Cast
Gels for It's A Living Season 4
by
Kristin Battestella
The
cast is in place for the twenty-five episode 1986-87 syndicated
fourth season of It's
A Living
with “The Roof Show” premiere introducing Sheryl Lee Ralph
(Abbott
Elementary)
as the series' final waitress Ginger St. James. Arguments and secrets
over who's trying to get out of work early lead to the ladies being
locked out one by one. Unprepared hostess Nancy is left waiting the
tables while the waitresses flail at the Above the Top luxury
restaurant windows, and the randomness of each set up is a lot of fun
because we don't often see the ensemble outside of the hotel where
episodes like “The Bar” do best. Orange juice drinking Amy goes
along to the singles bar for a rowdy adventure featuring Jonathan
Frakes (Star Trek: The Next Generation)
and Ernie Hudson (Ghostbusters)
in
another episode about nothing that showcases the ensemble interplay
beyond their job.
Three
days off is also an excuse for a breakdown on the way to Vegas in the
obvious Psycho
parody
“Night
at the Iguana.” Creepy mothers and a motel peppered with taxidermy
certainly make the ladies paranoid. They're aware of the Psycho
similarities
but try not to jump to murderous conclusions in the largely one room
humor, and the sharing of fears revelations elevate the goofy spoof.
Rumors of workplace dalliances in
“The Dot and Howard Show” are also intriguing to see thanks to
jealousy, clouded judgments, and rules for no restaurant dating that
apply to some but not others. Our ladies are both able to talk it out
or tell one it's none of her business – keeping an awkward
situation mature. Of course, “Farewell, My Sonny” is clearly the
precursor to writer Tom Whedon's “The Case of the Libertine Belle”
on The Golden Girls with
forties fancy dress, a Bogie-esque detective, and a Who
Dunnit Society at Above the Top. The staff is supposed to be in on
the murderous ruse, but the crime within a crime provides song and
dance winks, and once again I wish It's
A Living did
more of these one plot, all performance episodes.
Our
ladies dream of what they will do when they strike it rich in
“Sonny's Oil (aka The Oil Show)”– like buying pantyhose without
runs and a bathroom with two sinks. Some, however, remain sensible
and get out of the prospecting as more drilling drains more money.
More financial plots or get rich quick schemes would have been
fitting, but piano player Sonny is erroneously leading here instead
of the working waitresses relieved to have life a bit easier with
just a little extra money in their pockets. This mid-season seems
stronger even if “The Evictables” repeats opposites attract
roommates from the First Season when a landlord dispute has Ginger
moving in to a YWCA style, no men allowed building with Amy. A great
Patty Duke and The
Patty Duke Show joke
deserved more time, and you'd think more celebrities would dine at
Above the Top! Singing bad summer stock tunes, sleeping in the
dressing room lounge, sneaking in the kitchen for breakfast, hiding
from Nancy in their lockers – a lot's happening in this episode but
the character focus brings it together. The waitresses being left
with the child they're babysitting in “Ginger's Baby” has
certainly been done already, and the similar Golden
Girls episode
even originally aired the same week! Nancy changes the schedule and
couldn't care less about a baby in the restaurant, but Ginger stands
up to her unyielding in a moment that feels written for previous It's
A Living star
Ann Jillian. Despite the derivatives; the ladies sing, Nancy can't
handle the baby, and Howard saws Nancy in half for his magic act. The
titular fan club of “The Dickie Doodle Show” has the girls acting
out their silly childhood memories, singing while they count their
tips, and playing with the props after hours. Such shenanigans
interfere with critical vice president meetings and hotel promotion
opportunities amid the nostalgic reflection of seeing child stars
grow old. The well done farce continues in “A Romantic Comedy” as
employee of the month Jan wins a free night at the hotel. The
rendezvous, however, is hampered by short staffing, knocks at the
door, work emergencies, and injuries as It's
A Living uses
the entire ensemble to full effect. Young Amy and the new bus boy
have potential sparks for “Manhandling,”
but she's not ready so he moves in on fellow waitress Dot. Although
the meat of the story is off camera, the men
between ladies and arguments
about who puts out or gets hurt conflicts provide new It's
A Living growth.
