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Quella strana ragazza

Titolo originale: That Girl
  • Serie TV
  • 1966–1971
  • TV-PG
  • 30min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,3/10
3550
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Quella strana ragazza (1966)
Home Video Trailer from Shout! Factory
Riproduci trailer1: 24
5 video
99+ foto
CommediaCommedia romanticaDrammaRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAn aspiring actress moves from her hometown of Brewster, New York, to try to make it big in New York City, having to take several offbeat "temp" jobs to support herself in between her variou... Leggi tuttoAn aspiring actress moves from her hometown of Brewster, New York, to try to make it big in New York City, having to take several offbeat "temp" jobs to support herself in between her various auditions and bit parts.An aspiring actress moves from her hometown of Brewster, New York, to try to make it big in New York City, having to take several offbeat "temp" jobs to support herself in between her various auditions and bit parts.

  • Creazione
    • Sam Denoff
    • Bill Persky
  • Star
    • Marlo Thomas
    • Ted Bessell
    • Lew Parker
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,3/10
    3550
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Creazione
      • Sam Denoff
      • Bill Persky
    • Star
      • Marlo Thomas
      • Ted Bessell
      • Lew Parker
    • 49Recensioni degli utenti
    • 8Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 7 Primetime Emmy
      • 3 vittorie e 11 candidature totali

    Episodi137

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati

    Video5

    Funny Women of Television
    Video 3:41
    Funny Women of Television
    That Girl
    Trailer 1:24
    That Girl
    That Girl
    Trailer 1:24
    That Girl
    That Girl: Seasons One Through Five
    Trailer 1:24
    That Girl: Seasons One Through Five
    That Girl: Season Three
    Trailer 1:26
    That Girl: Season Three
    That Girl: Season One
    Trailer 1:26
    That Girl: Season One

    Foto294

    Visualizza poster
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    + 286
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali99+

    Modifica
    Marlo Thomas
    Marlo Thomas
    • Ann Marie
    • 1965–1971
    Ted Bessell
    Ted Bessell
    • Donald Hollinger…
    • 1965–1971
    Lew Parker
    Lew Parker
    • Lew Marie…
    • 1966–1971
    Bernie Kopell
    Bernie Kopell
    • Jerry Bauman
    • 1966–1971
    Rosemary DeCamp
    Rosemary DeCamp
    • Helen Marie
    • 1966–1970
    Bonnie Scott
    • Judy Bessemer
    • 1966–1967
    Carolan Daniels
    Carolan Daniels
    • Ruth Bauman
    • 1967–1969
    Alice Borden
    • Ruth Bauman
    • 1969–1971
    Dabney Coleman
    Dabney Coleman
    • Dr. Leon Bessemer
    • 1966–1967
    Bobo Lewis
    Bobo Lewis
    • Gloria…
    • 1967–1971
    Bob Ross
    • Waiter…
    • 1970–1971
    Sam Denoff
    • Big Better…
    • 1969–1971
    Mabel Albertson
    Mabel Albertson
    • Mildred Hollinger…
    • 1966–1970
    Ruth Buzzi
    Ruth Buzzi
    • Pete Peterson
    • 1967–1968
    Ed Peck
    Ed Peck
    • Bart…
    • 1966–1970
    Jesse White
    Jesse White
    • Eddy Edwards…
    • 1968–1969
    Renata Vanni
    Renata Vanni
    • Mrs. Rose Brentano…
    • 1967–1969
    Gino Conforti
    Gino Conforti
    • Nino
    • 1969–1971
    • Creazione
      • Sam Denoff
      • Bill Persky
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti49

    7,33.5K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    Sargebri

    Before Mary, There Was Ann

    Four years before the debut of the Mary Tyler Moore Show, this was the first show to feature an independent woman who wanted to make it on her own without having to rely on her parents or her boyfriend. This was a great show with a great cast that really worked well together. The other thing that I really loved about this show was the fact that the humor was very broad and that Ann, even though she was independent, often found herself in some very awkward situations. I especially loved the last season in which we really saw Ann's relationship with Donald really blossom as they finally became engaged. Too bad it ended before they walked down the aisle.
    8AlsExGal

    Lew Parker as Wile Coyote and Ted Bessell as The Roadrunner...

