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There is no doubt about it: the 1970s were the golden age of the television sit-com. Stuck
between the kooky creativity of the 1960s and the bland politically correct
sentimentality of the 1980s, the 1970s provided TV audiences with the best
writers, producers, actors and envelope pushing that the television sit-com had
to offer. However, none of the sit-coms of the 1970s has come as close as
incorporating itself into Americana as Happy Days. Sure, it wasn't as
smart as MASH, as controversial as All in the Family, or as well
written as the Mary Tyler Moore Show, but by bringing a portrait of 1950s
Milwaukee and one of television greatest ensemble casts into viewers’ homes for
ten amazing seasons (not to mention spawning four spin off series and "Fonziemania",
one of the biggest crazes of the 1970s surrounding TV icon and the shows star
Henry Winkler), Happy Days has become on of the most endearing and loved
sit-coms in the history of television. The characters are as familiar to us as
our own family - the Cunningham family patriarchs Howard and Marion, straight
shooter Richie, kid sister Joanie and the mysterious Chuck, goofballs Potsie and
Ralph Malph, the rebellious yet loveable Chachi and, of course, the show’s icon,
the enigmatic Arthur "Fonzie" Fonzarelli a.k.a. "the Fonz." These characters
have become some of the biggest icons on our pop culture journey.
I had the great pleasure to sit down with Erin prior to the doors opening at a collectable show in Toronto in June 2007. Erin is exactly how you would want to imagine: fun, energetic, witty and quick with a joke or a smart comment. For about forty-five minutes Erin and I discussed her career, as well as the phenomena known as Happy Days. When did Happy Days jump the shark? How did Fonziemania affect the Happy Days cast? What was the spin off that a cast member refused to make...and why? Did Joanie really love Chachi? Did the Ted McGinley curse kill Happy Days? Did Joanie Loves Chachi really have high ratings in Korea? Come with us, friends and readers, as Erin and I discuss the TV show that is a part of the American identity as Norman Rockwell and apple pie as
CONFESSIONS OF A POP CULTURE ADDICT PROUDLY PRESENTS THE HAPPY DAYS OF JOANIE CUNNINGHAM: A VISIT WITH ERIN MORAN
Erin: Oh thank you! Thank you! Sam: So you've been working and acting since you were a kid… Erin: Since I was four. Sam: Since you were four. Erin: Yes. Since I was four years old. Sam: And you started in commercials?
Erin: Yes,
and then my very first series was Daktari. Re Sam: With Judy the Chimp and Clarence the cross-eyed lion! Erin: That's right! Sam: So how did you get into acting at the age of four? Erin: Well, a friend of my Mom's had a friend who was just starting out as a child agent, and the friend of my Mom's said, "just take Erin in and just meet with her". So my Mom took me in to meet with her and her name was Mary Grady, a famous child agent. Sam: Who else did she work with? Erin: Oh. God. I couldn't tell you. A lot of kids who worked. So I went in with my Mom and had the interview with her and she signed me right their that day and the first commercial that I went for, which was for the First National Bank, I got and I've worked ever since. Sam: You've worked ever since. Erin: Yup. I'm still working. Sam: What are some of your current projects now? Erin: I've been doing some plays. Sam: Oh! So you've gotten into theatre!
Sam: So after your time on Daktari you worked on stuff like The Courtship of Eddie's Father and My Three Sons and…
Erin: Yeah,
that was a little later but actually, f Sam: So did they remember you? Erin: No. I didn't get Happy Days when I went on the interview. Another girl did it and did the pilot. Sam: Right. That was on Love American Style. Erin: Yeah. Sam: A bit of the Happy Days pilot from Love American Style is available on YouTube. Erin: It's on what now? Sam: On YouTube. I watched it not long ago on YouTube. Erin: I don't even know what that is that you’re saying. Sam: YouTube. You've never been on YouTube? Erin: I don't even know what it is. Sam: It's this great website where you can download video clips and old videos and TV footage... Erin: Really!!! Sam: Yeah. Actually, in a few places on our website we have links to you and Scott Baio singing the Joanie Loves Chachi theme via YouTube.
Sam: Now I just re-watched the first season of Happy Days. That's been on DVD for a while. Erin: Oh! I love that season! The second season just came out! Sam: Yeah. I went to buy it this weekend but it was already sold out! Erin: Really! That's good! Sam: Now back in the early episodes you were really just the smart-mouthed kid sister that actually had all the best lines. Erin: Yeah. Sam: Did you feel that later on the writing changed for you?
