ABC Afterschool Special
ABC Afterschool Special |
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title card, 1973. |
Genre |
Anthology |
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Country of origin |
United States |
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Original language(s) |
English |
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No. of seasons |
25 |
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No. of episodes |
154 |
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Production |
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Camera setup |
Single-camera |
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Running time |
60 minutes |
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Release |
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Original network |
ABC |
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Picture format |
Color |
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Original release |
October 14, 1972 (1972-10-14) – July 1, 1997 (1997-07-01) |
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The ABC Afterschool Special is an American television anthology series that aired on ABC from October 14, 1972 to July 1, 1997, usually in the late afternoon on week days. Most episodes were dramatically presented situations, often controversial, of interest to children and teenagers.[1] Several episodes were either in animated form or presented as documentaries. Topics included illiteracy, substance abuse and teenage pregnancy. The series won 51 Daytime Emmy Awards during its 25-year run.[2]
In 2004 and 2005, BCI Eclipse and Sunset Home Visual Entertainment issued six DVD collections of episodes from the series that had been produced by Martin Tahse, each collection containing four episodes. A boxed set, in the shape of a school bus, was also released containing all of the DVD releases, with a detailed information booklet of all the specials on the set and including an extra DVD of two specials that had previously not been released on DVD. The DVDs are currently out of print.
List of specials
Season One (1972–73)
Episode | Synopsis |
Last of the Curlews | Animated special about a father and son who go hunting, and debate whether or not to kill an Eskimo curlew, which may become [and may now be] extinct. |
Follow the Northern Star | A young boy helps his friend escape slavery through the Underground Railroad. |
Santiago's Ark | An imaginative, determined 14-year-old Puerto Rican boy builds a boat in which to sail around Central Park. Co-starring Bill Duke and René Enríquez. Followed in 1975 by the sequel Santiago's America. |
William: The Life, Works, and Times of William Shakespeare | Special introducing William Shakespeare to young people through sketches, readings and music. |
The Incredible, Indelible, Magical Physical, Mystery Trip | Animated special about two youngsters who are miniaturized and travel through their uncle's body to understand more about his health. Features the first appearance of Timer, a character later featured in ABC's Time for Timer shorts. |
Alexander | The story of a retired clown and his undying love for children. Starring Red Buttons, Robbie Rist and Jodie Foster. |
Season Two (1973–74)
Episode | Synopsis |
Rookie of the Year | 11-year-old Sharon Lee (Jodie Foster) encounters opposition when she joins her brother's Little League baseball team, which happens to be all male. (1972 was when girls were first allowed on Little League teams.) Co-starring Steve Gustafson; based on Isabella Taves's book Not Bad For a Girl. |
My Dad Lives in a Downtown Hotel | Joseph Grant, Jr. (Ike Eisenmann) is shocked when his parents announce their decision to separate. Beau Bridges portrays Joe, Sr. |
Psst! Hammerman's After You! | A sixth-grader has a run-in with the class bully, who then wants to meet with him after school. Starring Lance Kerwin and Willie Aames; based on Betsy Byars's novel. |
Cyrano | Long-nosed Cyrano de Bergerac helps an army officer woo Roxanne (voice of Joan Van Ark), the woman Cyrano himself loves, in this animated version of Edmond Rostand's play. |
Runaways | A small-town teenage girl teams up with a younger but wiser boy for survival. Co-starring Moosie Drier; written by Clyde Ware. |
The Magical Mystery Trip Through Little Red's Head | Timer shrinks down two youngsters and shows them around their teenage sister's head, to discover how the mind works. |
The Crazy Comedy Concert | Live action/animation special geared to educate young people about classical music. Starring Tim Conway and Ruth Buzzi. |
