- Less than Perfect
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Less Than Perfect
Original castFormat Situation comedy Created by Terri Minsky Starring Sara Rue
Andy Dick
Sherri Shepherd
Andrea Parker
Zachary Levi
Eric Roberts (seasons 1–3)
Will Sasso (seasons 2–4)
Patrick Warburton (seasons 2–4)Theme music composer Cary R. Beare
Jason Thomas Gordon
Sky Nicholas
Dan Northchild (theme briefly used in season 2)Composer(s) Jonathan Wolff (entire run)
Rich Ragsdale (seasons 1–2)
Scott Clausen (seasons 3–4)Country of origin United States No. of seasons 4 No. of episodes 81 (List of episodes) Production Executive producer(s) Nina Wass
Eugene Stein (entire run)
Terri Minsky (season 1)
Christine Zander (seasons 2–4)Camera setup Film; Single-camera Running time 30 minutes Production company(s) Wass/Stein Productions
Touchstone TelevisionBroadcast Original channel ABC Picture format 480i (SDTV)
720p (SDTV)Original run October 1, 2002 – June 6, 2006Less Than Perfect is an American sitcom that aired on ABC from October 1, 2002, to June 6, 2006. The show was about a young female office employee (played by Sara Rue) and her co-workers. The show was directed by Skip Collector and Ted Wass, among others.
Contents
Overview and premise
The show, created by Terri Minsky, centers on Claude (Sara Rue), who works at a television network called GNB. Claude is the assistant for anchor Will Butler (Eric Roberts). Comedians Andy Dick, Will Sasso, and Sherri Shepherd play her co-workers and friends, while Zachary Levi and Andrea Parker play her rivals at work.
Much was made at the time of the show's premiere about the central character of the show being a "full figured" woman, and that the title correlated to Claude being "Less Than Perfect."[1] Over the course of the series, Rue lost 30 pounds (14 kg; 2.1 st).[2]
History
Less Than Perfect debuted in a Tuesday evening time-slot and received steady ratings for its first two seasons. When the series was moved in its third season to a Friday-night time-slot, ratings began to fall sharply, and the show was considered to be in danger of cancellation.
TVGuide.com featured the show on a list of "Endangered Series." Ratings in the coveted 18–49 demographic were high enough, and the show was near the threshold for number of episodes needed for syndication, so a limited fourth season of 13 episodes was ordered.
After a long hiatus from ABC's schedule, the show returned as a late-season replacement for ABC with its fourth season premiere on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 at 9:30 p.m.[3]
Despite the pickup, the future of the series was not assured. Cast member Zachary Levi stated many cast members were ready to move on,[4] and series lead Sara Rue had filmed a pilot for CBS starring as a woman who runs a toy company with her brother in the comedy Play Nice.
ABC confirmed on May 17, 2006 that the fourth season would be its last.[5] ABC showed only part of the fourth season as scheduled. After five of the 13 episodes aired, ABC ceased broadcasting of the show, with the last episode broadcast on June 6, 2006. However, these episodes which were not broadcast in the US have been shown in other countries.
The show joined Lifetime Television on June 1, 2009 in syndication and airs all 81 episodes including the eight episodes previously not broadcast in the US, but as of 2010 it is no longer on the schedule.
Characters
Main characters
- Sara Rue as Claudia "Claude" Casey, a lovable female worker. She is bright with her co-workers and her con-artist enemy, Lydia. She is always the lead character and is seen in all episodes of the show.
- Sherri Shepherd as Ramona Platt, a coworker of Owen and good friend of Claude. She is sometimes bossy with her coworkers.
- Andy Dick as Owen Kronsky, an offbeat and sometimes clumsy office supply manager with GNB.
- Andrea Parker as Lydia Weston, one of Claude's antagonists. She is shallow, snobby and professionally ambitious. Eventually, she has a relationship with Jeb Denton.
- Zachary Levi as Kipp Steadman, Claude's other antagonist who later becomes Jeb Denton's assistant.
- Eric Roberts as Will Butler, (2002–2005) (Seasons 1–3, 57 episodes) a national newsanchor at GNB with many ex-wives. Will is Claude's boss.