Erin: W Sam: Now did the cast... well, the thing about the Happy Days cast is that it's one of the great ensemble casts in television history. Now did everybody just mesh together right away? Erin: Yeah. That's why we were all together for eleven years. Sam: Now when did it become apparent that it was becoming Henry Winkler's show? Erin: Oh, well, not the first or second season. When we went to three cameras, which was in the third season, that's when it pretty much picked up and became bigger then life and then that was it and he started taking off. It was about the third season and then by the fourth he really took off. Big time.
Erin: Well, we were fine. It was kind of hard for Ron Howard because he was the star of the show and then all of a sudden here comes Henry kind of outshining him, not that he was jealous in that but he didn't really want to act anyways. He wanted to direct. But it worked out. It was really funny because when Henry was taking off and we were becoming number one they offered Henry his own show called, I don't know, "The Fonz Show" or something ridiculous and I remember Henry going, he said this: "Why would I want to do another show where I have to get another whole cast of people who I am going to have to try to mesh with and get along with when I already got it right here. We already got it. We got it going right now!" So that was it.
Sam: So
what's the real reason they got rid of
Erin: They didn't need him. They just didn't need him. Sam: So it had nothing to do with him. Erin: It had nothing to do with him. Not one bit. They had plenty going on with the amount of cast members as it was. Sam: Sure. In the first season he was always just going out the door with a basketball in his hand and a sandwich in his mouth. Erin: Yeah: Exactly. Sam: And there was no questions from the audience or... Erin: Nope. Just now. Sam: Just one of those weird pop culture enigmas. Erin: Yup. Yup. It happens.
Erin: I think it was the third season. He did one little spot and then he came back in the fourth. Sam: So how did the addition to Scott to the series impact the series for you? Erin: Well I got more to do, which was nice, so then Ron left and then there was even more to do. Sam: Because you and Scott became the focus. Erin: Exactly, and then the singing and all that was pretty cool. Sam: How would you describe your working relationship with Scott Baio?
Erin:
Excellent. Ah, with all of them! Oh, we just had
Sam: So Ron Howard and Donny Most left about the sixth season? Erin: I believe… Ron left…. uh… yeah, about the sixth season. I think you’re right about that. The sixth season. Yeah. Sam: Now how did that impact everything, and also, a lot of Happy Days fans feel that's when they should have… uh… Erin: Ended the show? Sam: Yeah. Erin: Yeah. Well they thought about doing that but it was still such a big hit then they just thought, "why?" Sam: The show must go on. Erin: The show must go on. It impacted all of us because we loved Ron so much, and it was a family and it was established and we were all together for that many years, so that was hard because he had left. And Donny as well. Sam: Now Ron left to do directing, right? Erin: Yeah.
Erin: He left to do some more serious acting. Sam: Did he? Erin: Um… I believe… a little bit. Yeah. Yeah. It was hard. Sam: Because you guys have all had to deal with typecasting. Erin: Yeah. That's right. And that quickly… That was pretty quick. Sam: Has typecasting impacted your career a lot? Erin: Yeah. Yeah. It sure has. Sam: How do you get over that? Erin: You do plays.
Sam: Well,
that' Erin: Well they put it up against Magnum PI. It was never meant to go. It was a season replacement, you see. That's why. It wasn't anyone's fault except for the producers and what they added and why they had it going, they never wanted it to be anything more then a season replacement. They never wanted it to go. Sam: So they told you that they were going to bring you and Scott back to Happy Days. Erin: They had every intention of bringing us back to Happy Days. It was a done deal.
Sam: Erin: No, they weren't bad, but then they put us up against Magnum PI, and that would shoot anybody done no matter how good the ratings were. Sam: Is there any proof to the story that ratings for Joanie Loves Chachi were high in Korea? (long pause) Because of "Chachi" being Korean for penis. Erin: Oh. I dunno. Jeez. I've been getting this question on and off. Whatever. Sam: It's just one of those pop culture urban myths up there with Barry Williams sleeping with Florence Henderson and the kid from Mr. Belvedere being Marilyn Manson. Erin: Oh. I haven't heard that about Marilyn Manson. I didn't know about that. Sam: Oh… uh. Well he wasn't. It's just an urban myth.
Erin: Yeah. Sam: Do you still know all the words to the Joanie Loves Chachi theme song? Erin: No. None of us do. It's sad but true. Sam: I know all the words to the theme song. Uh… it's on my MP3 player. Erin: (Laughs) That's good. That's excellent. Sam: Well it was released on a .45, wasn't it? Erin: I don't know. Probably. You know what really upsets me is that the second season on the Happy Days DVD they changed the songs. That sucks. That's just not right. Sam: Well it was a copyright thing, wasn't it? Erin: Yeah, I know but… they don't have enough money to pay them? C'mon…
S Erin: Did they really? Sam: Yeah. The first season just came out on DVD and they had to change all the music to generic stuff. Erin: That bites. Doesn't it? That's awful because that's just not the way it was! It should just remain the same!
