In a spin-off from "Party of Five," Sarah leaves the Salingers behind to search for her birth-father in New York.In a spin-off from "Party of Five," Sarah leaves the Salingers behind to search for her birth-father in New York.In a spin-off from "Party of Five," Sarah leaves the Salingers behind to search for her birth-father in New York.
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Sarah (Jennifer Love Hewitt) leaves San Francisco and the Salinger family to find her real father in New York. It´s the first time she stands on her own feet. "It´s the end of the world as we know it" - an old R.E.M. title - Sarah sang at the end of the pilot-episode. The song fits! "Time of your life" didn´t survive a long time. Why?! It was full of interesting characters!
Maybe I´m in the minority, but I don´t think that the focus of the show wasn´t too much on Sarah. There was enough space for the other characters to develop their own stories. Romy (Jennifer Garner), an actress who tries to find work, Maguire (Jonathon Schaech), the guy from the record-shop, who falls in love with Sarah, J.B. (Diego Serrano), a hairdresser who works at the edge of legality sometimes and falls in love with Romy, etc - they all try to find luck on their own way. I can especially remember episode 12 "The time everything changed" when Molly, a girlfriend of Romy died. I guess it was the most dramatic episode! Besides in Germany - where the show was called "New York life" - all 19 episodes were aired. So the american TV-audience will never know who Sarah´s real father is. It was a real touching moment when she met him....
"Time of your life" would have been a great alternative for "Party of five"-fans. Why didn´t they give the show a second chance?! It really had the potential for success! I can remember that "Party of five" was also a missuccess in the first season! It´s a shame that it was cancelled so soon!
Another great show on television that I will miss...
Maybe I´m in the minority, but I don´t think that the focus of the show wasn´t too much on Sarah. There was enough space for the other characters to develop their own stories. Romy (Jennifer Garner), an actress who tries to find work, Maguire (Jonathon Schaech), the guy from the record-shop, who falls in love with Sarah, J.B. (Diego Serrano), a hairdresser who works at the edge of legality sometimes and falls in love with Romy, etc - they all try to find luck on their own way. I can especially remember episode 12 "The time everything changed" when Molly, a girlfriend of Romy died. I guess it was the most dramatic episode! Besides in Germany - where the show was called "New York life" - all 19 episodes were aired. So the american TV-audience will never know who Sarah´s real father is. It was a real touching moment when she met him....
"Time of your life" would have been a great alternative for "Party of five"-fans. Why didn´t they give the show a second chance?! It really had the potential for success! I can remember that "Party of five" was also a missuccess in the first season! It´s a shame that it was cancelled so soon!
Another great show on television that I will miss...
Note: This is one of my list of the 400 Most Notable TV Shows Set in New York City, in honor of the 400th Anniversary of the founding of NYC - the full explanation and list of titles can be found by clicking my username (DeanNYC) and looking for the list on my Profile Page.
Reviews of each show are being posted under their respective titles.
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The series "Party of Five" was a big deal in its first couple of seasons. It was intriguing because the Salinger family of San Francisco, essentially kids (though granted most of the actors were playing a lot younger than their actual ages), were orphans and trying to both put food on the table (quite literally, as they ran a restaurant), and get through their scholastics while holding their tenuous family circumstances together.
It had elements of a soap opera to it with the drama of Child Protective Services possibly coming in to end it all if eldest sibling Charlie wasn't living up to their requisite expectations, in addition to all of the standard teen issues you would expect with junior high and high schoolers under normal conditions.
Eventually younger brother Bailey, played by Scott Wolf, got into a relationship with a girl named Sarah, and it looked like they might be headed to an engagement. But it broke off. And Sarah, played by Jennifer Love Hewitt, did something drastic. She left San Francisco for New York.
We were told that the reason why she left was because she was in pursuit of information about her birth parents, who were New Yorkers - she was chasing her roots.
There also was a question about whether this might have been an "absence makes the heart grow fonder" situation. After all, we were told this was only going to be a temporary exploration and Sarah seemed to want to get back with Bailey.
To be sure, there were a few episodes where that search for parental facts was the focus. But it seemed like that took a back seat to most of the actual stories we got.
For the late 1990s early 2000s, maybe Sarah wasn't completely prepared for the culture shock the move she made would create. More importantly, neither were the writers of this series. Sarah fell into a bohemian lifestyle with an apartment, new friends, new co-workers at her waitressing job just down the block from her dwelling, her attempts to become a recording artist (which may have been a nod to Hewitt's actual, and mostly unsuccessful, attempts to get her own singing career going in the US) a few love interests and all of the elements of randomness, oddities and potential trouble that come with life in The City.
Part of the problem was that Sarah wasn't particularly well-developed... as a CHARACTER, so she wasn't really an ideal candidate to be the star of this show. No offense to Ms. Hewitt, who has had a pretty decent career and can currently be seen on "9-1-1" (after Fox canceled it, the Alphabet Network snapped it up). But her acting at the time was not of the same level as "Felicity" star, Keri Russell, and that hurt the program, certainly by comparison.
It also didn't help that a couple of co-stars, Jennifer Garner, who was actually playing an aspiring actress, and Pauley Perrette, who was an up-and-coming model on the series, were very poorly used. But, don't worry about them too much; they both found better opportunities relatively soon after this series.
