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IMDbPro

Une fille à scandales

Titre original : The Naked Truth
  • Série télévisée
  • 1995–1998
  • TV-14
  • 30min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
1,1 k
MA NOTE
Téa Leoni, George Wendt, Jonathan Penner, Mark Roberts, Darryl Sivad, and Holland Taylor in Une fille à scandales (1995)
Comédiesitcom

Un photojournaliste respecté perd tout et finit par accepter un emploi dans un tabloïd de célébrités louches.Un photojournaliste respecté perd tout et finit par accepter un emploi dans un tabloïd de célébrités louches.Un photojournaliste respecté perd tout et finit par accepter un emploi dans un tabloïd de célébrités louches.

  • Création
    • Chris Thompson
  • Casting principal
    • Téa Leoni
    • Holland Taylor
    • Mark Roberts
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    1,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Création
      • Chris Thompson
    • Casting principal
      • Téa Leoni
      • Holland Taylor
      • Mark Roberts
    • 14avis d'utilisateurs
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Épisodes55

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    HautLes mieux notés

    Photos492

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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Téa Leoni
    Téa Leoni
    • Nora Wilde
    • 1995–1998
    Holland Taylor
    Holland Taylor
    • Camilla Dane
    • 1995–1998
    Mark Roberts
    Mark Roberts
    • Dave Fontaine…
    • 1995–1998
    Jonathan Penner
    Jonathan Penner
    • Nicky Columbus
    • 1995–1997
    Darryl Sivad
    Darryl Sivad
    • T.J.
    • 1995–1997
    Chris Elliott
    Chris Elliott
    • Bradley Crosby
    • 1997–1998
    Tom Verica
    Tom Verica
    • Jake Sullivan
    • 1997–1998
    Amy Hill
    Amy Hill
    • Suji
    • 1997–1998
    Jim Rash
    Jim Rash
    • Harris Van Doren
    • 1997–1998
    Amy Ryan
    Amy Ryan
    • Chloe Banks
    • 1995–1996
    Jack Blessing
    Jack Blessing
    • Mr. Donner
    • 1995–1996
    George Wendt
    George Wendt
    • Les Polanski
    • 1997
    David Lee Smith
    David Lee Smith
    • Mark
    • 1997
    Mary Tyler Moore
    Mary Tyler Moore
    • Catherine Wilde
    • 1997
    George Segal
    George Segal
    • Fred Wilde
    • 1995–1997
    Fred Stoller
    Fred Stoller
    • Leo
    • 1998
    Jack Coleman
    Jack Coleman
    • Colin Terell
    • 1998
    Tim Curry
    Tim Curry
    • Sir Rudolph Haley
    • 1995–1996
    • Création
      • Chris Thompson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs14

    6,81.1K
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    Avis à la une

    Babsies

    The Good, The Bad and the Ugly

    This is the only way I can describe the 3 seasons of this show. As with other shows that aren't in a league with "Friends" and "Frasier", the Powers That Be 'retooled' the show after the first season (the Good). Then the show just went from Bad to Ugly and was gone. I became a fan of Téa Leoni because of this show--back then, she was correctly described as "a cross between Lucille Ball and Sharon Stone"--and I was very disappointed when they 'retooled' and eventually cancelled the show (by that time, I was just happy they put it out of it's misery). This is a classic example of If-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it Syndrome. (And, by the way, calling Mark Roberts' character 'Stupid Dave' was funny!!!) I'm still a fan of Téa's (and her husband--I think his name is David-something;~}), and if this was the show that put her on the map, then it was worth it.
    TelevisionJunkie

    A textbook example of why shows shouldn't be "retooled"

    1995 was an incredible year for sitcoms... unfortunately, very few of the astronomical number of sitcoms made it past their freshman season. Among the few survivors were "The Naked Truth" and "The Jeff Foxworthy Show," both of which went though incredibly awkward transitions from ABC to NBC.

