In liberal San Francisco a conservative cartoonist tries to keep his two daughters, who rent an apartment below him, safe.In liberal San Francisco a conservative cartoonist tries to keep his two daughters, who rent an apartment below him, safe.In liberal San Francisco a conservative cartoonist tries to keep his two daughters, who rent an apartment below him, safe.
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"Too Close For Comfort" is one of the best hilarious TV comedy series I have ever seen. When I first saw the show on a TV station in the northeast, it made me laugh a lot. That Monroe Ficus (Jim J. Bullock) is so funny, and the fact of the matter is the show could have stayed on the air a few years more, but due to the fact the main actor of the show, Ted Knight, who played Henry Rush on this show, and as anchorman Ted Baxter, on the "Mary Tyler Moore Show", had passed away in August of 1986 of Cancer, and that was a blow to both the TV series and also its favorite viewers. This show should be on syndication all the time, because this show is the best comedy show of the 1980's.
I notice most of the negative reviews,based on dates posted come from a generation of those not use to what quality television was..
Don't get me wrong,shows like Friends to Big Bang Theory are enjoyable in their own right..
I'm sure kids years later will find it,as lame or lacking in some regards too.
I feel the(overall)casting & acting was fine,as was the cinematography & although outdated in some aspects it does continue to be as enjoyable when it first started airing.. Only thing that made me curious & although siblings can be different which did get used in episodes,it never made sense as neither were adopted into the family was Jackie's ethnicity.
Also why do people feel when a baby enters the picture,that means a show is dying & so forth? In this instance on the show it was prevalent because it shows an average family & a couple becomes parents again,at a later age with all that unfolds versus a younger couple just starting off in life.
Have seen it said in reviews also a poor version,trying to be another Three's Company? Really! Not even close,lol.
Enjoyed this years back & still watch reruns today,worth checking out.
I feel the(overall)casting & acting was fine,as was the cinematography & although outdated in some aspects it does continue to be as enjoyable when it first started airing.. Only thing that made me curious & although siblings can be different which did get used in episodes,it never made sense as neither were adopted into the family was Jackie's ethnicity.
Also why do people feel when a baby enters the picture,that means a show is dying & so forth? In this instance on the show it was prevalent because it shows an average family & a couple becomes parents again,at a later age with all that unfolds versus a younger couple just starting off in life.
Have seen it said in reviews also a poor version,trying to be another Three's Company? Really! Not even close,lol.
Enjoyed this years back & still watch reruns today,worth checking out.
Ted Knight played cartoonist, Henry Rush, who lives with his photographer wife, Muriel, in a two family home in San Francisco, California. The series opens up with the loss of their downstairs tenant, Mr. Rafkin, who was a transvestite. Selma Diamond played his sister. Henry and Muriel's adult daughters, Jackie and Sara, lived with them in their two bedroom apartment upstairs. It would be sensible for the girls as they were called to move downstairs. The actresses who played the daughters were fine. Nancy Dussault is ideal as Muriel. Jim J. Bullock played the annoying Monroe Ficus. While there were plenty of memorable moments between Monroe and Henry, there were tender moments between him and Muriel and his daughters. Audrey Meadows joined the show as Muriel's adopted mother. There were lots of friendly, light moments mixed with heavy issues as well. But there was a general tenderness there that isn't in today's sitcoms.
I first saw "Too Close for Comfort" last fall as reruns on a local WLVI-TV in Boston.Ted Knight, in his last TV role, was excellent in the role of Henry Rush, cartoonist of "Cosmic Cow". Oh sure.....I also thought Henry's wife Muriel and and two grown up daughters Sara and Jackie added comic relief but my all time favorite character has to be Monroe Ficus (JM J. Bullock) who was a very geeky and stupid person. He became a very big part of Henry's family in later episodes originally passed as Sara's student friend from college.
Oh, I remember this great series very well. I remember Henry Rush, and his fictional cartoon creation "Cosmic Cow", his upstair's neighbour Monroe, his two beautiful daughters, his wife, and his much hated mother-in-law. I remember how much this series made me laugh. This show was the perfect sitcom, it had good laughs, a great cast, and a very sucessful series run. But by 1985, I had lost interest in this show after re-tited "The Ted Knight Show" because the setting moved from Apartment to house, and the two daughters were nowhere to be seen. All, and all, a great series that will live on forever!!!
Did you know
- TriviaIn one episode, Ted Knight wore a sweatshirt with the name and logo of an actual university on it. Soon, college and university students who were fans of the show began sending logo sweatshirts for Knight to wear on the air. From then on, Knight began wearing as many different sweatshirts as possible in each episode to please the fans.
- GoofsBased on the opening sequence, the Rushes live at 173 Buena Vista Avenue, East, in San Francisco's Buena Vista neighborhood. There's a view of the southern tower of the Golden Gate Bridge from their street, so they're southeast of the bridge. Yet the view from Henry and Muriel's bedroom window has the house sitting due east of the Golden Gate Bridge (you can see its entire span), which would place their house in the extreme northern part of the city, nowhere near Buena Vista Avenue.
- Alternate versionsThe DVD release of the first season is made up of the syndicated versions of episodes which are missing 2 minutes from the original network versions.
- ConnectionsFeatured in I Love the '80s Strikes Back: 1980 (2003)
- How many seasons does Too Close for Comfort have?Powered by Alexa
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- The Ted Knight Show
- Filming locations
- 171-173 Buena Vista Avenue East, San Francisco, California, USA(opening credits and scenes)
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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