Season Three (1974–75)
Episode | Synopsis |
Sara's Summer of the Swans | Teenage Sara (Heather Totten) must confront the problems regarding her handicapped brother. Co-starring Chris Knight and Eve Plumb; based on Betsy Byars's novel. |
The Bridge of Adam Rush | 12-year-old Adam (Lance Kerwin) adjusts to a new way of life when his mother remarries and moves their whole family to the country. |
Winning and Losing: Diary of a Campaign | The 1974 Senate race is seen through the eyes of two teen-aged girls, each a campaign volunteer for George McGovern (Democrat) and Leo K. Thorsness (Republican). |
The Toothpaste Millionaire | Aspiring 12-year-old entrepreneur Rufus (Tierre Turner) decides to create and sell his own brand of toothpaste. Co-starring Wright King; based on Jean Merrill's book of the same title. |
The Skating Rink | A teenager with a stuttering problem overcomes his shyness to become a championship figure skater. Based on Mildred Lee's novel; co-starring Cindy Eilbacher and Rance Howard. |
Santiago's America | A Puerto Rican boy is invited to a prestigious conference in Los Angeles. With no money, he re-builds a broken taxi to get there. Bill Duke and René Enríquez reprise their roles. |
The Secret Life of T.K. Dearing | 12-year-old T.K. (Jodie Foster) invites her grandfather to join a "secret" club. Co-starring Tierre Turner; based on Jean Robinson's book. |
Season Four (1975–76)
Episode | Synopsis |
It Must Be Love ('Cause I Feel So Dumb!) | A 13-year-old boy has a crush on a cheerleader at his school and dreams up creative ways to try to impress her. Starring Alfred Lutter. |
Fawn Story | The McPhail siblings—Jenna, Toby and Louisa (Kristy McNichol, Poindexter Yothers and Karen Obediear)—discover a wounded deer, which they nurse back to health. Co-starring Gordon Jump. |
The Shaman's Last Raid | Despite his failing health, a Native American medicine man is determined to teach his great-grandchildren the traditions of the Apache nation. Based on Betty Baker's novel; starring Dehl Berti. |
The Amazing Cosmic Awareness of Duffy Moon | Tired of ridicule for being short, sixth-grader Duffy (Ike Eisenmann) buys a mysterious book which enables him to "Think Big"—quite literally. Based on Jean Robinson's book. Co-starring Lance Kerwin, Jim Backus and Jerry Van Dyke. |
Me and Dad's New Wife | 12-year-old Nina Beckwith (Kristy McNichol) does not know how to react to her new stepmother. Co-starring Lance Kerwin, Melendy Britt, Leif Garrett and Jimmy McNichol. Based on Stella Pevsner's novel, "A Smart Kid Like You". |
Blind Sunday | In order to better understand his blind girlfriend, teenage Jeff (Leigh McCloskey) spends an entire day blindfolded. Co-starring Robert Ridgely (as Jeff's dad), Cindy Eilbacher, and Corbin Bernsen. |
Dear Lovey Hart: I Am Desperate | Teenage Carrie Wasserman (Susan Lawrence) takes up writing an advice column for her school newspaper. Based on Ellen Conford's novel. Co-starring Al Eisenmann as Carrie's brother Jeff. |
Season Five (1976–77)
Episode | Synopsis |
Francesca, Baby | In this adaptation of Joan Oppenheimer's novel, teenager Francesca James (Carol Jones) deals with her alcoholic mother Lillian (Melendy Britt) by joining the support group Alateen. Co-starring Jody Britt (Melendy's real-life daughter). |
P.J. and the President's Son | Update of Mark Twain's The Prince and the Pauper. A delivery boy and the President's son (Lance Kerwin in a dual role) meet and hit it off. It does not hurt that each is an exact double of the other; for mutual amusement, they decide to swap identities. Co-starring Harry Kerwin and Rosalind Chao. |
Mighty Moose and the Quarterback Kid | A football coach (Dave Madden) tries to mediate a conflict between his star quarterback (Brandon Cruz) and the boy's father (Joseph Mascolo). Co-starring Alex Karras . |
My Mom's Having a Baby | Curious about his mom's pregnancy, a ten-year-old seeks answers to where babies come from. |
The Horrible Honchos | The neighborhood youth gang makes a pact to bully and torment the new kid on their 17th Street turf. Based on Emily Cheney Neville's novel The 17th Street Gang. Starring Kim Richards. |
Very Good Friends | Sensitive Kate (Melissa Sue Anderson) gradually comes to terms with the accidental death of her younger sister, in this adaptation of the novel by Constance Greene. |
Season Six (1977–78)
Episode | Synopsis |
Hewitt's Just Different | A mentally challenged 16-year-old attempts to make friends with his neighborhood peers. Starring Moosie Drier, Russell Johnson and Tom Gulager. |
