Fridays

Fridays

1980
Fridays
Fridays

Fridays

7.5 | TV-PG | en | Comedy

Fridays is the name of ABC's weekly late-night live comedy show, which aired on Friday nights from April 11, 1980 to April 23, 1982.

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Seasons & Episodes

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EP21  Prime Time Special: Tony Geary / Stevie Wonder & Paul McCartney
Apr. 23,1982
Prime Time Special: Tony Geary / Stevie Wonder & Paul McCartney

--Anthony Geary (host) --Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder perform ""Ebony and Ivory"" (music video)

EP20  Marilu Henner / Sister Sledge
Mar. 19,1982
Marilu Henner / Sister Sledge

--Sister Sledge -""My Guy"" and ""All the Man I Need"" (Note: another source listed the 2nd song as ""Super Bad Sisters"")

EP19  Gregory Hines / Bonnie Raitt
Mar. 12,1982
Gregory Hines / Bonnie Raitt

--Bonnie Raitt performs ""Me and the Boys,"" ""Keep this Heart in Mind"" and ""Willya Wontcha""

EP18  Lynn Redgrave / Huey Lewis & The News
Mar. 05,1982
Lynn Redgrave / Huey Lewis & The News

--Huey Lewis & The News - ""Workin' For A Livin',"" ""Do You Believe In Love"" and ""Givin' It All for Love""

EP17  Victoria Principal / Chubby Checker
Feb. 19,1982
Victoria Principal / Chubby Checker

--Chubby Checker performs ""Running,"" ""Harder than Diamond"" and ""Burn Up the Night""

EP16  Valerie Bertinelli / Bill Champlin
Feb. 12,1982
Valerie Bertinelli / Bill Champlin

We don't have an overview of this episode, please check back later.

EP15  Bob Balaban / The Blasters
Feb. 05,1982
Bob Balaban / The Blasters

We don't have an overview of this episode, please check back later.

EP14  Howard E. Rollins Jr. / Quarterflash
Jan. 22,1982
Howard E. Rollins Jr. / Quarterflash

--Quarterflash performs ""Harden My Heart""

EP13  Tab Hunter / KISS
Jan. 15,1982
Tab Hunter / KISS

--KISS performs ""The Oath,"" ""A World Without Heroes"" and ""I""

EP12  Valerie Harper / The Cars
Jan. 08,1982
Valerie Harper / The Cars

--The Cars (2nd appearance) - ""Shake It Up,"" ""Since You're Gone"" and ""Think It Over"" --Also: videotaped segments from past hosts: Shelley Duvall, Peter Fonda, Kareem Abdul Jabar, Valerie Bertinelli and Anthony Geary.

EP11  Beau Bridges / David Grisman
Dec. 18,1981
Beau Bridges / David Grisman

--Beau Bridges (host) --David Grisman performs ""E.M.D.,"" ""Dawg Funk"" and ""Dawg's Bull""

EP10  Susan Sarandon / The Four Tops
Dec. 11,1981
Susan Sarandon / The Four Tops

--The Four Tops perform ""She Was My Girl"" and a medley of their hits

EP9  Peter Fonda / King Crimson
Dec. 04,1981
Peter Fonda / King Crimson

--Peter Fonda (host) --King Crimson perform ""Elephant Talk"" and ""Thela Hun Ginjeet""

EP8  Shelley Duvall / Al Jarreau
Nov. 20,1981
Shelley Duvall / Al Jarreau

--Shelley Duvall (host) --Al Jarreau performs ""In This Love,"" ""Roof Garden"" and ""Breaking Away.""

EP7  Jamie Lee Curtis / Garland Jeffreys
Nov. 13,1981
Jamie Lee Curtis / Garland Jeffreys

--Jamie Lee Curtis (host) --Garland Jeffreys performs ""96 Tears,"" ""R.O.C.K"" and ""35mm Dreams""

EP6  David Naughton / Billy & The Beaters
Nov. 06,1981
David Naughton / Billy & The Beaters

--David Naughton (host) --Billy Vera and the Beaters perform ""Strange Things Happen,"" ""I Can Take Care of Myself"" and ""Millie, Make Some Chili""

EP5  Marty Feldman / Manhattan Transfer
Oct. 30,1981
Marty Feldman / Manhattan Transfer

--Marty Feldman (host) --Manhattan Transfer perform ""Boy from New York City,"" ""Spies in the Night"" and ""Route 66""

EP4  Karen Allen / The Stray Cats
Oct. 16,1981
Karen Allen / The Stray Cats

--Karen Allen (host) --The Stray Cats - ""Rock This Town,"" ""Stray Cat Strut,"" ""Runaway Boys""

EP3  Tony Geary & Genie Francis / Devo
Oct. 09,1981
Tony Geary & Genie Francis / Devo

--Tony Geary & Genie Francis (co-hosts) --Devo (3rd appearance) - ""NuTra Theme,"" ""Jerkin' Back 'n' Forth,"" ""Jesus in my Stew,"" ""Through Being Cool"" & ""Working In A Coal Mine""

EP2  William Shatner / Kim Carnes
Sep. 25,1981
William Shatner / Kim Carnes

--Kim Carnes (2nd appearance) - ""Bette Davis Eyes,"" ""Under My Thumb"" and ""Miss You Tonight""

EP1  Andy Kaufman / The Pretenders
Sep. 18,1981
Andy Kaufman / The Pretenders

--The Pretenders perform ""The Adultress,"" ""Message of Love"" and ""Louie, Louie"" (not the 1960's song by the Kingsmen)

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7.5 | TV-PG | en | Comedy | More Info
Released: 1980-04-11 | Released Producted By: Moffitt-Lee Productions , The West Coast Comedy Company Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Fridays is the name of ABC's weekly late-night live comedy show, which aired on Friday nights from April 11, 1980 to April 23, 1982.

