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November 28th, 2006
Brady resurrections started in 1977 when the crazy duo of Sid and Marty Kroft
had another groovy idea. After members of the Brady cast had appeared on
the Kroft produced Donny and Marie Osmond Variety Show, Sid and Marty decided to
revive the Brady franchise. The Brady Bunch had ended two years earlier,
but Sid and Marty strapped it to a gurney, shot some lightening bolts through
it, added music an However there was one problem. They couldn't get the
entire Brady clan back together again. Eve Plumb, who played neurotic middle
sister Jan Brady, had other plans. She had little to no interest in a song and
dance variety act. So what were Sid and Marty to do? You couldn't have the Brady
Bunch without Jan. Well there was one thing to do. A new Jan Brady was going
to have to be hired. However, they'd do better than Sherwood Schwartz did. They
were going to get a better Jan. A prettier Jan. A Jan who could sing and dance
and really groove. They were going to get a Jan who would make sure that even if
this Variety Hour thing didn't work out that it could be momentarily saved by a Jan who would blow the whole thing
out of the water. And that was what Sid and Marty did. Enter Geri Reischl. Already a
veteran of toy commercials and horror films, Geri had sung with Sammy
Davis Jr and Rene Simard and even headed up her own country band before Sid and
Marty picked her out of over three hundred girls. And picked something special
they had.
I first discovered what a force to be reckoned with Geri was earlier this year when researching a Brady themed article that was never finished. While watching clips of Geri singing songs like, "You Don't Have to Be a Star", "Hey Mister Melody", "Turn the Beat Around", "Shake Your Booty", and "Your Song" via YouTube I discovered a dynamo who was making a show that has gone into pop culture history as one of the worst hours of television ever into something unbelievably special. So I went out to discover just who this Geri Reischl was. I quickly found her via her website, www.fakejan.com, and a few quick emails led to an interview with Geri herself. My visit with Geri Reischl was possibly one of the most special moments of my pop culture journey. Geri and I took to each other immediately. The conversation was often interrupted by laughter. Geri Reischl is possibly one of the warmest and fun celebrities I've ever had the pleasure to talk with. Our conversation went on for hours but was full of stories that featured far more than just the Brady Bunch. Encounters with people like Elvis Presley, Red Skelton, Lon Chaney Jr. and Michael Jackson amazed me. Furthermore, Geri gave me the inside scoop on her involvement with such productions as The Exorcist and The Facts of Life. All this, and the real inside scoop on the Brady Bunch. Geri Reischl is an amazing woman with amazing experiences to tell about. Join me as we hear about her experiences growing up in 1970s' show business as CONFESSIONS OF A POP CULTURE ADDICT PROUDLY PRESENTS THE REAL LIFE OF FAKE JAN: A CONVERSATION WITH BRADY BUNCH ALUMNI GERI REISCHL
Sam Tweedle: Hi there. My name is Sam Tweedle. I'm calling for Geri. Geri Reischl (picks up): Hi Sam! Sam: Geri? Geri: Yes! Hi! Sam: Hi! How are you! Geri: I'm doing good! I'm awake... I think. Sam: Are you? I hope I haven't called too early. I mean, it's four in the afternoon here. Geri: No. I just had a big party weekend. Sam: Well look. I want to thank you so much for talking to us today and I know it's been a long time coming but it's built a lot of excitement and anticipation. Geri: Well why not? This is going to be fun! Sam: I also want to thank you for keeping in touch over the last couple of weeks. The pictures and the videos... Geri: Oh. You're welcome! Sam: The emails here and there. That has been so much fun and wonderful. Geri: Oh thank you! Sam: I've been sharing it with friends but not online because I haven't been sure if it's private correspondence or... Geri: Oh it's up to you. I'm just an open book. Sam: W Geri: No. I don't care. That's fine. As long as you don't find the bad stuff. Sam: I haven't found any bad stuff yet. Geri: I haven't either, thank goodness. Sam: No skeletons in the closet? Geri: No. They haven't come out. Sam: Well that's probably why we haven't seen you all over the tabloids. Geri: Right. I guess I have to do something and then I'll have a skeleton. Sam: So you've been busy these last couple of weeks. Have these been charity events or... Geri: Oh yeah. I did the one in North Carolina for the James Stephens III Scholarship Foundation. That was a lot of fun. I was with Ernest Thomas, Raul Julia Jr., Jackee Harry, Roz Ryan and Reynaldo Rey. I spent the whole weekend in Rawling, North Carolina. Yeah. I'm kind of busy just doing things here and