The Pinballs | In this adaptation of Betsy Byars's novel, three orphans (one portrayed by Kristy McNichol) from different backgrounds find themselves living with the same foster couple, while all three wait to be adopted. |
Michel's Mixed-Up Musical Bird | Live-Action/animation special featuring Michel Legrand in a true story about the bird that inspired him while studying at the Paris Conservatory of Music. |
It Isn't Easy Being a Teenage Millionaire | When 14-year-old Melissa Harrington (Victoria Paige Meyerink) wins the lottery, she thinks she will never have to worry about money—or anything else—again. Unfortunately for her, fate has other plans in store. |
The Rag Tag Champs | A 14-year-old baseball player and his manager-uncle find themselves at odds over their different interpretations of the philosophy "Winning isn't everything, it's the only thing". Starring Larry B. Scott. |
Mom and Dad Can't Hear Me | Teenage Charlie Meredith (Rosanna Arquette) is used to acting as the ears of her deaf parents, but she's ashamed when she introduces her peers to them; because of their reactions, the elder Merediths come off as being out-of-touch. |
It's a Mile From Here To Glory | After a high school track star is crippled by a near-fatal accident, he must learn to depend on others for day-to-day living. Anthony Kiedis has a role as Jimmy. Based on Robert C. Lee's novel. |
Season Seven (1978–79)
Episode | Synopsis |
One of a Kind | A free-spirited woman realizes her daughter is no longer a child, and experiments with giving her more independence. However, the girl is puzzled by this sudden lack of attention; it seems like her mom is pushing her away. |
A Home Run For Love | In 1947, a young white boy and an elderly black man enjoy a warm and wonderful friendship, based on their mutual love of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and of Jackie Robinson in particular. Co-starring Anne Ramsey and Edie McClurg; based on Barbara Cohen's novel. |
Gaucho | A young Puerto Rican New York boy knows his mother misses her homeland. Accordingly, he becomes an errand boy for a small-time hood, in order to earn enough money that she can move back to the Caribbean. Based on Gloria Gonzalez's novel; co-starring Danny De La Paz. |
Dinky Hocker | Overweight teenager Susan "Dinky" Hocker (Wendie Jo Sperber) is obsessed with food and cannot stop eating. Finally she turns to a friend, who helps make changes in her eating habits. Co-starring June Lockhart and Alan Oppenheimer as Dinky's parents; based on the novel by M. E. Kerr. |
Make Believe Marriage | High school students take a marriage course, where they are coupled up and must complete assorted everyday tasks that go with married life. Co-starring Janina Mathews. |
The Terrible Secret | After teenage Bobbie Marston experiences a hit and run, guilt takes its toll on her everyday life. Co-starring Michael Biehn. |
Seven Wishes of a Rich Kid | Wealthy-but-lonely Calvin Brundage (Robbie Rist) is granted seven wishes by a genie. Calvin uses them in an effort to impress Melanie Gamble (Cynthia Nixon), the most popular girl in his school. But things do not work out the way he anticipated. Co-starring Christopher Hewett and Butterfly McQueen. |
Season Eight (1979–80)
Episode | Synopsis |
Which Mother Is Mine? | Arthur Allan Seidelman directed this adaptation of Joan Oppenheimer's novel My Other Mother. 16-year-old Alexandria (Melissa Sue Anderson) is stunned when her biological mother arrives to take Alex away from her adoptive parents. Co-starring Marion Ross and Woody Eney. |
A Movie Star's Daughter | Shy teenager Dena (Trini Alvarado) enrolls in a new school and does not make friends easily, until it is discovered that her father is famous actor Hal McKain (Frank Converse). Overnight, she becomes the most popular student in school—but this brings its own problems. |
A Special Gift | Arthur Allan Seidelman directed this adaptation of Marcia L. Simon's novel. A 14-year-old basketball star, deciding he needs a new challenge, takes up ballet. Then he worries about what friends and family will think of his decision. Co-starring real-life brothers Al and Ike Eisenmann. |
The Late Great Me! Story of a Teenage Alcoholic | A 15-year-old girl takes up drinking to impress a boy; instead, she soon develops a serious problem. |
The Heartbreak Winner: One Girl's Struggle For Olympic Gold | Bruce Malmuth directed this adaptation of Michael Bonadies's novel The Gold Test. Ambitious teenage figure skater Maggie MacDonald (Melissa Sherman) learns what champions are truly made of when she meets a paraplegic youngster. |
