La famille Cunningham a vécu les années cinquante avec l'aide et les conseils de l'adorable et presque surhumain graisseur Fonzie.La famille Cunningham a vécu les années cinquante avec l'aide et les conseils de l'adorable et presque surhumain graisseur Fonzie.La famille Cunningham a vécu les années cinquante avec l'aide et les conseils de l'adorable et presque surhumain graisseur Fonzie.
- A remporté 1 prix Primetime Emmy
- 18 victoires et 21 nominations au total
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- AnecdotesAlthough Fonzie loved motorcycles, Henry Winkler was terrified of them. Most of the scenes of Fonzie riding the motorcycle were shot with the bike attached to a platform, and being pulled by a truck.
- GaffesThe changing of the interior of the house after the second season messed up the scheme of the house. From exterior shots the driveway/garage of the Cunningham house was to the right of the front door, while from the interior sets the garage was still to the right of the front door (i.e. it would be on the left as viewed from outside).
- Générique farfeluBeing a breakout character, Winkler starts off by only being credited on the closing title sequence; then fourth in season 2; second in season 3-7; finally, top-billing from season 8 onward!
- Autres versionsIn both syndication and daytime network airings, the episodes' tag sequences were often cut.
- ConnexionsEdited into Weezer: Buddy Holly (1994)
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"American Graffiti"-styled television show that ran a decade (1974-1984) and completed a mind-blowing 255 episodes in all. The show followed the Cunningham family (father Tom Bosley, mother Marion Ross, son Ron Howard and daughter Erin Moran) in Milwaukee throughout the 1950s. Howard, his friends (Don Most and Anson Williams) and their misadventures with school and girls dominated the show's story-lines early on. Would-be motorcycle tough guy punk Henry Winkler (aka Fonzie) stole the show from minute one and he was the main reason why the show survived so long. Cast departures (Howard, Most and diner owner Pat Morita) and additions (Ted McGinley, Scott Baio, Al Molinaro and Morita again) did nothing to change ratings as the show consistently stayed high on the Nielsen scale. Also the father of two lesser spin-offs ("Laverne & Shirley" and "Joanie Loves Chachi"), "Happy Days" proved that one amazing character (Fonz) could basically carry a program's list of shortcomings. 4 stars out of 5.
- tfrizzell
- 6 juin 2004
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