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Lotsa Luck!

  • TV Series
  • 1973–1974
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
261
YOUR RATING
Dom DeLuise in Lotsa Luck! (1973)
Official Trailer
Play trailer0:56
1 Video
22 Photos
Comedy

Sitcom about Stanley, his family and his work life.Sitcom about Stanley, his family and his work life.Sitcom about Stanley, his family and his work life.

  • Creators
    • Sam Denoff
    • Bill Persky
    • Carl Reiner
  • Stars
    • Dom DeLuise
    • Kathleen Freeman
    • Wynn Irwin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    261
    YOUR RATING
    • Creators
      • Sam Denoff
      • Bill Persky
      • Carl Reiner
    • Stars
      • Dom DeLuise
      • Kathleen Freeman
      • Wynn Irwin
    • 13User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Episodes22

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Videos1

    Lotsa Luck!
    Trailer 0:56
    Lotsa Luck!

    Photos22

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    Top cast61

    Edit
    Dom DeLuise
    Dom DeLuise
    • Stanley Belmont
    • 1973–1974
    Kathleen Freeman
    Kathleen Freeman
    • Iris Belmont
    • 1973–1974
    Wynn Irwin
    Wynn Irwin
    • Arthur Swann
    • 1973–1974
    Beverly Sanders
    Beverly Sanders
    • Olive Swann
    • 1973–1974
    Jack Knight
    Jack Knight
    • Bummy Pfitzer
    • 1973–1974
    Danny Wells
    Danny Wells
    • Ernie Kaplan
    • 1973–1974
    Jackie Joseph
    Jackie Joseph
    • Millie
    • 1973
    Alvy Moore
    Alvy Moore
    • Samuel Quincy
    • 1973
    Mark Gordon
    • Lt. Milford
    • 1973
    Patti Heider
    • Lenore
    • 1973
    J.J. Barry
    J.J. Barry
    • Man with Gun
    • 1973
    Joe Cortese
    Joe Cortese
    • Mr. Smith
    • 1973
    Michael Allen
    • 1st Man
    • 1973
    Jennifer King
    • Miss Jones
    • 1973
    Harold Gould
    Harold Gould
    • Martin Wicker
    • 1973
    Elliott Reid
    Elliott Reid
    • Dr. Schrager
    • 1973
    Pat Finley
    Pat Finley
    • Marsha
    • 1973
    Henry Corden
    Henry Corden
    • H. R. Bunce
    • 1973
    • Creators
      • Sam Denoff
      • Bill Persky
      • Carl Reiner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.2261
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    Featured reviews

    10robert-dodge

    Great Show

    I wish NBC had renewed this show for a second season. Great cast. The banter between Stanley and Arthur was classic. Dom Deluise was so underrated. Check this show out on Antenna TV, late Saturday nights.
    itsbarrie

    One of the best of the '73 season

    I was just a kid at the time, but I remember this show as being hilarious. The cast was SUPER, and you simply can't do better than Kathleen Freeman if a script needs a loud, frumpy pain-in-the-A. I once remember reading a description of her as being someone particularly adept at opening doors rudely. The show revolved around her and her ever-bathrobed husband versus Dom DeLuise as the bus company lost-&-found department employee who supports them.

    Dom DeLuise has never been better - he's sadly underused, considering there's a lot more to him than being a professional cuddly Italian.

    What probably killed this show was that everybody was trying to get their noisy urban sitcom on the air ("The Montefuscos" anyone?) in the wake of All in the Family, and this -- DEFINITELY one of the best -- somehow got lost in the shuffle. Sad. It was just as funny as All the the Family, but without the occasional tastelessness and Norman Lear's annoying politics.
    6DeanNYC

    NYC 400 - #349 - "Lotsa Luck!"

    Carl Reiner is a big name, like Norman Lear, when it comes to TV. His greatest success (not counting his son, Rob) was "The Dick Van Dyke Show" which is enough to preserve a legacy in the medium all on its own. But Reiner was continually coming up with different concepts for programs, and in 1973, he teamed with Bill Persky and Sam Denoff (who worked with Reiner on "Van Dyke"), to collectively give us "Lotsa Luck!"

    First it's notable that during this era of TV, there were a couple of programs that Norman Lear had brought over from England and created Americanized versions. One was called "Steptoe and Son" which became "Sanford and Son" and the other was called "Till Death Do Us Part" which became "All in the Family," stateside. Carl Reiner, emulating Mr. Lear, also selected a show which was British import titled "On The Buses" across the pond.

