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The Mary Tyler Moore Show

Titre original : Mary Tyler Moore
  • Série télévisée
  • 1970–1977
  • TV-PG
  • 30min
NOTE IMDb
8,3/10
11 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
2 199
82
Edward Asner, Valerie Harper, and Mary Tyler Moore in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970)
The Mary Tyler Moore Show: Season 5
Lire trailer1:18
3 Videos
99+ photos
SitcomComedy

La vie et les épreuves d'une jeune femme célibataire et de ses amis, tant sur le plan professionnel que familial.La vie et les épreuves d'une jeune femme célibataire et de ses amis, tant sur le plan professionnel que familial.La vie et les épreuves d'une jeune femme célibataire et de ses amis, tant sur le plan professionnel que familial.

  • Création
    • James L. Brooks
    • Allan Burns
  • Casting principal
    • Mary Tyler Moore
    • Edward Asner
    • Gavin MacLeod
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,3/10
    11 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    2 199
    82
    • Création
      • James L. Brooks
      • Allan Burns
    • Casting principal
      • Mary Tyler Moore
      • Edward Asner
      • Gavin MacLeod
    • 62avis d'utilisateurs
    • 35avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 29 Primetime Emmys
      • 46 victoires et 82 nominations au total

    Épisodes168

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés

    Vidéos3

    Funny Women of Television
    Video 3:41
    Funny Women of Television
    Mary Tyler Moore show
    Clip 3:01
    Mary Tyler Moore show
    Mary Tyler Moore show
    Clip 3:01
    Mary Tyler Moore show
    The Mary Tyler Moore Show: Season 5
    Trailer 1:18
    The Mary Tyler Moore Show: Season 5

    Photos418

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    + 412
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Mary Tyler Moore
    Mary Tyler Moore
    • Mary Richards
    • 1970–1977
    Edward Asner
    Edward Asner
    • Lou Grant
    • 1970–1977
    Gavin MacLeod
    Gavin MacLeod
    • Murray Slaughter
    • 1970–1977
    Valerie Harper
    Valerie Harper
    • Rhoda Morgenstern…
    • 1970–1977
    Ted Knight
    Ted Knight
    • Ted Baxter…
    • 1970–1977
    Georgia Engel
    Georgia Engel
    • Georgette Franklin…
    • 1972–1977
    Betty White
    Betty White
    • Sue Ann Nivens
    • 1973–1977
    Cloris Leachman
    Cloris Leachman
    • Phyllis Lindstrom
    • 1970–1977
    John Amos
    John Amos
    • Gordy Howard…
    • 1970–1977
    Joyce Bulifant
    Joyce Bulifant
    • Marie Slaughter
    • 1971–1977
    Lisa Gerritsen
    Lisa Gerritsen
    • Bess Lindstrom
    • 1970–1975
    Richard Schaal
    Richard Schaal
    • Howard Arnell…
    • 1970–1974
    Priscilla Morrill
    Priscilla Morrill
    • Edie Grant…
    • 1973–1975
    John Gabriel
    John Gabriel
    • Andy Rivers
    • 1973–1975
    Larry Wilde
    • M.C.…
    • 1973–1976
    Nancy Walker
    Nancy Walker
    • Ida Morgenstern
    • 1970–1973
    Patrick Campbell
    • Announcer…
    • 1972–1975
    Eileen Heckart
    Eileen Heckart
    • Flo Meredith
    • 1975–1976
    • Création
      • James L. Brooks
      • Allan Burns
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs62

    8,310.8K
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    Avis à la une

    Sargebri

    The Original

    This truly was one of the first ensemble driven situation comedies in the history of television. Even though Mary Tyler Moore was the star of the show, the fact was that the series truly revolved around her relationships with not only her friends at home, but her friends on the job and when those two worlds collided, sparks usually flew. Also, this show was really funny when Valerie Harper was still on the show playing Rhoda. She and Mary were polar opposites (Mary the cheerful optimist and Rhoda the angry cynic). However, those differences was what made their relationship shine. Cloris Leachman was also perfect as the over bearing Phyllis Lindstrom. And lets not forget the other characters; cynical Lou, the optimistic Murray and, of course, dimwitted Ted Baxter. This show definitely one of the all time classics and made Saturday nights worth staying home.

