Together We Stand
Together We Stand | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Michael Jacobs |
Written by | Stephen Sustarsic |
Directed by |
Peter Bonerz Andrew D. Weyman |
Starring |
Dee Wallace Elliott Gould Scott Grimes Jonathan Ke Quan Julia Migenes Natasha Bobo Katie O'Neill |
Country of origin | US |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 19 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Sherwood Schwartz Al Burton |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) | Universal Television |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | September 22, 1986 – April 24, 1987 |
Together We Stand, also known as Nothing Is Easy, is an American television series that aired on the CBS network from 1986 to 1987. It was written by Stephen Sustarsic and directed by Andrew D. Weyman.
Together We Stand is about a married couple, David (Elliott Gould) and Lori Randall (Dee Wallace), and their array of adopted children from all walks of life. According to producer Sherwood Schwartz, the plot for this show was originally written as a spin-off from The Brady Bunch called Kelly's Kids. In the January 4, 1974 episode of The Brady Bunch (also titled "Kelly's Kids"; Season 5, Episode 13), which served as a backdoor pilot, the Bradys' neighbors plan to adopt one child but end up adopting three boys of different ethnicities.
Summary
David Randall and his wife Lori, had two kids, adopted daughter Amy (Katie O'Neill) and biological son (Scott Grimes). After seeing how well the Randall family did with an adopted child and a biological child, a pushy social worker gives them two more children: an Asian-American boy named Sam (Ke Huy Quan) and a little African-American girl named Sally (Natasha Bobo). The story lines consisted of the cultural differences and adjustments that had to be made by all — Sam and Sally having parents for the first time, and Jack and Amy having to compete with the new arrivals for their parents' time and affection.
Network run
The series was pulled by CBS after six episodes. The show returned three months later with a new title (Nothing Is Easy), new opening credits, a new theme song, and a new cast member (Julia Migenes as bitter divorced neighbor Marion Simmons). Elliott Gould did not appear in the revamped series; his character was killed off in an automobile accident, and Dee Wallace-Stone continued on as a single mother. The revamp lasted only a couple more episodes.
External links
- Together We Stand at the Internet Movie Database
- Together We Stand at TV.com
- Television Obscurities
- TVGuide.com - Together We Stand
- TV.com - Together We Stand