New York played a part because of the flavor of the city, that sense that anything could happen, the connections of wealth and fame, seemingly just within your reach and the compromises one is willing to make to be able to be there.
Ultimately though, "Time of Your Life" was a case of a central character not having a central focus and without that, it was like a boat without a rudder. That's really why this didn't work out.
Reviews of each show are being posted under their respective titles.
//
The series "Party of Five" was a big deal in its first couple of seasons. It was intriguing because the Salinger family of San Francisco, essentially kids (though granted most of the actors were playing a lot younger than their actual ages), were orphans and trying to both put food on the table (quite literally, as they ran a restaurant), and get through their scholastics while holding their tenuous family circumstances together.
It had elements of a soap opera to it with the drama of Child Protective Services possibly coming in to end it all if eldest sibling Charlie wasn't living up to their requisite expectations, in addition to all of the standard teen issues you would expect with junior high and high schoolers under normal conditions.
Eventually younger brother Bailey, played by Scott Wolf, got into a relationship with a girl named Sarah, and it looked like they might be headed to an engagement. But it broke off. And Sarah, played by Jennifer Love Hewitt, did something drastic. She left San Francisco for New York.
We were told that the reason why she left was because she was in pursuit of information about her birth parents, who were New Yorkers - she was chasing her roots.
There also was a question about whether this might have been an "absence makes the heart grow fonder" situation. After all, we were told this was only going to be a temporary exploration and Sarah seemed to want to get back with Bailey.
To be sure, there were a few episodes where that search for parental facts was the focus. But it seemed like that took a back seat to most of the actual stories we got.
For the late 1990s early 2000s, maybe Sarah wasn't completely prepared for the culture shock the move she made would create. More importantly, neither were the writers of this series. Sarah fell into a bohemian lifestyle with an apartment, new friends, new co-workers at her waitressing job just down the block from her dwelling, her attempts to become a recording artist (which may have been a nod to Hewitt's actual, and mostly unsuccessful, attempts to get her own singing career going in the US) a few love interests and all of the elements of randomness, oddities and potential trouble that come with life in The City.
Part of the problem was that Sarah wasn't particularly well-developed... as a CHARACTER, so she wasn't really an ideal candidate to be the star of this show. No offense to Ms. Hewitt, who has had a pretty decent career and can currently be seen on "9-1-1" (after Fox canceled it, the Alphabet Network snapped it up). But her acting at the time was not of the same level as "Felicity" star, Keri Russell, and that hurt the program, certainly by comparison.
It also didn't help that a couple of co-stars, Jennifer Garner, who was actually playing an aspiring actress, and Pauley Perrette, who was an up-and-coming model on the series, were very poorly used. But, don't worry about them too much; they both found better opportunities relatively soon after this series.
New York played a part because of the flavor of the city, that sense that anything could happen, the connections of wealth and fame, seemingly just within your reach and the compromises one is willing to make to be able to be there.
Ultimately though, "Time of Your Life" was a case of a central character not having a central focus and without that, it was like a boat without a rudder. That's really why this didn't work out.
Not available to stream anywhere. Party of five got a shabby box set release. They should do a better one and include this season. America never got to see all the episodes.
Hello,
I know I'm late, but I'm a french TOYL fan (called "Sarah" in France), which is almost unknown in here because you can only watch it on a small cable channel; and you can still watch it on this moment. I've just seen this week episode, and I worry about it to be the last one, as I heard the series is over in USA. In this episode, JB is going to jail, Sarah is about to leave New-York (but doesn't) and Maguire actually does. All the characters seems to be depressed and it sounds and look like the end of something. So what, was it the last episode? Or the last episode is it about to arrive?
I hope my english is not too bad and someone will answer my questions. I'm sad anyway the series will end, and I'm mad about the TV channels worrying so much about audience results, because here in France if americans don't like something we just don't get to see it, without any right to make a choice!!
Thanks for reading me...
I know I'm late, but I'm a french TOYL fan (called "Sarah" in France), which is almost unknown in here because you can only watch it on a small cable channel; and you can still watch it on this moment. I've just seen this week episode, and I worry about it to be the last one, as I heard the series is over in USA. In this episode, JB is going to jail, Sarah is about to leave New-York (but doesn't) and Maguire actually does. All the characters seems to be depressed and it sounds and look like the end of something. So what, was it the last episode? Or the last episode is it about to arrive?
I hope my english is not too bad and someone will answer my questions. I'm sad anyway the series will end, and I'm mad about the TV channels worrying so much about audience results, because here in France if americans don't like something we just don't get to see it, without any right to make a choice!!
Thanks for reading me...
I'm a fan of Party of Five and all I can say is Jennifer Love Hewitt you made a bad choice. Except for the fact that she now gets to hang out with Johnathon Schaech. That was pretty much the only reason I watched the one episode I did turn on. I could not believe how annoying the Romy character was. Maybe that's the reason I disliked it so much, but it just hurt to watch.
Did you know
- Trivia"Time of Your Life" is a spin-off of Party of Five (1994). To connect the two series, Scott Wolf provided the voice of Bailey Salinger, Sarah's boyfriend. Bailey writes Sarah a letter, announcing his decision to end their relationship.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Mad TV: Episode #5.1 (1999)
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