    Another interesting fact about this show is the fact that it debuted during the final season of the original series about a single woman trying to make it, "That Girl". However, while Ann pretty much was still an innocent little girl at heart that had a boyfriend and often still relied on him and her parents to get her out of jams, Mary Richards proved that she could be single and live her life on her own terms.
    PrometheusTree64

    Period piece and classic sitcom

    It's hard for people to remember what American TV was like at the time (even for people who were alive and conscious then) in the hugely formulaic post-PETTICOAT JUNCTION era.

    And I've known a lot of people who today look at the first season of "MTM" where the jokes are broader and don't always quite work and the acting is a bit too "loud" and stagey, and they wonder why this show was so well-regarded, then and now --- often to the point that they can't make it thru to later seasons.

    I guess that's understandable. It's hard to believe very-very early episodes of "MTM" about Mary and Rhoda joining a divorce club and its strained humor was actually looser and freer and more amusing than what other sitcoms of the day had to offer. But it's true.

    Although the first year of the show may be only sporadically humorous, it makes up for it in that "MTM" did one of the best jobs of capturing that weird melancholy of the era --- that mood that kind of defined the '70s, and was even more intense at the very start of the decade: this sort of lost, disillusioned, bittersweet, post-60s flavor which made everybody immediately seem as if they had a "past" from the moment they appeared on screen...

    For anybody looking to see what it actually felt like living in the world at that particular moment in time -- at the cusp of the '60s and '70s -- it's captured vividly by such period montage sequences as the urban street scenes in MIDNIGHT COWBOY (1969) or the snow angels/ice skating sequence in LOVE STORY (1970) or the "MTM" show opening theme design from Season 1, even Mary and little Bess going shopping in a Minneapolis mall, etc...

    The world actually felt that way at the time. It's not just a Hollywood construct.

    To me, Season 1 of "MTM" is kind of a portal to 1970. I regarded it as such even as early as the late-70s (when the show was first in syndication) and it still hits me the same way whenever I see very early installments--- the look of the show and the forlorn music score... No, the comedy isn't quite as hilarious by the slick standards of sitcoms from more recent decades (or even compared to later episodes of the same show) but I still find the mood almost heart-breakingly captivating. It is so evocative of the era.

    As the seasons rolled on, the comedy got sharper (by the standards of the day) even though that '70s somberness was gradually mitigated as it lessened in real life.

    So it's a time capsule of sorts... One would think every show and movie filmed in a particular era would be, but that just isn't true. Clothes and cars from a period don't sell or convey the past to the present --- something has to be good, or at least right-minded, in order for the zeitgeist of the era in question to stick to celluloid. And "MTM" was one of those shows that did so.

    It was also one of the rare series then to proceed in "real time" which gave the show a life, an energy, that most didn't have, even though it didn't delve into the then-shocking, in-your-face politics that ALL IN THE FAMILY soon would.

    Folks who weren't around then probably aren't able to grasp how fresh this "MTM" show seemed back in 1970, given where TV was at the time. Or understand why all the terribly broad (some might even say groan-inducing) comedy directed at, and derived from, Ted Baxter during Season 1 -- which predominantly focused on his dumbness and inability to pronounce basic words -- could possibly ever have been once seen as "funny".

    In fact, it was, however briefly, fall-off-the-couch funny. TV in the 1960s had fervently ignored the social changes of that decade (including the questioning of establishment authority) so seeing a revered image like the silver-haired newsreader held up as a buffoon was actually considered edgy, even though that context doesn't really "read" today. (That's not revisionism, I swear. And at least the writers realized they would soon have to write to Ted's narcissism and density in a more layered, sophisticated fashion, and they quickly did so.)

    That says more about where the media culture was circa 1969 or 1970 than it does THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW.

    For all of the above reasons, Mary Richards became metaphorical for the early-to-mid 1970s, almost by accident: TV changed more between 1970 and 1975 than any other five year period in its history, in terms of content, and the television sitcom genre had literally become an agent for social change. And Mary Richards likewise grew during the seven years of the series from the quivery, vulnerable, lanky girl with the long, raven hair who let herself be gently bullied into giving up her family holiday visit at Christmas to cover for her co-workers in that 1970 episode (so wistfully forlorn for reasons hard to explain, except that it, too, captures the poignant atmosphere of the time precisely) into the almost cocky, seasoned professional who didn't pause to deliver a zinger to Ted or SueAnn when circumstances demanded it, and could grab and kiss her latest boyfriend in a public restaurant and then fluff her hair tauntingly at her voyeuristic co-workers as she sauntered out the front door.