there. Sam: So do you still do a lot of media events? Geri: I Sam: Well it seemed for a long time that you were this obscure mystery in the pop culture journey and all of a sudden people are suddenly becoming very aware of who you are, and you are coming back on the map. Geri: Well yeah. I wouldn't have changed it for anything though. I thought if I was going to have children that I was going to be at home and raise them and not have somebody doing that job because that was my job and I started acting when I was six and stopped when I was 23 when I got pregnant with my son, and my husband and I decided then that it was more important to stay at home and do that than do the other - and I never regretted it. But now I'm ready to go back out and have fun and do things and I'm a free woman again. Sam: Was it hard giving that up? Geri: It was, but I did so much work from age 6 to age 23 that at the time it was one of my chapters in my book and I was ready to go on to the next chapter. I knew I could always go back to where I started from so I just thought it was the right thing to do at the right time and at that time I didn't miss it that much because I just loved being a mom. It was the ultimate. But I do miss it now and I want to get back into my singing and I love doing charity events and helping people out and doing things like that because I have a big heart and I love to be with a lot of people and you do things like that and it just makes you feel so good. Sam: So Geri: Well it started when my Mom put me in acting classes because she said I was just so outgoing and I had been singing around the house and she could tell I had a good voice I guess. Sam: You have a fantastic voice! Geri: Oh, thank you! Sam: And that is the truth! When I started getting interested in your career I was writing an article which I've never finished. I sort of got derailed on it. Anyway, it was on Brady spin-offs and I was looking up clips on the "Variety Hour" and... well... I don't know your opinion on the Variety Hour but the universal opinion on the "Variety Hour" is that it stinks. Geri: Yes. It's so sad. [laughs] Sam: Yeah, but the way I looked at it was that when you appear on the screen... well... the way I wrote it was that if the "Variety Hour" was a toothache, your performances are like Ambesol, taking away the pain temporarily. Geri: Well that's good! I'm glad you didn't use Preparation H! Sam: Well that, for me, is what the show had going for it! You're dynamic! Geri: Oh, I loved doing the show because I've always thought my best talent was singing. I love the acting and I love the dancing but the singing is what I really loved because I had my own band for two and a half years and I sang with Sammy Davis Jr. and I toured with René Simard from Canada and I used to sing at all kinds of country and western clubs. I was always under age so I always had to sit in an office in the back and then when it was time for me to sing I would go out and do my show, then because of the alcohol, I would have to go back in the little office and sit and wait. But it didn't bother me because I had so much fun doing it and, gosh, I didn't care if I was singing in front of five people or a thousand people, it was just fun because you just connect with the people and you know they're enjoying you, and you just get more energy inside you, and you just have more fun doing it. Then you don't want to stop singing and you don't want your show to end because you're having so much fun with them. Sam: So you started Geri: Yes. I started at age six and my mother had put me in acting classes. It was at MelodyLand Theatre in Anaheim, California. It was a round stage. It was a really neat venue. So I was cast as Gretel in "The Sound of Music" but what happened is they hired an actress to play Maria and she had five children and she wanted all five children to play the part of the von Trapps. She had a daughter who was a year older than me and the people who were running the production were sick about it because they wanted me so bad, but this lady, they wanted her, and she wouldn't do it without her little girl doing it so I became a stand in, even though I learned everything. I had to be there every night. I never got to go on stage. I wanted so bad for that little girl to get the chicken pox but nothing ever happened but I guess it was meant to be because... you know how everything is meant to be... well I was getting a drink at a fountain and this man came up to my Mom and said, "Is this your little girl?" and she said yes and he said, "She's just the cutest little thing. I would just love to try to get her into show business and TV and get her to do commercials and stuff..." and my Mom was quite wary about anybody like that, you know. But he gave her his business card and my Mom and Dad talked it over and about