TV Series Finale

12
Dec
2006

The Golden Girls: Part 1, The Queens of NBC’s Saturday Night

The Golden Girls - illustration by Glen HansonThe Golden Girls debuted on September 14, 1985 and ran for seven seasons. The show was a snappy comedy and quickly became a cornerstone of NBC’s Saturday night line-up.

The idea for the sitcom is said to have come from NBC executive Brandon Tartikoff after he visited his senior citizen aunt. His aunt and her best friend/neighbor were constantly arguing and bickering with one another but, underneath it all, he could see how much they truly cared for one another. Tartikoff thought it would be a great concept for a show and suggested it to Soap creator Susan Harris.

Harris used that simple idea and created The Golden Girls. It was executive produced by her husband Paul Junger Witt and Tony Thomas through their joint company Witt/Thomas/Harris.

The series centered around four older women who lived together in a Florida home as they dealt with issues of aging, mortality, dating, sex and more. The characters were played by a quartet of wonderfully-talented veterans of stage and screen.

Beatrice Arthur, previously known to audiences as the Emmy Award-winning star of the Norman Lear sitcom Maude and the Broadway musical Mame, played substitute teacher and divorcee Dorothy Petrillo Zbornak. Dorothy was intelligent and forthright with her opinion while frequently becoming the butt of jokes about her height and size.

Sitcom veteran Betty White, best known from playing The Mary Tyler Moore Show’s Sue Ann Nivens and appearing on game shows like her late husband’s Password series, played the sweet and innocent Rose Lindstrom Nylund. Rose was well-known for her sunny and ditzy personality as well as long and contrived stories about her hometown in Minnesota, Saint Olaf.

Rue McClanahan (who’d worked with Bea Arthur on Maude and with Betty White on Mama’s Family) played the self-absorbed Blanche Elizabeth Hollingsworth Devereaux. Blanche was the owner of the house where they all lived and had a penchant for dating and sleeping with a wide variety of men.

Broadway actress Estelle Getty (Torch Song Trilogy) rounded out the quartet as Dorothy’s Sicilian mother Sophia Spirelli Petrillo. Sophia had had a stroke and, as a result, would usually speak her mind in overly sarcastic and caustic ways.

With such a wonderfully talented cast and creative team, it’s no wonder that The Golden Girls became a huge success. How did it begin? Stay tuned . . . TV Series Finale home page

Related links
The Golden Girls books || The Golden Girls theme on iTunes Theme from The Golden Girls

14 Responses to “The Golden Girls: Part 1, The Queens of NBC’s Saturday Night”

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  1. 14
    Beccabiggestfan Says:

    I loved the Golden Girls and Sophia (Estelle G. and Betty W. were 2 of my favorites) if you could pick just 2. I loved them all. When you have a group of women of their caliber you knew you were in for a show the entire family could enjoy. I try to catch the reruns when ever I can.
    Thanxs for so many hours of laughter.
    Becca

  2. 13
    Luis Says:

    RIP Estelle, thanks for all these years of laughter. Goodbye Mamma Petrillo, we’ll miss you.

  3. 12
    AbiGaiL Says:

    Golden Girls is easily my favorite show. RIP Estelle Getty aka SOPHIA…you will be missed by all true G.G. Fans everywhere! :(

  4. 11
    Rick Says:

    My favorite scene with Estelle Getty:

    Sophia: All right, all right, I can pick up a cue. Picture it: Sicily, 1912. A beautiful young peasant girl with clear olive skin, meets an exciting but penniless Spanish artist. There’s an instant attraction. They laugh, they sing, they slam down a few boilermakers. Shortly afterwards he’s arrested for showing her how he can hold his pallet without using his hands…But I digress. He paints her portrait and they make passionate love. She spends much of the next day in the shower with a loofa sponge scrubbing his fingerprints off her body. She sees the portrait and is insulted. It looks nothing like her, and she storms out of his life forever. That peasant girl was me. And that painter was…Pablo Picasso.

    Dorothy: Ma, I have a feeling you’re lying.

    Rose: Be positive, Dorothy.

    Dorothy: OK, I’m POSITIVE you’re lying!

    -It is a shame she had to go. But I will always remember how much laughter she brought to me.

    RIP Estelle

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