pixeltracker

one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE- Page 2

one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE

eatlasagna
#25one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 2:23am

tv guide did an issue a while back on their favorite musical performances on tv and this episode was in there! apparently the cast had no clue that the actress playing Bonnie could sing that like so that was their real response to her... and that's why tv guide placed it on their list because of the natural reaction!

ok... does anyone know what happened to the character of Crystal??? was her character just not needed anymore or did the actress not want to be a part of the show? just wondering.. she appeared later in the series with just one more appearance but other than that it was like the character never existed

doodlenyc Profile Photo
doodlenyc
#26one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 10:19am

One of my favorites as well, I have them memorized because I still watch them regularly. There are few shows that I can watch over and over and this is one. I even like some of the eppies from that final season.

SM2, Cosby took himself out of the Lead Actor category because he know how popular his show was, and him, and that he'd likely win. Since he already had a few Emmys from "I Spy" he decided to let others have that prize.

I remember hating the pilot episode (with a diffent DJ) and really hating the character of Jackie. But like many shows, the pilot was actually very diffent from what it quickly became. Rosanne was less of a harpy who seemed to hate her kids and husband and Jackie became a much more interesting character, less of a man trap/mess up.

One of my favorite episodes is the "Cyrano" one with Jackie having one line..."Tureen of BEEF!" with a pegleg. I use that phrase often. She, of course, has to go on as Roxanne.


"Carson has combined his passion for helping children with his love for one of Cincinnati's favorite past times - cornhole - to create a unique and exciting event perfect for a corporate outing, entertaining clients or family fun."

"In Oz, the verb is douchifizzation." PRS

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#27one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 10:42am

eatlasagna, I find it hard to believe the cast didn't know Bonnie Bramlett (credited as Bonnie Sheridan) couldn't sing. In the 1960s, Bonnie comprised the husband/wife group of Delaney & Bonnie. In fact, Bonnie co-wrote and performed "Superstar" a couple years before The Carpenters popularized it. Incidentally, I prefer her rock/soul version to Karen's squeaky clean pop rendition (the original lyric is "I can't wait to sleep with you again" not "to be with you again").

doodle: Thanks for the clarification. That's too bad 'cause he really deserved one, as did Phylicia Rashad.


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

Mister Matt Profile Photo
Mister Matt
#28one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 11:49am

To me, Roseanne earned its place as an iconic classic American television sitcom, but it was not as clearly evident when it aired. It was often disparaged as being too crude and there was much backlash due to Roseanne's publicity stunts, personal life, and studio troubles that regularly caused Hollywood to turn their collective nose at it which ultimately led to the sharp drop in ratings the final two seasons and the bizarreness of the final season. It took a while for the show to find it footing, but once the writing established its more permanent acerbic tone, it became the show to watch for six straight seasons. People wanted to see how they would be delightedly surprised next. And the characters of Roseanne often were saying and doing things that represented its majority audience in a way that no other show at the time was willing to acknowledge. For nearly a decade, Roseanne was the voice of blue collar America and other shows tried to jump on the bandwagon, but the position was already filled and nobody else could do it as well. Today, I think we can see more clearly the innovation and influence the show truly had and Roseanne has easily joined the ranks of television comedienne greats Lucille Ball and Bea Arthur (and was soon followed by Ellen Degeneres).

Laurie Metcalf and Roseanne's Emmys were truly well-deserved. I think John Goodman was perfectly cast, but I was never truly wowed by his performances. To me, he never really delivered that sense of spontaneity I saw in Laurie and Roseanne. Sara Gilbert deserved more than a single Emmy nomination, but even more than Sara, I think Alicia Goranson deserved an Emmy for her work as Becky. She NAILED that character so well, it is almost impossible to distinguish her from her character. And she did it right from the start throughout every episode in every season she appeared. I usually forget she is acting, which becomes readily apparent in scenes with Michael Fishman (the weakest link of the cast, who never developed beyond the "child actor" phase of the first few seasons) and Sara Gilbert's stylistically developed Darlene. Sarah Chalke was ok and held her own when she stepped into Becky's shoes, but she had a natural air of maturity and sophistication that always seemed a bit out of place with the rest of the cast. I was thrilled when Alicia returned, however briefly. Maybe it was typecasting, but I've often wondered why her career never really took off. I thought her performance in Boys Don't Cry was brilliant and memorable.


"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian
Updated On: 9/8/10 at 11:49 AM

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#29one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 12:01pm

Mister Matt, Gilbert got 2 nominations (1993 and 1994) but lost out both times to co-star Metcalf.

I agree, Goranson should've received a nomination, too. She got the whole pretentious bitchy princess thing down-pat. Sometimes it felt like being a fly on the wall of a real family when she'd go at it with Roseanne in the early seasons.