a week later my Mom called him. We went up to his office and we met him and his Mom was there and in the first week I went out for two commercial interviews and I got them both so that's how it all started. So I guess I was always supposed to be the understudy and never be on stage. Who knows? He'd never seen me taking a drink a water. Sam: So when you were doing the commercials, did you enjoy that as a kid? Was it hard work? Geri: Oh! I loved it! It was just so much fun! I did forty commercials when I was working. Ten of them were for Mattel Toys. Sam: You Geri: Yes. That was my going away present because I was outgrowing their toys and the one doll, Heather, they made in my likeness. Sam: Did they really! Geri: Yes they did. She has long blonde hair and they said, "Geri, this is really you here," and I said, "Oh. That's so sweet!" but they told me that I was getting too old for their toys. So that was when I was eleven and they said that this was my going away present. It was really fun working with them. But I always had to make sure I never had a broken nail. My cuticles were always perfect. I had lost a tooth and they said, "Oh Geri. We can't use you in this commercial because you lost a tooth!" Everybody had to be perfect in the commercials so my mom went and had a fake tooth made but it gave me kind of a lisp so they said, "To heck with it. Take it out. We know kids lose their teeth." So I was one of the first kids in their commercials to do one with a tooth missing. Sam: So they really loved you. Geri: Well yeah. That's the thing. I guess they did. Sam: I looked up this whole Rock Flowers thing and there is a real cult for that particular set of dolls. Geri: I had no idea actually. I had no idea that peo Sam: He did the voiceover. Actually, just the albums themselves are sought out collectables and there was an LP compilation. Yeah there are people out there that just collect those dolls. Geri: Yeah. Well I have the Heather doll. So that's cool. Just for a fond memory. Sam: Now when you found that commercial on YouTube, how long had it been since you'd seen a commercial with you in it? I mean, it doesn't seem to be the kind of thing that they keep in circulation. Geri: Well a friend had actually written to me and she had said, "Geri. Is this you in this commercial? Because it looks just like you..." so I first experienced it when I went to YouTube and clicked the link she had sent me and I said, "Oh my gosh!" So I sent it back to her and I said, "Oh yeah. That's me. I can't believe it but it got onto YouTube!" And I'm thinking, who in the world got a copy of it in the first place? Sam: Exactly! I mean that's what I think when I see stuff like that. Geri: Oh yeah! I was amazed! I would never have thought of looking that up! I never look any of my stuff up actually; but I have friends and fans that will see things and then they'll say, "Oh Geri. Have you seen this, or this?" or, "Do you know your episode of Gunsmoke is going to be on?" You see, I never look to see if I'm going to be on TV or anything but I've got great fans that will send me things and say, "Oh look, you're going to be on TVLand in Gunsmoke next Tuesday!" and I say, "Thank you!" Sam: So you did the commercials, and then you broke into horror films! Geri: Oh! I know! Sam: So, what's that about? Geri: Well it was kind of bizarre because I see an article or two that
was sent to me where they call me a horror actress. So when I tell people
that I'm a horror actress I have to really m Sam: I just ordered a copy of "Brotherhood of Satan" but I haven't gotten it yet. I'm waiting for it. Geri: It doesn't hurt for you to go on a little bit longer not watching it. Sam: "I Dismember Mama" seems to be quite obscure. Geri: Yes. I have that on VHS which I had put onto DVD so
maybe I can have someone burn it and I'll send you a copy because I have a lead
in that one because it was really titled "Poor Albert and Little Annie." I guess
they didn't think that was scary enough or would catch an audience's eye so they
called it "I D Sam: And is it as bad as "Brotherhood of Satan"? Geri: Well I think the movie is kind of bad. Most people who have seen "Brotherhood of Satan" have seen "I Dismember Mama" because they're into horror movies so they have seen them both. But I've had a lot of people tell me that they love "Brotherhood of Satan". It was one of the first movies to come out of that kind, because they made it in '69 and I'm not sure if they brought it out in '71, but I was nine years old when I made it. Now it is a bit of a cult classic. Sam: I'd heard of it but I didn't realize you were involved in it. Geri: Right. And Strother Martin stars in it, of all people, strange
because he always did westerns. So he's in the movie playing the devil. He'll give you creeps, I'll tell ya. L.Q. Jones... oh I loved L.Q.