    ... or if not that, Ted Bessell as one of the most sexually frustrated men of 1960's New York City. If the Mary Tyler Moore show had first aired in 1966 instead of 1970, it would have been this show. American culture changed that quickly. Marlo Thomas plays a young woman, Ann Marie, from the village of Brewster, New York who comes to the big city to become an actress, which is a tough career to break into, thus she takes a series of quirky jobs to get by which often become the central theme of certain episodes. In the very first episode she meets Donald (Ted Bessell), a writer for a magazine, and they are a couple for the next five years, a couple that - apparently - never has sex.

    Back home, Ann's dad (Lew Parker) never quite trusts Donald's intentions with his daughter, and believes that girls should live at home until married. Thus a mainstay of the show is dad bursting in on Ann and Donald, either incidentally or intentionally, only to find them in what appears to be a compromising position (Ah ha! I've got him!) that in the end has a logical and platonic explanation.

    If you didn't live through this period in history, you might think of the 1960's and believe it was nothing but an endless parade of hippies, pot smoking, and student/police confrontations over the Vietnam War. The fact is, most people in 1960's America were still living in the 1950's at the time, and women were still largely accepted only in traditional professions - teaching, nursing, secretarial work, acting - you know, jobs that involve either serving men or children. So That Girl was about as far as network TV could go with this topic - a young woman living in her own apartment pursuing a career in ANYTHING in New York City - without raising middle class eyebrows.

    It was bright, funny, and innocent, sometimes to the point of being naive, but I'll always look back fondly on "That Girl" of my youth.
    10inkblot11

    How That Girl was a top favorite of mine in the sixties and how I wanted to be just like her!

    Ann Marie (Marlo Thomas, Danny Thomas' daughter in case you've never heard) is a single lady living in Manhattan. Her ambition is to make it as an actress on Broadway but between small gigs on children's television, commercials and experimental theater, she must work other jobs. These include news stand salesclerk (where she meets someone special), waitress, door-to-door shoe hawker, and more. On one of her first days in NYC, she meets Don Hollinger (Ted Bessell) and its an auspicious beginning. They both want to buy the same rolltop desk for sale in the same building and Don interrupts a commercial Ann is shooting after hours. But, in short order, they go to dinner. Pretty soon, they are stepping out steadily and, after a disastrous picnic, meet Ann's folks. While Ann's mother (Rosemary DeCamp) is loving and kind, Ann's father, Lew (Lew Parker, hilarious) is a prickly restaurateur. He, Ann, and Don often clash on many topics. Also, Ann is on very friendly terms with the couple across the hall, Judy and Leon, and Don's co-workers include Bernie (Bernie Kopell) before he went to the Love Boat. By the fifth season, will Ann and Don finally tie the knot? This will always be one of my favorite shows from childhood. First, it was and is very funny, with Thomas exhibiting very comedic talents as zany Ann. Bessell is a perfect foil and Parker is a delight, too. Secondly, Ann was a single lady decorating her own apartment, pursuing her own dreams, choosing her own friends and more. Yes, most gals like me wanted to get married AT SOME POINT but, first, we wanted to live the good life by our own merits! Naturally, Ann's costumes are terrific, her hairstyle was one we tried to copy, and her tastes became our tastes. Dear Marlo Thomas, as Ann's alter ego, YOU WILL ALWAYS BE A HEROINE TO ME. After all, you were one of the first to show women everywhere that women's goals and ambitions MATTERED!
    10earlytalkie