    When this series premiered, it was radically different from the rest. Delving into the uncharted territory of "tabloid journalism," Tea Leoni starred as Nora Wilde, a Pulitzer-nominated photographer who, after losing her funds in a nasty divorce, reluctantly wound up working at The Comet, a "National Enquirer"-like tabloid newspaper. Celebrity cameos and inside-jokes abounded, and Leoni was heralded as the "new Lucille Ball" (a moniker that suited her zany antics). Among celeb cameos were Anna Nicole Smith (Nora was sent out to steal her urine for pregnancy testing), Tom Hanks (who got to be oddly perverse), Rip Taylor (in one of his funniest roles ever) and Michael York as Nora's ex, Leland.

    The Comet was run by ruthless Camilla Dane (the irrepressible Holland Taylor) and owned by Sir Rudolph Halley (charasmatic Tim Curry, who made several guest appearances). Other photographers included Nicky Columbus, a handsome love-interest for Nora; T.J., a black dude who seemed blind since he was always clad in dark shades; and the aptly-named "Stupid Dave" Bippenwhacker, a developmentally challenged paparazzi member. Regularly seen were Mr. Donner, the owner of Nora's building (it should be noted that she originally lived in the same set that was used for "One Day at a Time" and the final seasons of "Gimme a Break") and her former step-daughter, Chloe -- who doubled as her best friend, since they were similar in age.

    ABC rather abruptly pulled the plug on the series, but NBC gave it a new lease on life. Nearly a year after ABC aired the unofficial "season finale," "The Naked Truth" returned to the air on NBC. Gone were both Mr. Donner and Chloe, and added to the cast was Les Polanski (George Wendt), a meat-mogul who bought The Comet from Sir Rudolph Halley. While the series quickly slipped back into a groove (thanks in no small part to frequent guest-shots by Mary Tyler Moore and George Segal as Nora's parents, who eventually bought the apartment across the hall from Nora's), the outrageous antics from the season on ABC were significantly toned down as they molded it into the standard "girl-in-the-big-city-working-for-a-paper" niche that most of the other NBC sitcoms were into at the time. Dave was no longer "Stupid Dave," he was Dave Fontaine, who was slightly smarter than he'd been the previous season. Camilla and Les had a brief but torrid affair and the season eventually ended on a high note. As "The Naked Truth" finished its abridged second season, George Segal struck gold on "Just Shoot Me," another NBC girl-in-the-city-working-for-a-magazine series.

    When the show returned for season three, gone was the majority of the cast. Camilla moved to editor The National Inquisitor and dragged Nora and Dave along with her. Now Dave was no longer "stupid" at all -- he was brilliant, in fact (I had a real hard time buying that transition). George Segal and Mary Tyler Moore were never mentioned again (though Dave did eventually move into their apartment, where Nora revealed that the former tenants were murdered -- "and you can thank me for that too"). New to the cast were Tom Verica as her new love-interest, Jake Sullivan; Amy Hill (who I ADORE but is certain death when it comes to series) as belligerent Suji; the illegitimate son of Bing Crosby, Bradley (Chris Elliot); and fastidious fact-checker Harris (Jim Rash). Unfortunately, the celebrity cameos completely deteriorated by this point, the writing was sub-par and the show was stuck on Monday nights with other soon-to-be canceled series "Suddenly Susan," "Caroline in the City" and (the hilarious) "Fired Up." As the third season progressed, Dave was eventually altogether written out of the show; then-unknown Sarah Silverman made an unfunny guest-appearance as an Alyssa-Milano-like former child star; and the possibility of a love-connection between Jake and Nora was quickly put to rest when Jake began having a secret affair with Camilla (though NBC aired the episodes totally out of order, creating confusion for viewers). As another commenter noted, the third season was "ugly." NBC pulled the plug for good long before the season had finished, and many of the episodes remained unaired until USA ran the series briefly during their USA.M. comedy block.

    Ironically, the *tabloids* cited Leoni for the demise of the series -- they said that she'd become increasingly unruly since getting together with David Duchovney (whom she soon married -- and who provided one of the funniest jokes in the second-season finale). I can't blame her personally but instead I blame the constant retooling of the initial gem-of-a-show, coupled with increasingly bad writing. The final episodes of season three were among the best (for whatever that's worth) but NBC didn't even bother to air them.

    Overwhelmingly fantastic first season, but as another commenter put it, in order of seasons, it went "the good, the bad and the ugly."
    9amberae

    Cute, funny, worth a watch.

