El antiguo e incisivo mayordomo de Jessica Tate prospera y se convierte en el primer gobernador "director de asuntos del hogar"; luego, en director de presupuestos del estado; y después, en ... Leer todoEl antiguo e incisivo mayordomo de Jessica Tate prospera y se convierte en el primer gobernador "director de asuntos del hogar"; luego, en director de presupuestos del estado; y después, en teniente gobernador de la Casa del Gobierno.El antiguo e incisivo mayordomo de Jessica Tate prospera y se convierte en el primer gobernador "director de asuntos del hogar"; luego, en director de presupuestos del estado; y después, en teniente gobernador de la Casa del Gobierno.
- Ganó 2 premios Primetime Emmy
- 3 premios ganados y 22 nominaciones en total
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I watched this show regularly for about four years or so,all the way to it's last show in 1986. By then,it had been moved to Saturday nights,with ABC clearly putting it out to pasture as the ratings were probably slowing(if not outright dipping)and the writing and story-lines getting more contrived and preachy over the last two seasons. Still,I got into this show and enjoyed it quite a bit.
A spin-off of the groundbreaking,controversial and(in my and I'm sure not the only opinion)brilliant "Soap",this show followed the life of acerbic but humane and wise butler-turned-house servant-turned-budget secretary-turned lieutenant Governor Benson DuBois(Robert Guillame,who seemed to be born to play this role). He,similar to his role on "Soap",has to put up with his share of rich(and almost entirely white)stuffed-shirts and makes friends with the TAte-Gatling family,only this time it's with Jessica Tate's cousin,the Governor himself(JAmes Noble,who is FANTASTIC here)and his daughter KAtie(Missy Gold,who will always be a cute blonde kid to me).It is the Governor,in fact,who appoints Benson to his posts in the Mansion,and Benson in turn puts up with the jovial absent-mindedness that the Gov exudes,being an aid as well as a gentle foil. The primary antagonism/grudging compatriots in the show came from the dour German housekeeper Gretchen Kraus(Inga Swenson,who probably had trouble getting casting directors to NOT cast her as Teutonic women after this show)and the pompous ass of an adviser Clayton Endicott III(Rene Auberjonois,another great actor that probably had to work hard to free himself from being typecast). Also,Benson ended up befriending his secretary Denise(Didi Conn,who will always be Frenchy from Grease to millions!)and her eventual husband,the lovably scattered gubernatorial staffer Pete Downey(Ethan Phillips,still working,Thank God!).Also featured as the staff(mostly in the first two seasons,which I must confess I have not seen as much of as the later shows) were Harris/Thomas/Witt standby Caroline McWilliams,Lewis Stadlen,co-producer Bob Fraser and Jerry Seinfeld(!).
This show was early Friday nights for me when I was too young to have much (if any) of a social life,and while the humor and pacing may seem dated and slow by today's standards(put this up against something like "Seinfeld" or "Scrubs" and see what I mean),watching it on TVLand again had me laughing out loud at times and appreciating this show for what it was:simple sitcom material done right. While this show does SEEM like twenty years or more has passed,it's a good t.v. memory,something that to me makes television worth watching.
A spin-off of the groundbreaking,controversial and(in my and I'm sure not the only opinion)brilliant "Soap",this show followed the life of acerbic but humane and wise butler-turned-house servant-turned-budget secretary-turned lieutenant Governor Benson DuBois(Robert Guillame,who seemed to be born to play this role). He,similar to his role on "Soap",has to put up with his share of rich(and almost entirely white)stuffed-shirts and makes friends with the TAte-Gatling family,only this time it's with Jessica Tate's cousin,the Governor himself(JAmes Noble,who is FANTASTIC here)and his daughter KAtie(Missy Gold,who will always be a cute blonde kid to me).It is the Governor,in fact,who appoints Benson to his posts in the Mansion,and Benson in turn puts up with the jovial absent-mindedness that the Gov exudes,being an aid as well as a gentle foil. The primary antagonism/grudging compatriots in the show came from the dour German housekeeper Gretchen Kraus(Inga Swenson,who probably had trouble getting casting directors to NOT cast her as Teutonic women after this show)and the pompous ass of an adviser Clayton Endicott III(Rene Auberjonois,another great actor that probably had to work hard to free himself from being typecast). Also,Benson ended up befriending his secretary Denise(Didi Conn,who will always be Frenchy from Grease to millions!)and her eventual husband,the lovably scattered gubernatorial staffer Pete Downey(Ethan Phillips,still working,Thank God!).Also featured as the staff(mostly in the first two seasons,which I must confess I have not seen as much of as the later shows) were Harris/Thomas/Witt standby Caroline McWilliams,Lewis Stadlen,co-producer Bob Fraser and Jerry Seinfeld(!).
This show was early Friday nights for me when I was too young to have much (if any) of a social life,and while the humor and pacing may seem dated and slow by today's standards(put this up against something like "Seinfeld" or "Scrubs" and see what I mean),watching it on TVLand again had me laughing out loud at times and appreciating this show for what it was:simple sitcom material done right. While this show does SEEM like twenty years or more has passed,it's a good t.v. memory,something that to me makes television worth watching.
Benson DuBois (one of the reasons why Soap is a success and is my favorite character of that show) is moving on from being the Tate's butler/cook to being the head of household affairs, but his sharp, sarcastic wittiness hasn't changed one bit.
While Soap was a soap opera parody with continuing storylines and occasional cliffhangers unresolved until the following episode answers those questions, Benson was purely a mostly self-contained sitcom with politics sprinkled in the mix.
