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Pilot (Desperate Housewives)

"Pilot" is the first episode of the American dramedy-mystery series Desperate Housewives. It premiered on October 3, 2004, on the ABC network. It was written by series creator Marc Cherry and directed by Charles McDougall. The pilot introduces the residents of the suburban neighborhood of Wisteria Lane. Following the suicide of an outwardly successful neighbor, her friends begin to deal with the problems in their personal lives. Susan Mayer (Teri Hatcher) competes for the attention of a new plumber who has moved across the street; Bree Van de Kamp (Marcia Cross) struggles with her failing marriage and ungrateful family; Gabrielle Solis (Eva Longoria) continues an affair with her sixteen-year-old gardener; and Lynette Scavo (Felicity Huffman) copes with life as a stay-at-home mother of four.

"Pilot"
Desperate Housewives episode
Lynette, Gabrielle, Susan, and Bree celebrate the life of Mary Alice, their departed neighbor and friend.
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 1
Directed byCharles McDougall
Written byMarc Cherry
Production code101
Original air dateOctober 3, 2004 (2004-10-03)
Running time43 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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Desperate Housewives season 1
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Cherry conceived the idea for the series while watching coverage of the Andrea Yates murder trials, and was fascinated by how women lead lives of quiet desperation. He began writing the script in 2002 and pitched it to several networks throughout the following year. In October 2003, ABC announced that it had picked up the pilot. Casting began in February 2004 and filming took place the following month primarily on the Colonial Street backlot set at Universal Studios. According to Nielsen ratings, the episode was watched by 21.6 million viewers on its original American broadcast, becoming the most-watched program of the week. The pilot received extremely positive reviews, with critics complimenting the series' tonal diversity. The cast, particularly the four leads and Sheridan, also received praise. The episode won various awards, including three Emmys.

Plot edit

Desperate Housewives focuses on the lives of several residents of the fictitious street of Wisteria Lane. The suburban neighborhood is shocked by the suicide of Mary Alice Young (Brenda Strong), who seems to have led an ideal domestic life. Mary Alice's close friends, Susan Mayer (Teri Hatcher), Lynette Scavo (Felicity Huffman), Bree Van de Kamp (Marcia Cross), and Gabrielle Solis (Eva Longoria), struggle to come to terms with the news. Later, Mary Alice's son, Zach (Cody Kasch), awakens in the middle of the night to find his father, Paul (Mark Moses), unearthing a mysterious chest from the drained swimming pool in their backyard.

Susan, a divorced mother, takes interest in Mike Delfino (James Denton), a plumber who has recently moved to Wisteria Lane; however, she faces competition with neighbor Edie Britt (Nicollette Sheridan), a promiscuous serial divorcée. Suspicious that Mike is spending the night with Edie, Susan enters Edie's home uninvited with the pretense of borrowing sugar. While inside, she accidentally knocks over a candle, which sets fire to the entire house. Susan flees the scene, leaving behind her glass measuring cup. Though wracked with guilt, Susan is relieved to learn that Mike was not the man with whom Edie was fornicating. Meanwhile, Lynette, a former career woman, is frustrated with raising four young children while her husband, Tom (Doug Savant), is constantly away on business.

Bree, a perfectionist homemaker who feels unappreciated by her family, is troubled when her husband Rex (Steven Culp) asks for a divorce. She poisons him by mistakenly putting onions, to which he is deathly allergic, in his salad. At the hospital, Rex accuses Bree of being emotionally unavailable and obsessed with achieving domestic perfection. Elsewhere, Gabrielle, a former model, grows increasingly unhappy with her marriage to Carlos (Ricardo Antonio Chavira), who buys her love with extravagant gifts. She continues an affair with her sixteen-year-old gardener, John Rowland (Jesse Metcalfe).

Paul asks Susan, Lynette, Bree, and Gabrielle to sort through Mary Alice's belongings, as he cannot bear to do so himself. In a box of Mary Alice's clothes, the women discover a blackmail note reading "I know what you did[.] It makes me sick[.] I'm going to tell[.]" The postmark indicates that Mary Alice received it the day she killed herself and the women begin to wonder what secret their friend could have been keeping.

Production edit

Creation and development edit

I always envisioned [my mother] as the perfect wife and mother. The idea that she had a period in her life when she was miserable was astounding to me. I suddenly realized that if my mother could be desperate in the life she had chosen for herself, any woman can.

Marc Cherry, USA Today[1]

In 2002, Marc Cherry was in a precarious financial situation and was having trouble finding a job. He commented, "I was broke, unable to get even an interview for a writing job, and seriously concerned about my future. I had just turned forty and was starting to wonder if I was one of those deluded writers that wander around Hollywood, convincing themselves they're talented when all the evidence points to the contrary."[2] While watching television coverage of the Andrea Yates trials with his mother, Cherry turned to her and asked, "Can you imagine being so desperate that you would do that to your children?" to which his mother replied, "I've been there."[1] Cherry was intrigued by the idea that a "perfectly sane, rational woman could have the life she wanted, being a wife and mother ... and still have moments of insanity;" he began writing the pilot episode soon after.[1][3] Cherry originally developed the concept as a half-hour comedy.[4] However, after his agent was arrested for embezzlement, Cherry signed with Paradigm Talent Agency, where he was advised to rewrite the script as a soap opera.[5] Cherry completed the first draft of the pilot in April 2002 and pitched the script to CBS, NBC, Fox, HBO, Showtime, and Lifetime, all of which turned it down.[6][7]

Following script rewrites, Cherry pitched the series to ABC, who picked up the pilot.[1][6] ABC executives were, however, concerned about the title of the series, which Cherry had selected before even writing the script.[1] They suggested renaming the series Wisteria Lane or The Secret Lives of Housewives, but Cherry insisted on keeping the original title.[8] He later commented, "I put 'desperate' [into the title] to try to indicate, however subtly ... I'm going to have some fun with the imagery, to take it to some interesting places. Most critics got the joke. Some people see the word 'housewives' and it pushes a button in them and they seem to lose all reason."[9] The project was officially announced on October 23, 2003, as a cross between American Beauty and Knots Landing.[10] While Desperate Housewives, along with fellow new series Grey's Anatomy and Lost, would later help reverse ABC's flagging fortune,[11] network executives Lloyd Braun and Susan Lyne were fired shortly after greenlighting these risky and expensive pilots.[12][13]

Casting edit

 
Eva Longoria was the first actor cast in the pilot. She auditioned for the project without having read the entire script.