Where Do Teenagers Come From? | 12-year-old girl wonders about all of the changes that's happening to her body. Sequel to My Mom's Having a Baby. |
What Are Friends For? | Two inseparable 12-year-old girls (Melora Hardin, Dana Hill), each one the daughter of a separate divorcing couple, are determined to keep their friendship alive despite the odds. Stephen Gyllenhaal directed this adaptation of Mildred Ames's novel. |
Season Nine (1980–81)
Episode | Synopsis |
A Family of Strangers | A widower with two daughters (Danny Aiello) marries a widow with one daughter, creating a blended family. |
Schoolboy Father | When high school senior Charles Elderberry (Rob Lowe) discovers that his summer girlfriend has given birth to his child, he decides to fight for custody. Co-starring Dana Plato, Sharon Spelman and Nancy McKeon. |
The Gymnast | Holly Gagnier stars as 16-year-old Ginny Coker, who's determined to become a world-class athlete. |
Stoned | Jack (Scott Baio) is a motivated high schooler, until he experiments with marijuana and falls in with a fast crowd; soon he's dabbling in harder drugs, such as LSD, quaaludes, and cocaine. Will he wise up before it's too late? Co-starring Largo Woodruff and Anthony C Sena. |
A Matter of Time | Teenager Lisl Gilbert (Karlene Crockett) must find the inner strength to deal with her mother Jean's (Rosemary Forsyth) impending death from cancer. Co-starring Rob Lowe. |
Run, Don't Walk | A teenage girl does not know how to deal with being in a wheelchair, after an accident leaves her paralyzed. Then she befriends a boy in the same situation, and the future suddenly looks brighter for both of them. Starring Toni Kalem, Scott Baio, Dee Wallace and Hal Williams. |
My Mother Was Never a Kid | A teenage girl is convinced that her mother does not understand the younger generation. Mysteriously, she is sent back in time and meets her mother as a teenager. Based on a novel by Francine Pascal. |
Season Ten (1981–82)
Season Eleven (1982–83)
Episode | Synopsis |
Amy & the Angel | 17-year-old Amy Watson (Helen Slater), a depressed high school student, is visited by aspiring angel Oliver after wishing she had never been born. As with George Bailey and Clarence in It's a Wonderful Life, Oliver shows Amy how important she is to the people in her life, particularly her divorced mom, her paternal grandfather (David Huddleston) and her best friend (who's a lot more troubled than Amy realizes). The twist here is that Oliver himself committed suicide and, as a punishment, was forced to roam the world for years afterward—witnessing the repercussions of his action. Now senior angel Gabriel (James Earl Jones) is giving Oliver a chance to redeem himself, by making sure Amy doesn't commit the same mistake as Oliver himself. Also starring Matthew Modine and Meg Ryan. |
Between Two Loves | Teen violinist is torn between her musical career and her boyfriend. Co-starring Robert Reed. |
A Very Delicate Matter | Teenage girl is shocked when a former boyfriend tells her he has gonorrhea. Not only does she get tested, she must tell her current boyfriend to get tested as well. Co-starring Zach Galligan. |
Please Don't Hit Me, Mom | Teenager Nancy Parks (Nancy McKeon) stumbles upon a case of child abuse. It turns out her new boyfriend's (Lance Guest) younger brother is regularly beaten by their mom (Patty Duke, whose real-life son Sean Astin portrays the victim in question). |
The Woman Who Willed a Miracle | A blind, mentally retarded infant with cerebral palsy is left in the care of an elderly English woman who refuses to let him die. Starring Cloris Leachman, M. Emmet Walsh, James Noble and Kirk Cameron. |
Have You Ever Been Ashamed of Your Parents? | Kari Michaelsen and Jennifer Jason Leigh star as two teenagers—one rich, the other middle-class—who become best friends over the summer. Co-starring Marion Ross and Julie Piekarski. |
But It's Not My Fault | Billy Warlock portrays 16-year-old Craig Foster, whose efforts to prove himself to his peers land him in juvenile hall. Co-starring Al White. |
The Wave | High school teacher decides to conduct a social experiment, asking his students to take part. But what they do not know is that the experiment is on mind control. (Previously broadcast on ABC in October 1981 as a standalone special.) |
Season Twelve (1983–84)
Episode | Synopsis |
It's No Crush, I'm in Love | A high school girl (Cynthia Nixon) has a crush on a soap opera star but she thinks she is in love with him. At school, she meets her new English teacher, who closely resembles the soap star. |
