroom doors camera right, labeled "Guys" and "Dolls". A 1953 Seeburg Model G jukebox (with replaced metal pilasters from Wico Corp.) was positioned camera right, and an anachronistic "Nip-It" pinball machine (actually produced in 1972) was positioned far camera right.

 
Potsie, Richie, Fonzie, and Ralph Malph at Arnold's, 1975

College pennants adorned the walls, including Purdue and University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, along with a blue and white sign reading "Jefferson High School". Milwaukee's Washington High School provided the inspiration for the exteriors of the fictional Jefferson.

In a two-part episode from the seventh season, the original Arnold's Drive-In was written out of the series as being destroyed by fire (see List of Happy Days episodes, episodes 159 and 160). In the last seasons that covered the 1960s timeline, a new Arnold's Drive-In set (to portray the new Arnold's that replaced the original Arnold's destroyed by the fire) emerged in a 1960s decor with wood paneling and stained glass. Also, in seasons 8 and 9, the new drive-in was named "Fonzie & Big Al" because Fonzie and Al co-owned the new establishment in a partnership.

In 2004, two decades after the first set was destroyed, the Happy Days 30th Anniversary Reunion requested that the reunion take place in Arnold's. The set was rebuilt by production designer James Yarnell based on the original floor plan. The reunion special was taped at CBS Television City's Bob Barker Studio in September 2004.[32]

Theme music

Season one used a newly recorded version of "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley & His Comets (recorded in the fall of 1973) as the opening theme song. This recording was not commercially released at the time, although the original 1954 recording returned to the American Billboard charts in 1974 as a result of the song's use on the show. The "Happy Days" recording had its first commercial release in 2005 by the German label Hydra Records. (When Happy Days entered syndication in 1979, the series was retitled Happy Days Again and used an edited version of the 1954 recording instead of the 1973 version.) In some prints intended for reruns and overseas broadcasts, as well as on the Season 2 DVD set release and later re-releases of the Season 1 DVD set, the original "Rock Around the Clock" opening theme is replaced by the more standard "Happy Days" theme, because of music rights issues.

The show's closing theme song in seasons one and two was a fragment from "Happy Days" (although in a different recording with a different lyric from that which would become the standard version), whose music was composed by Charles Fox and whose lyric was written by Norman Gimbel. According to SAG, this version was performed by Jim Haas on lead vocals, The Ron Hicklin Singers, Stan Farber, Jerry Whitman, and Gary Garrett on backing vocals, and studio musicians.

From seasons three to ten inclusive, a longer version of "Happy Days" replaced "Rock Around the Clock" at the beginning of the show. Released as a single in 1976 by Pratt & McClain, "Happy Days" cracked the Top 5. The show itself finished the 1976–77 television season at No. 1, ending the five-year Nielsen reign of All in the Family.

For the show's 11th and final season (1983–84), the theme was rerecorded in a more modern style. It featured Bobby Arvon on lead vocals, with several back-up vocalists. To accompany this new version, new opening credits were filmed, and the flashing Happy Days logo was reanimated to create an overall "new" feel which incorporated 1980s sensibilities with 1950s nostalgia (although by this time the show was set in 1965).

Merchandising revenue lawsuit

On April 19, 2011, Happy Days co-stars Erin Moran, Don Most, Marion Ross and Anson Williams, as well as the estate of Tom Bosley (who died in 2010), filed a $10 million breach-of-contract lawsuit against CBS, which owns the show, claiming they had not been paid for merchandising revenues owed under their contracts.[33] The cast members claimed they had not received revenues from show-related items, including comic books, T-shirts, scrapbooks, trading cards, games, lunch boxes, dolls, toy cars, magnets, greeting cards and DVDs where their images appear on the box covers. Under their contracts, they were supposed to be paid 5% of the net proceeds of merchandising if their sole image were used, and half that amount if they were in a group. CBS said it owed the actors $8,500 and $9,000 each, most of it from slot machine revenues, but the group said they were owed millions.[34] The lawsuit was initiated after Ross was informed by a friend playing slots at a casino of a Happy Days machine on which players win the jackpot when five Marion Rosses are rolled.

In October 2011, a judge rejected the group's fraud claim, which meant they could not receive millions of dollars in potential damages.[35] On June 5, 2012, a judge denied a motion filed by CBS to have the case thrown out, which meant it would go to trial on July 17 if the matter was not settled by then.[36] In July 2012, the actors settled their lawsuit with CBS. Each received a payment of $65,000 and a promise by CBS to continue honoring the terms of their contracts.[37][38]

Legacy

In 1978, actor Robin Williams made his screen debut during the fifth season of Happy Days, as the character "Mork" in the episode "My Favorite Orkan."[39] Sought after as a last-minute cast replacement for a departing actor, Williams impressed the producer with his quirky sense of humor when he sat on his head when asked to take a seat for the audition.[40][41] While portraying Mork on Happy Days, Williams improvised much of his dialogue and physical comedy, speaking in a high, nasal voice, and he made the most of the script. The cast and crew, as well as TV network executives were deeply impressed with his performance. As such, the executives moved quickly to get the performer on contract just four days later before competitors could make their own offers.[42]

In 1980, the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution asked Henry Winkler to donate one of Fonzie's leather jackets.[43][44][45]

In 1985, Jon Hein developed the phrase jumping the shark in response to an episode of Happy Days, (Season 5, Episode 91) called "Hollywood: Part 3, written by Fred Fox, Jr.[46] which aired on September 20, 1977. In this episode, Fonzie jumps over a shark while on water-skis.[47][48][49] The phrase is used to suggest that a creative outlet appears to be making a misguided attempt at generating new attention or publicity for something that is perceived to be once, but no longer, widely popular.[50][51] In a 2019 interview with NPR, Terry Gross asked Henry Winkler (Fonzie) what it was "about that scene or that episode that came to signify when something's time is up - when it's over?" Winkler responded: "You know what? I don't know. To them, the Fonz water skiing was just like the last straw. The only thing is it wasn't to the audience because we were No. 1 for years after that. So it didn't much matter to anybody."[52] In addition, he told TheWrap in 2018 that he is "not embarrassed" by the phrase. He stated that "newspapers would mention jumping the shark...and they would show a picture of me in my leather jacket and swim shorts water-skiing. And at that time I had great legs. So I thought, ‘I don't care.’ And we were No. 1 for the next four or five years."[53] As his character Barry Zuckerkorn (in the sitcom Arrested Development) hopped over a shark in Episode 13 of the second season, Winkler also noted that there "was a book, there was a board game and it is an expression that is still used today ... [and] I'm very proud that I am the only actor, maybe in the world, that has jumped the shark twice — once on Happy Days, and once on Arrested Development.”[53]

In 1999 TV Guide ranked Fonzie as number 4 on its 50 Greatest TV Characters of All Time list.[54]

In a 2001 poll conducted by Channel 4 in the UK, the Fonz was ranked 13th on their list of the 100 Greatest TV Characters.[55]

In 2008, American artist Gerald P. Sawyer, unveiled the Bronze Fonz (a public artwork) on the Milwaukee Riverwalk in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[56]

Home media

Paramount Home Entertainment and CBS DVD have released the first six seasons of Happy Days on DVD in Region 1, as of December 2, 2014.[57] For the second season, CBS features music replacements due to copyright issues, including the theme song "Rock Around the Clock". ('The Complete First Season' retains the original opening, as it was released before CBS was involved.) Only season 3 and 4 of the DVD release contain the original music.[58] The sixth season was released on December 2, 2014.[59] It is unknown if the remaining 5 seasons will be released.

The season 7 premiere "Shotgun Wedding: Part 1" was also released on the Laverne & Shirley season 5 DVD. To date, this is the last episode released on home media.

Seasons 1 to 4 have also been released on DVD in the UK and in regions 2 and 4.