    Stanley Belmont (Dom DeLuise) was a full-grown bachelor, who was promoted from driving a bus to the lost and found department for his bus company, living with his mom (Kathleen Freeman), his sister Olive (Beverly Sanders) and Olive's husband Arthur (Wynn Irwin) all under one roof. Stan is covering the cost for all of them as the Brother-in-law is unemployed and spends his days lazing around in his jammies while Stan is at work. I have to note that Stanley and Olive are a play on the first names of one of the greatest comedy teams in Hollywood History: Laurel and Hardy.

    Much of the comedy comes from Stan doing insult humor at Arthur for not finding work (more accurately, Arthur actively did everything he could to avoid working), and Ma and/or Olive reacting badly to it. But keep in mind, that was a standard during this era of television. It seems like every sitcom had at least a little insult humor with characters continually making fun (or, more accurately, making mean) of each other. One character directly telling another to "shut up" or "stifle," or nicknaming them "You Big Dummy" or "Meathead" was just the methodology of the day.

    But there's another standard TV Trope that I would have guessed that a guy who had been in the business as long as Carl Reiner had, would have known: that is, you gauge comedy, based on economics, in reverse correlation to what is happening in the real world. In other words, if the economy is bad, you don't do a sitcom about a family who is having financial trouble. Audiences aren't going to find that nearly as entertaining, especially if it's a circumstance they're living! In a way, that's why the nighttime soap operas, with their overblown wealth, were so popular in the 1980s.

    Let's be clear, though: it wasn't that the Belmonts were having serious problems surviving. They weren't. But some of the difficulties the show displayed were based on the fact that an able bodied guy was just loafing and the Head of Household, who rarely had a chance to go on a date and who lived with his mom, was the one holding the family together, and doesn't he deserve a little better than that?

    New York played a part because of the transit authority, the cost of living, the need to have people to support you and the elements of commuting - yes, the people who work for mass transportation also use it to get around and you have to go from the outer boroughs to your place of business as a matter of course.

    I think if they hadn't relied so much on the misery of the situation and had more fun with it, "Lotsa Luck!" would have had a little more luck in the ratings.
    9Aldanoli

    Family Strife Outlives Topical Humor

    "Lotsa Luck" is a well-remembered, but sadly failed series from NBC's 1973-1974 television season. It had an extraordinary pedigree, having been created by three of the most respected writers and producers of its day, yet it only lasted a single season. It left behind 22 episodes and what was perhaps Dom DeLuise's best effort at a television series, cut down before its time.

    The series was created by Carl Reiner, Bill Persky, and Sam Denoff. Reiner was the creator and producer of "The Dick Van Dyke Show," which arguably was the best comedy series of all time. Reiner decided to take that show off the air in 1966 when it was still getting good ratings and the writing still seemed as fresh and unforced as it had during its early days. Persky and Denoff had started out as a writing team and were, according to one account, the "unlikely saviors" of Reiner, who was facing serious burnout as the end of the second season of "Van Dyke" approached, having not only produced the show but written about two-thirds of its episodes.

    Persky and Denoff took on an increasing share of the writing as their tenure on the Van Dyke show went on, and eventually stepped into Reiner's shoes as producers in its final season while Reiner was off making a motion picture. When the Van Dyke show ended, the duo went on to produce other shows themselves, including Marlo Thomas' "That Girl" from 1966-1971.

    What had made the Van Dyke show special, as Reiner liked to say, was that he looked for humor in "real life" situations, consciously avoiding the "battle of the sexes" between spouses that had been the staple of so many other domestic comedies, whether on "The Honeymooners" or even "I Love Lucy." When the three of them reunited in 1973, however, television had changed -- it was now dominated by comedies coming out of Norman Lear's stable, including "Sanford and Son," "Maude," and, of course, "All in the Family." Lear's shows were about a different kind of domestic disharmony compared to the shows of the 1950s and 60s, and they also had louder voices than much of what had been on the air a decade earlier. So Reiner, Persky, and Denoff also created what was perhaps a more deliberately dysfunctional situation than they had in their past collaboration.

