I just love everything... this day and age isn't. Marlo Thomas you are loved...what a life...I'm so sorry for your loss Beloved Phillip... that guy you married was so fun..yes...just as you were...Time is so precious.
Oh, that Donald Hollinger, what a patient guy!! Too bad Anne was so patient, as well. She was just protecting her reputation. Her father would have known, for sure, and been shocked. I think her mother would have understood. Maybe even asked Anne if she enjoyed herself.
Thought I was the only one who ever noticed those type things. My wife’s hands were gorgeous. Compliments were many over the years. Still not bad at 71. She was a nail tech so she knew how to bring em out.
That Girl is fun, funny, and endearing. People who dis it are probably too young to ever understand.. it was a different time. one of the greatest shows of the 1960s
Stuart Margolin as the wacked-out hippie juror. He had a wonderful career as a second banana, sidekick, and supporting character. He was a very talented comedic actor. I believe he also directed a few sitcom episodes.
He has a great role in Death Wish as a gun toting business man who inspires the Charles Bronson character to hunt down the killers of the Bronson character's wife and daughter.
The defendant later became Mr. Whipple of Don't Squeeze the Charmin fame. And the writers didn't know a thing about law and didn't ask. There is no plaintiff in a criminal case. This is written as a mishmash of civil and criminal law, as if the wife sued the husband for her injuries but the defendant was tried criminally. Obviously many elements are unrealistic, that is to be expected, but a judge instructing a jury in a criminal case and referring to a victim as a plaintiff or jurors saying that the wife put on evidence, that is too much.
Just SUCH a different time...where men got away with beating their wife's "she must asked for it;" & "make up & get on with it!" Sooo glad we've moved on from that unhinged thought process!!
The ratings were solid, but what I read is that Marlo wanted to leave after season four and move on with her career and had to talked into returning for the last season.
Not too many laughs in this serial. The mystery is how it lasted as long as it did on network TV. Mary Tyler Moore Show, also about a single working girl, just blows it away.
@@spockboy Yes exactly, but even more because Marlo was so cute and vulnerable in every episode, the precise opposite of the feminism she professes in real life.
I heard Marlo Thomas say it was her decision to cancel the show because she didn't want her character to get married. I saw her on Joan Rivers when she said this
Marlo has said that many times. She was getting pressure from the show's producer and commercial sponsor, Clairol. They all wanted to see them get married. She objected. She refused to have marriage being the only path to a 'happily ever after' ending. She was all about breaking free from the sexist norms which amounted to nothing less than slavery of women. I've never heard Marlo use that word 'slavery'. That was me paraphrasing her sentiment. In real life, she refused to get married herself. Not until she was 42. And only after she met Phil. Phil Donahue had undergone his own personal transformation. After interviewing the likes of Gloria Steinham, Bella Abzug, etc, on his daytime talk show, he became a feminist himself. And only then did Marlo feel that she had connected with a man she could commit the rest of her life to. Alas, the rest of _his_ life. She has now reverted to being a 'single girl' yet again, after 40+ years of marriage. A marriage that, best I can tell, was an actual happily ever after story. When these two were together, they seemed blissful. Like teenagers in puppy love. Even well into their 80s. Marlo got the lifelong love & respect she yearned for. With a lifemate who fully supported her career goals as she supported his. A wonderful balance. This says nothing of motherhood, and that is yet another part of the story.
I just love everything... this day and age isn't. Marlo Thomas you are loved...what a life...I'm so sorry for your loss Beloved Phillip... that guy you married was so fun..yes...just as you were...Time is so precious.
Ann had such a great sense of duty. Glad to see she was finally able to hit a jerk when she needed to.
I actually loved this show so much and I still do
Marlo Thomas was beautiful in That Girl, i love that opening,I have a That Girl doll with Ann holding the flag.
Oh, that Donald Hollinger, what a patient guy!! Too bad Anne was so patient, as well. She was just protecting her reputation. Her father would have known, for sure, and been shocked. I think her mother would have understood. Maybe even asked Anne if she enjoyed herself.
*Ann
Joe Besser was hysterical--as one of the Stooges or otherwise. R.I.P.
Anne has beautiful hands
Along with everything else.
Thought I was the only one who ever noticed those type things. My wife’s hands were gorgeous. Compliments were many over the years. Still not bad at 71. She was a nail tech so she knew how to bring em out.