The Hand-Me-Down Kid | Tired of receiving hand me downs from her sister, an 11-year-old girl "secretly borrows" her bicycle, which then gets stolen by somebody else. Tracey Gold and Cheryl Arutt portray the sisters; Terry O'Quinn plays their dad. Also starring Corey Parker and Martha Plimpton; based on a novel by Francine Pascal. |
The Celebrity and the Arcade Kid | Video arcade whiz and teen movie star discover they are exact doubles and decide to switch identities. A modern version of Mark Twain's The Prince and The Pauper. |
Andrea's Story: A Hitchhiking Tragedy | Teenage Andrea Cranston (Michele Greene) is traumatized after surviving an assault by a stranger from whom she hitched a ride. Co-starring Moosie Drier, Carrie Snodgress (as Andrea's mom), Robert DoQui and Kirk Cameron. |
The Great Love Experiment | Teenagers bait a timid girl to get her involved with various displays of affection. Starring Tracy Pollan, Pete Kowanko and Jennifer Grey. |
Backwards: The Riddle of Dyslexia | Real-life brothers River and Leaf Phoenix star in this tale of a 13-year-old boy who has problems reading, which his teachers attribute to laziness. It is ultimately discovered that he has dyslexia. |
The Hero Who Couldn't Read | A teacher discovers that one of his students, the school's star basketball player, is illiterate. He makes it his mission to teach the boy how to read. Starring Clarence Williams III; with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Michael Dorn. |
Season Thirteen (1984–85)
Episode | Synopsis |
Summer Switch | Ken Kwapis directed this adaptation of Mary Rodgers's novel about a man who magically switches personalities with his son, and about the comical chaos that ensues. |
Out of Step | An aspiring teenager Lisa dancer gets the chance to try out for a dance troupe. But will fear of failure keep her from auditioning? Terry Donahoe stars as Lisa Williams. |
The Almost Royal Family | Family inherits a house on a tiny island between Canada and the United States, outside the jurisdiction of either country. Sarah Jessica Parker stars. |
Mom's on Strike | An overworked housewife goes on strike, in order to persuade the rest of her family to share household chores. Co-starring Yeardley Smith, George Gaynes, Jonathan Ward and Sam McMurray. |
I Want to Go Home | Tommy and Mary Sanders (Seth Green, Maddie Corman) go on the run with their divorced mom Louise (Lindsay Crouse). Only belatedly do they realize that Louise has kidnapped them from their dad Tom (John Getz). |
First the Egg | A group of high school students take part in a parenting class where their first assignment is to 'parent' an egg. Starring Justine Bateman, Jimmy McNichol, Chris Hebert and Helene Udy. |
One Too Many | Actor Peter Horton directed this tale of four high school friends (Lance Guest, Val Kilmer, Michelle Pfeiffer and Mare Winningham) who find their lives changed forever, when one of them drives drunk with devastating results. This special was originally shown in prime-time.[3] |
Season Fourteen (1985–86)
Episode | Synopsis |
No Greater Gift | Anson Williams co-wrote and directed this tale of two terminally ill boys who hit it off in a hospital ward. One of them makes the ultimate sacrifice, in order to give the other a fighting chance at life. Co-starring Betty Thomas and Jeff Cohen. |
Cindy Eller: A Modern Fairy Tale | Actress Lee Grant directed this contemporary remake of Cinderella aimed at pre-teenagers. Starring Pearl Bailey, Kyra Sedgwick (in the title role), Jennifer Grey, Kelly Wolf, Grant Show, Melanie Mayron, Stephen Keep Mills and Sylvia Miles. |
Don't Touch | A teenage babysitter discovers that her young charge is being molested by a family friend; that's when harrowing memories of the sitter's own past molestation by her uncle resurface. Co-starring Blair Brown, Corey Parker, John Glover, Lisa Bonet and Danielle Carin; featuring real-life brothers Joey and Matthew Lawrence. |
High School Narc | A 22-year-old police officer (Michael E. Knight) poses as a student to sniff out the drug supplier for an inner-city high school. |
Can a Guy Say No? | A 17-year-old student learns just how deceiving looks can be, when he befriends the prettiest girl in school. It turns out her beauty compensates for unhappiness and low self-esteem, or does it? Starring Steve Antin, Heather Langenkamp, Christa Denton, Khrystyne Haje and Beau Bridges. |
Are You My Mother? | A teenage girl is stunned to discover that her supposedly-deceased mother is actually mentally ill, and institutionalized. Co-starring Marian Mercer and Michael York. |