- Will Sasso as Carl Monari (2003–2006) (Seasons 2–4 [guest starring in season 1], 40 episodes). He lives across the hall from Claude and works at GNB as the cafeteria manager.
- Patrick Warburton as Jeb Denton, (2003–2006) the boyfriend of Claude's biggest enemy, Lydia. He's a very energetic, quiet, funny, serious, and greedy news anchor climbing the ladder at GNB. His favorite food is Crab Cakes. He refers to Kipp never by name, but merely as "Secretary."
Recurring characters
- Josh Braaten as Charlie, Claude's boyfriend from the travel department. (2002–2003 & 2005, Seasons 1 & 3, 8 episodes)
- William Ragsdale as Mitch Calgrove, a producer at GNB who Claude dates (2004, Season 2, 4 episodes)
- John Eric Bentley as an assistant director who becomes a director (2002 & 2006, Seasons 1 & 4, 3 episodes)
- George Wyner as Alan Turnbach, head of GNB news (2003 & 2006, Seasons 1 & 4, 3 episodes)
- French Stewart as Gene Schmidtline, an employee at GNB (2003–2005, Seasons 2–3, 3 episodes)
- Jenny McCarthy as Dani, Will's on-and-off girlfriend (2003, Season 2, 3 episodes)
- Diana-Maria Riva as Vivian, Carl's ex-girlfriend (2004–2005, Seasons 2–3, 3 episodes)
- Joanna Tamases as Irene, a co-worker at GNB who offers Claude a job (2006, Season 4, 3 episodes)
- Valerie Harper as Judith, Owen's mom (2003–2004, Seasons 2–3, 2 episodes)
- Joanna Kerns as Judy, Owen's other mom (2003–2004, Seasons 2–3, 2 episodes)
- Michael Boatman as Ted Elliot, a director who employs Claude (2003, Seasons 1–2, 2 episodes)
- Michael Angarano as George Denton, Jeb's son (2004, Seasons 2–3, 2 episodes)
- Nicole Sullivan as Deirdre Bishop, Owen's love interest (2003, Season 1, 2 episodes)
One-off guest stars
- Martin Mull as Mr Buddy Casey, Claude's dad (2002, Season 1)
- Cindy Williams as Mrs Joan Casey, Claude's mom (2002, Season 1)
- Joanna Cassidy as Norma (2003, Season 1)
- Trista Rehn as Herself (2003, Season 1)
- Richard Ruccolo as Bobby Casey, Claude's brother (2003, Season 1)
- Barry Bostwick as Max Damarius (2003, Season 1)
- Gordon Clapp as Detective Martin (2003, Season 2)
- Pamela Anderson as Vicki Devorski (2003, Season 2)
- Bill Walton as Himself (2004, Season 2)
- Lesley Ann Warren as Diane Steadman, Kipp's mom (2004, Season 2)
- Brooke Burke as Nurse Benson (2004, Season 2)
- James Belushi as sandwich vendor Eddie Smirkoff (2004, Season 2)
- John McEnroe as Himself (2004, Season 2)
- Tori Spelling as Roxanne Fiedler (2004, Season 2)
- Lucy Lawless as Tracy Fletcher (2004, Season 3)
- Richard Kind as Lance Corcoran (2004, Season 3)
- John Di Maggio as Bartender (2004, Season 3)
- David Cassidy as Vince (2005, Season 3)
- Paula Abdul as Kathleen (2005, Season 3)
- Kimberly Williams as Laura (2005, Season 3)
- Regis Philbin as Xin Xao Pi (2005, Season 3)
- Joan Rivers as Louise (2005, Season 3)
- Paul DiMeo, Tracy Hutson & Michael Moloney as themselves, as the cast of Extreme Makeover (2005, Season 3)
- Star Jones as Dr Curtis (2005, Season 3)
- Christopher Knight as Waiter (2005, Season 3)
- Tony Plana as The Owl Inspector did not really have a name. Claude and Carl were refereeing him as the "Owl Specialist". He has a frustrating personality because Claude didn't want him to take away or shoot her kind owls. He only made his appearance in "The Owl Specialist".
