Getting By is an
American sitcom produced by
Thomas L. Miller and
Robert L. Boyett, with the format created by William Bickley and
Michael Warren. The show debuted on
ABC in
March 1993 on the
TGIF block, but was canceled before the end of the season.
NBC picked the show up in
September 1993 and revived it; again, it was canceled by the end of that season.
Synopsis
The show was about two women, one white and one black, who inadvertently are sold the same house and decide to live there with both of their families. It starred
Telma Hopkins as Dolores Dixon and
Cindy Williams as Cathy Hale, two best friends and single mothers, who were also both employed as social workers for the Chicago Department of Welfare. The unique living situation went off without
too much of a hitch, especially with the kids, although there were the normal pains, squabbles and adjustments expected with the territory. Dolores had two sons, teenagers Marcus (
Merlin Santana) and Darren (
Deon Richmond). Cathy had two daughters, blossoming teenager Nikki (Nicki Vannice) and cute youngster Julie (Ashleigh Blair Sterling). Many of the plots revolved around the kids learning to relate to each other and their numerous misadventures, and Dolores and Cathy's discovery that living together was putting a new face on their friendship. Dolores was sensible, headstrong, and very much down to earth, while Cathy seemed too preoccupied with perfection, and was afraid to take new risks. Eventually, Cathy became determined to shake off her "goody two shoes" image and sought the guidance of Dolores to bring her more in touch with the real world.
The first season's opening sequence was a single scene in which both mothers were handing their children their bagged lunches, as the kids raced around the kitchen before going off to school. The theme song was a gentle tune with a traditional Miller-Boyett "inspirational" sound, featuring male vocals. The credit font used in these episodes was the same italicized, orange font used in
Family Matters. For
Getting Bys only full season on NBC, the opening changed to featuring cut-out animation of a house, with various windows and doorways that opened and closed when cast members and episode scenes were revealed. The multicolored graphics and font was now in a thinner variant of the font used on Step By Step. The theme music was also re-written with new lyrics set to a funky melody; however, the same male vocalist from season one's theme remained. First and final scene production credits, as well as the closing credits, used orange/black-embossed Hobo font (the same type used on The Dukes of Hazzard) in the second season.
Development
Miller-Boyett Productions, along with their associates Bickley/Warren, were looking to develop a new sitcom for
ABC in 1992 centered around a white family that adopted a black son, which looked to be an original, less heavy-handed 1990s spin on
Diff'rent Strokes and
Webster. The project was titled
A New Day, and had
Cindy Williams cast as the mother. Plans were moving forward on the series for a fall 1992 debut, until a change in direction occurred.
Telma Hopkins, who had been co-starring for the past three years as
Rachel Crawford on
Family Matters, decided that year that she wanted to leave that series for her own venture, which her employers were more than willing to provide. In the process of coming up with a concept for Hopkins' series, producers in the end experimented with the idea of adding her into
A New Day with Williams, to see how the casting would work. Both women clicked as equal leads, so the show's premiere was moved up by several months as Miller/Boyett and company tinkered with the format, resulting in the final product known as
Getting By.
Merlin Santana and
Deon Richmond portrayed preteen rivals for the affections of
Rudy Huxtable on
The Cosby Show. Their interaction on that series was so impressive that they were cast as brothers on
Getting By. The two also made 2 guest appearances on
Hanging with Mr. Cooper in 1995 and 1996, as well as the 2003 movie
The Blues, which turned out to be Santana's last film appearance before his death.
Episodes
Season 1
| Episode # | Episode Title | Original Airdate
|
| 1 | "Moving In" | March 5, 1993
|
| 2 | "Men Don't Dance" | March 12, 1993
|
| 3 | "Back to Nature" | March 19, 1993
|
| 4 | "A Little Romance" | March 26, 1993
|
| 5 | "The Suit" | April 2, 1993
|
| 6 | "Shop 'till You Drop" | April 9, 1993
|
| 7 | "My Brother's Keeper" | April 16, 1993
|
| 8 | "The Gospel Truth" | April 23, 1993
|
| 9 | "Give Peace a Chance" | April 30, 1993
|
| 10 | "The Love Connection" | May 7, 1993
|
| 11 | "We Are Family, Not" | May 14, 1993
|
| 12 | "Anatomy of a Fight" | May 21, 1993
|
Season 2
| Episode # | Episode Title | Original Airdate
|
| 1 | "Turnabout Dance" | September 21, 1993
|
| 2 | "Letter to the President" | September 28, 1993
|
| 3 | "Faking the Grade" | October 5, 1993
|
| 4 | "Old Car" | October 12, 1993
|
| 5 | "Do the Fright Thing" | October 19, 1993
|
| 6 | "Not With My Sister" | November 2, 1993
|
| 7 | "Reach for the Stars" | November 23, 1993
|
| 8 | "Pinball Wizard" | December 7, 1993
|
| 9 | "The Pit Stop" | December 14, 1993
|
| 10 | "The Penthouse" | December 21, 1993
|
| 11 | "Sell It Like It Is" | January 8, 1994
|
| 12 | "In the Driver's Seat" | January 15, 1994
|
| 13 | "A Life in the Theater" | January 22, 1994
|
| 14 | "It Takes a Thief" | January 29, 1994
|
| 15 | "The Rich Guy" | February 12, 1994
|
| 16 | "Three Days of the Condo" | May 28, 1994
|
| 17 | "Teacher's Pest" | June 4, 1994
|
| 18 | "Just Say No" | June 11, 1994
|
| 19 | "My Brilliant Career" | June 18, 1994
|
Award nominations
| Year
| Result
| Award
| Category
| Recipient
|
| 1994 | Nominated | Young Artist Awards | Youth Actress Leading Role in a Television Series | Ashleigh Sterling
|
External links
TGIF (ABC)