Getting Even: A Wimp's Revenge | Tired of being bullied at school, a boy starts drawing a master scientist. He begins to imagine what it would be like, as the scientist, standing up to the bullies at school. Directed by James Scott and starring Adolph Caesar. |
Season Fifteen (1986–87)
Episode | Synopsis |
A Desperate Exit | Teenager is stunned when his best friend commits suicide, and is left with one unanswered question: Why? Based on Eve Bunting's novel Face at the Edge of the World; co-starring Malcolm-Jamal Warner and Rob Stone. |
Wanted: The Perfect Guy | Sensing that his mom Ellie (Madeline Kahn) is lonely and looking for companionship, fatherless 13-year-old Danny Coleman (Ben Affleck) places a personal ad for "The Perfect Guy". Co-starring Keith Szarabajka. |
Teen Father | Actor Kevin Hooks directed this tale of a college-bound 18-year-old (Corey Parker) whose life is turned upside down when his 16-year-old girlfriend announces that she is pregnant. |
The Gift of Amazing Grace | A teenager (Tempestt Bledsoe) is frustrated about being the only member of her gospel-singing family who cannot carry a tune in a barrel. So she writes a song about her problems, and soon discovers she's got musical talent after all, just not where she or anybody else suspected. Co-starring Della Reese. |
Supermom's Daughter | A career-driven woman opposes her daughter's future plans. Starring Barbara Bosson and Marisa Tomei. |
Divorced Kids' Blues | 15-year-old struggles through the politics of divorce as his parents split up. Written by Donald Margulies. |
Class Act: A Teacher's Story | A wealthy businessman returns to teaching after conquering the stock market. He inherits a class of underachievers and sets out to make them winners. Starring Ralph Garman. |
Season Sixteen (1987–88)
Episode | Synopsis |
Just a Regular Kid: An AIDS Story | Teenager Kevin Casio (Christian Hoff) discovers he has been infected with AIDS by a blood transfusion. Co-starring Florence Henderson and Ronny Cox (as Kevin's parents); featuring Lewis Arquette (as one of his doctors). |
The Kid Who Wouldn't Quit: The Brad Silverman Story | True story about a teen with Down syndrome who begins attending college classes. |
The Day My Kid Went Punk | Teenage musician Terry (Jay Underwood) hopes to distinguish himself from "the crowd", by becoming a punk rocker. Also starring Bernie Kopell, Albert Hague and James Noble. |
Seasonal Differences | A Christmas Nativity scene is displayed at a high school, where it sparks debate and protest from the student body; this leads to the separation of church and state being examined, formally, and in depth. Co-starring Megan Follows. |
Terrible Things My Mother Told Me | Hard-working 16-year-old Julia (Katherine Kamhi) does not realize that her mother Eleanor (Beth Howland), who alternately harasses and ignores Julia, yet dotes on lazy younger daughter Katie (Ita DeMarco), is being emotionally and verbally abusive. But when Julia gets the lead in a school play directed by popular Randy (Ian Ziering), she realizes she's every bit as worthy of Eleanor's support and encouragement as is her pampered sister. |
Daddy Can't Read | Teenager Alison Watson (Cheryl Arutt) does not understand why her father Bill (Edward Albert) opposes her campaign to promote literacy at his factory until she discovers that he cannot read. Co-starring Joey Travolta, Michael Jackson (as himself), gymnast Cathy Rigby and Richard Roundtree.[4][5] |
Season Seventeen (1988–89)
Episode | Synopsis |
Date Rape | A teenage girl is raped by the most popular boy in her school, while on a date with him. Co-starring John Savage, David Patrick Kelly and Gabrielle Carteris. |
A Family Again | A family must come to grips with the sudden death of their eldest daughter (Tonya Crowe). With Jill Eikenberry and Michael Tucker; also featuring Judith Barsi, Rob Stone, Ricki Lake, Rhea Perlman and Sherilyn Fenn. This special was originally shown in primetime under the name "ABC Family Theater".[6] |
Tattle: When to Tell on a Friend | Four girls on their high school swimming team appear inseparable, until two of them experiment with cocaine and get hooked. Tammy Lauren portrays one of said addicts; also starring Katharine Ross. |
Taking a Stand | An entire neighborhood examines their feelings of racism, and take sides after the home of a black family is vandalized by a neighbor. Co-starring Dan Lauria, Betty Buckley and Michael Beach. |
Just Tipsy, Honey | Teenager Patty Adams (Ellie Cornell) is in total denial about her mother Carolyn's (Joanna Pettet) drinking problem, which is glaringly evident to everybody else. |