Episodes
Main article: List of Less Than Perfect episodesInternational broadcasting of show
Less Than Perfect is currently showing on Comedy Central in the United Kingdom and Ireland, on ATV in Austria, on Nelonen in Finland, on FOX8 (pay TV) and the Seven Network (free to air) in Australia, on MTV Russia in Russia, on Star World for the rest of Asia, on yesSTARS in Israel, on Cuatro in Spain, on Sky Italia's Fox and MTV Italia in Italy, on Kanal 5 in Denmark, on HRT and Fox Life in Croatia, Serbia, Macedonia, Poland and Bulgaria, on TV-First in Belarus. The first seven episodes and episode nine of the final season of Less Than Perfect aired on TV2 in New Zealand, with the remaining episodes (eight and 10 through 13) yet to be scheduled. The show also aired on MBC 4 to Arabic speaking viewers. In Turkey, TNT Turkey airs. And ComedyMax currently airs the show for Digiturk subscribers and Comedy Smart airs for D-Smart subscribers. The show has also been aired on RTÉ Two in Ireland.
Reception
Critical
Early reviews for the show found the characterization generally stereotypical, but critics often praised the performance of Sara Rue. USA Today asserted that "in just two episodes, the good guys/bad guys structure and the exaggerated characterizations already are showing signs of wear," although it called Rue a "welcome addition" to TV sitcoms.[6] People magazine likewise criticized the stereotypical characters, but summarized the show as "Hardly perfect but happily Rueful."[7] However, by Season 3, USA Today said the show had "hit its stride."[8]
American ratings
Season Episodes Premiere Season finale U.S. ratings 1 2002–2003 22 October 1, 2002 May 20, 2003 8.1 million (85th place)[9] 2 2003–2004 24 September 23, 2003 May 18, 2004 8.8 million (66th place)[10] 3 2004–2005 22 September 24, 2004 April 15, 2005 6.2 million (94th place)[11] 4 2006 13 (8 unaired) April 18, 2006 June 6, 2006 4.9 million (115th place)[12] DVD releases
Lionsgate Home Entertainment released the first season of Less Than Perfect on DVD in Region 1 on September 7, 2010 .[13]
Season Episodes Region 1 Region 2 Region 4 Season 1 22 September 7, 2010 TBA TBA Season 2 24 TBA TBA TBA Season 3 22 TBA TBA TBA Season 4 13 TBA TBA TBA References
- ^ MSNBC.com
- ^ Extra.tv
- ^ Zap2It
- ^ http://channels.isp.netscape.com/celebrity/hollywoodexclusive.jsp?feature=ce_hol_01122006
- ^ Digital Spy
- ^ Bianco, Robert (October 1, 2002), "'Less Than Perfect' aptly named, but Rue is nearly flawless". USA Today.
- ^ Kelleher, Terry (October 28, 2002), "Less Than Perfect (TV program)". People. 58 (18):30
- ^ Robert Bianco (November 26, 2004), "Unwind, rewind, watch these shows". USA Today.
- ^ "Nielsen's TOP 156 Shows for 2002–03 Retrieved July 29, 2008.
- ^ "2003–2004 TV Ratings Retrieved July 29, 2008.
- ^ "2004–2005 TV Ratings Retrieved July 29, 2008.
- ^ "2005–2006 TV Ratings Retrieved July 29, 2008.
- ^ http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Perfect-Season-1/13906
External links
TGIF 8 Simple Rules • Aliens in the Family • Baby Talk • The Big House • Billy • Boy Meets World • Brother's Keeper • Camp Wilder • Complete Savages • Clueless • Dinosaurs • Family Matters • Full House • George Lopez • Getting By • Going Places • Hangin' with Mr. Cooper • Hi Honey, I'm Home! • Home Free • Hope & Faith • The Hughleys • Just the Ten of Us • Less than Perfect • Life with Bonnie • Married to the Kellys • Mr. Belvedere • Muppets Tonight • New Attitude • Odd Man Out • On Our Own • Perfect Strangers • Sabrina, the Teenage Witch • Sister, Sister • Step By Step • Teen Angel • Two of a Kind • Where I Live • You WishCategories:- TGIF (ABC)
- 2002 American television series debuts
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- 2000s American television series
- American Broadcasting Company network shows
- American television sitcoms
- English-language television series
- Television series about television
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- Television shows set in New York City
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