DVD name No. of
episodes
Release dates
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
The Complete First Season 16 August 17, 2004 August 27, 2007 September 19, 2007
The Second Season 23 April 17, 2007 November 12, 2007 March 6, 2008
The Third Season 24 November 27, 2007 April 7, 2008 September 4, 2008
The Fourth Season 25 December 9, 2008 January 9, 2011 February 5, 2009
The Fifth Season 26 May 20, 2014
The Sixth Season 27 December 2, 2014

Reunion specials

There have been two reunion specials which aired on ABC: the first was The Happy Days Reunion Special originally aired in March 1992, followed by Happy Days: 30th Anniversary Reunion in February 2005 to commemorate the program's 30th anniversary. Both were set up in interview/clip format.

Spin-offs

Happy Days resulted in seven different spin-off series, including two that were animated: Laverne & Shirley, Blansky's Beauties, Mork & Mindy, Out of the Blue, Joanie Loves Chachi, The Fonz and the Happy Days Gang (animated) and Laverne & Shirley with The Fonz (animated).

  • The most successful of these spin-offs, Laverne & Shirley (1976–83) starring Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams, respectively, also took place in early/mid-1960s Milwaukee. As Shotz Brewery workers, modeled after the Miller, Schlitz, and Pabst Breweries once located in Milwaukee, Laverne and Shirley find themselves in adventures with The Fonz, Lenny and Squiggy and even the Cunninghams also living in the midwestern city. The two starring characters eventually moved to Los Angeles in the show's later years. Penny Marshall was the sister of producer Garry Marshall. Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley had a crossover episode, "Shotgun Wedding", in which Richie and Fonzie get into trouble with a farmer for courting his daughters, and Laverne and Shirley try to help them. Part one is the season seven premiere of Happy Days and part two is the season five premiere of Laverne & Shirley.
  • After Robin Williams appeared as Mork in "My Favorite Orkan", he was given his own sitcom, Mork & Mindy (1978–82). In this series, Mork is an alien from the planet Ork, who lands in 1970s Boulder, Colorado, to study humans. He moves in with Pam Dawber's character of Mindy McConnell.
  • Joanie Loves Chachi (1982–83) was a short-lived show about Richie's younger sister Joanie and Fonzie's younger cousin Chachi's relationship during their years as musicians in Chicago. While commonly believed that the show was canceled due to low ratings, the program finished in the Top 20 its first season, but ABC determined that the show was losing too much of its lead-in, suggesting low appeal if the show were moved (a suggestion that came to be realized, as the show's ratings dropped dramatically after a move to another time slot in its second season). This type of cancellation seemed strange in the early 1980s, but soon became a commonplace part of TV audience research.
  • Out of the Blue (1979) is a spin-off of Happy Days, though a scheduling error had the series airing prior to the main character's introduction on Happy Days.
  • Blansky's Beauties (1977) starred Nancy Walker as former Las Vegas showgirl Nancy Blansky. One week before the show's premiere, the Blansky character appeared on Happy Days as a cousin of Howard Cunningham. Scott Baio and Lynda Goodfriend co-starred before joining Happy Days the following fall, and Pat Morita reprised his role of Arnold. Similarly, Eddie Mekka of Laverne & Shirley played the cousin of his Carmine character, while pulling double duty as a regular in both shows.

Spin-off pilots that did not succeed include The Ralph and Potsie Show as well as The Pinky Tuscadero Show.[60]

In other media

Books

A series of novels based on characters and dialog of the series was written by William Johnston and published by Tempo Books in the 1970s.

Comic books

Western Publishing published a Happy Days comic book series in 1979 under their Gold Key Comics brand and Whitman Comics brand.

Animation

There are two animated series, both produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions in association with Paramount Television (now known as CBS Television Distribution). The Fonz and the Happy Days Gang ran from 1980 to 1982. There are also animated spin-offs of Laverne & Shirley (Laverne & Shirley in the Army) and Mork & Mindy (centering on a young Mork and Mindy in high school). The following season, they were connected together as Mork & Mindy/Laverne & Shirley/Fonz Hour (1982).[61]

Musicals

In the late 1990s, a touring arena show called Happy Days: The Arena Spectacular toured Australia's major cities.[62] The story featured a property developer, and former girlfriend of Fonzie's, called Miss Frost (Rebecca Gibney), wanting to buy the diner and redevelop it. It starred Craig McLachlan as Fonzie, Max Gillies and Wendy Hughes as Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham, Doug Parkinson as Al, and Jo Beth Taylor as Richie's love interest Laura. Tom Bosley presented an introduction before each performance live on stage, and pop group Human Nature played a 1950s-style rock group.

Another stage show, Happy Days: A New Musical, began touring in 2008.[63][64]

Music videos

The music video for the song Buddy Holly (which takes place at Arnold's Drive-in) by Weezer features footage from the series, including clips of Richie, Potsie, Ralph Malph, Joanie, and Fonzie.[65] Al Molinaro also reprises his role as Al Delvecchio in the video, joking about how bad his fish is at the beginning and end of the video.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Tied with Petrocelli
  2. ^ Tied with Mork & Mindy
  3. ^ Tied with Too Close for Comfort
  4. ^ Tied with Little House: A New Beginning
  5. ^ A broadcast date of September 24, 1984, for Fonzie's Spots has not been verified.

References

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External links

happy, days, this, article, about, 1970s, television, series, other, uses, disambiguation, american, television, sitcom, that, aired, first, network, from, january, 1974, july, 1984, with, total, half, hour, episodes, spanning, seasons, created, garry, marshal. This article is about the 1970s television series For other uses see Happy Days disambiguation Happy Days is an American television sitcom that aired first run on the ABC network from January 15 1974 to July 19 1984 with a total of 255 half hour episodes spanning 11 seasons Created by Garry Marshall it was one of the most successful series of the 1970s The series presented an idealized vision of life in the 1950s and early 1960s Midwestern United States and it starred Ron Howard as Richie Cunningham Henry Winkler as his friend Fonzie and Tom Bosley and Marion Ross as Richie s parents Howard and Marion Cunningham 1 Although it opened to mixed reviews from critics Happy Days became successful and popular over time 2 Happy DaysAlso known asHappy Days AgainGenreSitcomCreated byGarry MarshallStarringRon HowardMarion RossAnson WilliamsTom BosleyHenry WinklerDonny MostErin MoranPat MoritaAl MolinaroScott BaioLynda GoodfriendCathy SilversTed McGinleyLinda PurlHeather O RourkeTheme music composerMax C Freedman and James E Myers 1974 75 opening Norman Gimbel and Charles Fox 1975 83 opening 1974 84 ending Opening theme Rock Around the Clock performed by Bill Haley amp His Comets 1974 75 Happy Days performed by The Ron Hicklin Singers 1975 83 Bobby Arvon 1983 84 Ending theme Happy Days performed by Jim Haas 1974 75 The Ron Hicklin Singers 1975 83 Bobby Arvon 1983 84 ComposersJohn BealFrank ComstockPete KingJames Patrick DunneCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons11No of episodes255 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersGarry MarshallThomas L MillerEdward K MilkisRobert L BoyettProducersWilliam BickleyMichael WarrenAnthony W MarshallRonny HallinFred Fox Jr Camera setupSingle camera 1974 75 Multi camera 1975 84 Running time25 minutesProduction companiesMiller Milkis Productions seasons 1 8 Henderson Production Company Inc seasons 6 11 Miller Milkis Boyett Productions seasons 9 11 Paramount TelevisionReleaseOriginal networkABCPicture format35mm filmAudio formatMonauralOriginal releaseJanuary 15 1974 1974 01 15 July 19 1984 1984 07 19 RelatedLaverne amp ShirleyBlansky s BeautiesMork amp MindyOut of the BlueJoanie Loves ChachiThe series began as an unsold pilot starring Howard Ross and Anson Williams which aired in 1972 as a segment titled Love and the Television Set later retitled Love and the Happy Days for syndication on ABC s anthology show Love American Style Based on the pilot director George Lucas cast Howard as the lead in his 1973 film American Graffiti causing ABC to take a renewed interest in the pilot The first two seasons of Happy Days focused on the experiences and dilemmas of innocent teenager Richie Cunningham his family and his high school friends attempting to honestly depict a wistful look back at adolescence 2 Initially a moderate success the series ratings began to fall during its second season causing Marshall to retool it The new format emphasized broad comedy and spotlighted the previously minor character of Fonzie a cool biker and high school dropout 2 Following these changes Happy Days became the number one program in television in 1976 1977 Fonzie became one of the most merchandised characters of the 1970s and Henry Winkler became a major star 3 4 The series also spawned a number of spin offs including Laverne amp Shirley and Mork amp Mindy Contents 1 Plot 2 Episodes 3 Cast 4 Characters 4 1 Main 4 2 Minor recurring 4 3 Notable guest stars 5 Production 5 1 Production and scheduling notes 5 1 1 Production styles 5 1 2 Sets 5 2 Theme music 5 3 Merchandising revenue lawsuit 6 Legacy 7 Home media 8 Reunion specials 9 Spin offs 10 In other media 10 1 Books 10 2 Comic books 10 3 Animation 10 4 Musicals 10 4 1 Music videos 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksPlot EditSet in Milwaukee Wisconsin during the 1950s the series revolves around teenager Richie Cunningham and his family his father Howard who owns a hardware store traditional homemaker and mother Marion younger sister Joanie Cunningham Richie s older brother Chuck briefly in seasons 1 and 2 only disappearing from storylines afterward and high school dropout leather jacket clad greaser mechanic and suave ladies man Fonzie who would eventually become Richie s best friend and the Cunninghams over the garage tenant The earliest episodes revolve around Richie and his friends Potsie Weber and Ralph Malph with Fonzie as a secondary character However as the series progressed Fonzie proved to be a favorite with viewers and soon more story lines were written to reflect his growing popularity Winkler was top billed in the opening credits alongside Howard by season 3 5 Fonzie befriended Richie and the Cunningham family and when Richie left the series for military service Fonzie became the central figure of the show with Winkler receiving sole top billing In later seasons other characters were introduced including Fonzie s young cousin Chachi Arcola who became a love interest for Joanie Cunningham The series pilot was originally shown as Love and the Television Set later retitled Love and the Happy Days for syndication a one episode teleplay on the anthology series Love American Style aired on February 25 1972 Happy Days spawned successful television shows Laverne amp Shirley and Mork amp Mindy as well as three failures Joanie Loves Chachi Blansky s Beauties featuring Nancy Walker as Howard s cousin 6 and Out of the Blue The show is the basis for the Happy Days musical touring the United States since 2008 The leather jacket worn by Winkler during the series was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution for the permanent collection at the National Museum of American History 7 The original light grey McGregor windbreaker Winkler wore during the first season was eventually thrown into the garbage after ABC relented and allowed the Fonzie character to wear a leather jacket Episodes EditMain article List of Happy Days episodes SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedRankRatingFirst airedLast aired116January 15 1974 1974 01 15 May 7 1974 1974 05 07 1621 5223September 10 1974 1974 09 10 May 6 1975 1975 05 06 4917 5 a 324September 9 1975 1975 09 09 March 2 1976 1976 03 02 1123 9425September 21 1976 1976 09 21 March 29 1977 1977 03 29 131 5527September 13 1977 1977 09 13 May 30 1978 1978 05 30 231 4627September 5 1978 1978 09 05 May 15 1979 1979 05 15 428 5 b 725September 11 1979 1979 09 11 May 6 1980 1980 05 06 1721 7822November 11 1980 1980 11 11 May 26 1981 1981 05 26 1520 8 c 922October 6 1981 1981 10 06 March 23 1982 1982 03 23 1820 61022September 28 1982 1982 09 28 March 22 1983 1983 03 22 2817 4 d 1122September 27 1983 1983 09 27 July 19 1984 1984 07 19 e 6313 9 8 Cast EditActor Character Seasons1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 EpRon Howard Richie Cunningham Main Guest 170Anson Williams Potsie Weber Main 211Marion Ross Marion Cunningham Main 252Tom Bosley Howard Cunningham Main 255Henry Winkler Arthur Fonzie Fonzarelli Recurring Main 255Don Most Ralph Malph Recurring Main Guest 168Erin Moran Joanie Cunningham Recurring Main Recurring Main 234Al Molinaro Al Delvecchio Recurring Main Guest 145Scott Baio Chachi Arcola Recurring Main Recurring Main 131Lynda Goodfriend Lori Beth Cunningham Recurring Main Guest 66Cathy Silvers Jenny Piccolo Recurring Main Guest 55Ted McGinley Roger Phillips Recurring Main 61Linda Purl Ashley Pfister Main 19Heather O Rourke Heather Pfister Recurring 12 Main Recurring GuestCharacters EditMain Edit Richie Cunningham The protagonist for the first seven years of the series 1974 80 When Ron Howard left the show due to his burgeoning directorial career Richie was written out by leaving to join the United States Army He marries his girlfriend Lori Beth in season eight by phone while Fonzie stands in for him in the wedding 9 Howard returned for guest appearances as Richie during the show s final season He came back with Lori Beth and their son Richie Jr and Ralph in the season 11 two part episode Welcome Home and then left for California with Lori Beth and Richie Sr to pursue a career in screenwriting He also returned in Passages when he and his family attended Joanie and Chachi s wedding 10 Marion Kelp Cunningham Wife of Howard Cunningham mother of Richie and Joanie and a traditional homemaker She is the only character who is allowed to call Fonzie by his real first name Arthur which she does affectionately 11 She sometimes gets tired of being at home such as in Marion Rebels where she gets into an argument with Howard and briefly gets a job as a waitress at Arnold s 12 In Empty Nest when Joanie left for Chicago to pursue her music career Marion had empty nest syndrome and was thrilled when her and Howard s niece K C moved in with them 13 Marion was one of only four characters to remain with the show throughout its entire run Howard Cunningham Husband of Marion Cunningham father of Richie and Joanie business owner of a hardware store called Cunningham s Hardware he is a lodge member and family man Frequently seen reading the daily newspaper in his easy chair 1 Enjoys driving his beloved 1948 DeSoto Suburban In Letting Go he did not want Joanie to go to Chicago still seeing her as his little girl But after talking with Fonzie and realizing how much she has grown up he supports her going 14 In Passages Howard says that he is proud of Richie and Joanie in Joanie and Chachi s wedding Howard is one of only two characters the other being Fonzie to appear in every episode of the series Joanie Cunningham Richie s younger sister In early seasons she is sometimes snooping on Richie s activities and would occasionally be sent to her room by her parents She is affectionately called Shortcake by Fonzie Later on Joanie briefly joins a motorcycle gang after going on a date with a boy whom she considered to be dull In Smokin Ain t Cool Joanie started smoking in order to be in a cool club until Fonzie sets her straight For years Fonzie s cousin Chachi had been chasing her until she eventually agreed to a date with him She and Chachi would eventually form a band together and in Letting Go they leave for Chicago to pursue their music career which spun off the short lived series Joanie Loves Chachi Joanie however eventually left the band to return home to pursue a teaching career 15 She and Chachi then broke up for a time until Chachi proposes to her and they get married in the series finale Arthur Fonzarelli a k a The Fonz or Fonzie Initially a secondary or recurring character billed in the end credits during the first season he became a popular breakout character and was promoted to front billing by the second season Fonzarelli s Fonzie nickname and comeback phrase Sit on it were created by the show s producer Bob Brunner 16 17 18 Known for being especially cool and for his catchphrases H eyyyy and Whoa His coolness gave him special powers such as making machinery such as Arnold s jukebox and other vending machines electric lights and car engines function by pounding on them with his fist or getting the attention of girls by snapping his fingers His parents abandoned him as a child and his grandmother raised him from the age of four Warren Potsie Weber Richie s best friend and an aspiring and talented singer He is somewhat more carefree and worldly than Richie in early seasons then in mid seasons he becomes more often paired with Ralph for plots and the two became inseparable In later seasons his character evolves to increasingly emphasize his dimwitted side and Ralph would often say to him You re such a Potsie Potsie often lightheartedly mentioned the supposed hatred his father who never appeared on the show had for him Potsie remained with the show after Richie and Ralph joined the Army however he was seen less frequently While Potsie s character became underdeveloped in these later episodes and he along with Ralph was one of the few characters absent from the finale he is mentioned to regularly bowl with the Cunninghams and still continues his position as assistant manager of Cunningham Hardware and as pledge master of the Leopard Lodge His nickname is explained in the 6th episode The Deadly Dares originating in childhood via his mother as he enjoyed making clay pottery Ralph Malph In the first season Ralph was intended as more of a secondary character billed in the end credits along with Winkler and Moran but by season 2 Ralph was from billed with them Richie Potsie and Ralph often were intertwined as episode protagonists Ralph and Potsie would became roommates by the fifth season Ralph was occasionally seen wearing his red GEMS club jacket especially in the early seasons but nothing was ever mentioned of it or the club Known for saying I still got it after delivering one of his jokes Ralph left with Richie after the 1979 80 season to join the Army Ralph returned as a guest star in the final season although he is absent in the finale along with Potsie he is mentioned as having left to continue college to become an optometrist like his father Mitsumo Arnold Takahashi Noriyuki Pat Morita seasons 3 10 11 26 episodes is the owner of Arnold s Drive In season three 1975 76 He obtained the moniker when he purchased Arnold s restaurant and people thought it was named after him explaining that it was too costly to buy enough letter signs needed to rename it Takahashi He moonlighted as a martial arts instructor teaching self defense classes at the drive in after hours Morita also played Arnold as a guest star in 1977 and 1979 before returning as a recurring character after Al Molinaro departed in 1982 Chachi Arcola Scott Baio Fonzie s younger cousin and later Al Delvecchio s stepson Fonzie acts as his older brother father figure He has much of Fonzie s smoothness and charisma wah wah wah being his catchphrase Chachi becomes one of the guys joining Richie Potsie Ralph and Fonzie in their antics and as their bandmate drummer After Richie and Ralph leave the show season 7 finale Chachi and Fonzie often find trouble or plot conflicts together Chachi has a crush on Joanie Cunningham from the moment he meets her in season 5 but she initially thinks of him as a little kid calling him pejorative terms like shrimp or drip But as they enter high school she too begins to find him attractive and begin dating In season 11 they break up but as the season progresses they reunite The series finale features Chachi and Joanie s wedding Al Delvecchio From seasons four to nine 1976 82 Al became the new owner and cook of the drive in diner after Arnold got married the previous season Al later married Chachi s mother Louisa thereby becoming Chachi s stepfather and Fonzie s uncle Molinaro left Happy Days in 1982 to take his Al character to Joanie Loves Chachi and he returned as Al in three later episodes of Happy Days Known for sighing Yeeep yep yep yep yep when he was disappointed or when things did not go his way Jenny Piccolo Cathy Silvers Joanie s boy crazy best friend 1980 83 frequently mentioned but never seen in early episodes She made her first on screen appearance in the eighth season and remained a recurring character through the ninth season becoming a regular during the tenth season in 1983 She returned as a guest star in the 1984 series finale 19 Jenny s father played by Cathy Silvers real life father Phil Silvers appeared in one episode Roger Phillips Ted McGinley Marion s nephew coach and teacher at Jefferson High until Vocational Education where he became principal at Patton High 20 Introduced in 1980 after Richie left the show as a recurring character Lori Beth Allen Cunningham Lynda Goodfriend Richie s girlfriend and later his wife 1977 82 She married Richie by phone in season eight Fonzie helped Lori Beth deliver her baby in Little Baby Cunningham She returned as a guest star in the final season where she is revealed to be pregnant with her second baby Ashley Pfister Linda Purl Divorced mother who becomes Fonzie s steady girlfriend until they break up offscreen sometime before Where the Guys Are Purl also portrays Richie s part time girlfriend Gloria in season 2 Minor recurring Edit Marsha Simms Beatrice Colen seasons 1 3 5 22 episodes A carhop waitress in the first 3 seasons with comic sides and plot development appearances She returned for a flashback guest appearance in the episode Our Gang Bobby Melner Harris Kal seasons 8 11 19 episodes Friend of Chachi and Joanie seen in episodes after Richie and Ralph left the show He is a student in Fonzie s auto shop class as well as in Roger s health class At one point he was also on the Jefferson High basketball team and performed in a band with Joanie and Chachi K C Cunningham Crystal Bernard season 10 15 episodes Howard s niece She moved in with Howard and Marion after Joanie left for Chicago She left an all girls boarding school in Texas because it closed down Her parents are always traveling She also became friends with Jenny and she went on her first date with Melvin Leopold Flip Phillips Billy Warlock seasons 9 amp 10 13 episodes Roger s rebellious younger brother He usually wears a shirt cut off over his bellybutton Tommy Kevin Sullivan seasons 8 11 13 episodes Another friend of Chachi and Joanie in episodes after Richie and Ralph left the show Like Bobby Tommy is a student in Fonzie s auto shop class as well as in Roger s health class At one point he was also on the Jefferson High basketball team and performed in a band with Joanie and Chachi Heather Pfister Heather O Rourke season 10 12 episodes Ashley Pfister s daughter Initially did not get along with Fonzie but gradually learned to accept him as a father figure Charles Chuck Cunningham Gavan O Herlihy Randolph Roberts seasons 1 amp 2 11 episodes The oldest son of Howard and Marion Cunningham and older brother of Richie and Joanie Chuck is a college student and basketball player He is rarely seen and disappears without explanation in season three never to be seen nor referenced again after season 2 s Fish and Fins The character s disappearance gave rise to the term Chuck Cunningham Syndrome used to describe TV characters that disappear from shows without an in universe explanation and are nowhere to be seen or mentioned again 21 Gavan O Herlihy played Chuck but then he asked to leave the series 22 He was replaced by Randolph Roberts In several late season episodes Howard and or Marion make reference to being very proud of our two children with no on screen reference to Chuck Eugene Belvin Denis Mandel seasons 8 amp 9 10 episodes Nerdy classmate of Joanie and Chachi and twin brother of Melvin Belvin Is in Fonzie s auto shop class and has a crush on Jenny Piccolo Despite being a general stooge to his classmates at Jefferson High he frequently tags along with Joanie and Chachi s circle of friends Bag Zombroski Neil J Schwartz seasons 1 4 9 episodes A Jefferson High schoolmate drummer of Richie s band and a leader of a