Jones so much... and the late Alvy Moore. But yeah, it was a real fun movie
to make but when we were in New Mexico we filmed by a lake and at the time we
didn't know that it was covered in mosquitoes so later that evening I was just
covered in mosquito bites and it was so bad that they had to take me to the
hospital. And one time they took me out filming where we were walking out
on the road and it was super hot and my eyeballs actually got sunburned so it
was so bad. But those were the only two bad thi Sam: My god! Really! Geri: Yeah. And I really wanted to see it so bad because I knew I had done a good job in it. I thought I had. I was proud of my work. Sam: So why did so many years go by before you got your hands on it? Geri: Well I didn't realize the name had changed. Sam: I see. Geri: Because when I was flying out to Japan and Sam: And did you love it? Geri: I did! I couldn't believe it. I was like, "Wow, I did really good!" And of course this was at forty years old then but it was really cool to see my work 'cause that was one that I wanted to see so, so bad. It was really cool. Sam: Why didn't you go on to do more horror films? Maybe explore that genre more... Geri: Oh. Okay. I was... well I know... [sigh] William Friedkin wanted me for "The Exorcist". That would have been my next horror movie. Sam: Wow! That would have been intense. Geri: Oh, I kno Sam: Did you ever meet Linda Blair? Geri: I did meet Linda Blair because I was one of the final three. William Friedkin had called my Mom and told me he wanted me and she had said no, but he had said, "Just let her do this last interview for me. Please. Just think about it." So my Mom said, "Oh, okay. The final interview isn't going to hurt." So my Mom had to sign a waiver or a thing saying that it would be okay for me to be hypnotized. So it was Dawn Lyn - who they said was too young for the part, Linda Blair and myself. So all three of us went into his office and the thing was where they put a dollar bill on the carpet, and they hypnotize you to where they say that no matter how hard you try, you cannot pick that dollar bill up. But I wouldn't go under. Maybe I was refusing or something but I wouldn't be hypnotized so I could always pick the dollar up. So, yeah, you would have to be hypnotized to do some of the things in the movie and when my Mom heard that she said, "No, this just is not right." Sam: Well I read somewhere that Linda Blair got really messed up doing that movie. Geri: I heard she had got her back hurt really bad and everything so in
the long run, if I had done it maybe my career wouldn't have gone on the way it
did. There is a reason for everything, so I just wasn't meant to do
that. But the part that I did have, and that I was already
studying for, and I was learning my lin Sam: Oh! No way! Geri: I did. I was cast as Blair on "The Facts of Life". I was already practicing with everybody else. We were at a big long table and we had our scripts and the kids from "Diff'rent Strokes" would come and visit us. But I had also tried out for a cereal commercial, which I had done a series of them, called Crispy Wheat-n-Raisins. Sam: That's the Wizard of Oz themed commercials. Geri: Right. And they had interviewed three to five hundred girls
and they wanted me really bad and of course I had accepted because I hadn't
heard of "The Facts of Life" yet. So I signed a contract to do those for them. So, what happened was that the commercial coincided with
The Facts of Life and
they came back to me and said, "Oh Geri. We've got terrible news!" They
said, "We are so, so sorry but you are signed under contract to do these
commercials and we just couldn't work it out with them to allow you to do this
too." So I'm 19 when I'm doing the Crispy Wheat-n-Raisin commercials but
I'm only supposed to be 13 but I've always looked very young for my age. So they liked that as well because
when you're 18 and up they can work you as long as they want for so many hours
without schooling. So I said goodbye to everyone and they all gave me a big hug
and I was walking in the parking lot I passed Lisa Whelchel and I didn't really think of that at the time because I
didn't know who she was. But later I was all, "Oh... okay." So it wasn't meant to be
and so I did all these commercials for Cri Sam: So you don't regret it. Geri: I don't regret it. I just look at it as I wasn't meant to do that and for some reason I wasn't supposed to play that part and I was supposed to do those commercials instead. Sam: But really - would you rather be known as Blair or as Fake Jan? Geri: Oh. Fake Jan. But everything in my career went the way it was supposed to go so I can't complain about anything. So I didn't do "The Exorcist" - oh well. It's no biggie. And because I toured with René Simard that helped a lot, even though my singing was pretty good. Sam: So let me ask you - here in Canada René Simard is a bit of a pop culture icon, although time has faded his popularity in English Canada anyways. Maybe he still has a big fan following in the French populace of Canada... Geri: Well when I was with him we