Casting for Desperate Housewives began in February 2004.[6] Director Charles McDougall reported seeing around 150 "very good and determined women" audition for the four leads.[6] Eva Longoria was the first actor cast in a lead role, landing the role of Gabrielle Solis, a materialistic ex-model, after two auditions.[1][6][14] Longoria, an unknown soap opera actress at the time, stated that prior to her audition, she had not read the entire script. She recounted, "Marc Cherry asks, 'So what did you think of the script?' like the whole thing. And I said, 'Well I didn’t read the script. I only read my part.' And Marc Cherry goes, 'I knew you were Gabrielle at that moment because it was such a Gabrielle thing to say.'"[15] Roselyn Sánchez also auditioned for the role.[16] Teri Hatcher was cast in the role of Susan Mayer, a single mother looking for love, after a second audition for ABC network executives.[1][17] Cherry commended Hatcher's audition, calling it "the best audition I've ever seen in network [television]."[18] Actors originally considered for the role include Courteney Cox,[19] Calista Flockhart,[20] Mary-Louise Parker,[21] and Sela Ward.[22] Julia Louis-Dreyfus also expressed interest in the role, but network executives felt she was not right for the part.[4]

Cherry offered the role of Bree Van de Kamp, a "perfect homemaker" reminiscent of The Stepford Wives,[23] to Dana Delany three times. Delany rejected the role, as it was too similar to her character on Pasadena, but would later join the series in its fourth season as Katherine Mayfair.[24][25] Marcia Cross was later cast as Bree.[26] Roma Downey, Jeri Ryan, and Stacey Travis were also considered for the role,[4][27] while Nicollette Sheridan auditioned for the part and was cast as neighborhood tramp Edie Britt instead.[6] On her audition, Sheridan recalled, "At the end of the reading, the director looked at me and said, 'No, no, I see you as Edie.' I said, 'Oh, I see, I come in a housewife and mother of two and leave the slut.'"[28] The Edie character was originally intended to be a small role, but it was expanded once Sheridan was cast.[29] Felicity Huffman was cast as Lynette Scavo, a frustrated stay-at-home mother of four, after talking about her own experiences as a mother during her audition.[30] Cherry called Huffman's casting "very lucky," commenting that "within fifteen minutes she had the part."[31] Alex Kingston read for the role of Lynette,[4] and has since alleged that she was denied the role for being too heavy.[32][33] The role of series narrator Mary Alice Young was given to Sheryl Lee.[34] Cross originally auditioned for the role before being cast as Bree instead.[35] Jeanne Tripplehorn and Heather Locklear also auditioned for leading roles.[4][36]

Ricardo Antonio Chavira was cast as Gabrielle's wealthy and condescending husband, Carlos Solis.[37] Kyle Searles joined the cast as John Rowland, the Solis’ teenage gardener with whom Gabrielle is having an affair.[38] Andrea Bowen was hired to play Susan's teenage daughter, Julie,[38] while James Denton was cast as Susan's love interest and new neighbor, plumber Mike Delfino.[37] Mark Moses was cast as Paul, Mary Alice's mysterious husband, and Cody Kasch as their troubled teenage son Zach.[39] Michael Reilly Burke was cast as Bree's sexually dissatisfied husband, Rex Van de Kamp.[40] The pilot also introduced several recurring cast members. Christine Estabrook appeared as nosy neighbor Martha Huber, a role originally intended for an Asian American actress.[6] Doug Savant made his first appearance as Tom, Lynette's husband who is always away on business. Savant later became a series regular for the second season,[41] a promise Cherry made to him when he signed on for the first season.[42] Shawn Pyfrom and Joy Lauren each made their debut appearances as Andrew and Danielle Van de Kamp, Bree's defiant teenage children. Cherry stated that casting the two roles was difficult because of their limited involvement in the first few episodes of the series.[43] Additionally, Brent Kinsman, Shane Kinsman, and Zane Huett were cast respectively as Preston, Porter, and Parker Scavo, Lynette and Tom's three sons.

Filming and subsequent casting changes edit

 
Filming for the pilot primarily took place on Colonial Street, a backlot street set at Universal Studios Hollywood. This map depicts the layout of the backlot as well as the location of the various characters' homes.

Filming for the pilot was initially intended to take place in an actual Los Angeles neighborhood until the production team realized the difficulties that would ensue. Instead they chose Colonial Street, a backlot street set at Universal Studios Hollywood.[6] The house sets on Colonial Street had been used in numerous film and television productions as early as 1946.[44] Many of the sets, whose styles ranged from contemporary to Victorian to ranch, were remodeled to create a uniform neighborhood.[45] Cherry and production designer Thomas A. Walsh wanted the street to recall the Eisenhower era and convey traditional American values, but appear modern at the same time.[46] Walsh viewed episodes of Father Knows Best, My Three Sons, and Leave It to Beaver, among other television series, to capture the visual style of classic conservative America.[46] Walsh commented, "We were trying to honor that sensibility and at the same time create an everyplace that was neither a red state nor a blue state."[45] Instead, Walsh insisted that the street was in "kind of a pink state. We're somewhere in the middle of America's soul."[46] Refurbishments of the house sets, which included building interior rooms,[47] cost around $700,000.[6] While Walsh strove for a visually unified look for the street as a whole, he carefully designed the interior of each home to reflect the tastes and budgets of the characters.[47]

According to McDougall, another director was originally hired to work on the episode but quit after learning casting would be a group decision.[6] Filming took place over thirteen days in March 2004.[6] During filming, McDougall suggested removing references to pop culture from the script to ensure the pilot had "more of a timeless feel."[48] ABC picked up the series for 13 episodes on May 18, 2004.[49] In June, ABC called for three starring cast members to be recast.[6] Jesse Metcalfe replaced Searles as John Rowland, as producers wanted to add more sexual appeal to the role "to justify why (Gabrielle) was having an affair."[50] Metcalfe had previously read for the role during the initial casting process.[51] The role of Rex Van de Kamp was given to Steven Culp, who was Cherry's first choice for the part but was unavailable when the original pilot was filmed.[6] Brenda Strong took over the role of Mary Alice, as producers thought that Lee was not right for the part.[6] Strong commented on the casting change for her character, explaining, "I think it was a conceptual shift ... There certainly wasn't something wrong with what [Lee] did. It was just that instead of vanilla they wanted chocolate, and I happened to be chocolate."[52] Scenes featuring the original actors were refilmed with their replacements, however Burke and Searles are present in the background of some scenes in the final cut of the episode.[43]

Release and reception edit

Promotion and viewership edit

To promote the series, ABC issued a laundry-themed campaign and purchased advertisement space in magazines such as InStyle and People and on dry-cleaning bags across the country.[53][54] The show's raciness prompted several advertisers to remove their commercials from the broadcast, but they were quickly replaced.[5] The pilot premiered at 9 pm Eastern Time Zone (ET) on October 3, 2004, one week after its intended broadcast date.[55] The premiere drew 21.6 million viewers and an 8.9 rating/21 share among adults 18 to 49 years of age.[54] It was the highest debut for an ABC series since Spin City in 1996 and for any non-spinoff series since NBC's Inside Schwartz in 2001,[56] as well as the most-watched debut of a drama series in eleven years.[54] The pilot was the most-watched program of the week and also had the highest rating among the demographic of women aged 18 to 49.[57] Additionally, it was the most-watched program among men aged 18 to 34.[9]

In the United Kingdom, the pilot aired on Channel 4 on January 5, 2005, and drew 4.8 million viewers, the highest premiere for a drama series on the network since ER nine years earlier.[58]

Critical reception edit

Refreshingly original, bracingly adult and thoroughly delightful, Desperate Housewives is like the answer to a TV prayer you didn't know you'd made. You just know life was much duller before it arrived.

Robert Bianco, USA Today[23]

The pilot was met with extremely positive critical reception. Robert Bianco of USA Today gave the series premiere four out of four stars, commenting that it was as "involving as any new drama and funnier than any new sitcom [because it] matches high visual style with a witty-but-never arch sensibility."[23] He highlighted the performances of the six leading actresses, writing, "Individually, each is terrific; combined, they're an irresistible feminine force", and praised Hatcher's "revelatory performance."[23] Bianco also noted that Cherry avoided making the pilot campy.[23] The San Francisco Chronicle's Tim Goodman complimented the pilot's tonal diversity while expressing concern that American audiences would "tune in, get freaked out by the scattershot emotional chords and flip over to something safer."[59] However, he praised Cherry's writing as well as the acting, declaring, "There are almost too many things to love in 'Desperate Housewives.'"[59] In his review of the episode, Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe commended the episode for its "marvelous tonal elasticity, as it stretches from sharp satire to dishy soap opera to tragique tribute and back again."[60]

Justin Ravitz of PopMatters called the series a "cleverly trashy postmodern soap" and credited it for reviving the soap opera genre, which he felt had disappeared but still suited American culture.[61] He compared the pilot to Sex and the City, declaring it "could potentially replace the departed Sex as the TV Sunday ritual for women and gay men everywhere, although DH is the guiltier pleasure of the two."[61] However, he noted the contrasting tones and dynamics between the two series, and stated that the friendships between Desperate Housewives's four leading women seemed "tenuous," opining, "the sisterly, sugar-swapping connection between the surviving women is superficial, and clearly vulnerable to shifting alliances, acts of betrayal and crowd-pleasing cat-fights."[61] Brian Lowry of Variety called the pilot "oodles of fun."[62] He complimented the cast, stating that while Hatcher provides "the emotional core" of the series, "nearly everyone is intriguing in one way or another," and predicted that Eva Longoria would become the show's breakout star.[62] However, Lowry noted that Desperate Housewives may be "a little too smart for its own good" and expressed concern over the series' "soapy elements."[62] Tom Shales of The Washington Post praised the pilot, assessing, "In visual style, witty language, borderline surrealism and overall mad attitude, [the series] stands on a mountaintop all its own, the best new drama of the season and perhaps the best new comedy, too."[63] He complimented Cross and Hatcher's performances, as well as the writing for the Mary Alice character's narrations.[63] The Futon Critic selected the pilot as the 26th best television episode of 2004.[64]

Awards edit

The pilot episode won three Emmy Awards: Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series (Felicity Huffman),[65] Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series (Charles McDougall),[66] and Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series (Michael Berenbaum).[67] Marc Cherry was nominated for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series.[68] Berenbaum also won for an American Cinema Editor's Award for his work on the episode.[69] McDougall was also nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award for directing the episode.[70]

