On Our Own (1994 TV series)
On Our Own | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | David W. Duclon |
Developed by |
Thomas L. Miller Robert L. Boyett |
Written by |
David Chambers Michael Din David W. Duclon Gregory Thomas Garcia Ralph Greene Lore Kimbrough Gary Menteer Fred Rubin Timothy Stack |
Directed by |
Richard Correll Kelly Sandefur John Tracy Joel Zwick |
Starring |
Ralph Louis Harris Jojo Smollett Jazz Smollett Jussie Smollett T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh Jurnee Smollett Jocqui Smollett Roger Aaron Brown Kimberley Kates |
Theme music composer |
Jesse Frederick Bennett Salvay |
Opening theme | "Love, Tried and True" performed by Joe Turano |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 20 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
David W. Duclon Thomas L. Miller Robert L. Boyett Suzanne de Passe Suzanne Coston |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Lightkeeper Productions de Passe Entertainment Miller-Boyett Productions Warner Bros. Television |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
Original release | September 13, 1994 – April 14, 1995 |
On Our Own is an American sitcom that aired on ABC from September 13, 1994 until April 14, 1995. The series stars Ralph Louis Harris and six real life siblings: Jazz, Jocqui, Jake, Jojo, Jurnee, and Jussie Smollett.[1]
The series was created and executive produced by David W. Duclon, one of the executive producers of Family Matters. The series was also produced by Thomas L. Miller and Robert L. Boyett, who developed the show. Suzanne de Passe and Suzanne Coston were additional executive producers, with Duclon's longtime colleague Gary Menteer acting as co-executive producer (who also was a producer/writer on Family Matters, to which he returned when On Our Own was canceled).
The series was produced by Miller-Boyett Productions, with associates Lightkeeper Productions (Duclon's company) and de Passe Entertainment. On Our Own was the first Miller-Boyett sitcom to be produced by Warner Bros. Television for its entire run.
Synopsis
The series centers on the Jerrico family, consisting of seven brothers and sisters (all of whom have names that start with "J") in the O'Fallon Park neighborhood of St. Louis who lose their parents and are being raised by the eldest brother, Josh (Harris). The early episodes focused on the siblings attempting to not be split up by authorities. This leads to Josh, the eldest brother who was trying to raise the family alone, to dress in drag and pose as older guardian, Aunt Jelcinda (also known as "Mama J"), to fool their case worker, Alana Michaels (Kimberley Kates). Alana quickly sees through the charade, but decides to help the family stay together. Alana and the family attempt to fool Alana's boss, Mr. Gordon Ormsby (Roger Aaron Brown), that "Mama J" is actually taking care of the family. Problems arise when Mr. Ormsby becomes enamored with "Mama J" and pursues her. Ultimately, "Mama J" tells Mr. Ormsby that she cannot enter into a relationship with him because she is focused on the well being of the children.
The pilot episode also featured Rae'Ven Larrymore Kelly as Hannah, a young neighbor girl and friend of the Jerricos. She was originally slated to be a regular cast member, as she was credited in the opening title sequence (with "and Rae'Ven Kelly as Hannah" appearing last in the cast credit procession), but she did not appear ever again after the prologue segment of the pilot.
In December 1994, the series was put on hiatus and retooled. When it returned to the air in March 1995, Josh was granted full custody of his siblings, thus ending the need for the Aunt Jelcinda/Mama J character. The characters of Alana Michaels and Mr. Ormsby were also written out of the show, and a new character, Scotti Decker (T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh) was introduced. Scotti, a young, attractive professional contractor, rented a room from the Jerricos in exchange for the work she was doing on their home (in her debut episode, rotted beams caused the bathroom tub to crash through the living room ceiling). She became a sister figure to the younger kids, while fighting off sexual advances from Josh and Jimi and turning them into more responsible "men of the house". Suki (Karen Kim) and Nails (Laura Ponce) were the carpenters who worked for Scotti.
Having aired on Sunday nights at 7:30/6:30c during the first half of the season, On Our Own was moved to the 9:30/8:30c time slot following Step By Step on TGIF when it returned in March 1995. The changes to the series in the spring didn't help ratings, and after six more episodes, the show was canceled by ABC.[2]
After cancellation
After the series was cancelled, the exterior shots of the Jerrico home resurfaced on Miller-Boyett's (rather, in this case, Miller-Boyett-Warren's) short-lived 1997 sitcom Meego. Although not set in St. Louis, Meego used the On Our Own home exteriors to depict the residence of the Parker family in that series. Meego largely used the view from the house's east side in exterior shots, but most of the shots from On Our Own were recycled.
