Skywalker
06-09-2012, 04:17 PM
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=efROAAAAIBAJ&sjid=cwIEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5995,1266463&dq=fish+vigoda&hl=en
Toledo Blade Feb. 8, 1977
ABC Lands a Winner In New Sitcom, 'Fish'
ABC has come up with another winner in "Fish" which made a warm and witty premiere Saturday night with Abe Vigoda in the title role, spawned from ABC's top sitcom, "Barney Miller".
Fish is played with vim and vinegar by Vigoda, an extremely talented actor who appears destined to give ABC a mighty lift on it's Saturday night schedule, long a ratings wasteland for the junior network.
The basic premise of "Fish" isn't exactly promising, but thanks to Vigoda and an expert supporting cast, the show seems certain to be one of the mid season's top rating successes.
It seems that Fish has retired from the New York City police force and with his wife (played expertly by Florence Stanley) has moved into a somewhat dilapidated house with five PINS - young problem children otherwise known as Persons In Need of Supervision.
Brash youngsters are all-too-common ingredient of sitcoms, but thanks to Vigoda's sour but somehow endearing performance and the restraint shown by the juvenile performers, they come across very well.
But Vigoda steals the show, and that takes some doing in these days when the likes of Starsky and Hutch and Laverne and Shirley dominate the airwaves. Who would think that a dour, 60-ish character with flat feet and digestive disorders could give the youngsters a run for their money?
But, as Fish remarked on the Saturday night premiere. "I don't want to be young again. I was young once and I wasn't good at it."
Toledo Blade Feb. 8, 1977
ABC Lands a Winner In New Sitcom, 'Fish'
ABC has come up with another winner in "Fish" which made a warm and witty premiere Saturday night with Abe Vigoda in the title role, spawned from ABC's top sitcom, "Barney Miller".
Fish is played with vim and vinegar by Vigoda, an extremely talented actor who appears destined to give ABC a mighty lift on it's Saturday night schedule, long a ratings wasteland for the junior network.
The basic premise of "Fish" isn't exactly promising, but thanks to Vigoda and an expert supporting cast, the show seems certain to be one of the mid season's top rating successes.
It seems that Fish has retired from the New York City police force and with his wife (played expertly by Florence Stanley) has moved into a somewhat dilapidated house with five PINS - young problem children otherwise known as Persons In Need of Supervision.
Brash youngsters are all-too-common ingredient of sitcoms, but thanks to Vigoda's sour but somehow endearing performance and the restraint shown by the juvenile performers, they come across very well.
But Vigoda steals the show, and that takes some doing in these days when the likes of Starsky and Hutch and Laverne and Shirley dominate the airwaves. Who would think that a dour, 60-ish character with flat feet and digestive disorders could give the youngsters a run for their money?
But, as Fish remarked on the Saturday night premiere. "I don't want to be young again. I was young once and I wasn't good at it."