The Cheats | Three girls steal the answers to their final exam. When the headmistress finds out, she gives those responsible one day to confess, before she expels and/or prosecutes everybody with any connection—no matter how remote—to the theft/cover-up. |
Torn Between Two Fathers | Actor Richard Masur directed this tale of a divorced couple's teenage daughter, who ends up waging a custody battle of her own. After the girl's natural mother dies in an accident, she sues her natural father for the right to live with her disabled stepdad. |
Season Eighteen (1989–90)
Season Nineteen (1990–91)
Episode | Synopsis |
A Question About Sex | Tracey Gold portrays Shauna Kelly, a cheerleader who advocates sex education at her high school. As a result, she locks horns with her mother Joanne (Cindy Pickett) who's aspiring to a seat on the school board. Co-starring Tom Skerritt (who also directed), Kristin Dattilo, Renée Estevez and Vince Vaughn. |
Testing Dirty | Having never used illegal drugs in his life, model teenager Will Hatch (Christopher Daniel Barnes)—a competitive swimmer who also works as delivery boy for a medical clinic—is shocked when he tests positive for amphetamines (actually, it was medication for swimmer's ear). He's even more shocked when "speed" is found in his locker, which school security forcibly searches—in his absence—over the test results. Also shocked are: his mom (Alley Mills) and his girlfriend Carla (Lisa Dean Ryan), who believe in his innocence; swim-team coach Stanley Daniels (Chris Rich) and Will's high-school principal (Art LaFleur), who do not. It does not help that Stan is also Carla's father and Mrs. Hatch's fiance; he even turns against his own daughter, when she's expelled for refusing to take the same drug test as Will. Adam Sandler has a cameo as a pusher. |
Stood Up! | After getting stood up for the school prom a high school girl sues her date. |
The Less-Than-Perfect Daughter | A demanding woman and her daughter knock heads when the latter (Robyn Lively), aspiring to be less reliant on her family, moves in with a troubled friend (Andrea Elson). Robyn's real-life father Ernie Lively portrays her character's dad. Co-starring Renee O'Connor. |
It's Only Rock & Roll | A teenage musician (Alison Bartlett) finds her song lyrics being scrutinized as too suggestive. Co-starring Davy Jones and Carole King. |
Season Twenty (1991–92)
Episode | Synopsis |
In the Shadow of Love: A Teen AIDS Story | Two high school journalists write a story about a teen HIV support group, and are stunned by some of the stories they hear. |
Summer Stories: The Mall - Part 1 | Three-part series about high school graduates contemplating their futures, while working at the mall. In "First Impressions", a girl has mixed sentiment about meeting her birth mother for the first time. |
Summer Stories: The Mall - Part 2 | In "Second Chances", a girl struggles with mixed feelings about her widowed mother's upcoming remarriage. |
Summer Stories: The Mall - Part 3 | In "Temptations" the gang prepares to go their separate ways as summer winds down. Meanwhile, a recovering teenage alcoholic struggles to stay sober when an old drinking buddy shows up. Co-starring Todd Graff. |
Season Twenty-One (1992–93)
Episode | Synopsis |
Surviving a Break-up | Oprah Winfrey moderates a panel of teens, celebrities and experts to discuss surviving the end of a relationship. |
Shades of a Single Protein | Oprah Winfrey moderates a panel of teens discussing race relations in America. |
Learning Not to Hurt | Roz Abrams hosts a special report on youth violence and later moderates a panel discussion. |
Girlfriend | Two teenage girls, one black and one white, become friends while working on a mural to honor a black classmate killed by random gunfire. |
Season Twenty-Two (1993–94)
Episode | Synopsis |
Love Hurts | 16-year-old Christie (Holly Shaw) turns to a support group when her boyfriend begins to physically abuse her. |
Montana Crossroads | Julia Morrow-Wheeler (Jacklyn Zeman) struggles with her daughter Samantha (Kellie Martin) wanting to leave the nest, and, at the same time, with her father Frank's (Don Murray) reluctance to enter a retirement home. Co-starring Michael Cutt. |
I Hate the Way I Look | Oprah Winfrey moderates a panel of teens, celebrities and experts to discuss the obsession teens have with their appearance. |
Jacqui's Dilemma | A pregnant 16-year-old girl examines her choices over what to do with her unborn baby amidst interviews with teens, parents, educators, counselors, social workers and doctors that amplify the issues. |
Season Twenty-Three (1994–95)
Episode | Synopsis |