Don't get me started on Chalke. Ugh! Becky became a pale version of herself (i.e. ditzy, perky) in her hands.


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

strummergirl Profile Photo
strummergirl
#30one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 12:06pm

Agree on all counts, Mister Matt.

This was a show where people actually looked and talked exactly to what their socio-economic standing was. Compare that to other shows at the time (I won't even include now, that's too easy) that had people wearing designer clothes in huge apartments that seemed completely impossible to what their said profession could afford those characters on those shows (Hi, Friends).

eatlasagna
#31one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 12:21pm

i never hated sarah chalke as Becky... i LOVED her on Scrubs... but she never quite got the role of Becky right... but i did love how Roseanne would always reference the fact there were two Beckys... how they did a riff on the Patty Duke Show... my favorite was when Lecy Goranson came back and everyone kept asking Becky "where the hell have you been"... or during the Halloween episode when the second Becky came back and was trick or treating at their house with some kids... awesome!

StageManager2.. i'm just writing what TV Guide wrote in their music issue from a few years ago... maybe they didn't know she was a singer or maybe they did... maybe she never sang during rehearsals and that moment on the show was unscripted... whatever the case may be apparently the looks on all their faces wasn't acting which is what made that scene more memorable

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#32one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 12:34pm

eatlasagna, I was just gonna mention that "Identical Cousins" parody with the two Beckys though not exactly a scene:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtJCDMaaTiA


Here's the original PATTY DUKE SHOW intro for comparison:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TSgtxo4R8JU


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

doodlenyc Profile Photo
doodlenyc
#33one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 12:42pm

I was surprised how strong Chalke was on Scrubs after her rather weak Becky.

I definitely think Estelle Parsons is among those who gave Emmy worthy performances, also Shelley Winters for her guest spots.


"Carson has combined his passion for helping children with his love for one of Cincinnati's favorite past times - cornhole - to create a unique and exciting event perfect for a corporate outing, entertaining clients or family fun."

"In Oz, the verb is douchifizzation." PRS

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#34one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 12:48pm

BTW: The lyrics underline the differences in their characterizations of the same character.

Where Sarah loved that dopey Mark
And wound up in a trailer park
Our Lecy shouts and Lecy squeals
She wants a house that's not on wheels

Whereas Lecy's Becky was determined and headstrong, Sarah's was a flaky pushover.


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

strummergirl Profile Photo
strummergirl
#35one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 12:57pm

I loved that they always made fun of the two Beckys (also using Bewitched and soap opera tropes as companion pieces). They were way too meta for that to be a 'jump the shark' moment, unlike the insanity of the last season:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B10IUzsOR6g

I loved Chalke's return in the Halloween episode. The audience reaction was so delayed, it was kind of like, 'Oh, is she suddenly Becky again?'.

landryjames2
#36one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 1:06pm

Roseanne was (is) an absolutely brilliant show. I didn't really watch after Season 4 (I never really liked the Mark and David characters, nor did I particularly care for Estelle Parsons whose presence grew as the show progressed). Nonetheless, those first few years are incomparable.

songanddanceman2 Profile Photo
songanddanceman2
#37one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 1:39pm

I loved Mark and David and actually think the show was at its best from season 2 through 8


Namo i love u but we get it already....you don't like Madonna

doodlenyc Profile Photo
doodlenyc
#38one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 2:41pm

The biggest surprise was how much Roseanne herself grew as an actress. She had some truly amazing moments, imo and the some of the writing and story lines were wonderful...after she took over.

The lack of writing emmy nods I think was a real backlash against her.


"Carson has combined his passion for helping children with his love for one of Cincinnati's favorite past times - cornhole - to create a unique and exciting event perfect for a corporate outing, entertaining clients or family fun."

"In Oz, the verb is douchifizzation." PRS

Mister Matt Profile Photo
Mister Matt
#39one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 2:57pm

Oh, absolutely. Roseanne's personality rubbed the industry in every wrong way. They finally tossed Roseanne a bone for season six when they acknowledged her contribution to television and the end was in sight, but the lack of noms for writing, direction and for comedy series was rather shameful.


"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian

doodlenyc Profile Photo
doodlenyc
#40one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 3:19pm

...and the year she finally won, she had been denied so long that she didnt even attend the ceremony.


"Carson has combined his passion for helping children with his love for one of Cincinnati's favorite past times - cornhole - to create a unique and exciting event perfect for a corporate outing, entertaining clients or family fun."

"In Oz, the verb is douchifizzation." PRS

Mister Matt Profile Photo
Mister Matt
#41one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 4:13pm

Which also offended the industry and was considered disrespectful.

I even remember the negative buzz surrounding She-Devil because people were appalled that Meryl should stoop to appear in a film with Roseanne Barr. Truth was...Meryl wanted to do a comedy. I really don't think it was a bad movie, but the negative buzz really soured its opening.