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Stream Online

The tv show is currently not available onine

Cast

Larry David , Michael Richards , Melanie Chartoff

Director

Tom Kramer

Producted By

Moffitt-Lee Productions , The West Coast Comedy Company

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Reviews

bbbot I agree Fridays was a great show. Funny to see everyone remembering Michael Richards' blowing GI Joes up skits, because I don't remember them at all. I DO remember fantastic work he did in skits where he played the guy who imagined he was a great romeo/lover, and would go through these incredible facial expressions and dialogue to himself of self-reverence and braggadocio, ultimately ending up never succeeding, and/or never even trying for a "score" with the chicks he was expecting to score with. Amazing theater of unjustified vanity-filled posturing to himself, all delivered with rapid fire vibrating facial nuances. One of the great characters I have seen.
badbenski Friday's wasn't always brilliantly written but, unlike SNL, it was consistently funny.Friday's was what SNL used to be, high energy, edgy and hip. SNL had become tedious and chances are that if you thought the same about Friday's you were just too young to understand the comedic references. SNL had become a media institution at that point (like Rolling Stone, which used to be considered part of The Underground Press) and if you had a media product to peddle it was simply a base that had to be touched by the star or written into the sketches.Friday's didn't care about any of that; From the announcer's screaming greeting "Liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiive, from the Los Angeles basin!" to music by that day's hippest bands, Friday's showcased some of the most outrageous comedy to be found on TV. Most folks remember Darrow Igus's Rasta Gourmet - a one trick pony to be sure but a crowd pleaser every time - "Do we bake it?" "No no no no!" "Do we fry it?" "No no no no!" 'til finally "We SMOKE it!" "ya ya ya ya" exclaimed Igus' gourmet, whose only spice was Ganja.Michael Richard's Battle Boy got sicker and sicker as he developed the character, finally taking his little Sister hostage, burying her in the ground and threatening to torture her Barbie. Most folks remember how he liked to set his Army men on fire, complete with simulated screams of agony.I also liked Richard's hip biker record reviewer, wherein he sailed rejected albums (I usually agreed with him) into the crowd like so many Frisbees.Mark Blankfield's DRUGS R US stoned out pharmacist made me exhausted watching it. He sailed back and forth on that ladder, popping the inventory and getting more crazed by the minute. Funniest bit was when two midgets walked into his store and he screamed MY GOD, I'VE GROWN!!! Bruce Mahler was brilliant in anything he touched, even his stupid dancing chickens was irresistible. He and Blankfiled excelled above the others in a skit called "Men mmmm Who mmmm Say mmmm 'MMMM' between mmmm Every mmmm Word." When they got going fast it was simply insane.Another brilliant team bit that they repeated several times was The Transfibians, where three of them had "the operation" changing them into ManFishes. Their school-like movements were hysterical.Chartoff, the show's cutie-pie, was also a brilliant performer. I don't recall any signature pieces of her's, beyond the News bit. I know she always held up her end of the log in skits - quite a feat among such an insane bunch. I do recall her doing a very edgy piece about a relative who was a molester (she played a little girl). SNL had a similar skit but Friday's took it farther.I don't recall Larry David at all, I guess he didn't impress me. Rich Hall was there as well as on SNL.Friday's was truncated right in the midst of it's comedic development. It was a long way from becoming stale like SNL and performers like Michael Richards had to finish the development of their characterizations elsewhere. In Richard's case his nervous tic ridden character begun on Friday's ended up giving birth to Seinfeld's Cramer.When Friday's was canceled I was just leaving "The Biz," where I worked as an Accountant. Many insiders were mystified at the cancellation of a clearly superior show. Did somebody get a big wig's nose out of joint? Was Friday's deep-sixed for some manner of major faux pas ala Aresenio Hall? Surely the rise of Howdy Doody's big brother Ted Koppel and the creation of Nighline wasn't enough to bump a screamingly funny show like Fridays, was it? We probably will never know. I've seen Friday's reruns on some of the more obscure cable channels but I hope to see it on DVD one day, they'd fly off the shelves.bB
glk6 Friday's was one of the best shows I have ever watched. It was well written and superbly performed. I would love to see the show re-runs so they could be enjoyed by a whole new generation of people. The character development was superior to anything on television today. I was trying to tell my 21-year old about this show but words can't describe the superior comedic performances that appeared week after week. I still don't understand how lesser-quality comedy shows survived while this one didn't. The pharmacist and the angry little kid (played by Michael Richards) was side-splitting comedy at its best. I still chuckle when I think of some of those crazy skits. Any ideas out there on how to revive the shows for syndication?
jwrowe3 Okay, I'll be really honest. I DID NOT see the infamous Andy Kaufman episode. I have heard so much about it, it has become a part of my memory.If I did, I don't remember it, at all. I tried to watch this show, but when it was on, I was usually out on a date, or doing something else.I DO remember some of the great skits, such as Michael Richards going from Ronald Reagan to Richard Nixon, in a bit called "Altered Statesman", a play on the hit movie of the time "Altered States". I recall the group "Devo" being on, and the great ongoing bit about drugs, "Do we eat it, No-no no-no! Do we smoke it, ya-ya ya-ya!!!"It WAS edgier than Saturday Night Live ever was, as it had to compete with the concept that SNL was king. But, if you remember, SNL went into a decline with the 80-81 cast, and critics were sure that "Friday's" would live a long life. I think that the show suffered from being shuffled around with it's start times. I don't know if local ABC affiliates would push the show back to show local programs, or the network just kept moving it. I remember seeing it in late '81, starting well after midnight, central time.A perfect candidate for DVD/VHS release, or being shown on TVLand, or Comedy Central.