    Love That Girl

    "That Girl" is one of those shows that I enjoyed during it's first run on ABC and in it's reruns over the years, but it's been many years since i saw this as it has not been on TV in a while. The re-discovery of this on DVD reveals that it is even better than I remember it. The cast in all instances is first-rate, and the scripts are crisp, funny, full of heart and do not date one bit. Marlo Thomas supposedly had a hand in most of the aspects of this classic series, and I say a great job well done. Like John Forsythe in "Bachelor Father", this show was her baby and no show could have had a better mother. ME-TV has just begun re-running this as of this writing, and my partner and I were laughing out loud at many of the antics on the marathon which launched the series on New Year's Day. The film quality of the show has been so beautifully preserved that it looks brand-new. The 1960s background makes the series a kind of time capsule back to those fashions and some of the early episodes especially feature some great location footage shot in N.Y.C. which add to the "theatrical" look of this series. Each episode has the look of a mini-movie, being shot with one camera. The laugh-track is present but not overdone or intrusive. The format of the single girl trying to make it on her own would be echoed a few years later in the super-classic "Mary Tyler Moore" show. "That Girl" had great writing throughout it's five seasons, and Ms. Thomas wisely opted out of the show before it became stale as so many other long-running shows of the period did. She also avoided knuckling under to the network by not having Ann and Donald marry. This was her personal decision and in retrospect, a wise one. Marlo Thomas herself, being the daughter of the great Danny Thomas, had to prove herself with this series and boy, did she ever. Having "Make Room For Daddy", one of the great shows of it's own era, and "That Girl", one of the greats of the 60s, one hopes that there will be another generation of the Thomas family to give us yet another great series to enjoy. If this review sounds like a love letter to Marlo Thomas, so be it. It is.
    7rlquall

    A pleasant childhood memory

    I wonder how many preteen boys had a crush on Marlo Thomas like I did during the run of this program. She was soooo beautiful, and Ted Bessell seemed like an awfully lucky guy to me, except that he had to live in constant fear of Ann Marie's father, which was realistic enough as Mr. Marie was rather menacing, which by the time the series ended I realized was because he considered the Donald Hollister character a threat to his daughter's virginity. (Wonder how much different, if any, Danny Thomas was about that issue in real life?) In retrospect, this show requires suspension of disbelief even more than most sitcoms, as Ann, a supposedly struggling actress, had a better apartment and nicer clothes than many steadily-employed New Yorkers could have possibly have afforded, then or now. It's a shame that the show only went as far as Donald's bachelor party; it would seem to have been better if they had actually shown the wedding with the implication that "they all lived happily ever after" and that this show, after all really was a modern fairy tale. A fun aspect of the show was seeing how they were going to work the words "that girl" into the opening sequence.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The running gag of having the pre-credit sequence ending with a character referring to Ann as "that girl" was originally only supposed to be used in the pilot as it was believed that they would never be able to keep finding ways to work it into the conversation. It ended up being used in almost all the episodes.
    • Blooper
      Ann Marie moves to New York City from Brewster, NY, which is on the Metro North Railroad's Harlem Line to Grand Central Terminal. The footage behind the credits was shot on New Jersey Transit's Northeast Corridor Line (photographed from the rear of a train leaving New York and then shown backwards so the train appears to be going to New York, although on the wrong track).
    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The opening for season 1 only is not the famous train tracks, but a breathless and beautiful Ann Marie running across a NY street to a building, dressed in a pale blue coat, white gloves and shoes, white pocketbook under her arm. The train tracks don't come until seasons 2, 3, & 4, and season 5 adds lyrics to the up-tempo opening music ("Diamonds, daisies, snowflakes...").
    • Connessioni
      Featured in 7 Nights to Remember (1966)
    • Colonne sonore
      Minnie the Moocher
      Lyrics by Irving Mills and Clarence Gaskill

      Music by Cab Calloway

      Performed by Lew Parker

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    Domande frequenti19

    • How many seasons does That Girl have?Powered by Alexa

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 1965 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • That Girl
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Downtown Manhattan Heliport, Manhattan, New York, New York, Stati Uniti(Closing theme; Seasons 2 thru 5)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Daisy Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      30 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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