References edit

  • Touchstone Television (2005). Desperate Housewives: Behind Closed Doors. New York City: Hyperion. ISBN 1-4013-0826-0.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Oldenburg, Ann (September 30, 2004). "From domestic to 'Desperate'". USA Today. Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  2. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 6
  3. ^ . msnbc.com. September 30, 2004. Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d e Sassone, Bob (May 4, 2006). "Desperate Networks is a must-read for TV fans". TV Squad. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  5. ^ a b Weinraub, Bernard (October 23, 2004). "How Desperate Women Saved Desperate Writer". The New York Times. Retrieved April 25, 2011.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n McDougall, Charles (January 5, 2005). "Desperately seeking a ratings hit". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  7. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 7
  8. ^ "A Stroll Down Wisteria Lane with Marc Cherry and Meredith Vieira". Desperate Housewives: The Complete First Season. [DVD]. Touchstone Pictures. Retrieved August 15, 2010.
  9. ^ a b De Moraes, Lisa (October 5, 2004). "ABC's 'Housewives' Leaves Competition in the Dustbuster". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  10. ^ "Development Update: October 23". The Futon Critic. October 23, 2003. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  11. ^ Bianco, Robert (April 26, 2005). "A good season, with reason". USA Today. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  12. ^ Craig, Olga (August 5, 2005). "The man who discovered 'Lost' - and found himself out of a job". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  13. ^ Schneider, Michael (January 15, 2009). "ABC hit hold when TV trio launched". Variety. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  14. ^ “Development Update: February 9”. The Futon Critic. February 9, 2004. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
  15. ^ Phillips, Stone (October 23, 2005). "Longoria: I’m desperate to be a housewife". NBC News. Retrieved April 25, 2011.
  16. ^ Hernandez, Lee (April 25, 2011). "Star Tracker: Eddie Cibrian, Mariah Carey and Roselyn Sanchez". Latina. Retrieved April 25, 2011.
  17. ^ ABC.com's "Ask Desperate Housewives: Season 6, Part 12". YouTube. May 4, 2010. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  18. ^ ABC.com's "Ask Desperate Housewives: Season 6, Part 12". YouTube. May 4, 2010. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  19. ^ Diaz, Glenn (July 10, 2008). "Scrubs: After Michael J. Fox, It's Courtney Cox" 2012-10-23 at the Wayback Machine. BuddyTV. Retrieved July 5, 2011.
  20. ^ Porter, C. Joan (December 1, 2009)."Celebrity Yearbook - Calista Flockhart" 2009-12-05 at the Wayback Machine. MSN Entertainment. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  21. ^ Ryan, Kyle (June 17, 2009). "Mary-Louise Parker". The A.V. Club. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  22. ^ "Sela Ward: I Could Have Been a Housewife. People. August 4, 2005. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  23. ^ a b c d e Bianco, Robert. (September 30, 2010). "'Housewives' has the recipe for a bubbly evening soap". USA Today. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  24. ^ Owen, Rob (August 17, 2007). "Tuned In: 'Desperate' measures include adding Dana Delany to cast". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  25. ^ Brady, James (April 27, 2008). "In Step With... Dana Delany" 2008-05-30 at the Wayback Machine. Parade. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  26. ^ "Development Update: Marc 1". The Futon Critic. March 1, 2004. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  27. ^ Audio commentary on "Guilty" with Marc Cherry. Desperate Housewives: The Complete First Season. [DVD]. Touchstone Pictures. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  28. ^ Huff, Richard (November 22, 2004). "On 'Desperate,' the die is cast"[permanent dead link]. New York Daily News. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  29. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 50
  30. ^ ABC.com's "Ask Desperate Housewives: Season 5, Part 1". YouTube. September 25, 2009. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  31. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 28
  32. ^ Walls, Jeannette (May 31, 2006). . MSNBC. Retrieved August 11, 2011.
  33. ^ "Alex Kingston slams skinniness of the Desperate Housewives" 2010-01-27 at the Wayback Machine. Fametastic. May 23, 2006. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  34. ^ "Development Update: March 3". The Futon Critic. March 3, 2010. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  35. ^ "Cross Wanted To Be Desperate Housewives Narrator". Contactmusic.com. April 18, 2006. Retrieved June 5, 2011.
  36. ^ Rice, Lynette (December 7, 2004). "Heather Help Us". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved June 5, 2011.
  37. ^ a b “Development Update: February 26”. The Futon Critic. February 26, 2004. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  38. ^ a b “Development Update: March 4”. The Futon Critic. March 4, 2004. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  39. ^ Keck, William (September 2, 2004). "For the Youngs, family function is dysfunction". USA Today. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  40. ^ "Development Update: March 8". The Futon Critic. March 8, 2004. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  41. ^ Rudolph, Ileane (February 25, 2005). "Desperate Hubby Here to Stay". TV Guide. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  42. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 60
  43. ^ a b Audio commentary on "Pilot" with Marc Cherry. Desperate Housewives: The Complete First Season. [DVD]. Touchstone Pictures. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  44. ^ "The Studio Tour: Colonial Street - History". Universal Studios Hollywood. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  45. ^ a b Rice, Jerry (January 15, 2009). "'Desperate' life on Wisteria Lane". Variety. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  46. ^ a b c Touchstone Television, pp. 152-153.
  47. ^ a b Keeps, David A. (December 16, 2004). "Housewives with designs". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  48. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 174
  49. ^ "2004 Broadcast Upfront Presentations: ABC, Part 1". The Futon Critic. May 18, 2004. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  50. ^ Keck, William (November 18, 2004). "Desperately seeking Metcalfe". USA Today. Retrieved June 5, 2011.
  51. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 67
  52. ^ Touchstone Television, pp. 96-99
  53. ^ Touchstone Television, p. 90
  54. ^ a b c Variety Staff (January 15, 2009). "Timeline of 'Desperate Housewives'. Variety. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  55. ^ "'Housewives,' 'Legal' Bows Bumped to October 3". The Futon Critic. August 11, 2004. Retrieved March 19, 2011.
  56. ^ Bauder, David (October 6, 2004). "ABC's 'Housewives' starts strong". Associated Press. Boston Globe. Retrieved November 10, 2010.
  57. ^ De Moraes, Lisa (October 6, 2004). "ABC Cleans Up With 'Desperate Housewives'". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  58. ^ Jury, Louise (January 7, 2005). . The Independent. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  59. ^ a b Goodman, Tim (October 1, 2004). "Desperately hoping this take on suburban despair survives". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  60. ^ Gilbert, Matthew (October 2, 2004). "With 'Housewives,' dysfunction is delightful". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  61. ^ a b c Ravitz, Justin (October 11, 2004). "No Sweats Allowed". PopMatters. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  62. ^ a b c Lowry, Brain (September 25, 2004). "'Desperate Housewives' series premiere review" 2011-06-29 at the Wayback Machine. Variety. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
  63. ^ a b Shales, Tom (October 3, 2004). "'Housewives': Worth Staying at Home For". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  64. ^ Sullivan, Brian Ford (January 19, 2005). "The 50 Best Episodes of 2004: #30-21". The Futon Critic. Retrieved June 24, 2012.
  65. ^ Emmy Awards. Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Primetime Emmy Award Database → Person: Felicity Huffman, Program: Desperate Housewives. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
  66. ^ Emmy Awards. Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Primetime Emmy Award Database → Person: Charles McDougall, Program: Desperate Housewives. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
  67. ^ Emmy Awards. Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Primetime Emmy Award Database → Person: Michael Berenbaum, Program: Desperate Housewives. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
  68. ^ Emmy Awards. Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Primetime Emmy Award Database → Person: Marc Cherry, Program: Desperate Housewives, Category: Writing Comedy. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
  69. ^ American Cinema Editors Nominees & Recipients 2008-05-21 at the Wayback Machine. American Cinema Editors. Retrieved November 7, 2010.
  70. ^ Saney, Daniel (January 14, 2005). "Directors Guild of America nominees". Digital Spy. Retrieved June 9, 2011.

