Apple Pie

Apple Pie

1978
Apple Pie
Apple Pie

Apple Pie

6.9 | en | Comedy

Ginger-Nell Hollyhock is a single and lonely hairdresser who lives in Kansas City, Missouri during the Great Depression year of 1933. When Ginger-Nell places classified ads in the local newspapers, she recruits a group of wacky relatives - a con-man husband, Fast Eddie Murtaugh; a tap-dancing daughter, Anna Marie Hollyhock; a son who wanted to fly like a bird, Junior Hollyhock; and a tottering old blind grandfather, Grandpa Hollyhock - all of whom come to live together for the laughs.

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Seasons & Episodes

1
0
EP2  Ginger-Nell Goes Hollywood
Sep. 30,1978
Ginger-Nell Goes Hollywood

A fast-talking door-to-door salesman tells Ginger-Nell she's going to be a star.

EP1  Fast Eddie Slows Down
Sep. 23,1978
Fast Eddie Slows Down

In need of mortgage money, Ginger-Nell advertises for a head of household to pay the bill.

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6.9 | en | Comedy | More Info
Released: 1978-09-23 | Released Producted By: T.A.T. Communications , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Ginger-Nell Hollyhock is a single and lonely hairdresser who lives in Kansas City, Missouri during the Great Depression year of 1933. When Ginger-Nell places classified ads in the local newspapers, she recruits a group of wacky relatives - a con-man husband, Fast Eddie Murtaugh; a tap-dancing daughter, Anna Marie Hollyhock; a son who wanted to fly like a bird, Junior Hollyhock; and a tottering old blind grandfather, Grandpa Hollyhock - all of whom come to live together for the laughs.

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Cast

Rue McClanahan , Dabney Coleman , Jack Gilford

Director

Peter Bonerz

Producted By

T.A.T. Communications ,

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Reviews

madjack Rue McClannahan fills the Hollyhock home with respondents from an advertisement seeking "individuals to move in and create an atmosphere of an all-American family." The rest is comedy at its best. As American as "Apple Pie." Yum-Yum, you'll love it! There's a line that still comes to mind and makes me laugh even now. Jack Gilford played the blind grandfather of the "family" who was sitting with an open newspaper in front of his face; when he lowers the paper and you see his dark lensed glasses and that impish smile from cheek to cheek, setting up the punch line, he says "The comics just don't smell as funny as they used to." With a shake of the head he lifts the paper up in front of that wonderful face.