Benson works with Governor Eugene X. Gatling (played to perfection by James Noble), who has a daughter, Katie (played by the cute and adorable Missy Gold).
The governor does have his dimwitted and airheaded moments, but he does take his job seriously, for the most part.
Outside of Benson, the other consistent member of the governor's staff is his cook Gretchen Kraus (played to perfection by the late Inga Swenson). Throughout the series, Benson and Ms. Kraus do take jabs at each other but would become friends later in the show's run.
Another character that occasionally gets on Benson's nerves is the governor's chief of staff, the snobbish Clayton Endicott III (played by the late, great René Auberjonois), and their rivalry were also parts of the reason why it became successful back then.
Other characters include the governor's first chief of staff John Taylor (played by David Hedison in the pilot and Lewis J. Stadlen for the rest of S1) until he was dropped and replaced by Clayton starting with S2, the governor's secretary Marcy Hill (played by the lovely Caroline McWilliams) who would leave early in S3 after getting married, Press Secretary Pete Downey (played by Ethan Phillips) who joined in S2, while Marcy's replacement and later Pete's wife Denise Stevens (played by the lovely Didi Conn) joined the following season until they both leave early in S6, and the governor's new chef Rose Cassidy (played by Billie Bird).
Like its parent show Soap, Benson also ended on a cliffhanger, deciding on who would win and become the governor.
Despite that, Benson is still remembered for being charmingly funny.
While Soap was a soap opera parody with continuing storylines and occasional cliffhangers unresolved until the following episode answers those questions, Benson was purely a mostly self-contained sitcom with politics sprinkled in the mix.
Benson works with Governor Eugene X. Gatling (played to perfection by James Noble), who has a daughter, Katie (played by the cute and adorable Missy Gold).
The governor does have his dimwitted and airheaded moments, but he does take his job seriously, for the most part.
Outside of Benson, the other consistent member of the governor's staff is his cook Gretchen Kraus (played to perfection by the late Inga Swenson). Throughout the series, Benson and Ms. Kraus do take jabs at each other but would become friends later in the show's run.
Another character that occasionally gets on Benson's nerves is the governor's chief of staff, the snobbish Clayton Endicott III (played by the late, great René Auberjonois), and their rivalry were also parts of the reason why it became successful back then.
Other characters include the governor's first chief of staff John Taylor (played by David Hedison in the pilot and Lewis J. Stadlen for the rest of S1) until he was dropped and replaced by Clayton starting with S2, the governor's secretary Marcy Hill (played by the lovely Caroline McWilliams) who would leave early in S3 after getting married, Press Secretary Pete Downey (played by Ethan Phillips) who joined in S2, while Marcy's replacement and later Pete's wife Denise Stevens (played by the lovely Didi Conn) joined the following season until they both leave early in S6, and the governor's new chef Rose Cassidy (played by Billie Bird).
Like its parent show Soap, Benson also ended on a cliffhanger, deciding on who would win and become the governor.
Despite that, Benson is still remembered for being charmingly funny.
10yaheekt
I just saw the "Benson" show for the first time this weekend. It was during the TV Land, 48-hour, Benson Marathon! I had a ball!
I NEVER knew someone could laugh so much and so hard! My favorite episode was the one in which Clayton is kidnapped. That was a good one! Trouble never fails to catch up with that guy! And what a rescue team....Uh yeah!!!....Not!
My next favorite episode involved Klaus' SPOOF-OF-A-MARRIAGE! Could kind of guess what was coming but it was fun to watch anyway! I spent the whole weekend holding my sides and trying NOT to laugh continuously! Needless to say, I failed! Oh well, you can't win them all! HA HA HA!
I NEVER knew someone could laugh so much and so hard! My favorite episode was the one in which Clayton is kidnapped. That was a good one! Trouble never fails to catch up with that guy! And what a rescue team....Uh yeah!!!....Not!
My next favorite episode involved Klaus' SPOOF-OF-A-MARRIAGE! Could kind of guess what was coming but it was fun to watch anyway! I spent the whole weekend holding my sides and trying NOT to laugh continuously! Needless to say, I failed! Oh well, you can't win them all! HA HA HA!
Excellent series. Without a doubt, my favorite episode was when Robert Guillaume sang "O Holy Night" during one of the Christmas-time episodes. This was one of the best of this series, of which there were many fine episodes. Actually, the series finale was just weird in that we never found out who actually won the election. Perhaps though it is just as well. Another excellent episode was when Benson saved Krause's life by using the Heimlich Manuver. Years later a young child (maybe pre-teen, I forget) saved the life of a friend using this technique because this child saw this particular Benson episode. Amazing show by some very talented actors.
This was one of my favorite shows growing up. It was a rare example of a spinoff series being more successful than the original, as it spun off from Soap. Robert Guillaume was perfect as the wisecracking butler who assisted the meek governor for whom he worked in various aspects of his life, especially family and business. Benson is later appointed state budget director and then elected Lt. Governor. All in all, I sometimes miss this show due to its humor and characters.
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- TriviaThe sixth season episode "Scenario" (original airdate 22 February 1985) was the first network drama episode to demonstrate the use of the Internet. The computer network they were accessing was the ARPANET which was an Internet prototype used by the US military and government.
- ConexionesFeatured in The 32nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1980)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Бенсон
- Locaciones de filmación
- 1365 S Oakland Avenue, Pasadena, California, Estados Unidos(Harlow E. Bundy house as the Governor's Mansion)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
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