    I stumbled across rerun syndication of this show several years ago, and fell in love with it. It features Téa Leoni and Holland Taylor and kept me laughing, one episode after the next. I guess it didn't make it so big, and was cancelled after a few seasons, but I believe it was a good run, and would suggest watching it...if the opportunity arises.
    TheCowSays

    Didn't Have a Chance

    This was one of the best shows on the air. It had a good concept, funny story lines, and funny actors. Despite this, it didn't have a chance of making it. After the 1st season on NBC, they moved it out of it's Thursday night slot and took it off the air. As they did with LateLine, they brought it back weeks later on with almost no advertisements and almost no way for anyone to know that it was back on the air. By the time people began to realize it was back on, they moved it again, and again, and again, giving it less than a fighting chance to survive. They, eventually cancelled it, in the summer of 1998, showing the last episode, in which Nora and the cast all die at sea in a Hot Air balloon. It later came back in syndication on the USA network, where you can still see reruns of the show.
    6SnoopyStyle

    network change

    27 year old Nora Wilde (Téa Leoni) divorces her cheating newspaper magnet husband Leland Banks. She proclaims that she doesn't want a dime and gets back only her name. He blackballs her as a photojournalist from the industry and she can only get a job on a tabloid. Camilla Dane (Holland Taylor) is her new boss and Nicky Columbus is a fellow photographer. Chloe Banks (Amy Ryan) is her step-daughter.

    The first season has Leoni trying to be the new Lucille Ball with some success. Holland Taylor is great. The premise should allow for celeb cameo like Extras. Nicky is a problem but Chloe is a bigger problem. Amy Ryan is in her late 20's and she has always seem like an older spirit. She's only two years younger than Leoni in real life. The role fits more as a younger flakey spoiled rich girl. Non of that screams Amy Ryan. At least, she should be Nora's roommate or get a job at the Comet to piss off her father. The first season is a zany single gal sitcom. It has its moments and has some fun.

    The show moved from ABC to NBC for the second season. Amy Ryan gets faded out. Some retooling is tried like adding Norm from Cheers except he's mean but not mean enough to be funny. Stupid Dave is now just Dave. He turns from loveable idiot to stupid weirdo. While Nick is not that good, the rotating door of bad dates is worst. Mark may as well be a blank. Her new home is more homey. Her first season home is an empty Laverne & Shirley L.A. apartment which is interesting and a little quirky. NBC turns the show into a more standard 90's network workplace sitcom. It loses a bit of spice but probably fits better with the rest of the network comedies. The show gets a nice bump from the network change.

    The retooling continues in the third season. Only Nora, Camilla, and Dave survive the purge. Dave is the best secondary character but Dave stops being stupid and stops being fun. Holland Taylor is the other important actress. They join another paper with a whole new cast. Jake is a lesser Nicky but at least, he's more than Mark. The show loses its chemistry. Leoni even tries changing her hair. The viewership takes a nosedive and the show gets cancelled. It's a failure in retooling.

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    Histoire

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    • Anecdotes
      The show premiered on ABC, which had recently been acquired by Disney. Despite ranking a respectable #25 out of over 150 shows in the year's ratings, it didn't fit with the network's family sitcom image, so they canceled it. NBC quickly scooped it up and placed it on their "Must See TV Thursday" schedule between Seinfeld (1989) and Urgences (1994), where it ranked #4 for its short second season, tying with Friends (1994). For the third year, NBC fired most of the cast, moved it to Monday nights alongside other workplace comedies that had done well on Thursdays (Susan! (1996), Fired Up (1997) and Caroline in the City (1995)), and ratings plummeted, with it ranking #69 for the final season. Seven episodes didn't surface until the show began airing in weekday reruns on the NBC-owned USA Network in 1999.
    • Citations

      Camilla: Felicia, look at you! Why, the hands of time have scarcely tou - Oh, no, now that I'm closer I can see that the hands of time have knocked you about quite a bit!

    • Connexions
      Referenced in There's No Fish Food in Heaven (1998)

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    FAQ19

    • How many seasons does The Naked Truth have?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 septembre 1995 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Site officiel
      • Sony TV's Retread Tuesdays
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Naked Truth
    • Sociétés de production
      • Brillstein-Grey Entertainment
      • Christopher Thompson Productions
      • Columbia Pictures Television
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 30min
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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