1775
((Sat. (5), 8-8:30 p.m., CBS-TV))
Jeremy Proctor ... Ryan O'Neal
Annabelle Proctor ... Lesley-Anne Down
Maude Proctor ... Sarah Koskoff
Eliza Proctor ... Judith Jones
Abby Proctor ... Danielle Harris
Bert ... Gregory Sporleder
George Washington ... Adam West
Colonial Governor ... Jeffrey Tambor
Man ... Robert Phalen
Joseph ... Adbul Salaam El Razzac
Scruffy Kid ... Jeremy Davies
Customer ... Cliff Berens
1775" is the kind of high-concept show spoofed in films about Hollywood to epitomize an absurd, ludicrous level that is occasionally reached in modern television. Then again, perhaps the idea of Americans laughing at their history as delivered with modern lingo seemed fresh in a pitch.
In the pilot, directed by David Trainer and written by exec producers Martin Rips and Joseph Staretski, Jeremy needs to borrow money for an upcoming ball so that he can pay for the tickets and dress his daughters appropriately.
It all will lead, he and his wife hope, to a young man falling in love with oldest daughter Maude so that she'll get married.
Middle daughter Eliza, who sees her youth slipping away, wants to get married but can't until Maude does. The youngest daughter, the idealist with revolutionary values, simply wants a horse.
The daughters find their father none too hip, so they keep him in line with such lines as "Dad, these are the '70s" and comments such as "Dad's about to have a hissy fit."
Meanwhile, Dad is unable to borrow money from his brother-in-law, George Washington (Adam West, who looks as fit in a longhaired wig as he did in a bat costume), made into a nincompoop. Jeremy gives up, only to find that his wife has procured the needed lucre from her rich sister, Martha Washington.
Jeremy discovers that Maude is not worried about spinsterhood and will marry only for love. That's OK with Dad. Dad and Mom then rekindle passion and hurry for the bedroom.
O'Neal and company offer double takes and supposedly witty retorts, trying for the look of the best sitcoms, but here it's painful to watch--more so than in O'Neal's last sitcom effort, the short-lived "Good Sports," with Farrah Fawcett. Maybe someone will have a good comedy for O'Neal yet.
CBS, thankfully, is not ordering more episodes. With "1775," Rips and Staretski--who were also the supervising producers on the wonderfully strange "Doctor, Doctor"--have given new stress to the "off" in "offbeat."
Camera, Richard Brown; editor, John Doutt; art director, Jane Fletcher; costume designer, Nanrose Buchman.
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