Boys Will Be Boys: the Ali Cooper Story | Not to be confused with the same-named TV series, this chronicles the ordeal of a high-school marching band-member (Ami Dolenz) who becomes the victim of sexual harassment by several male classmates, including some close friends of her elder brother Steve (David Lipper). Fortunately, he takes her side. Ali and her family decide upon suing the school, after Principal Pritchard (Steven Gilborn) cites the title excuse instead of doing anything to protect her. Directed by Joan Van Ark, who also portrays Ali and Steve's mom; Larry Wilcox plays their dad. Also starring Jeremy Jordan and Danny Cooksey. |
Magical Make-Over | Teenage girl desperately wants to be popular. One day an angel grants her that wish, by giving her a new image every day. But soon, she wishes she could just be herself. |
Bonnie Raitt Has Something to Talk About | Whoopi Goldberg interviews musician/singer Bonnie Raitt about her life, career and future plans. |
Notes for My Daughter | Teenage girl struggles with her mother's illness from breast cancer. |
Long Road Home | Teenager Hank Atkins (Micah Dyer) does not know what to think of his dad John's (Jameson Parker) new wife; for one thing, Amanda (Kristen Cloke) is young enough to be John's daughter. Thankfully, however, as Hank takes a long road trip alone with Amanda, the proverbial ice gets broken with a vengeance. |
Season Twenty-Four (1995–96)
Episode | Synopsis |
Fast Forward | A teenager is shown how being involved with booze will shape his life, ultimately, he will become a bombed-out derelict (Gerald McRaney). |
Episode 2 | The film traces the story of the Chicago-born astronomer George Ellery Hale as he struggles to build the greatest telescopes of the 20th century. |
Positive: A Journey Into AIDS | Documentary following two actors from ABC's General Hospital (Kimberly McCullough, Michael Sutton) as they research and talk to people living with HIV and AIDS. |
Just Chill | After the senseless death of his twin brother, a teen drug pusher decides to seek revenge against all who have wronged him in the neighborhood. |
Educating Mom | Soccer mom Nancy Gallagher (Jane Kaczmarek) feels like a hypocrite when lecturing her kids Jason and Carly (Will Friedle, Lacey Chabert) about the importance of finishing one's education, since Jane herself is a high school dropout. She decides to practice what she's been preaching, by sharing classes with Jason. Co-starring Kevin Connolly. |
Daddy's Girl | Teenage girl, Alica (Elise Neal) meets up with her father for the first time in ten years, and yearns to reunite her family despite their opposition. Featuring Lauryn Hill as Alicia's friend, Malika. |
Through Thick & Thin | Twin sisters, one slim and one overweight, magically switch personalities, giving them a new appreciation of each other. |
Season Twenty-Five (1996–97)
Episode | Synopsis |
Too Soon for Jeff | In this adaptation of Marilyn Reynolds' novel, a high school senior's (Freddie Prinze, Jr.) future plans change abruptly when he learns his girlfriend is pregnant. Co-starring Ed Begley, Jr., Breck Wilson and Jessica Alba. |
Me and My Hormones | Three women, each from a different generation, deal with the various changes taking place in their lives. Starring Courtney Peldon, Marion Ross, Bruce Boxleitner, Sara Gilbert (whose real-life sister Melissa directed) and Chad Lowe. |
Teenage Confidential | Andrea Mattson's (Lauren Woodland) overprotective parents (Morgan Fairchild and Sam McMurray), out of excessive concern for their daughter's well-being, hire a private eye to shadow her every move. Predictably, this does much more harm than good. Co-starring Danny Cooksey. |
Miracle at Trapper Creek | Underprivileged and troubled teens join the Trapper Creek Jobs Corp in Montana to learn a trade, work in the wilderness and achieve a solid work ethic. |
Reception
In 1993, TV Guide named the series the best kids' show of the 1980s.[7]
See also
References
- ↑ Terrace, Vincent (2009). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2007 (Volume 1). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-3305-6.
- ↑ Awards for ABC Afterschool Special (1972), retrieved 2009-04-13
- ↑ http://www.platypuscomix.net/bored/afterschool32.html
- ↑ "Article". Anchorage Daily News. March 13, 1988.
- ↑ Margulies, Lee (March 11, 1988). "ABC-TV to target literacy". The Bulletin. Central Oregon. The Bulletin and LA Times. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
- ↑ http://www.platypuscomix.net/bored/afterschool51.html
- ↑ TV Guide April 17-23, 1993. 1993. p. 79.
External links