jacket club called The Demons Police Officer Kirk Army Reserve Major Kirk Ed Peck seasons 3 10 9 episodes Fonzie s nemesis and antagonist who s eager to demonstrate his inflated sense of authority and on the watch for delinquents and pinkos communists Kirk took over as acting Sheriff following the untimely death of Sheriff Flanaghan Wendy Misty Rowe season 2 8 episodes A carhop from Arnold s in season two She was paired with Marsha Simms in 5 episodes Trudy Tita Bell seasons 1 4 8 episodes Jefferson High classmate Potsie s amp Fonzie s date in various episodes Melvin Belvin Scott Bernstein seasons 9 amp 10 8 episodes Nerdy classmate of Joanie and Chachi and twin brother of Eugene Belvin Like his brother Melvin frequently tags along with Joanie s and Chachi s circle of friends He once went on a date with K C Cunningham Leather Tuscadero Suzi Quatro seasons 5 amp 6 7 episodes Musician younger sister of Pinky Tuscadero and a former juvenile delinquent formed her own girl group called Leather and the Suedes Richie Ralph Potsie and Chachi become her nameless backup band They perform The Fonzie a new dance song on Chicago s Sock Hop teen TV dance show Jennifer Jerome Lorrie Mahaffey seasons 5 amp 6 6 episodes Potsie s steady girlfriend Mahaffey was Anson Williams then wife Laverne De Fazio Penny Marshall and Shirley Feeney Cindy Williams seasons 3 6 amp 7 5 episodes Dating interest of Fonzie Laverne and her friend Shirley appeared prominently in three episodes during season three A Date with Fonzie Football Frolics and Fonzie the Superstar which led to the two starring in the spin off series Laverne amp Shirley they also make guest appearances in season six s Fonzie s Funeral Part 2 and season seven s Shotgun Wedding Part 1 the second part of Shotgun Wedding concluded on a crossover episode of Laverne and Shirley Louisa Arcola Delvecchio Ellen Travolta seasons 8 11 5 episodes Mother of Chachi Arcola aunt of Fonzie She married Al Delvecchio and they moved to Chicago Gloria Linda Purl season 2 5 episodes Richie s occasional girlfriend in season two Dr Mickey Malph Alan Oppenheimer Jack Dodson season 3 amp 4 7 4 episodes Ralph s father an optometrist and like his son a self styled comedian Briefly separated from his wife Minnie but apparently resolved issues with her after a talk with Ralph It was Dr Malph who convinced Fonzie to wear glasses after he started having vision problems Raymond Spike Fonzarelli Danny Butch seasons 2 4 4 episodes Fonzie s cousin often referred to as his nephew but Fonzie explains that he couldn t be his nephew as Fonzie was an only child and his copycat He went on a date with Joanie in Not with My Sister You Don t and made only fleeting appearances before the introduction of Chachi The kinship between Spike and Chachi was never explained Grandma Nussbaum Frances Bay seasons 3 9 10 amp 11 4 episodes Chachi Arcola and Fonzie s grandmother Grandma Nussbaum was played by Lillian Bronson in the season 3 episode Fonzie Moves In She has been married several times and now enjoys playing mahjong amp canasta Carol Pinky Tuscadero Roz Kelly season 4 3 episodes Former girlfriend of Fonzie and a traveling demolition derby driver Clarence Gary Friedkin season 10 3 episodes A cook at Arnold s who is referred to several times throughout the show but never actually seen until the episode A Woman Not Under the Influence There it is revealed that Clarence is a little person Clarence seems to have a good relationship with Al but also frequently upsets him while goofing off in the kitchen Bill Sticks Downey John Anthony Bailey season 3 2 episodes Friend of Fonzie Richie Potsie and Ralph and drummer for their band hence his nickname Sticks though he claimed he got the nickname because he was skinny Notable guest stars Edit Hank Aaron the Atlanta Braves home run king appeared in season 7 episode 19 Adam Arkin in one of his first TV roles as Bo a disgruntled boyfriend that threatens Richie at a lodge dance season 2 Fonzie Joins the Band Frankie Avalon appeared as himself in season 9 singing his signature song Venus to a swooning Jenny Piccolo at the Leopard Lodge s annual Poo Bah Doodah musical Ed Begley Jr as a leader in the Demons jacket club season 1 episode 6 The Deadly Dares Dr Joyce Brothers season 5 episode 19 appears as herself trying to help Fonzie s dog Spunky out of a depression Julie Brown made her television debut in the seventh season episode Ahhh Wilderness as one of three girls who went camping with Richie Fonzie et al Leslie Browne as Colleen a talented ballerina that wins Fonzi s heart season 6 but must pursue her dreams in New York City Didi Conn a Jefferson High student who convinces Richie he caught mono from Fonzi s girl season 2 Jeff Conaway as Rocko a leather jacket wearing greaser who intimidates Richie at Arnold s while playing pinball season 3 ep 6 Morgan Fairchild season 5 episode 10 as a snooty rich socialite who tries to humiliate Fonzie Herbie Faye appeared as Pop in the 1974 season 1 episode Knock Around the Block Lorne Greene made a brief walk on cameo during the season five premiere which took place in Hollywood Tom Hanks a karate black belt and disgruntled third grade classmate seeking revenge on Fonzie for pushing him off a swing just as Fonzie is about to be given a community leader award John Hart TV s The Lone Ranger appeared in season 9 episode 17 where Fonzie meets his childhood idol Hart s last acting job Clint Howard as Moose a burglar who robs Arnold s cash register after hours with Spike s help in Bringing Up Spike season 3 Diana Hyland as Adriana Prescott a married bon vivant swinger that Fonzi dates until he learns of her marital status and open marriage arrangement Christopher Knight as Binky Joanie s date on the season five episode Be My Valentine Cheryl Ladd appeared in Wish Upon a Star season 2 playing the part of Cindy Shea a wholesome Hollywood starlet with whom Richie wins a Homecoming date Anne Lockhart college gal on Spring Break in a rented cabin on Lake Whitefish 3 On A Porch season 3 June Lockhart as Judge McBride who presides over the small claims court case of H Cunningham vs A Fonzarelli in Two Angry Men season 3 Dave Madden of The Partridge Family as compromised game show host Jack Whippet who gives a reluctant Richie the answer to a 5 000 baseball trivia jackpot prize season 2 Big Money Michael McKean and David L Lander of Laverne amp Shirley portrayed their Lenny and Squiggy characters in the sixth season episode Fonzie s Funeral Part 2 Eddie Mekka also from Laverne amp Shirley portrayed his Carmine character in the season four s Joanie s Weird Boyfriend and the season six s Fonzie s Funeral Part 2 Maureen McCormick Marcia Brady of The Brady Bunch as Hildie the Eastchester girlfriend of Dragon s drag racer Doolie that Richie must race in his dad s Desoto season 2 episode 16 James Millhollin a character actor made the last television appearance of his career as Mr Rudi in the 1979 episode Potsie Quits School James Randi The Amazing Randi appeared as himself in the episode The Magic Show season 6 23 Tony Randall uncredited cameo as a man who s a werewolf onscreen in a movie that Richie Joanie and their dates are watching season 2 ep 8 Not With My Sister You Don t Buffalo Bob Smith and Bob Brunner as Clarabell the Clown appeared in the episode The Howdy Doody Show season 2 the characters come to town looking for Howdy Doody look alikes Craig Stevens the star of detective show Peter Gunn played Ashley Pfister s father in Hello Pfisters season 10 Danny Thomas appeared in the episode Grandpa s Visit season 5 as Sean Cunningham Howard s father Charlene Tilton appeared in the episode They Shoot Fonzies Don t They season 4 as Jill Higgins who challenges Fonzie and Joanie at a dance marathon until Fonzie might have to get a crewcut Dick Van Patten as Phil Hunsberger a bank loan officer in Fonzie the Salesman season 3 and embittered vice principal Connors The Graduation ssn 4 Robin Williams appeared in two episodes as Mork from Ork in season five s My Favorite Orkan Mork wants to take Richie back to Ork with him to study earthlings which led to the spin off Mork amp Mindy season six s Mork Returns aired during the height of the popularity of Mork and Mindy Lyle Waggoner appeared in the episode Dreams Can Come True season 8 as Bobby Burns host of the game show of the same name on which Marion appears as a contestant and again in the episode Like Mother Like Daughter season 11 as Frederick Hamilton Marion s former college boyfriendProduction EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Happy Days originated during a time of 1950s nostalgic interest as evident in 1970s film television and music In late winter of 1971 Michael Eisner was snowed in at Newark airport where he bumped into Tom Miller head of development at Paramount Eisner has stated that he told Miller Tom this is ridiculous We re wasting our time here Let s write a show The script treatment that came out of that did not sell But in spite of the market research department telling them that the 1950s theme would not work they decided to redo it and this was accepted as a pilot 24 This unsold pilot was filmed in late 1971 and titled New Family in Town with Harold Gould in the role of Howard Cunningham Marion Ross as Marion Ron Howard as Richie Anson Williams as Potsie Ric Carrott as Charles Chuck Cunningham and Susan Neher as Joanie Paramount passed on making it into a weekly series and the pilot was recycled with the title Love and the Television Set later retitled Love and the Happy Days for syndication for presentation on the television