External links edit

pilot, desperate, housewives, pilot, first, episode, american, dramedy, mystery, series, desperate, housewives, premiered, october, 2004, network, written, series, creator, marc, cherry, directed, charles, mcdougall, pilot, introduces, residents, suburban, nei. Pilot is the first episode of the American dramedy mystery series Desperate Housewives It premiered on October 3 2004 on the ABC network It was written by series creator Marc Cherry and directed by Charles McDougall The pilot introduces the residents of the suburban neighborhood of Wisteria Lane Following the suicide of an outwardly successful neighbor her friends begin to deal with the problems in their personal lives Susan Mayer Teri Hatcher competes for the attention of a new plumber who has moved across the street Bree Van de Kamp Marcia Cross struggles with her failing marriage and ungrateful family Gabrielle Solis Eva Longoria continues an affair with her sixteen year old gardener and Lynette Scavo Felicity Huffman copes with life as a stay at home mother of four Pilot Desperate Housewives episodeLynette Gabrielle Susan and Bree celebrate the life of Mary Alice their departed neighbor and friend Episode no Season 1Episode 1Directed byCharles McDougallWritten byMarc CherryProduction code101Original air dateOctober 3 2004 2004 10 03 Running time43 minutesGuest appearancesChristine Estabrook as Martha Huber Doug Savant as Tom Scavo Joy Lauren as Danielle Van de Kamp Shawn Pyfrom as Andrew Van de Kamp Brent Kinsman as Preston Scavo Shane Kinsman as Porter Scavo Zane Huett as Parker Scavo Sherica Durdley as Wendy Nike Doukas as Natalie Klein Heath McCall as Waiter Kay Wade as Elderly Lady Edward Zoellner as Tanaka Party WaiterEpisode chronology Previous Next Ah But Underneath Desperate Housewivesseason 1List of episodesCherry conceived the idea for the series while watching coverage of the Andrea Yates murder trials and was fascinated by how women lead lives of quiet desperation He began writing the script in 2002 and pitched it to several networks throughout the following year In October 2003 ABC announced that it had picked up the pilot Casting began in February 2004 and filming took place the following month primarily on the Colonial Street backlot set at Universal Studios According to Nielsen ratings the episode was watched by 21 6 million viewers on its original American broadcast becoming the most watched program of the week The pilot received extremely positive reviews with critics complimenting the series tonal diversity The cast particularly the four leads and Sheridan also received praise The episode won various awards including three Emmys Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Creation and development 2 2 Casting 2 3 Filming and subsequent casting changes 3 Release and reception 3 1 Promotion and viewership 3 2 Critical reception 3 3 Awards 4 References 4 1 Notes 5 External linksPlot editDesperate Housewives focuses on the lives of several residents of the fictitious street of Wisteria Lane The suburban neighborhood is shocked by the suicide of Mary Alice Young Brenda Strong who seems to have led an ideal domestic life Mary Alice s close friends Susan Mayer Teri Hatcher Lynette Scavo Felicity Huffman Bree Van de Kamp Marcia Cross and Gabrielle Solis Eva Longoria struggle to come to terms with the news Later Mary Alice s son Zach Cody Kasch awakens in the middle of the night to find his father Paul Mark Moses unearthing a mysterious chest from the drained swimming pool in their backyard Susan a divorced mother takes interest in Mike Delfino James Denton a plumber who has recently moved to Wisteria Lane however she faces competition with neighbor Edie Britt Nicollette Sheridan a promiscuous serial divorcee Suspicious that Mike is spending the night with Edie Susan enters Edie s home uninvited with the pretense of borrowing sugar While inside she accidentally knocks over a candle which sets fire to the entire house Susan flees the scene leaving behind her glass measuring cup Though wracked with guilt Susan is relieved to learn that Mike was not the man with whom Edie was fornicating Meanwhile Lynette a former career woman is frustrated with raising four young children while her husband Tom Doug Savant is constantly away on business Bree a perfectionist homemaker who feels unappreciated by her family is troubled when her husband Rex Steven Culp asks for a divorce She poisons him by mistakenly putting onions to which he is deathly allergic in his salad At the hospital Rex accuses Bree of being emotionally unavailable and obsessed with achieving domestic perfection Elsewhere Gabrielle a former model grows increasingly unhappy with her marriage to Carlos Ricardo Antonio Chavira who buys her love with extravagant gifts She continues an affair with her sixteen year old gardener John Rowland Jesse Metcalfe Paul asks Susan Lynette Bree and Gabrielle to sort through Mary Alice s belongings as he cannot bear to do so himself In a box of Mary Alice s clothes the women discover a blackmail note reading I know what you did It makes me sick I m going to tell The postmark indicates that Mary Alice received it the day she killed herself and the women begin to wonder what secret their friend could have been keeping Production editCreation and development edit I always envisioned my mother as the perfect wife and mother The idea that she had a period in her life when she was miserable was astounding to me I suddenly realized that if my mother could be desperate in the life she had chosen for herself any woman can Marc Cherry USA Today 1 In 2002 Marc Cherry was in a precarious financial situation and was having trouble finding a job He commented I was broke unable to get even an interview for a writing job and seriously concerned about my future I had just turned forty and was starting to wonder if I was one of those deluded writers that wander around Hollywood convincing themselves they re talented when all the evidence points to the contrary 2 While watching television coverage of the Andrea Yates trials with his mother Cherry turned to her and asked Can you imagine being so desperate that you would do that to your children to which his mother replied I ve been there 1 Cherry was intrigued by the idea that a perfectly sane rational woman could have the life she wanted being a wife and mother and still have moments of insanity he began writing the pilot episode soon after 1 3 Cherry originally developed the concept as a half hour comedy 4 However after his agent was arrested for embezzlement Cherry signed with Paradigm Talent Agency where he was advised to rewrite the script as a soap opera 5 Cherry completed the first draft of the pilot in April 2002 and pitched the script to CBS NBC Fox HBO Showtime and Lifetime all of which turned it down 6 7 Following