Fun little nostalgia: http://bventertainment.go.com/tv/buenavista/atm/reviews.html?sec=1&subsec=256

I agree with Roger Ebert.


"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian

broadwayguy2
#42one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 10:02pm

I LOVED all of the two Becky references and the meta-ness. However, my absolute favorite was the trip to Disney World after Goransen returned. I don't remember the reasoning, but just for the two part Disney episode, Chalke returned as Becky. On Becky's first entrance, the action froze and an understudy announcement was made. BRILLIANT.

TheatreDiva90016 Profile Photo
TheatreDiva90016
#43one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 10:19pm

"apparently the cast had no clue that the actress playing Bonnie could sing that like so that was their real response to her"

Considering they rehearse the show for a week and the scripts were written out well in advance, This is just not the case.

They knew she could sing and let her have her moment. Maybe she 'opened up' during the filming, but they rehearsed it plenty of times before they filmed it.

Nothing on that show was unscripted, trust me.


"TheatreDiva90016 - another good reason to frequent these boards less."<<>> “I hesitate to give this line of discussion the validation it so desperately craves by perpetuating it, but the light from logic is getting further and further away with your every successive post.” <<>> -whatever2

MrMidwest Profile Photo
MrMidwest
#44one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 10:27pm

The show was already going downhill at this point, but I love the discussion Jackie and Roseanne have in this episode about the lack of a female point of view in the music of their day. (It starts around 6:50 into the video)


Use me, I'll set you on fire, ya bastard


"The gods who nurse this universe think little of mortals' cares. They sit in crowds on exclusive clouds and laugh at our love affairs. I might have had a real romance if they'd given me a chance. I loved him, but he didn't love me. I wanted him, but he didn't want me. Then the gods had a spree and indulged in another whim. Now he loves me, but I don't love him." - Cole Porter

StageManager2 Profile Photo
StageManager2
#45one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/8/10 at 11:02pm

"...and the year she finally won, she had been denied so long that she didnt even attend the ceremony."

doodle, she'd only been nominated once before she won. She was nominated in 1992, won in 1993, and was nominated in 1994 and 1995. But it's still a shame that it took the Emmys until the 4th season to nominate her. IMO, her best work was in those seasons.

BTW: What was up with Candice Bergen hogging all those Emmys (1989, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1995) for that insipid MURPHY BROWN? I apologize if anyone liked that show, but I thought it was dull and unfunny. Bergen did not deserve all those Emmys. Had she continued to submit herself for consideration she probably would've kept on winning. Same goes for Helen Hunt for MAD ABOUT YOU. With the exception of Roseanne and Kirstie Alley (CHEERS) the decade was taken up by Bergen in the first half and then by Hunt for the latter half.


Salve, Regina, Mater misericordiae
Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra
Salve, Salve Regina
Ad te clamamus exsules filii Eva
Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes
O clemens O pia

eatlasagna
#46one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/9/10 at 1:40am

"I LOVED all of the two Becky references and the meta-ness. However, my absolute favorite was the trip to Disney World after Goransen returned. I don't remember the reasoning, but just for the two part Disney episode, Chalke returned as Becky. On Becky's first entrance, the action froze and an understudy announcement was made. BRILLIANT."

aah yes... that was brilliant... but i love how it was said... the character of becky who was performed by lecy goransan and then by sarah chalke and then by lecy goransan will now be played by sarah chalke... AWESOME! and i think it was the same episode where Roseanne says something like... aren't you glad you came back for this... good stuff

broadwayguy2
#47one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 9/9/10 at 2:15am

Yes, yes, YES, lasagna. The phrasing put it right over the top!

The "aren't you glad you came back" line.. love.

Armie3
#48one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 10/15/18 at 7:49am

Eight years later...

 

I guess maybe I shouldn't have bumped such an old thread, but I was searching and it was interesting to read such positive comments about Roseanne, before this past year's ****show. At least to me.

Any of the OPs in this thread still around to share their current feelings?

Has the legacy of Roseanne been ruined?

Will you be watching The Conners tomorrow night?

How do you feel about Roseanne (Conner)'s death?

 

Songanddanceman2 said  "I would love to see this show comeback with all the original cast"...

Be careful what you wish for! 

Updated On: 10/15/18 at 07:49 AM

Mister Matt Profile Photo
Mister Matt
#49one of my favorite scenes from ROSEANNE
Posted: 10/15/18 at 3:38pm

I think Roseanne's insanity has tainted its revival, but really doesn't change the legacy of what made the original series a classic.  The fact that the show is continuing without her (as well as survived in the past during her personal antics) seems to underscore the fact that the show's legacy was more about the writing, cast and direction than it was about Roseanne Barr.  It remains to be seen how well this new version fares, but I'm looking forward to watching it.


"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian