The Office (1995 TV series)
The Office | |
---|---|
Created by | Susan Beavers Barbara Corday |
Written by | Susan Beavers Ken Estin Tami Yellin |
Directed by | Jay Sandrich |
Starring | Valerie Harper Dakin Matthews Debra Jo Rupp Lisa Darr Kristin Dattilo-Hayward Kevin Conroy Andrea Abbate Gary Dourdan |
Composers | G*N*G Music |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Paul Junger Witt Tony Thomas Susan Beavers |
Producer | Gilbert Junger |
Production locations | Sunset Gower Studios Hollywood, California |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies | 5 a.m., Inc. Witt/Thomas Productions Warner Bros. Television |
Original release | |
Network | CBS |
Release | March 11 April 22, 1995 | –
The Office is an American sitcom television series starring Valerie Harper that aired for six episodes on CBS from March 11 to April 22, 1995, as a mid-season replacement during the 1994–95 television season. The series, billed as an office comedy version of the British series Upstairs, Downstairs, centered on the camaraderie of executives and their secretaries of a busy corporate office at a design-packaging company.[1]
Synopsis
Rita Stone (Valerie Harper) is a divorcée and 19-year veteran of a secretarial pool at the executive office of a package design company in Chicago called Package Inc. She is outspoken and mainly the adhesive that holds things together at the company, seeing that everything gets done on time, mediating disputes and trying to be a good listener to both job-related and personal problems.
While Rita is responsible for the company's inept CEO, Frank (Dakin Matthews), she also manages three other secretaries: Beth (Debra Jo Rupp), a flustered mother of four who works for the company's only female executive, Natalie (Lisa Darr); Mae (Andrea Abbate), a free-spirited, thrice-divorced former temp who works for the firm's temperamental artist (Gary Dourdan); and Deborah (Kristin Dattilo-Hayward), a naive MBA student who works for a sleazy salesman (Kevin Conroy).
Cast
- Valerie Harper as Rita Stone
- Dakin Matthews as Frank Gerard
- Debra Jo Rupp as Beth Avery
- Lisa Darr as Natalie Stanton
- Kristin Dattilo-Hayward as Deborah Beaumont
- Kevin Conroy as Steve Gilman
- Andrea Abbate as Mae D'arcy
- Gary Dourdan as Bobby Harold
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Pilot: The Office" | Jay Sandrich | Story by : Susan Beavers & Barbara Corday Teleplay by : Susan Beavers | March 11, 1995 | |
Rita and the secretaries are upset and stage a job action when the boss announces that overtime pay is being eliminated by corporate headquarters. | |||||
2 | "Laboring Pains" | Jay Sandrich | Susan Beavers | March 18, 1995 | |
Beth is forced to bring her sick, havoc-wreaking 4-year-old son to the office on a day when Frank hopes to close a major deal. | |||||
3 | "Rita & Frank" | Jay Sandrich | Ken Estin | March 25, 1995 | |
Frank is jealous of Rita's new romance; meanwhile, Beth attempts to put the spark back into her marriage. | |||||
4 | "Power Playing" | Jay Sandrich | Susan Beavers | April 8, 1995 | |
Mae enjoys a position of power when a former boyfriend (Mars Callahan) visits and shows interest in Package Inc. | |||||
5 | "Judgement Day" | Jay Sandrich | Susan Beavers | April 15, 1995 | |
The staff is unhappy with newly instituted merit evaluations; meanwhile, Beth earns low marks on her household skills from Rita. | |||||
6 | "My Guy" | Jay Sandrich | Ken Estin | April 22, 1995 | |
Rita mediates when Deborah and Natalie unwittingly date the same man. |
Reception
The Office was the fourth starring vehicle for Harper, following her previous television ventures in the sitcoms Rhoda (1974–78), Valerie (1986–87) and City (1990). However, the series did not catch on with the public and was cancelled after five episodes, with one episode remaining unaired. It was broadcast Saturday nights on CBS at 9:00 p.m. throughout its brief run.[citation needed]
References
- ^ The Office Reviewed by Bruce Fretts, April 7, 1995 - Entertainment Weekly
External links
- The Office at IMDb
- The Office at epguides.com
- The Office at Sitcoms Online