Unfortunately,
the former flames and high school reunions of “The Reunion Show”
have already had their share on It's
A Living. Everyone
reminisces about regrets, mistakes, and bad experiences, but it's all
crowded and flat rather than personal. Before we really meet Ginger,
Amy accuses her of having an affair with Jan's husband in “Surprise.”
It's all innocent misunderstands of course in a half hour that ends
up meaningless. Dot's mom and Jan's dad hook up in two scenes for
“Family Feud,” as It's
A Living wastes
more time on repetitive romances. A rival of chef Howard turned
restaurant critic arrives in “Critic's
Choice,” but the focus here is erroneously on gossip about Ginger
and Sonny instead of cuisine jokes and Nancy's fear of a bad review
leading to her offering herself to secure the restaurant's
reputation. Viewers expect one story but then another plot hogs the
time, and the frustrating A/B structure shoehorns everyone in when
it's more realistic to not have every waitress work in every episode.
The ladies refusing to jump out of a cake despite the $200 pay in
“Bachelor Party” could have been its own plot, but Howard's
reconciliation with his daughter is also saddled with her dating
Sonny. For every potential wisdom, there is another stupid turn.
Back to back former boyfriend plots begat “Dot's Priest” and her
conflicted feelings over his still being cute and leaving the cloth
amid car accidents, Jan's goldfish bowl, and more derivative crowding
that doesn't give the characters a chance to shine. The white savior
cultural conflict is also played for laughs in “The Howie Show”
when Polynesian islanders arrive to worship Howard's magic tricks and
offer him a woman to give them a little Howie. The in-uniform Nancy
ready to get the most tips and win a best waitress contest should
have been the majority of the episode rather than a fun high speed
montage in the last 5 minutes. Ginger accepts proposals from two men
but both fall through in yet another marriage plot for “The Two
Guys Show” while Nancy mixes business with pleasure in Howard's
contract negotiations. He demands a clause to cease her physical
harassment and sexual innuendos, but she sobs until he forgoes his
demands – and then invites him to an adult motel. Such a
provocative element deserved to be played seriously, and the
excellent performances with devious characterizations strangely shows
the best and worst of It's
A Living at
once.
Instead of a singular tour de force, “Nancy's Shrink” is another
clip show finale. The psychiatrist thinks her sick sexual fantasies
are rooted in her relationships with her coworkers, but the humorous
clips jar with the potentially serious therapy. Filler episodes like
this show how the writing on It's
A Living is
not on par with the performances
as Nancy brings down the house with a “Love for Sale” song and
dance dream.
Barrie
Youngfellow's Jan Hoffmeyer Gray remains headstrong, believing in
shared marital responsibilities and a woman's right to decide if,
where, and when. She fills in as hostess and stands up for when she
knows she is right. Jan doesn't get along with her visiting
mother-in- law, yet just like last season, her blended family home
life goes unexplored. Husband Richard Kline is told of more than
seen, with “Richie's Sculpture” being a brief moment about his
art on the side when not doing HVAC at Above the Top. Richie wants to
take his “Red” to Chicago when a business opportunity arises, but
her having to work instead of supporting him is relegated to a C plot
resolved in two scenes. When admired for work, home, and going to law
school, Jan admits she had to quit school for the time being – an
important development relegated to a throwaway line as It's A
Living underutilizes its now top billed star. Of course, Marian
Mercer's Nancy BeeBee says only Sean Penn could take advantage of
her, and she's still after the challenge of obtaining the future
“Howard Beebee.” Nancy feigns interest in science to flirt with a
potentially rich geologist and sucks up to the crusty hotel
management. She wants to become restaurant supervisor of all their
West Coast hotels just for the power and is annoyed when she's merely
named employee of the month. She would never abuse her
position, but she wants to know what Howard would do to keep his boss
happy. Nancy hopes the girls pass it on when they call her the
meanest boss in town, and she wants to be even meaner when the
waitresses stop being afraid of her. She's
been deprived of celebration in her life and won't discuss age but
drops hints in “Nancy's Birthday Party,” testing her
friendship with each girl and bonding over bad birthday memories in
superb, humorous soliloquies before some fun mistaken doorbells and
cake surprises. It's disappointing we don't get to see her roughing
it outdoors when following Howard on his fishing trip, but instead
her competitive, wealthy, recently divorced sister Gloria visits in
“Nancy's Sister.” Gloria throws herself at Howard in more Golden
Girls derivatives, but the
repressed, unpopular Nancy won't relent and have it out with
her sister. Although Nancy insults their advice, she confides in the
ladies, and It's A Living is
great when it focuses on a character driven plot that ends with Nancy
taking over the piano and singing “My Way.”