anthology series Love American Style 25 Also in 1971 the musical Grease had a successful opening in Chicago and by the following year became successful on Broadway Also in 1972 George Lucas asked to view the pilot to determine if Ron Howard would be suitable to play a teenager in American Graffiti then in pre production Lucas immediately cast Howard in the film which became one of the top grossing films of 1973 With the movie s success generating a renewed interest in the 1950s era although the film was set in 1962 TV show creator Garry Marshall and ABC recast the unsold pilot to turn Happy Days into a series According to Marshall in an interview executive producer Tom Miller said while developing the sitcom If we do a TV series that takes place in another era and when it goes into reruns then it won t look old This made sense to Marshall while on the set of the show 26 Gould had originally been tapped to reprise the role of Howard Cunningham on the show However during a delay before the start of production he found work doing a play abroad and when he was notified the show was ready to begin production he declined to return because he wanted to honor his commitment 27 Bosley was then offered the role Production and scheduling notes Edit Jerry Paris who played next door neighbor Jerry Helper on The Dick Van Dyke Show and directed 84 episodes of that series 28 directed every episode of Happy Days from season three on except for three episodes in season three Jailhouse Rock Dance Contest and Arnold s Wedding 29 Producer and writer Bob Brunner created Arthur Fonzarelli s Fonzie nickname and his iconic comeback phrase Sit on it 16 17 18 Beginning in September 1979 until the show went out of production reruns of the show were syndicated under the title Happy Days Again Happy Days was produced by Miller Milkis Productions a teaming of Thomas L Miller with former film editor Edward K Milkis which became Miller Milkis Boyett Productions when Robert L Boyett joined the company in 1980 and was the first ever show to be produced by the company s most recent incarnation Miller Boyett Productions which followed Milkis s resignation from the partnership It was also produced by Henderson Productions and was one of the popular shows produced in association with Paramount Television In its 11 seasons on the air Happy Days is the second longest running sitcom in ABC s history behind The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet which ran 14 seasons from 1952 to 1966 and one of the longest running primetime programs in the network s history It is also unique in that it remained in the same time slot leading off ABC s Tuesday night programming at 8 00 p m Eastern Pacific 7 00 p m in the Central and Mountain zones for its first ten seasons That half hour became a signature timeslot for ABC with Who s the Boss instantly entering the top 10 when it was moved from Thursdays and staying in that time slot for six seasons followed by the equally family friendly sitcom Full House another Miller Boyett co production That sitcom also hit the top 10 immediately after inheriting the Tuesday at 8 00 7 00 p m slot and then stayed there for four seasons Happy Days also proved to be quite popular in daytime reruns they joined the ABC daytime schedule in 1975 airing reruns at 11 30 a m ET 10 30 a m CT MT PT being moved to 11 00 10 00 a m in 1977 paired with Family Feud following at 11 30 10 30 a m It was replaced on the daytime schedule by reruns of its spin off Laverne amp Shirley in April 1979 CBS programming head Fred Silverman scheduled the Maude spin off Good Times directly against Happy Days during their respective second seasons in an attempt to kill the ABC show s growing popularity In a way this move backfired on Silverman as he was named president of ABC in 1975 thus forcing him to come up with a way to save the show he tried to kill the year before After having knocked Happy Days out of the top 20 programs on television his last year at CBS Silverman had the series at the top of the Nielsen ratings by 1977 see below Good Times was later cancelled in 1979 Ron Howard later revealed that many of the exterior scenes filmed in Happy Days were actually shot in Munster Indiana The official series finale Passages aired on May 8 1984 But there were five leftover episodes that ABC didn t have time to air during the regular season due to the Winter Olympics and the spring run of a k a Pablo Four of these aired on Thursday nights during the summer of 1984 the fifth Fonzie s Spots aired on September 24 1984 Production styles Edit The first two seasons of Happy Days 1974 75 were filmed using a single camera setup and laugh track One episode of season two Fonzie Gets Married was filmed in front of a studio audience with three cameras as a test run From the third season on 1975 84 the show was a three camera production in front of a live audience with a cast member usually Tom Bosley announcing in voice over Happy Days is filmed before a live audience at the start of most episodes giving these later seasons a markedly different style A laugh track was still used during post production to smooth over live reactions Garry Marshall s earlier television series The Odd Couple had undergone an identical change in production style after its first season in 1970 71 Sets Edit Richie and Fonzie view his destroyed motorcycle in his living room 1976 Fonzie s apartment was over the Cunninghams garage The show had two main sets the Cunningham home and Arnold s Al s Drive In In seasons one and two the Cunningham house was arranged with the front door on the left and the kitchen on the right of screen in a triangular arrangement From season three on the house was rearranged to accommodate multiple cameras and a studio audience The Cunninghams official address is 565 North Clinton Drive Milwaukee Wisconsin 30 The house that served as the exterior of the Cunningham residence is actually located at 565 North Cahuenga Boulevard south of Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles 31 several blocks from the Paramount lot on Melrose Avenue The Milky Way Drive In located on Port Washington Road in the North Shore suburb of Glendale Wisconsin now Kopp s Frozen Custard Stand was the inspiration for the original Arnold s Drive In it has since been demolished The exterior of Arnold s was a standing set on the Paramount Studios lot that has since been demolished This exterior was close to Stage 19 where the rest of the show s sets were located The set of the diner in the first season was a room with the same vague details of the later set such as the paneling and the college pennants When the show changed to a studio production in 1975 the set was widened and the entrance was hidden but allowed an upstage central entrance for cast members The barely seen kitchen was also upstaged and seen only through a pass through window The diner had orange booths downstage center for closeup conversation as well as camera left There were two restroom doors camera right labeled Guys and Dolls A 1953 Seeburg Model G jukebox with replaced metal pilasters from Wico Corp was positioned camera right and an anachronistic Nip It pinball machine actually produced in 1972 was positioned far camera right Potsie Richie Fonzie and Ralph Malph at Arnold s 1975 College pennants adorned the walls including Purdue and University of Wisconsin Milwaukee along with a blue and white sign reading Jefferson High School Milwaukee s Washington High School provided the inspiration for the exteriors of the fictional Jefferson In a two part episode from the seventh season the original Arnold s Drive In was written out of the series as being destroyed by fire see List of Happy Days episodes episodes 159 and 160 In the last seasons that covered the 1960s timeline a new Arnold s Drive In set to portray the new Arnold s that replaced the original Arnold s destroyed by the fire emerged in a 1960s decor with wood paneling and stained glass Also in seasons 8 and 9 the new drive in was named Fonzie amp Big Al because Fonzie and Al co owned the new establishment in a partnership In 2004 two decades after the first set was destroyed the Happy Days 30th Anniversary Reunion requested that the reunion take place in Arnold s The set was rebuilt by production designer James Yarnell based on the original floor plan The reunion special was taped at CBS Television City s Bob Barker Studio in September 2004 32 Theme music Edit Main article Happy Days TV theme Season one used a newly recorded version of Rock Around the Clock by Bill Haley amp His Comets recorded in the fall of 1973 as the opening theme song This recording was not commercially released at the time although the original 1954 recording returned to the American Billboard charts in 1974 as a result of the song s use on the show The Happy Days recording had its first commercial release in 2005 by the German label Hydra Records When Happy Days entered syndication in 1979 the series was retitled Happy Days Again and used an edited version of the 1954 recording instead of the 1973 version In some prints intended for reruns and overseas broadcasts as well as on the Season 2 DVD set release and later re releases of the Season 1 DVD set the original Rock Around the Clock opening theme is replaced by the more standard Happy Days theme because of music rights issues The show s closing theme song in seasons one and two was a fragment from Happy Days although in a different recording with a different lyric from that which would become the standard version whose music was composed by Charles Fox and whose lyric