Sam: Well how did you get involved with him? I mean, geographically it seems really odd. Geri: Well he was in LA interviewing dancers, singers, everything. I can't remember who actually sent me out on this interview. Anyways, I
remember going out to this dance studio several times and having to learn little
routines at the snap of a finger and I guess he was just a year younger than I
was and we really blended in together. And I guess they thought we looked really
cute together, so they hired me and Vicky Thomas. She was older than both of us. She was maybe... eighteen? Nineteen? But she
was the rock singer. I was the country. René had his style, I don't
know what you would call it but it was beautiful, whatever he did. I mean it was
amazing. So we had variety in our shows. We toured the different fairs al Sam: So when you were working with René Simard you did a TV pilot called "René Simard and the ProTeens." Geri: Right. Sam: Now that's an awful title. Geri: Isn't it? Sam: Well what was it? Geri: Well what we would do is we would sing and dance and it was just a bunch of kids hanging around. It was similar to, I guess, "Saved by the Bell" I suppose. Sam: Kind of like "K.I.D.S. Incorporated"? Geri: Right. Right. We were just a bunch of teenagers. Kind of singing and dancing. You know, it's kind of hard for me to even remember. I have a picture of myself doing it but in the picture I have a rag or something so maybe I was polishing in a scene? But it's really hard to remember that part but yeah, we did it. It didn't go anywhere but it was a fun little thing to do but it never really took off. Sam: So after René Simard you fall into this Jan Brady thing. Geri: Right. In the fall of '76, that's when I tried out for the
Brady Bunch, and I think I only had to do three interviews for that but, again,
it was like three of four hundred other girls. And I never understood why I had
to cry for every audition, but I di Sam: What was working with Sid and Marty Kroft like? Geri: Oh. They were really really nice. Super guys. They were very, very professional. I don't know. I really really liked them. They were really nice to me. Everyone accepted me right away. Sam: Well that was one of my questions. I mean, the media would
like everyone to believe that the Brady Bunch, like most casts, are a real tight knit
group. Now if that's true or not remains to be seen but we did an interview
with Davy Jones not long ago and he revealed that he's never hung out with any
of the other Monkees outside of having to do a concert or a Geri: Well they see each other. I mean, they keep in contact occasionally, like special events they do something together but it's not like they hang out together. And each of them have their own lives and they do their own things. I mean, I'm best friends with Susan Olsen so we're doing things all the time, but not all of us keep in contact with each other because look how many years ago that is... but if you need to do something together it's like you're all one big family again. Sam: So when you showed up to replace Eve Plumb they took you in? Geri: Oh! Yes they did! They were so sweet and so nice and, in fact, Robert Reed told me, "Geri, it seems like you've been a part of our family the whole time. Like you started with us at the beginning or something." And that just made me feel so good, like that this was going to be so cool. Everybody was really nice to me. Mike Lookinland and I became very good friends and Chris was always so sweet to me, and Barry and Maureen and Florence... and Bob Reed was just the biggest sweetheart in the world. Sam: Now I wanted to ask about
Geri: No, yeah. He did! It was like a new thing for him and
he could just let loose and it was something like he had never done and, no, he
was always good on the set! He was always nice and friendly. It was a
little bit difficult for him to do some of the dancing and stuff but he just put
his all into it. He was just one of the nicest people that I have ever
met. He was just so sweet, so kind, so nice. I never saw him
negative at any time. Yeah, he was super. Now Susan, Mike and I were
always in school together. We had three hours of school a day and Susan
and I would kind of get in trouble sometimes because we would ditch and go and
hide out and go upstairs to this office where Chevy Chase was playing the piano
