The Love Boat: Difference between revisions
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'''''The Love Boat''''' was a [[TV series]] set on a [[cruise ship]], which aired on the [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC Television Network]] from [[1977]] until [[1986]]. It was part of ABC's Saturday night one-two punch along with ''[[Fantasy Island]]'' until that show ended in |
'''''The Love Boat''''' was a [[TV series]] set on a [[cruise ship]], which aired on the [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC Television Network]] from [[1977]] until [[1986]]. It was part of ABC's Saturday night one-two punch along with ''[[Fantasy Island]]'' until that show ended in 1984. |
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The executive producer for the series was [[Aaron Spelling]], who produced several successful series for ABC in the 1960's, 70's and 80's. |
The executive producer for the series was [[Aaron Spelling]], who produced several successful series for ABC in the 1960's, 70's and 80's. |
Revision as of 02:55, 15 December 2006
The Love Boat | |
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File:Love-boat.jpg | |
Created by | Aaron Spelling |
Starring | Gavin MacLeod Bernie Kopell Fred Grandy Ted Lange Lauren Tewes Jill Whelan Pat Klous Ted McGinley Marion Ross |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 249 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | September 24, 1977 – May 24, 1986 |
The Love Boat was a TV series set on a cruise ship, which aired on the ABC Television Network from 1977 until 1986. It was part of ABC's Saturday night one-two punch along with Fantasy Island until that show ended in 1984.
The executive producer for the series was Aaron Spelling, who produced several successful series for ABC in the 1960's, 70's and 80's.
The sitcom was usually set about a cruise liner called the Pacific Princess, whose passengers and crew had romantic and funny adventures every week. Other ships used were twin sister Island Princess, the Stella Solaris (for a Mediterranean cruise), Pearl of Scandinavia (for a Chinese cruise), the Royal Viking Sky (for European cruises) and the Royal Princess (for a Caribbean cruise).
The series' attraction was in the casting of well-known actors in guest-starring roles, with many famous film stars of yesteryear making rare television appearances. Although it wasn't the first series to use the all-star cast anthology format — Love American Style used the same device a decade earlier -- Love Boat perfected the genre and future shows in similar style (Supertrain and Masquerade to name two) were inevitably compared to Love Boat.
The series was also distinctive as being one of the few hour-long series ever made for American television that used a laugh track (Eight is Enough, on the same network and produced at the same time, being another example).
Another unique aspect of the Love Boat was its writing format. Each segment was written by a different set of writers. Each set of writers worked on one group of guest stars and their story of the week. So episodes ended up with ungainly titles like "Disco Baby/Alas, Poor Dwyer/After the War/Ticket to Ride/Itsy Bitsy: Part 1".
The show was based on the same premise as the 1956-60 television hit, The Gale Storm Show (aka Oh! Susanna).
The Love Boat theme song was sung by Jack Jones (except for the last season, where a cover version by Dionne Warwick was used). The lyrics were written by composer Paul Williams.
Cast
- Gavin MacLeod - Captain Merrill Stubing
- Bernie Kopell - Dr. Adam "Doc" Bricker
- Fred Grandy - Burl "Gopher" Smith, "Your Yeoman Purser"
- Ted Lange - Bartender Isaac Washington
- Lauren Tewes - Cruise Director Julie McCoy (1977–84)
- Jill Whelan - Vicki Stubing, the captain's daughter (1979–86)
- Pat Klous - Cruise Director Judy McCoy (1984–86)
- Ted McGinley - Ashley "Ace" Covington Evans (1984–86)
- Marion Ross - Emily Hayward Stubing (1986)
Sequels and spin-offs
- A TV movie, The Love Boat: A Valentine Voyage, followed in 1990, years after the show was canceled.
- A second TV series, The Love Boat: The Next Wave aired on the UPN Network from 1998 to 1999. It starred Robert Urich as Captain Jim Kennedy. Several members of the cast of the original series guest-starred on one episode, where it was revealed that Julie and "Doc" had been in love all along.
- In Germany, the TV series Das Traumschiff started in 1981 as a German-made version of The Love Boat. It airs as specials instead of a weekly basis, traditionally with an episode airing every December 26 on the ZDF network. In 2005, the 50th episode was broadcast.
In Pop Culture
- The 1982 film Airplane II: The Sequel featured a bizarre gag where, as Ted Stryker (Robert Hays) is escaping from a mental hospital, we see Jack Jones, spotlighted, singing the Love Boat theme song.
- A 1994 episode of Saturday Night Live featured a parody entitled Love Boat: The Next Generation, featuring host Patrick Stewart playing Captain Jean-Luc Picard, who, with his crew, gets involved in Love Boat-type adventures on a starship. Bernie Kopell made a surprise appearance, reprising his role as "Doc".
- In the South Park episode "Red Hot Catholic Love", Randy Marsh, when told of an impending Church Cruise, fears for his child's safety and has a nightmare vision of The Catholic Boat, complete with a parody of the theme song and opening titles. Also, in the episode "South Park is Gay!" at one point, when they are watching NBC, the announcer says, "You're watching Queer Eye for the Straight Guy! Coming up next is Will & Grace, followed by The Love Boat... with Men!
- In the Family Guy episode Holy Crap, after Brian Griffin mentions the Old Testament story in which "God told Abraham to kill Isaac," a cutaway shows President Abraham Lincoln shooting Isaac the bartender.
- "Love Barge", a song by comedian Denis Leary, parodies the show and its theme song. The song is found on Leary's Lock 'N Load album.
See also
International
- In France, the show was shown on FR3 and was called "La croisière s'amuse" (the cruise is having fun)
- In Germany, the show was shown originally on Sat.1 and later on Tele 5 and 9Live.