Every sit-com I’ve watched with courtroom antics have been Some of my favorite. 😊
That Girl is fun, funny, and endearing. People who dis it are probably too young to ever understand.. it was a different time. one of the greatest shows of the 1960s
Marlo Thomas was Ann Marie, i have a That Girl doll with Ann holding her flag
@michaelglass4701 wow! That's amazing! I have some cool memorabilia too..
You would never see an ending like that today.
What's wrong with this ending? The aggressor got arrested in the end
Mrs. Franklin was also Gloria, from Gloria's Answering Service, that Ann used to pick up her phone messages.
Another tv show episode inspired by 12 Angry Men. Dick Van Dyke, Odd Couple and Happy Days also did that.
Stuart Margolin as the wacked-out hippie juror. He had a wonderful career as a second banana, sidekick, and supporting character. He was a very talented comedic actor. I believe he also directed a few sitcom episodes.
He has a great role in Death Wish as a gun toting business man who inspires the Charles Bronson character to hunt down the killers of the Bronson character's wife and daughter.
If Talley had been assigned room 232 to Anne's room 222, there's no way his key would have opened her door.
a long way from mayberry to nyc for clara edwards.
The defendant later became Mr. Whipple of Don't Squeeze the Charmin fame. And the writers didn't know a thing about law and didn't ask. There is no plaintiff in a criminal case. This is written as a mishmash of civil and criminal law, as if the wife sued the husband for her injuries but the defendant was tried criminally. Obviously many elements are unrealistic, that is to be expected, but a judge instructing a jury in a criminal case and referring to a victim as a plaintiff or jurors saying that the wife put on evidence, that is too much.
All star jury on this episode
Just SUCH a different time...where men got away with beating their wife's "she must asked for it;" & "make up & get on with it!" Sooo glad we've moved on from that unhinged thought process!!
I love this show, but then I get depressed, realizing that most of these people have passed.😢
Marlo is still here.
The title is wrong since there are only nine men on the jury.
I've always liked Stuart Margolin
Anne was really disappointing in this episode, delaying the verdict for no reason when everybody was right about the guy being guilty.
Thank you, I do not know why they ever cancelled “That Girl”
The ratings were solid, but what I read is that Marlo wanted to leave after season four and move on with her career and had to talked into returning for the last season.
What did Marlo do after That Girl ?
Made a subversive special called Free To Be Me And You. And married Phil Donahue.
@@clevelandphil she also made cameo appearances on Law and Order.
Back, and to the left. Sounds familiar.
Not too many laughs in this serial. The mystery is how it lasted as long as it did on network TV. Mary Tyler Moore Show, also about a single working girl, just blows it away.
I agree MTM was in a different league. No comparison. I think maybe That Girl lasted because it was the "first" show about a single working girl.
@@spockboy Yes exactly, but even more because Marlo was so cute and vulnerable in every episode, the precise opposite of the feminism she professes in real life.
Well that's just your opinion. And apparently your opinion is unpopular
@@GohAhweh Really, hate to break the news to you, but everything written on You Tube is someone's "opinion."
@@2Uahoj That's why yours doesn't matter.
Thank you, I do not know why they ever cancelled “That Girl”
The show wasn't cancelled. Marlo Thomas thought five seasons was enough. The show was still very popular when they took it off the air.
I heard Marlo Thomas say it was her decision to cancel the show because she didn't want her character to get married. I saw her on Joan Rivers when she said this
Marlo has said that many times.
She was getting pressure from the show's producer and commercial sponsor, Clairol. They all wanted to see them get married. She objected. She refused to have marriage being the only path to a 'happily ever after' ending. She was all about breaking free from the sexist norms which amounted to nothing less than slavery of women.
I've never heard Marlo use that word 'slavery'. That was me paraphrasing her sentiment. In real life, she refused to get married herself. Not until she was 42. And only after she met Phil. Phil Donahue had undergone his own personal transformation. After interviewing the likes of Gloria Steinham, Bella Abzug, etc, on his daytime talk show, he became a feminist himself.
And only then did Marlo feel that she had connected with a man she could commit the rest of her life to. Alas, the rest of _his_ life. She has now reverted to being a 'single girl' yet again, after 40+ years of marriage. A marriage that, best I can tell, was an actual happily ever after story. When these two were together, they seemed blissful. Like teenagers in puppy love. Even well into their 80s.
Marlo got the lifelong love & respect she yearned for. With a lifemate who fully supported her career goals as she supported his. A wonderful balance.
This says nothing of motherhood, and that is yet another part of the story.