and we'd hang out with him. So that was a lot of fun and the te Sam: And you were working with professional choreographers. Geri: Yeah. Joe Cassini was our choreographer. He was really cool. Really nice and so it was a great time for me. I had worked before with Susan on a Mattel toy commercial and we had been on interviews before together. She's a year and a half younger then me. Sam: So you two already knew each other. Geri: Yeah. We had already kind of knew each other so it wasn't just total strangers or anything like that and then Mike and I became friends and I'd go over to his house and we'd go cruising around in his new car. Sam: Are you Geri: I've talked to him a couple of times and I make sure that if Susan is seeing him that I tell her to tell him hi. I know he lives in Utah and has a family but I'm not in touch with him like I am with Susan. Sam: Now I was just wondering how he's doing. I know he's had some troubles in the last couple of years and I've always liked Mike Lookinland a lot and I was just wondering if you know if he's doing alright? Geri: Oh, from what I've heard he's doing fantastic. He and his wife have two young boys and for what I've heard just recently he's doing fine. Things are a lot better. Sam: That's good to hear. I mean, I'm not trying to dig up and dirt or anything. I'm just checking. So well what I want to know is, well, let's talk a little bit about Eve Plumb. Have you met her? G Sam: Why didn't she do "The Variety Hour"? Geri: I think at that time, and this is just what I've heard because I haven't spoken to her, but I've heard that she just didn't want to do anything Brady and that she wanted to branch out and do movies and just get a little bit of separation and didn't want that to follow her in her career and didn't want to get typecast. But, you know, that's going to happen when you're on a show like that. You're never going to lose it. I think what she did is she went and did a couple of movies like "Dawn, Portrait of a Teenage Runaway" but she just wanted to try something new so she wouldn't be labeled. You know. Some people just like to go and try new things. Sam: But then she turns around and does "The Brady Brides" a couple of years later. Geri: Right. Sam: Geri: No I wasn't. Sam: Is there any rivalry between the two Jans? Geri: Well not from me! I love everybody! I mean, I'm just so happy to have played the part and I love being called Fake Jan. I love having my own identity because I would never want to take that away from Eve. I mean she is THE Jan Brady. I was the Fake Jan and I love being the Fake Jan. I think it's cute, it's different and it sets me apart. It's catchy. Sam: And it makes you notorious. Geri: I've never heard anything bad about Eve Plumb except that she doesn't like to talk about the Brady Bunch and to me I think that's really sad. Sam: Well it is. Because look at Barry Williams! He embraces it and it keeps him in the public spotlight. Geri: Oh my god! He is so cool! I was with him the other night and he was just, "Oh Geri!" And he gave me a big hug and then he was all serious and he said, "Are you still singing?" And I said I hadn't for a while but I love singing still and he goes, "Well of course. You were raising a family." And he was so cool and so nice and then his agent wants to talk to me and stuff and I don't know what's up with that. Sam: So let's leave this whole Brady Bunch thing for a minute. I want to go back to before the Bradys again and talk about Sammy Davis Jr. Geri: Oh yes. Sam: Now I Geri: Well let's see. I was with him for a little over a month. That's with rehearsing and everything and I was what was called a "Sammy Davis kid" and I did it in Lake Tahoe. We performed for two weeks. We'd do two shows nightly and on my website, you know, you can see the pictures. Sam: So you'd be singing stuff like "The People Tree" and "Candy Man"... Geri: "The Candy Man" and all that stuff. Well one night... he
was a really really nice guy but he also could have a little bit of a temper. He was so great with me. So sweet and so nice and he would come into my
dressing room and he would have on just pants and no shirt and he would have
fake fangs and he'd come in my dressing room and pretend to bite my neck and
chase me around. Well one night when I was performing I got the hiccups on
stage and he said, "Okay, do you have the hiccups?" And I said, "Yeah." I
just kept singing. I don't know. I guess I should have kept my mouth
shut but I just kept singing. I'm fourteen years old and I was, "I got to
do the show. I got to keep dancing and keep singing." So he was, "Who
has the hiccups?" and I was, "Awww... I got the hiccups. I'm so sorry."
And he
said, "That's okay." And, oh my gosh, he stopped the show. He m Sam: You danced with Michael Jackson! Wow! Geri: I couldn't believe I got to do that! It was amazing! And then Glenn Campbell was closing the night before we were going on and I got to meet him and I was like, "Oh wow! This is just a great experience." I sat next to Billy Eckstein on the plane going up to Lake Tahoe and it was like, "Oh gosh, this is quite an event!" I mean, for a fourteen year old... Sam: Through all of this you must have met dozens of legendary people! Geri: Oh yeah. Through my career... oh definitely. Gosh. I met Lon Chaney Jr. and Charleton Heston and Gregory Peck and Edward G. Robinson. Sam: Now what wa Geri: To me, because I was young when I met him, it was a little bit of frightening. A little bit scary. He had his trunk all full of his disguises with all his things in it and I wanted to open that trunk so bad and look in it. No, but he was really cool. Really quiet and being a young kid and seeing him was just a little bit scary to me. But he was nice though. He was one of a kind. Definitely one of a kind. So I've met some very big stars. But you know, in the 60s. You know, the stars from then. Like wow! So, yeah, I got to meet quite a few. Sam: That's amazing. Who was your favourite? Geri: Oh my gosh. Ummm... let's see. Red Skelton. Love the man. He actually
opened for René Simard. For our show. The most amazing. It was just a thrill to meet him and he turned it all
around and made it as if it was an absolute thrill to meet me and he asked if he
could have picture taken with me and I was just in aw Sam: That's just fantastic. Geri: That's what I thought. I mean I couldn't believe that was happening. Sam: So the 70s happened and you pretty much quit in the 80s because you had your son. Geri: Yes. I worked until 1983. I quit in '83. Sam: Now in your opinion, I know what my opinion is, but in your opinion, why is Fake Jan more notorious than Fake Marcia and Fake Cindy? Because there is a Fake Marcia and Fake Cindy. Why is Fake Jan the favourite? Geri: I don't know. Maybe it's because I played it longer than the others. I mean, I don't know how long they played their parts, but I think maybe because I was the first replacement of a Brady. Nobody else had ever played a Brady. They were always together. The six of them. And I was the first one to ever replace a character so maybe that's the reason. I don't know. I mean I've always been kind and gracious to my fans. Sam: Well that is for sure. I've learned that first hand. Geri: And Sam: That's my opinion and I wanted to ask you about that. Geri: And I'll tell you something. I never think of anything like this happening. I mean, I played the part. I never really think of it in depth. Sam: Well let me tell you something. When "The Simpsons" spoof you, you've hit it. Geri: Yeah! And I'm on the poster of all the characters! I think I'm on the top row on the right. Sam: Now the musical director on "The Simpsons" was the music director on "The Variety Hour." Geri: Yes. Sam: Now did you know you were going to be spoofed on "The Simpsons" or was that one of those things that just shocked you. Geri: It was a shocker. I later found out about it, and I didn't
even know about "Tiny Toons"... the cartoon when they did a midseason replacemen Sam: Oh! I didn't know that. Geri: Yeah. So it was a midseason replacement and that was me and they do some things and I find out after the fact most of the times. But "The Simpsons" thing was really, really cool. And then there is a band in Illinois called Fake Jan, so I thought that was cool too. Who actually called me Fake Jan first was Nickelodeon - Nick at Nite in the 90s when they were showing "The Variety Hour" and they would say, "The all new Fake Jan - Geri Reischl" so they started calling me the Fake Jan and it just stuck. So that's pretty cool. I like having my little own identity so I don't take anybody else's away. Sam: Now I need to ask you something honestly. Now I'm not saying "The Brady Bunch Variety Hour" isn't fun... I mean I've seen two episodes of it now and enjoyed every minute of it, but I also love Ed Wood films. Now what do you think went wrong when it came to "The Variety Hour"? I mean, something went wrong. TV Guide puts it in the top ten worst television programs of all time! Geri: Yeah. I think we were number four. I'll have to look that up again, but I was proud. Sam: Now were you above or below "Hello Larry"? Geri: Now number one was Jerry Springer. At least we didn't get
number one. But number four... I thought that was funny as heck because we even
got on the cover of that TV Guide a Sam: Now that's not fair to you. I've heard Maureen McCormick sing, "Look What They've Done to My Song Ma" and maybe that's fair to her, but that's not fair to you. Geri: I know. But I look at all of this and I laugh and I just think its funny. I just see it as, good or bad, the show is still getting publicity. You know what I mean? And I don't think there's anything about it that is that bad, but they still are talking about it! Look how many years ago that was, and they are still talking about it! I don't know if it had something to do with the writing. I mean, it was kind of corny. Kind of funny but at that time variety shows were in. Look when we would be on Nick at Nite, afterwards it would be Sonny and Cher and The Captain and Tennille and then Donny and Marie. Sam: Even Starland Vocal Band had their own show. Geri: Who? Sam: Starland Vocal Band. The one hit wonder that did "Afternoon Delight". Tony Orlando and Dawn. Geri: I watched that! Sam: My earliest memories are watching Sha Na Na with my dad and mom. Geri: Oh my gosh! I love that! That's great! I don't
know. I don't know if the audience were ready to accept Bradys singing and
dancing and maybe it was just too close to the other series and they were just so
used to it so this was a real shock. Maybe we didn't have a good
Sam: I love the camp factor. I love the costumes. Some of those disco suits are just a scream. Barry Williams dancing. That's always funny to watch. Geri: Yes! It's great, isn't it? Sam: Yeah. Someday I might just write an entire article about Barry Williams dancing because it's some of the most flamboyant dancing I've ever seen. Now was he choreographed, or was that actually Barry? Geri: No, it was done by Joe Cassini and that was what he was given to do and he did it the best he could. Now he is a great singer!
Geri: I loved singing with him. We did a version of Shining Star... Sam: Yeah! That's amazing! Oh, and in the music medley, when you do "Hey Mister Melody", you really, really groove! And wow! One of the worst things that I've ever seen on television in my life, not the very worst, but one of them, is the Bradys doing "Do the Hustle" and "Shake Your Booty". That right there has the potential to be, well not the potential... it was one of the weirdest things I've ever seen but, man, somehow you made it sound good! You had the solo and the moment you start singing it suddenly goes from crap to really amazing! It's almost as if your singing had the ability to perform pop culture miracles! Geri: But do you notice on that clip our mouths don't match? Sam: No I don't. Geri: Well now that I've told you that, watch it again and you will see
that when we say "Do the Hustle" our mouths don't match. Of course my solo
does, but I don't know if it was the dubbing or whatever, but something happe Sam: The only one I noticed is, again, during the, "Do the Hustle" number is that Bob Reed can't keep up and completely loses it at the end - he's no longer even trying to dance along. Geri: There's just so many. I mean, there is one where it's at the beginning and we're dancing around at the pool on those platforms. Well you'll see one where all of our hands go up and you'll see Chris and he goes down, and all of a sudden his arms go up and you just barely see a chuckle laugh on his face because he goes, "Ummm...darn it." But you'll see a lot of bloopers that maybe somebody else doesn't notice but we do and we have just the biggest laugh when we watch them. Sam: Well in Barry's book he writes a Brady episode guide where he points out all the on-screen bloopers of the original series. Geri: I'm trying to think. That was the book where they were
looking for me and a lot of people were saying to me, "Oh my gosh. It's like
you fell off the face of the planet..." This one person wrote to me and
told me that they were about to check if there was a death c Sam: So were you surprised, when yo Geri: Actually I was. I was like, "Wow!" Because I hadn't thought of it after I finished being the Fake Jan. But I was really surprised when the website started because, oh my gosh, because I would have five hundred emails in no time! I still have them everyday and it's going to be thirty years later, well next year officially. It started in 1977. Well it's been thirty years and people still write to me and nobody has ever been negative, which is really sweet. But then, I have a lot of younger people who write me. A lot of younger people who are in their mid-thirties to forties and then some of them who are a lot younger because they have got the DVD of the Brady Hour. So people are still remembering it to this day because I guess it just stands out. Sa Geri: Oh! Very cool! Well it's been such an honour talking to you because this has been so much fun, you know? You know what I mean? It's been great! Sam: Well it's people like you that have the real stories to tell. That's the way I look at it. Thanks so much for sharing it with us, and I hope that you'll stay in touch still. I love getting the occasional email from you. Geri: Oh don't worry. This isn't the last you ever hear from me. Sam: I'll be looking forward to it. And so ended my visit with Geri Reischl. You know what the most amazing thing about that interview was? It wasn't just me doing an interview with a celebrity. That afternoon it was like I felt that I sealed a friendship, which is more special than anything else I can even think of. WANT TO KNOW WHY I LOVE "FAKE JAN" SO MUCH? DISCOVER GERI REISCHL'S CAREER VIA YOUTUBE! Fake Jan: The
Movie - a fan-ma Geri's "Rock Flowers" doll commercial for Mattel Toys, featuring Casey Kasem as the voice announcer. The Heather doll was based on Geri herself. Geri and the Sand Dabs perform on the short lived family drama "Apple's Way" Geri as Jan Brady singing Elton John's "Your Song" The Brady Bunch sing "Do
the Hustle" and "Shake Your Boot Geri and Barry "Greg" Williams sing "You Don't Have to Be a Star" Geri really grooves. The Brady Bunch sing
"Songs About Music" An The Brady Kids do "Turn the Beat Around" Eat Your Heart out Vicki Sue Robinson. Dig the wigs on the Water Follies. YIKES! Geri as a guest on Pop Goes the Country And now I hope you get why Fake Jan has become my all time favorite Brady. Perhaps now she's your all time favorite Brady too!
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