was written by Norman Gimbel According to SAG this version was performed by Jim Haas on lead vocals The Ron Hicklin Singers Stan Farber Jerry Whitman and Gary Garrett on backing vocals and studio musicians From seasons three to ten inclusive a longer version of Happy Days replaced Rock Around the Clock at the beginning of the show Released as a single in 1976 by Pratt amp McClain Happy Days cracked the Top 5 The show itself finished the 1976 77 television season at No 1 ending the five year Nielsen reign of All in the Family For the show s 11th and final season 1983 84 the theme was rerecorded in a more modern style It featured Bobby Arvon on lead vocals with several back up vocalists To accompany this new version new opening credits were filmed and the flashing Happy Days logo was reanimated to create an overall new feel which incorporated 1980s sensibilities with 1950s nostalgia although by this time the show was set in 1965 Merchandising revenue lawsuit Edit On April 19 2011 Happy Days co stars Erin Moran Don Most Marion Ross and Anson Williams as well as the estate of Tom Bosley who died in 2010 filed a 10 million breach of contract lawsuit against CBS which owns the show claiming they had not been paid for merchandising revenues owed under their contracts 33 The cast members claimed they had not received revenues from show related items including comic books T shirts scrapbooks trading cards games lunch boxes dolls toy cars magnets greeting cards and DVDs where their images appear on the box covers Under their contracts they were supposed to be paid 5 of the net proceeds of merchandising if their sole image were used and half that amount if they were in a group CBS said it owed the actors 8 500 and 9 000 each most of it from slot machine revenues but the group said they were owed millions 34 The lawsuit was initiated after Ross was informed by a friend playing slots at a casino of a Happy Days machine on which players win the jackpot when five Marion Rosses are rolled In October 2011 a judge rejected the group s fraud claim which meant they could not receive millions of dollars in potential damages 35 On June 5 2012 a judge denied a motion filed by CBS to have the case thrown out which meant it would go to trial on July 17 if the matter was not settled by then 36 In July 2012 the actors settled their lawsuit with CBS Each received a payment of 65 000 and a promise by CBS to continue honoring the terms of their contracts 37 38 Legacy EditIn 1978 actor Robin Williams made his screen debut during the fifth season of Happy Days as the character Mork in the episode My Favorite Orkan 39 Sought after as a last minute cast replacement for a departing actor Williams impressed the producer with his quirky sense of humor when he sat on his head when asked to take a seat for the audition 40 41 While portraying Mork on Happy Days Williams improvised much of his dialogue and physical comedy speaking in a high nasal voice and he made the most of the script The cast and crew as well as TV network executives were deeply impressed with his performance As such the executives moved quickly to get the performer on contract just four days later before competitors could make their own offers 42 In 1980 the National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution asked Henry Winkler to donate one of Fonzie s leather jackets 43 44 45 In 1985 Jon Hein developed the phrase jumping the shark in response to an episode of Happy Days Season 5 Episode 91 called Hollywood Part 3 written by Fred Fox Jr 46 which aired on September 20 1977 In this episode Fonzie jumps over a shark while on water skis 47 48 49 The phrase is used to suggest that a creative outlet appears to be making a misguided attempt at generating new attention or publicity for something that is perceived to be once but no longer widely popular 50 51 In a 2019 interview with NPR Terry Gross asked Henry Winkler Fonzie what it was about that scene or that episode that came to signify when something s time is up when it s over Winkler responded You know what I don t know To them the Fonz water skiing was just like the last straw The only thing is it wasn t to the audience because we were No 1 for years after that So it didn t much matter to anybody 52 In addition he told TheWrap in 2018 that he is not embarrassed by the phrase He stated that newspapers would mention jumping the shark and they would show a picture of me in my leather jacket and swim shorts water skiing And at that time I had great legs So I thought I don t care And we were No 1 for the next four or five years 53 As his character Barry Zuckerkorn in the sitcom Arrested Development hopped over a shark in Episode 13 of the second season Winkler also noted that there was a book there was a board game and it is an expression that is still used today and I m very proud that I am the only actor maybe in the world that has jumped the shark twice once on Happy Days and once on Arrested Development 53 In 1999 TV Guide ranked Fonzie as number 4 on its 50 Greatest TV Characters of All Time list 54 In a 2001 poll conducted by Channel 4 in the UK the Fonz was ranked 13th on their list of the 100 Greatest TV Characters 55 In 2008 American artist Gerald P Sawyer unveiled the Bronze Fonz a public artwork on the Milwaukee Riverwalk in downtown Milwaukee Wisconsin 56 Home media EditParamount Home Entertainment and CBS DVD have released the first six seasons of Happy Days on DVD in Region 1 as of December 2 2014 57 For the second season CBS features music replacements due to copyright issues including the theme song Rock Around the Clock The Complete First Season retains the original opening as it was released before CBS was involved Only season 3 and 4 of the DVD release contain the original music 58 The sixth season was released on December 2 2014 59 It is unknown if the remaining 5 seasons will be released The season 7 premiere Shotgun Wedding Part 1 was also released on the Laverne amp Shirley season 5 DVD To date this is the last episode released on home media Seasons 1 to 4 have also been released on DVD in the UK and in regions 2 and 4 DVD name No ofepisodes Release datesRegion 1 Region 2 Region 4The Complete First Season 16 August 17 2004 August 27 2007 September 19 2007The Second Season 23 April 17 2007 November 12 2007 March 6 2008The Third Season 24 November 27 2007 April 7 2008 September 4 2008The Fourth Season 25 December 9 2008 January 9 2011 February 5 2009The Fifth Season 26 May 20 2014The Sixth Season 27 December 2 2014Reunion specials EditThere have been two reunion specials which aired on ABC the first was The Happy Days Reunion Special originally aired in March 1992 followed by Happy Days 30th Anniversary Reunion in February 2005 to commemorate the program s 30th anniversary Both were set up in interview clip format Spin offs EditHappy Days resulted in seven different spin off series including two that were animated Laverne amp Shirley Blansky s Beauties Mork amp Mindy Out of the Blue Joanie Loves Chachi The Fonz and the Happy Days Gang animated and Laverne amp Shirley with The Fonz animated The most successful of these spin offs Laverne amp Shirley 1976 83 starring Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams respectively also took place in early mid 1960s Milwaukee As Shotz Brewery workers modeled after the Miller Schlitz and Pabst Breweries once located in Milwaukee Laverne and Shirley find themselves in adventures with The Fonz Lenny and Squiggy and even the Cunninghams also living in the midwestern city The two starring characters eventually moved to Los Angeles in the show s later years Penny Marshall was the sister of producer Garry Marshall Happy Days and Laverne amp Shirley had a crossover episode Shotgun Wedding in which Richie and Fonzie get into trouble with a farmer for courting his daughters and Laverne and Shirley try to help them Part one is the season seven premiere of Happy Days and part two is the season five premiere of Laverne amp Shirley After Robin Williams appeared as Mork in My Favorite Orkan he was given his own sitcom Mork amp Mindy 1978 82 In this series Mork is an alien from the planet Ork who lands in 1970s Boulder Colorado to study humans He moves in with Pam Dawber s character of Mindy McConnell Joanie Loves Chachi 1982 83 was a short lived show about Richie s younger sister Joanie and Fonzie s younger cousin Chachi s relationship during their years as musicians in Chicago While commonly believed that the show was canceled due to low ratings the program finished in the Top 20 its first season but ABC determined that the show was losing too much of its lead in suggesting low appeal if the show were moved a suggestion that came to be realized as the show s ratings dropped dramatically after a move to another time slot in its second season This type of cancellation seemed strange in the early 1980s but soon became a commonplace part of TV audience research Out of the Blue 1979 is a spin off of Happy Days though a scheduling error had the series airing prior to the main character s introduction on Happy Days Blansky s Beauties 1977 starred Nancy Walker as former Las Vegas showgirl Nancy Blansky One week before the show s premiere the Blansky character appeared on Happy Days as a cousin of Howard Cunningham Scott Baio and Lynda Goodfriend co starred before joining Happy Days the following fall and Pat Morita reprised his role of Arnold Similarly Eddie Mekka of Laverne amp Shirley played the cousin of his Carmine character while pulling double duty as a regular in both shows Spin off pilots that did not