Cast
Main
- Ralph Louis Harris - Josh Jerrico/Aunt Jelcinda ("Mama J")
- Jurnee Smollett - Jordee Jerrico
- Jussie Smollett - Jesse Jerrico
- Jake Smollett - Joc Jerrico
- Jazz Smollett - Jai Jerrico
- Jocqui Smollett - Jarreau Jerrico
- Jojo Smollett - Jimi Jerrico
- Kimberley Kates - Alana Michaels (1994)
- Roger Aaron Brown - Mr. Gordon Ormsby (1994)
- Rae'Ven Larrymore Kelly - Hannah (pilot only)
- T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh - Scotti Decker (1995)
- Karen Kim - Suki (1995)
- Laura Ponce - Nails (1995)
Recurring
- Cindy Herron - Shannon
- Deon Richmond - Kevin
- Bumper Robinson - Nat
Episodes
No. | Title | Original air date |
---|---|---|
1 | "Pilot" | September 13, 1994 |
After their parents die in an automobile accident, twenty-year-old Josh takes over as the authority figure of his six younger siblings. But the by-the-rules head of Department of Children Services, Gordon Ormsby, hears of the Jerricos' case and sends new social worker Alana Michaels to investigate and, if accurate, prepare for foster care. Josh assumes the identity of "Aunt Jelcinda" to combat the authorities. | ||
2 | "Last Tango in St. Louis" "Dog Day After Groom" | September 18, 1994 |
Josh has a problem: Gordon asks "Aunt Jelcinda" for a date, and he cannot refuse if he wants the family to stay together. | ||
3 | "Matchmaker Mama" | September 25, 1994 |
"Aunt Jelcinda" finds a distraught young woman in a restaurant ladies' room and sets her up with her alter ego, Josh. She eventually becomes his girlfriend. | ||
4 | "A Matter of Principal" | October 2, 1994 |
When Jesse is unjustly suspended from school for fighting, Jimi poses as Jesse's grandfather for a meeting with the principal. | ||
5 | "Nok Till You Drop" | October 9, 1994 |
Jimi loses money he doesn't have to a con man on a game of Nok-Hockey. Meanwhile, Jai readies for her first dance. | ||
6 | "Swiss Family Jerrico's" | October 16, 1994 |
Josh thinks a camping trip will provide relief from his impersonation, but Gordon tags along. | ||
7 | "Bargain Basement" | October 23, 1994 |
The Jerricos discover a trunk full of memories of their parents -- and Alana too may soon be a memory, since Gordon wants to take her off their case. | ||
8 | "Bonnie is Really Clyde" | October 30, 1994 |
"Aunt Jelcinda" befriends a runaway teen while Joc threatens to do so. | ||
9 | "A Family Affair" | November 13, 1994 |
Josh is getting serious about his new girlfriend. "The trouble is," sighs Jimi, "if a girl gets serious with Josh, she gets a free six-pack of assorted Jerricos." | ||
10 | "Baby Blues" | December 4, 1994 |
The kids try to raise money for tickets to a Whitney Houston concert, with mixed success. Meanwhile, Josh gets stuck in an elevator with a very pregnant woman. | ||
11 | "That's My Car and I'm Sticking to It" | December 11, 1994 |
Neighborhood gossip gets the Jerricos investigated. | ||
12 | "All I Want for Christmas" | December 18, 1994 |
When a kindergarten bully tells Joc that Santa Claus doesn't exist, Josh dons a Santa suit to prove the bully wrong -- and succeeds only too well. | ||
13 | "Parents' Night" | December 28, 1994 |
Josh can not attend parents' night at Jordee's school because he has to finish an article. | ||
14 | "The Boarder" | March 3, 1995 |
Josh wins custody of the kids, and the family takes in a boarder: live-in contractor Scotti. | ||
15 | "Obstacle Illusion" | March 10, 1995 |
Jordee gets into remote-control cars. Meanwhile, Jimi is shot down by a girl who admits she is a jinx and proves it. | ||
16 | "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother" | March 17, 1995 |
While poking around in the attic, Josh discovers love letters to his mom from his dad -- who was not the father of his siblings. | ||
17 | "Girl Talk" | March 24, 1995 |
A football star eyes Jai, who wants a particular shy boy to ask her out. Meanwhile, Josh gets in trouble with his girlfriend because of Scotti. | ||
18 | "Little Rascals" | March 31, 1995 |
Josh, a cracker-jack coffee shop manager, has a crisis to manage: his staff has the flu. Enter the replacement staff: his siblings and Scotti. | ||
19 | "The Easy Way" | April 7, 1995 |
Jordee takes the easy way out of a geography exam: she cheats. And a girl with a "bad rep" has her eye on Jimi. | ||
20 | "The Tonsil Tale" | April 14, 1995 |
Joc needs a doc -- "Someone pulled a Christmas tree from my throat" -- so it's tonsillectomy time for the first-grader. Meanwhile, Jesse takes up hypnosis. |
Award nominations
Year | Award | Result | Category | Recipient |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | Young Artist Awards | Nominated | Best Performance by an Actor Under Ten in a TV Series | Jake Smollett |
Best Performance by an Actress Under Ten in a TV Series | Jurnee Smollett | |||
Syndication
The series was briefly re-aired on TV One in 2007.
References
External links
- On Our Own at the Internet Movie Database
- On Our Own at TV.com
- On Our Own at epguides.com