    Like both "Sanford" and "All in the Family," "Lotsa Luck" was borrowed from a British television series, this one called "On the Buses." Dom DeLuise was Stanley Belmont, an unmarried man of about 40 who still lived with his mother, and who indeed worked for a bus company. But Stanley had been promoted off the streets and into the lost-and-found department, the better to build plots around the sometimes crazy things people would leave on New York City's buses -- and occasionally around Stanley's need to "borrow" items from the lost-and-found, usually with predictable, chaotic results.

    Rounding out the cast were Kathleen Freeman as Stanley's "Ma," Beverly Sanders as his myopic, slightly overweight sister Olive, and Wynn Irwin as her ne'er-do-well husband Arthur -- or as the other characters put it with a New York accent, "Ahthuh." Freeman had one particular bit that she used at least once per show -- asking Stanley (when he would refuse to do something she wanted him to do), "Do I have a son, or do I not have a son?" Stanley would then respond, in a weary tone of defeat, "You have a son," bringing the follow-up, "You're a good son, Stanley" and a final retort, "You're a real pain in the neck, Ma" from him. Arthur was content to hang around the house all day in his bathrobe, unshaven, still recovering from an otherwise unexplained "operation" -- which had taken place four years before -- while occasionally applying "salve" to ameliorate his unnamed complaint.

    The topics the show delved into were certainly more tilted toward bathroom humor than they had been in the "Van Dyke Show" or "That Girl" -- literally so in the case of the show's pilot, in which Olive manages to get her foot caught in the toilet tank (don't ask), and which Stanley then breaks in his attempt to free her. The replacement toilet they purchase is an "orange sherbet" color -- with a purple lid. And further complications, naturally, arise.

    As the saying goes, Robert Benchley it ain't -- but the show was frequently hilarious, particularly the verbal battles between Arthur and Stanley, a working stiff who supports three people and resents the real stiff -- his good-for-nothing brother-in-law. All four of the regulars -- especially, of course, DeLuise -- had terrific comedic timing, and all performed well despite the demands of putting the show on before a live audience.

    Unfortunately, the three creators also borrowed another conceit from Norman Lear, choosing to shoot the show not on film but videotape, which despite being a "newer" technology (and undoubtedly a cost savings for the show) neither looks as good nor ages as well as film stock. The pilot episode in particular looks terrible, but many of the other episodes have held up reasonably well.

    Sadly, the show was canceled after only one season, but happily, the complete series has been available on DVD for several years. For those who were able to see it at the time, it's a fondly-recalled tidbit from an era of the winding down of Vietnam, stagflation in the economy, and something brewing in the newspapers called "Watergate." Of course, none of those things had any bearing on the battle of wits among Arthur, Stanley, and the rest of the Belmont household. In that sense, "Lotsa Luck" holds up better than a topical show like "All in the Family" -- because family strife is always good for laughs even when the political and social concerns of those days have gone forever.
    10shominy-491-652355

    Hilarious! Amazing Cast!

    We bought this DVD set last year and have thoroughly enjoyed watching the entire set more than once. The entire cast is excellent and top notch! We absolutely love Dom DeLuise, Beverly Sanders, and Jack Knight! The plots are great! If you love great comedy and clever one- liners, you will find this series timeless (there are so many lines we quote from this series in our daily lives). Dom (Stanley) and Jack (Bummy) have an amazing camaraderie (like Ralph Kramden & Ed Norton, Gilligan & Skipper) Beverly Sanders is outstandingly funny and naive! The only negative aspect of this series is that it was canceled after one season. (The handful of Nielsen families messed up yet again.) If you love great comedy (like "The Honeymoooners") and are sick of the awful faux reality shows that air on every channel 24/7 these days, check out "Lotsa Luck"! You'll be glad you did! We will continue to enjoy this series again and again!

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    Related interests

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    Comedy

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Based on the UK series On the Buses (1969). All the characters kept their original first names except Bummy - called Jack in Britain - although ironically the actor's name was Jack.
    • Quotes

      [repeated line; when coercing Stanley into doing something he doesn't want to do]

      Iris Belmont: Do I have a son or don't I have a son?

    • Connections
      Referenced in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson: Dom DeLuise/Sally Kellerman/Ronnie Schell/Jerry Butler/Bruno Vailati (1973)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 10, 1973 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lotsa Luck
    • Filming locations
      • NBC Studios - 3000 W. Alameda Avenue, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Concept II Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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