succeed include The Ralph and Potsie Show as well as The Pinky Tuscadero Show 60 In other media EditBooks Edit A series of novels based on characters and dialog of the series was written by William Johnston and published by Tempo Books in the 1970s Comic books Edit Western Publishing published a Happy Days comic book series in 1979 under their Gold Key Comics brand and Whitman Comics brand Animation Edit There are two animated series both produced by Hanna Barbera Productions in association with Paramount Television now known as CBS Television Distribution The Fonz and the Happy Days Gang ran from 1980 to 1982 There are also animated spin offs of Laverne amp Shirley Laverne amp Shirley in the Army and Mork amp Mindy centering on a young Mork and Mindy in high school The following season they were connected together as Mork amp Mindy Laverne amp Shirley Fonz Hour 1982 61 Musicals Edit In the late 1990s a touring arena show called Happy Days The Arena Spectacular toured Australia s major cities 62 The story featured a property developer and former girlfriend of Fonzie s called Miss Frost Rebecca Gibney wanting to buy the diner and redevelop it It starred Craig McLachlan as Fonzie Max Gillies and Wendy Hughes as Mr and Mrs Cunningham Doug Parkinson as Al and Jo Beth Taylor as Richie s love interest Laura Tom Bosley presented an introduction before each performance live on stage and pop group Human Nature played a 1950s style rock group Another stage show Happy Days A New Musical began touring in 2008 63 64 Music videos Edit The music video for the song Buddy Holly which takes place at Arnold s Drive in by Weezer features footage from the series including clips of Richie Potsie Ralph Malph Joanie and Fonzie 65 Al Molinaro also reprises his role as Al Delvecchio in the video joking about how bad his fish is at the beginning and end of the video See also Edit Television portal United States portalFonz video game Notes Edit Tied with Petrocelli Tied with Mork amp Mindy Tied with Too Close for Comfort Tied with Little House A New Beginning A broadcast date of September 24 1984 for Fonzie s Spots has not been verified References Edit a b Happy Days Actor Tom Bosley Dies Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on October 22 2010 Retrieved October 19 2010 a b c VanDerWerff Emily August 27 2012 Happy Days became one of the biggest hits on TV by selling its soul The A V Club Archived from the original on August 9 2016 Retrieved January 7 2020 Brooks Tim Marsh Earle 2007 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 Present 9th ed New York Ballantine Books pp 580 582 ISBN 9780307483201 Crupi Anthony May 2017 Happy Days for broadcasters as long as they re selling sports adage com Advertising Age Retrieved June 12 2017 Haithman Diane January 4 1991 Is Uncool Urkel the 90s Answer to the Fonz Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved November 7 2010 Blansky s Beauties TV com Retrieved April 27 2012 How Now Mr Fonzarelli People Magazine Retrieved October 20 2010 1983 84 Ratings History TV Ratings Guide Happy Days Episode Guide 1981 Season 8 R C and L B Forever Episode 19 tvguide com Retrieved November 8 2012 Happy Days Episodes Happy Days Full Episode Guides from Season 11 on ABC tvguide com Retrieved November 8 2012 King Susan October 7 2009 Marion Ross on Happy Days and today Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 19 2010 better source needed Happy Days Episode Guide 1977 Season 4 Marion Rebels tvguide com Retrieved November 8 2012 Happy Days Episodes Happy Days Full Episode Guides from Season 10 on ABC tvguide com Retrieved November 8 2012 Happy Days Episode Happy Days Full Episode Guides from Season 10 on ABC tvguide com Retrieved November 8 2012 Happy Days Episode Guide 1983 Season 10 Turn Around and You re Home tvguide com Retrieved November 8 2012 a b Bob Brunner Happy Days writer dies Variety November 8 2012 Retrieved November 27 2012 a b Bob Brunner Happy Days writer and producer dies aged 78 Digital Spy November 7 2012 Retrieved November 27 2012 a b Barnes Mike November 7 2012 Happy Days Writer Producer Bob Brunner Dies at 78 The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved November 27 2012 Cathy Silvers is so much like Jenny Piccalo that it s frightening Happy Days Episodes Guide 1983 Season 11 Vocational Education Episode 7 tvguide com Retrieved November 8 2012 Abramson Dan June 17 2010 The 13 Most Ridiculous Sitcom Mysteries Of All Time PHOTOS Huffington Post Meet Chuck the lost brother from Happy Days December 10 2017 Happy Days Episode Guide 1978 Season 6 The Magic Show Episode 13 TVGuide com Retrieved June 4 2014 Michael Eisner on the development of Happy Days with EmmyTvLegends org posted to YouTube on Nov8 2011 Note Eisner states that snowstorm happened when his son was three months old Breck Eisner was born on December 24 1970 so this means that the first treatment was written in late winter of 1970 March or April Charles Fox discusses writing the Happy Days theme with EmmyTvLegends org posted to YouTube on June 16 2015 Garry Marshall discusses creating Happy Days with EmmyTvLegends org posted to YouTube on July 13 2012 McLellan Dennis September 14 2010 Harold Gould dies at 86 veteran character actor Los Angeles Times Jerry Paris Internet Movie Database Retrieved August 20 2019 Happy Days Season 3 Episode Guide TV com Retrieved June 10 2010 Wilcox s Soaps amp More TV Character Address and Trivia Book 2004 Iconic Movie and TV Houses of L A LA Weekly August 21 2014 Shows CBS Television City September 7 1954 Retrieved June 4 2014 Dobuzinskis Alex April 20 2011 Happy Days actors sue over merchandising revenue Reuters Zamost Scott April 20 2011 Happy Days actors claim fraud money owed for merchandising CNNMoney Gardner Eriq June 5 2012 Happy Days Actors Win Key Ruling in CBS Lawsuit The Hollywood Reporter Scott Zamost June 5 2012 Happy Days cast members lawsuit heading for trial CNN Daley Sean August 6 2012 Chachi done with broke Joanie New York Post Zamost Scott July 7 2012 Happy Days actors settle lawsuit with CBS CNN James Lipton host June 10 2001 Robin Williams Inside the Actors Studio Season 7 Episode 710 Bravo Archived from the original on February 4 2007 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Maddow Rachel August 12 2014 Henry Winkler Recalls Robin Williams Happy Days Debut MSNBC Retrieved October 31 2021 Robin Williams Biography Biography Channel Archived from the original on July 16 2012 Retrieved September 27 2012 Happy Days Cast Reveals How Robin Williams Got Cast as a Martian in Show s Worst Script The Hollywood Reporter November 20 2014 Archived from the original on August 10 2018 Retrieved August 10 2018 Henry Winkler Donates his Jacket NMHT National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Retrieved August 31 2021 MacGregor Jeff September 2017 Why Happy Days and the Fonz Never Truly Jumped the Shark Smithsonian Retrieved September 10 2021 Bumiller Elizabeth February 14 1980 Exhibit A a a a y The Fonz The Washington Post Retrieved August 31 2021 Fox Fred Jr September 3 2010 First Person In defense of Happy Days Jump the Shark episode Los Angeles Times Hornaday Ann July 25 2003 A Few Pixels Short of a Personality The Washington Post Retrieved April 12 2013 Hollows Joanne Moseley Rachel 2006 Feminism in Popular Culture Berg Publishers ISBN 1845202236 McFedries Paul 2008 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Weird Word Origins Alpha Books ISBN 978 1592577811 Lenderman Max January 5 2010 Experience the Message How Experiential Marketing Is Changing the Brand World p 267 ISBN 9781551991696 Lubans Jr John 2010 Leading from the Middle and Other Contrarian Essays on Library Leadership Libraries Unlimited p 76 ISBN 9781598845785 Perlow Bob Cummins Richard John 2016 The Warmup Guy Random House p 30 Gross Terry April 11 2019 I Never Had A Plan B Henry Winkler On His Career From The Fonz To Barry NPR Retrieved September 16 2021 a b Pond Steve August 21 2018 Barry Star Henry Winkler on Why He s Very Proud He Jumped That Shark Twice Video TheWrap Retrieved August 30 2021 TV Guide Guide to TV Barnes and Noble 2004 p 651 ISBN 0 7607 5634 1 100 Greatest TV Characters Channel 4 Archived from the original on May 31 2009 Retrieved May 26 2019 Henry Winkler unveils bronze Fonz BBC August 20 2008 Archived from the original on August 28 2008 Retrieved August 16 2010 Happy Days DVD news Box Art for Happy Days The 5th Season TVShowsOnDVD com January 29 2014 Archived from the original on June 3 2014 Retrieved June 4 2014 Happy Days Season 5 DVD Talk Retrieved April 4 2017 Happy Days DVD news Announcement for Happy Days The 6th Season TVShowsOnDVD com tvshowsondvd com Archived from the original on September 3 2014 Charles Fox interview with EmmyTvLegends org posted to YouTube on June 16 2015 Happy Days 1974 Movie connections Imdb com Retrieved June 10 2010 Show Gives Fonz Some Happy Days The Sun Sentinel Retrieved November 7 2010 Happy Days The Musical nytheatre com Archived from the original on November 2 2008 Ng David November 10 2008 Happy Days is here again Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 28 2010 Nashawaty Chris December 9 1994 Weezer loves Happy Days EW com Retrieved June 11 2021 External links EditHappy Days at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Happy Days at IMDb Happy Days at The Interviews An Oral History of Television results Portal television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Happy Days amp oldid 1149193629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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