script rewrites Cherry pitched the series to ABC who picked up the pilot 1 6 ABC executives were however concerned about the title of the series which Cherry had selected before even writing the script 1 They suggested renaming the series Wisteria Lane or The Secret Lives of Housewives but Cherry insisted on keeping the original title 8 He later commented I put desperate into the title to try to indicate however subtly I m going to have some fun with the imagery to take it to some interesting places Most critics got the joke Some people see the word housewives and it pushes a button in them and they seem to lose all reason 9 The project was officially announced on October 23 2003 as a cross between American Beauty and Knots Landing 10 While Desperate Housewives along with fellow new series Grey s Anatomy and Lost would later help reverse ABC s flagging fortune 11 network executives Lloyd Braun and Susan Lyne were fired shortly after greenlighting these risky and expensive pilots 12 13 Casting edit nbsp Eva Longoria was the first actor cast in the pilot She auditioned for the project without having read the entire script Casting for Desperate Housewives began in February 2004 6 Director Charles McDougall reported seeing around 150 very good and determined women audition for the four leads 6 Eva Longoria was the first actor cast in a lead role landing the role of Gabrielle Solis a materialistic ex model after two auditions 1 6 14 Longoria an unknown soap opera actress at the time stated that prior to her audition she had not read the entire script She recounted Marc Cherry asks So what did you think of the script like the whole thing And I said Well I didn t read the script I only read my part And Marc Cherry goes I knew you were Gabrielle at that moment because it was such a Gabrielle thing to say 15 Roselyn Sanchez also auditioned for the role 16 Teri Hatcher was cast in the role of Susan Mayer a single mother looking for love after a second audition for ABC network executives 1 17 Cherry commended Hatcher s audition calling it the best audition I ve ever seen in network television 18 Actors originally considered for the role include Courteney Cox 19 Calista Flockhart 20 Mary Louise Parker 21 and Sela Ward 22 Julia Louis Dreyfus also expressed interest in the role but network executives felt she was not right for the part 4 Cherry offered the role of Bree Van de Kamp a perfect homemaker reminiscent of The Stepford Wives 23 to Dana Delany three times Delany rejected the role as it was too similar to her character on Pasadena but would later join the series in its fourth season as Katherine Mayfair 24 25 Marcia Cross was later cast as Bree 26 Roma Downey Jeri Ryan and Stacey Travis were also considered for the role 4 27 while Nicollette Sheridan auditioned for the part and was cast as neighborhood tramp Edie Britt instead 6 On her audition Sheridan recalled At the end of the reading the director looked at me and said No no I see you as Edie I said Oh I see I come in a housewife and mother of two and leave the slut 28 The Edie character was originally intended to be a small role but it was expanded once Sheridan was cast 29 Felicity Huffman was cast as Lynette Scavo a frustrated stay at home mother of four after talking about her own experiences as a mother during her audition 30 Cherry called Huffman s casting very lucky commenting that within fifteen minutes she had the part 31 Alex Kingston read for the role of Lynette 4 and has since alleged that she was denied the role for being too heavy 32 33 The role of series narrator Mary Alice Young was given to Sheryl Lee 34 Cross originally auditioned for the role before being cast as Bree instead 35 Jeanne Tripplehorn and Heather Locklear also auditioned for leading roles 4 36 Ricardo Antonio Chavira was cast as Gabrielle s wealthy and condescending husband Carlos Solis 37 Kyle Searles joined the cast as John Rowland the Solis teenage gardener with whom Gabrielle is having an affair 38 Andrea Bowen was hired to play Susan s teenage daughter Julie 38 while James Denton was cast as Susan s love interest and new neighbor plumber Mike Delfino 37 Mark Moses was cast as Paul Mary Alice s mysterious husband and Cody Kasch as their troubled teenage son Zach 39 Michael Reilly Burke was cast as Bree s sexually dissatisfied husband Rex Van de Kamp 40 The pilot also introduced several recurring cast members Christine Estabrook appeared as nosy neighbor Martha Huber a role originally intended for an Asian American actress 6 Doug Savant made his first appearance as Tom Lynette s husband who is always away on business Savant later became a series regular for the second season 41 a promise Cherry made to him when he signed on for the first season 42 Shawn Pyfrom and Joy Lauren each made their debut appearances as Andrew and Danielle Van de Kamp Bree s defiant teenage children Cherry stated that casting the two roles was difficult because of their limited involvement in the first few episodes of the series 43 Additionally Brent Kinsman Shane Kinsman and Zane Huett were cast respectively as Preston Porter and Parker Scavo Lynette and Tom s three sons Filming and subsequent casting changes edit nbsp Filming for the pilot primarily took place on Colonial Street a backlot street set at Universal Studios Hollywood This map depicts the layout of the backlot as well as the location of the various characters homes Filming for the pilot was initially intended to take place in an actual Los Angeles neighborhood until the production team realized the difficulties that would ensue Instead they chose Colonial Street a backlot street set at Universal Studios Hollywood 6 The house sets on Colonial Street had been used in numerous film and television productions as early as 1946 44 Many of the sets whose styles ranged from contemporary to Victorian to ranch were remodeled to create a uniform neighborhood 45 Cherry and production designer Thomas A Walsh wanted the street to recall the Eisenhower era and convey traditional American values but appear modern at the same time 46 Walsh viewed episodes of Father Knows Best My Three Sons and Leave It to Beaver among other television series to capture the visual style of classic conservative America 46 Walsh commented We were trying to honor that sensibility and at the same time create an everyplace that was neither a red state nor a blue state 45 Instead Walsh insisted that the street was in kind of a pink state We re somewhere in the middle of America s soul 46 Refurbishments of the house sets which included building interior rooms 47 cost around 700 000 6 While Walsh strove for a visually unified look for the street as a whole he carefully designed the interior of each home to reflect the tastes and budgets of the characters 47 According to McDougall another director was originally hired to work on the episode but quit after learning casting would be a group decision 6 Filming took place over thirteen days in March 2004 6 During filming McDougall suggested removing references to pop culture from the script to ensure the pilot had more of a timeless feel 48 ABC picked up the series for 13 episodes on May 18 2004 49 In June ABC called for three starring cast members to be recast 6 Jesse Metcalfe replaced Searles as John Rowland as producers wanted to add more sexual appeal to the role to justify why Gabrielle was having an affair 50 Metcalfe had previously read for the role during the initial casting process 51 The role of Rex Van de Kamp was given to Steven Culp who was Cherry s first choice for the part but was unavailable when the original pilot was filmed 6 Brenda Strong took over the role of Mary Alice as producers thought that Lee was not right for the part 6 Strong commented on the casting change for her character explaining I think it was a conceptual shift There certainly wasn t something wrong with what Lee did It was just that instead of vanilla they wanted chocolate and I happened to be chocolate 52 Scenes featuring the original actors were refilmed with their replacements however Burke and Searles are present in the background of some scenes in the final cut of the episode 43 Release and reception editPromotion and viewership edit To promote the series ABC issued a laundry themed campaign and purchased advertisement space in magazines such as InStyle and People and on dry cleaning bags across the country 53 54 The show s raciness prompted several advertisers to remove their commercials from the broadcast but they were quickly replaced 5 The pilot premiered at 9 pm Eastern Time Zone ET on October 3 2004 one week after its intended broadcast date 55 The premiere drew 21 6 million viewers and an 8 9 rating 21 share among adults 18 to 49 years of age 54 It was the highest debut for an ABC series since Spin City in 1996 and for any non spinoff series since NBC s Inside Schwartz in 2001 56 as well as the most watched debut of a drama series in eleven years 54 The pilot was the most watched program of the week and also had the highest rating among the demographic of women aged 18 to 49 57 Additionally it was the most watched program among men aged 18 to 34 9 In the United Kingdom the pilot aired on Channel 4 on January 5 2005 and drew 4 8 million viewers the highest premiere for a drama series on the network since ER nine years earlier 58 Critical reception edit Refreshingly original bracingly adult and thoroughly delightful Desperate Housewives is like the answer to a TV prayer you didn t know you d made You just know life was much duller before it arrived Robert Bianco USA Today 23 The pilot was met with extremely positive critical reception Robert Bianco of USA Today gave the series premiere four out of four stars commenting that it was as involving as any new drama and funnier than any new sitcom because it matches high visual style with a witty but never arch sensibility 23 He highlighted the performances of the six leading actresses writing Individually each is terrific combined they re an irresistible feminine force and praised Hatcher s revelatory performance 23 Bianco also noted that Cherry avoided making the pilot campy 23 The San Francisco Chronicle s Tim Goodman complimented the pilot s tonal diversity while expressing concern that American audiences would tune in get freaked out by the scattershot emotional chords and flip over to something safer 59 However he praised Cherry s writing as well as the acting declaring There are almost too many things to love in Desperate Housewives 59 In his review of the episode Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe commended the episode for its marvelous tonal elasticity as it stretches from sharp satire to dishy soap opera to tragique tribute and back again 60 Justin Ravitz of PopMatters called the series a cleverly trashy postmodern soap and credited it for reviving the soap opera genre which he felt had disappeared but still suited American culture 61 He compared the pilot to Sex and the City declaring it could potentially replace the departed Sex as the TV Sunday ritual for women and gay men everywhere although DH is the guiltier pleasure of the two 61 However he noted the contrasting tones and dynamics between the two series and stated that the friendships between Desperate Housewives s four leading women seemed tenuous opining the sisterly sugar swapping connection between the surviving women is superficial and clearly vulnerable to shifting alliances acts of betrayal and crowd pleasing cat fights 61 Brian Lowry of Variety called the pilot oodles of fun 62 He complimented the cast stating that while Hatcher provides the emotional core of the series nearly everyone is intriguing in one way or another and predicted that Eva Longoria would become the show s breakout star 62 However Lowry noted that Desperate Housewives may be a little too smart for its own good and expressed concern over the series soapy elements 62 Tom Shales of The Washington Post praised the pilot assessing In visual style witty language borderline surrealism and overall mad attitude the series stands on a mountaintop all its own the best new drama of the season and perhaps the best new comedy too 63 He complimented Cross and Hatcher s performances as well as the writing for the Mary Alice character s narrations 63 The Futon Critic selected the pilot as the 26th best television episode of 2004 64 Awards edit The pilot episode won three Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Felicity Huffman 65 Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series Charles McDougall 66 and Outstanding Single Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series Michael Berenbaum 67 Marc Cherry was nominated for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series 68 Berenbaum also won for an American Cinema Editor s Award for his work on the episode 69 McDougall was also nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award for directing the episode 70 References editTouchstone Television 2005 Desperate Housewives Behind Closed Doors New York City Hyperion ISBN 1 4013 0826 0 Notes edit a b c d e f g Oldenburg Ann September 30 2004 From domestic to Desperate USA Today Retrieved August 15 2010 Touchstone Television p 6 Suburbia sizzles in Housewives msnbc com September 30 2004 Retrieved August 15 2010 a b c d e Sassone Bob May 4 2006 Desperate Networks is a must read for TV fans TV Squad Retrieved May 2 2011 a b Weinraub Bernard October 23 2004 How Desperate Women Saved Desperate Writer The New York Times Retrieved April 25 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n McDougall Charles January 5 2005 Desperately seeking a ratings hit The Daily Telegraph Retrieved August 15 2010 Touchstone Television p 7 A Stroll Down Wisteria Lane with Marc Cherry and Meredith Vieira Desperate Housewives The Complete First Season DVD Touchstone Pictures Retrieved August 15 2010 a b De Moraes Lisa October 5 2004 ABC s Housewives Leaves Competition in the Dustbuster The Washington Post Retrieved March 25 2011 Development Update October 23 The Futon Critic October 23 2003 Retrieved February 13 2011 Bianco Robert April 26 2005 A good season with reason USA Today Retrieved February 13 2011 Craig Olga August 5 2005 The man who discovered Lost and found himself out of a job The Daily Telegraph Retrieved February 13 2011 Schneider Michael January 15 2009 ABC hit hold when TV trio launched Variety Retrieved February 13 2011 Development Update February 9 The Futon Critic February 9 2004 Retrieved August 19 2010 Phillips Stone October 23 2005 Longoria I m desperate to be a housewife NBC News Retrieved April 25 2011 Hernandez Lee April 25 2011 Star Tracker Eddie Cibrian Mariah Carey and Roselyn Sanchez Latina Retrieved April 25 2011 ABC com s Ask Desperate Housewives Season 6 Part 12 YouTube May 4 2010 Retrieved August 22 2010 ABC com s Ask Desperate Housewives Season 6 Part 12 YouTube May 4 2010 Retrieved May 2 2011 Diaz Glenn July 10 2008 Scrubs After Michael J Fox It s Courtney Cox Archived 2012 10 23 at the Wayback Machine BuddyTV Retrieved July 5 2011 Porter C Joan December 1 2009 Celebrity Yearbook Calista Flockhart Archived 2009 12 05 at the Wayback Machine MSN Entertainment Retrieved August 22 2010 Ryan Kyle June 17 2009 Mary Louise Parker The A V Club Retrieved August 22 2010 Sela Ward I Could Have Been a Housewife People August 4 2005 Retrieved August 22 2010 a b c d e Bianco Robert September 30 2010 Housewives has the recipe for a bubbly evening soap USA Today Retrieved August 22 2010 Owen Rob August 17 2007 Tuned In Desperate measures include adding Dana Delany to cast Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved August 22 2010 Brady James April 27 2008 In Step With Dana Delany Archived 2008 05 30 at the Wayback Machine Parade Retrieved May 2 2011 Development Update Marc 1 The Futon Critic March 1 2004 Retrieved August 22 2010 Audio commentary on Guilty with Marc Cherry Desperate Housewives The Complete First Season DVD Touchstone Pictures Retrieved February 13 2011 Huff Richard November 22 2004 On Desperate the die is cast permanent dead link New York Daily News Retrieved August 22 2010 Touchstone Television p 50 ABC com s Ask Desperate Housewives Season 5 Part 1 YouTube September 25 2009 Retrieved November 6 2010 Touchstone Television p 28 Walls Jeannette May 31 2006 Dissing the desperately thin Housewives MSNBC Retrieved August 11 2011 Alex Kingston slams skinniness of the Desperate Housewives Archived 2010 01 27 at the Wayback Machine Fametastic May 23 2006 Retrieved May 2 2011 Development Update March 3 The Futon Critic March 3 2010 Retrieved August 22 2010 Cross Wanted To Be Desperate Housewives Narrator Contactmusic com April 18 2006 Retrieved June 5 2011 Rice Lynette December 7 2004 Heather Help Us Entertainment Weekly Retrieved June 5 2011 a b Development Update February 26 The Futon Critic February 26 2004 Retrieved August 22 2010 a b Development Update March 4 The Futon Critic March 4 2004 Retrieved August 22 2010 Keck William September 2 2004 For the Youngs family function is dysfunction USA Today Retrieved August 22 2010 Development Update March 8 The Futon Critic March 8 2004 Retrieved August 22 2010 Rudolph Ileane February 25 2005 Desperate Hubby Here to Stay TV Guide Retrieved November 6 2010 Touchstone Television p 60 a b Audio commentary on Pilot with Marc Cherry Desperate Housewives The Complete First Season DVD Touchstone Pictures Retrieved March 19 2011 The Studio Tour Colonial Street History Universal Studios Hollywood Retrieved February 13 2011 a b Rice Jerry January 15 2009 Desperate life on Wisteria Lane Variety Retrieved February 13 2011 a b c Touchstone Television pp 152 153 a b Keeps David A December 16 2004 Housewives with designs Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 2 2011 Touchstone Television p 174 2004 Broadcast Upfront Presentations ABC Part 1 The Futon Critic May 18 2004 Retrieved November 6 2010 Keck William November 18 2004 Desperately seeking Metcalfe USA Today Retrieved June 5 2011 Touchstone Television p 67 Touchstone Television pp 96 99 Touchstone Television p 90 a b c Variety Staff January 15 2009 Timeline of Desperate Housewives Variety Retrieved March 19 2011 Housewives Legal Bows Bumped to October 3 The Futon Critic August 11 2004 Retrieved March 19 2011 Bauder David October 6 2004 ABC s Housewives starts strong Associated Press Boston Globe Retrieved November 10 2010 De Moraes Lisa October 6 2004 ABC Cleans Up With Desperate Housewives The Washington Post Retrieved November 6 2010 Jury Louise January 7 2005 Desperate Housewives proves that sex sells in television ratings war The Independent Retrieved May 2 2011 a b Goodman Tim October 1 2004 Desperately hoping this take on suburban despair survives San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 6 2010 Gilbert Matthew October 2 2004 With Housewives dysfunction is delightful The Boston Globe Retrieved November 6 2010 a b c Ravitz Justin October 11 2004 No Sweats Allowed PopMatters Retrieved November 6 2010 a b c Lowry Brain September 25 2004 Desperate Housewives series premiere review Archived 2011 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Variety Retrieved February 13 2011 a b Shales Tom October 3 2004 Housewives Worth Staying at Home For The Washington Post Retrieved March 25 2011 Sullivan Brian Ford January 19 2005 The 50 Best Episodes of 2004 30 21 The Futon Critic Retrieved June 24 2012 Emmy Awards Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Primetime Emmy Award Database Person Felicity Huffman Program Desperate Housewives Retrieved November 7 2010 Emmy Awards Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Primetime Emmy Award Database Person Charles McDougall Program Desperate Housewives Retrieved November 7 2010 Emmy Awards Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Primetime Emmy Award Database Person Michael Berenbaum Program Desperate Housewives Retrieved November 7 2010 Emmy Awards Academy of Television Arts amp Sciences Primetime Emmy Award Database Person Marc Cherry Program Desperate Housewives Category Writing Comedy Retrieved November 7 2010 American Cinema Editors Nominees amp Recipients Archived 2008 05 21 at the Wayback Machine American Cinema Editors Retrieved November 7 2010 Saney Daniel January 14 2005 Directors Guild of America nominees Digital Spy Retrieved June 9 2011 External links edit Pilot at ABC com Pilot at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pilot 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