Sam: So
in the sixth season you had Cathy Silvers come in and Ted McGinley. Well
Ted McGinley talks about something called the Ted McGinley curse where he joins
the cast of the sho Erin: Really? Sam: Yeah. He says he killed Happy Days. He killed Love Boat. He killed Falcon Crest. Erin: Silly. He's silly. Sam: Well what was it like to work with Ted? Erin: He's excellent. He's such a nice man. We adored him.
Sam: Now in
the later seasons they seemed to take a lot more liberties and they started
making the series look and feel like it was taking place in the 1 Erin: I know. Sam: I thought that was really weird. Erin: We all thought it was really weird as well. Sam: Did they do it because they were having a hard time with the costumes or the cars and sets, or were they getting lazy or something? Erin: I don't know. Maybe. Sam: In some later seasons I'm not sure what decade you guys were in. Erin: Yeah. None of us did. (Laughs) Sam: So Happy Days jumping the shark. You've heard the term jumping the shark? Erin: Yes. Yes. Sam: So, did Happy Days jump the shark and if it did, when did it? Erin: About then.
Erin: Yeah (laughs). It's funny because Anson Williams, Donny Most and I did a signing at Dragon Con and we did a whole Q & A thing and they talked about jumping the shark and Anson said that's when it happened. When Fonzie jumped the shark. Oh god. It's too funny. Sam: Where there ever a time when you folks and you got a script and you folks thought it was so outrageous that you didn't want to do it?
Erin: Oh
yeah. Yeah. Sam: A lot? Erin: No, not a lot, and it didn't happen with the whole cast. It was usually singular members that had it going on with their character. I would never say that. We all came across that. Sam: Did Henry want to jump the shark? Erin: I really don't know. Sam: That'd be a question for Henry. Erin: I'm sure he did. Sure. Sam: So you said you've done shows with Donny Most and Anson Williams. Do you still keep in touch with any other co-stars?
Erin: Oh
god. All of them! Two weeks ago I just got back from a two week cruise on the
Emerald Princess that Marion Ross and I christened. Yeah. We're the godmothers
of the Emerald Princess and the two of us went on a tw Sam: How is Tom Bosley doing? I haven't seen him on anything lately. Erin: He's doing great. He does plays. He loves doing plays. Sam: He is such a great character actor. I love seeing him doing guest spots on the Mod Squad or Night Gallery. Erin: He was on "Yours, Mine and Ours" with Lucille Ball too. Sam: Oh was he? Erin: Yeah. He plays the doctor. You’ve gotta rent it. It's a great movie! Sam: So how did doing Happy Days change your life?
Erin: Oh
well. My goodness. Well, in th
Sam: Now
we'll always remember you as Joanie Cunningham, but how do you want to be
remembered Erin: Just both. Erin and Joanie. When somebody accidentally calls me Joanie and they apologize I say, "don't apologize. I wouldn't be here otherwise”. Sam: I know a lot of people that do a role as long as you played Joanie to be so strongly identified with the character that it becomes a thorn in their side.
Erin: Oh no
no. It's a blessing. I'm so thankful for that because in Happy Days
there were shows that changed peoples lives. I'll never forget it. I've gotten
it throughout the years when communicating with the fans. I got a letter from a
girl saying that she saw an episode in which I was talking to my dad a Sam: Well that's so wonderful, because you folks are such an important part of our journey and our existence and shape who we become, so it's good to hear that our icons like you realize that. Erin: Yeah. We all feel the same way. Marion Ross feels the same way too, and she has such a heart of gold and she just lights up when fans recognize her, and it's like the first time every time. When we get compliments and get that recognition it's just wonderful.
Erin: No. I'm not surprised at all. Nah. Well, I shouldn't say that at all. I am for the matter that this far down the road that it's only because of the reruns, but even if there wasn't the reruns, people really keep the show in their heart. I came to realize recently about how much of a closeness there is with older people from the 50s era. They love that era, and there is such a thing for that era, so that was such a big eye opener for me. That's what made it big for that matter. Sam: Well I guess that's it. Well thank you Erin so much for taking the time to talk with us today. Erin: You’re welcome!
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Shaw of Secret Frequency.
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