Wannabe
actress Dot Higgins does a one woman Eleanor Roosevelt workshop, but
sadly we don't see Gail Edwards' do more than practice with joke
teeth and a bad accent or scream when auditioning for a slasher.
Though still often late with outlandish excuses, she stands up to
Nancy for docking her $180 when a table leaves without paying. She's
excited to pay off her car and today we can certainly understand the
extra $176 a month feeling. In “The Dot Quits Show,” Dot doesn't
get a role on the A
Time for Sorrow soap
and
wonders if she should be a full time actress or give up show business
altogether. Though everything usually stays the same on eighties
sitcoms and this episode should have come sooner than the end of the
season, it's pleasing to have some growth as Dot admits failure and
quits while the remaining three waitresses struggle doing the work of
four. Crystal
Bernard's chaste Texas transplant Amy Tompkins spells out s-e-x, but
she's often reduced to innocent redneck platitudes versus Sonny's
predatory cons. She returns from her younger pregnant sister's
country wedding in “Amy's Rusty” with twenty-two and single cat
lady fears interfering with her work. Her old boyfriend asks her to
marry him via postcards and phone calls, but the ladies encourage her
to not give in to her family's pressure and marry for the wrong
reasons. Amy is said to come out of her shell upon moving in with
Sheryl Lee Ralph's sassy Ginger St. James. Again her juicy romances
seem to have been written with Ann Jillian's moxie in mind, for
Ginger won't date cheapskates and knows how to be suave with the
high-tipping customers. She learns a nugget on Nancy and uses it as
needed and gives hot advice, but it's not until late in the season
that we hear of her obsession with shoes, looking good, and designing
her own clothing. Ginger's saving up for fashion school, however
rather than see her couture sketches and school application, It's
A Living falls
back on trite romances. Howard
Miller has the zingers to keep Nancy at bay, but Richard Stahl's chef
is not above teasing Nancy to get a new oven. He likes that she is
always trying to catch him but says that he's trying to keep Nancy's
virtue because he's a sucker for lost causes. Episodes that should be
about their banter are erroneously shared with weaker plots, and his
oft off camera magic tricks could have been fun in the kitchen.
Howard's angry when Nancy books a weekend honeymoon suite when they
go to a half day conference, but it's just another hear tell twofer
that I wish we could have seen!
Paul
Kreppel's piano player Sonny Mann asks Howard for dating advice and
he suggests thinking of the woman's happiness, but Sonny says he
wants to score instead. It's A Living's banter
drags to a halt with every sleazy Sonny moment, for he cries violence
when women push him away and erases single ladies'
reservations from the book so they have to drink at the bar where he
can pounce on them. Sonny claims he hears yes when a woman says no,
begs for phone numbers, and plays the theme from Vertigo for
a fear of heights group dining at Above the Top to overcome their
fears. Customers request he stop playing and get lost, and his scams
take away from better plots. When Sonny says he can't work
because it's Ramadan and is told that it's an Islamic holiday, he
answers, “I can pass.” This character grates me so much, I'd skip
over his scenes if it were possible. J.D. Lobue and Gary Brown direct
the majority of episodes, but the numerous writers again crowd the
twenty-two minutes or less runtime with their fellow The Golden
Girls similarities. In fact, It's A Living feels
like two shows for the price of one thanks to so much borrowing from
The Golden Girls – the
incidental music, the same guest stars, even a Glenn Miller missing
joke, and Dot's pink eighties pad is the up to his neck in hock Miami
Vice cop's apartment. Most of
the brief apartments here are the same room with different enter or
exit doors, and the ladies' changing big hairstyles give away the out
of order production. Fortunately, the theme song still bops,
and the black uniforms and tone on tone burgundy alternative remain
classy amid the heights of the eighties denim, shoulder pads, boots,
bright colors, and bows. I realize I take It's A Living too
critically at times. The series was content as a safe,
serviceable sitcom. However it's also unfair that It's A Living is
tough to find with reliance on over the air marathons and DVR. Of
the time flaws and the simplicity of yore make for pleasant
background viewing, and It's A Living now
has its final charming cast in place.