    Mary had grown up with us, or at least with the television medium, during it's most significant period of progression.

    And then there's the actress herself, Mary Tyler Moore, whose own personal melancholia seemed to parallel that of the earlier part of that decade. Even with the same writers and co-stars, the show would never have felt the same without Moore and her intrinsic sense of haunted, detached nostalgia wrapped in winter's chill.
    Monika-5

    It's a classic

    I always enjoyed The Mary Tyler Moore Show. The characters were all funny, especially the goofy fights between Ted Baxter and Murray Slaughter. Lou Grant ("I hate spunk!") was always good for a laugh, especially the episode where he ended up drunk on Mary's doorstep!

    Of course, the real two stars of the series were Mary Tyler Moore (duh) as Mary Richards and Valerie Harper as her best friend, Rhoda Morgenstern. My all-time favorite episode is the second one, where the two host a small gathering at Mary's apartment for two potential suitors, and everything goes wrong!

    A true classic, and it earned every Emmy it got.
    WendyOh!

    One of the best.

    Right up there with the Dick Van Dyke show, in fact directed by some of the same people, this is another great sitcom. It seems they come along once a decade or so, and this is definitely a great one. Mary Tyler Moore is the newly liberated woman at work, dealing with all the same sexist stuff she dealt with in 1961 on the Dick Van Dyke show, but in a totally different way. The supporting cast is marvelous, from Ed Asner to Valerie Harper (as 'Rhoda') to the irrepressible Ted Knight as the vain news anchor. Hysterical stuff.
    lauraeileen894

    The show with spunk!

    As a 25-year-old woman, it's a shame that the so-called "feminist icons" of my day have been klutzy, man-hungry ninny Ally McBeal and tabloid wench Paris Hilton. I've really come to envy women who had real feminist heroes, real or fictional, such as Gloria Steinem, Bea Arthur as "Maude", and, of course, Mary Tyler Moore as Mary Richards. "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" isn't just an excellent sitcom with perfectly realized characters, but it featured an imperfect but winning heroine that any woman could look up to. Mary was a sweet-natured thirty-something who alternated between being high-strung and confident. She happily lived alone and had a loyal gal pal in smart mouthed New Yorker Rhoda (the incomparable Valerie Harper). Mary also was an associate TV producer at the low-rated WJM news network, where she had the respect of her male co-workers, including her arch-conservative boss Lou Grant (Ed Asner), wisecracking but tender-hearted work buddy Murray Slaugher (Gavin McLeod), and buffoonish anchorman Ted Baxter (Ted Knight). Not that everyone loved Mary... she constantly had to deal with her insufferable, overbearingly perky landlady Phyllis (Cloris Leachman). When Phyllis was written out of the show, WJM's "Happy Homemaker" Sue Ann Nivens (flawless Betty White) replaced her as Mary's foil. Passive-aggressive and sex-starved, Sue Ann was a hilarious combination of Blanche from "The Golden Girls" and Harriet Nelson. Best of all, the show had running gags that somehow never went stale: Mary's tendency to attract the wrong men, her disastrous dinner parties, Ted's slips of the tongue on the air, Lou's annoyance at being the lowest-rated TV network, and Rhoda's quest for the perfect husband. An addictive show that didn't wear out its welcome in its seven year run, "MTM" is a shining example of great writing, fully developed characters, and perfect casting that has never been equaled. It was a show with spunk... we need spunk!

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Producers wanted "someone like Betty White" to play Sue Ann Nivens. Eventually, someone asked, "Why not cast Betty White?"
    • Gaffes
      In the first season installment "Divorce Isn't Everything", Mary mentions that she can't speak French but can speak Spanish. Later in the series, while at a Mexican restaurant, she indicates that she can't read the menu because she took French in college.
    • Citations

      Lou Grant: You know, Mary, you've got spunk.

      Mary Richards: Why, thank you, Mr. Grant.

      Lou Grant: I hate spunk.

    • Crédits fous
      In episode 71 the MTM Kitten was replaced by Miss Moore herself, saying "Th-th-th-that's all folks!", a line spoken by Mary Richards during that episode.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The 23rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1971)

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    FAQ19

    • How many seasons does The Mary Tyler Moore Show have?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 12 mai 2000 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Oh Mary
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Lake of the Isles, Minneapolis, Minnesota, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • MTM Enterprises
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      30 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 4:3

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