Segue la vita personale e professionale dell'avvocata Ally.Segue la vita personale e professionale dell'avvocata Ally.Segue la vita personale e professionale dell'avvocata Ally.
- Vincitore di 7 Primetime Emmy
- 44 vittorie e 115 candidature totali
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Recensioni in evidenza
One of the best shows to ever hit TV. There are some pretty negative comments here, but I know why. Folks are angry that the show changed in the last few seasons and they are disappointed that it ended. The first three seasons you couldn't go to the water cooler if you had not watched the show and had some little tid-bit to say about what you saw. That spells great writing and fabulous performances to me. Calista Flockhart is a wonderful person and a terrific actress. She made the show work. without her, no Ally. There are episodes that are priceless. The dancing baby is unique and entertaining. No one had ever taken that kind of risk on TV. A computerized baby dancing with real people. Of course everyone's doing it now. I believe Ally Mcbeal to be a classic.
Ally McBeal was ahead of its time. I found the first three seasons compelling, but after that it was not so much. Ally McBeal and The Practice were the two series I watched. Ally McBeal was first, and then The Practice, and it was my evening viewing in my younger days when I could stay up and watch whatever was on the tube.
Ally's insecurity, jealousy and rambling the last season got old real quick
Like, why? Why is she in every episode? Far too much Vonda
When "Ally McBeal" premiered in Australia in July 1997, I by perchance taped the pilot episode, not even knowing what it was about. It was that sole episode that drew me into "Ally" magic, which quickly dominated a dull Monday night, 8:30pm timeslot.
As a teenager who gives the typically teenaged aim of "Dawson's Creek", "Felicity" and "Charmed" a miss, "Ally" was a complete relief, despite the fact then I knew little about the law.
As expected from David E. Kelley, the characters and the actors portrayals of them are simply first rate. By far the best of the ensemble, Calista Flockhart in the title role is sensational as the insecure, uptight lawyer of Boston. The Ally character is bound to become a future cultural icon of the 1990s.
Peter MacNicol, as the weird John Cage, Greg Germann as the legally unaware, unsympathetic boss Richard Fish and Lucy Liu as the moody, bitchy Ling are the forefront supporting actors of the cast. Jane Krakowski as the snoopish, inventive secretary Elaine is pretty good too.
However, it is the weaker characters of Nelle (Portia deRossi), Georgia (Courtney Thorne-Smith), Billy (Gil Bellows) and Renee (Lisa Nicole Carson) that have begun to show their wear and tear in the second series. Merely, they seem to be paid for standing around looking pretty. Hopefully David E. Kelley will develop these characters more in the coming seasons, otherwise they will continue to be dominated by the stronger cast, looking like beautiful people dressed up with sex to look better than they really are.
The "Ally" cast, and their continuing ongoing struggles in the court room and in their personal lives in a dream of a law firm has been for the majority of the season, one of the most entertaining of the shows on the air today.
However, Kelley's creativity and imagery that goes into each special treat of an episode is excellent. For once, plot and character seem to go hand in hand. By breaking the barriers and creating a show that is neither four parts drama to one part comedy, or four parts comedy to one part drama, was the just the beginning of his dealing with controversial issues.
Since the cross over episode with Kelley's even better show "The Practice", I have graduated from little league law to the darker, grittier side of Boston which has now replaced "Ally" as my favourite show. But the allure for more "Ally" is still there.
As long as Kelley can continue to separate sex and controversy entirely from a show of pure genius, "Ally" will be continue to be fresh and by all means, a great show.
As a teenager who gives the typically teenaged aim of "Dawson's Creek", "Felicity" and "Charmed" a miss, "Ally" was a complete relief, despite the fact then I knew little about the law.
As expected from David E. Kelley, the characters and the actors portrayals of them are simply first rate. By far the best of the ensemble, Calista Flockhart in the title role is sensational as the insecure, uptight lawyer of Boston. The Ally character is bound to become a future cultural icon of the 1990s.
Peter MacNicol, as the weird John Cage, Greg Germann as the legally unaware, unsympathetic boss Richard Fish and Lucy Liu as the moody, bitchy Ling are the forefront supporting actors of the cast. Jane Krakowski as the snoopish, inventive secretary Elaine is pretty good too.
However, it is the weaker characters of Nelle (Portia deRossi), Georgia (Courtney Thorne-Smith), Billy (Gil Bellows) and Renee (Lisa Nicole Carson) that have begun to show their wear and tear in the second series. Merely, they seem to be paid for standing around looking pretty. Hopefully David E. Kelley will develop these characters more in the coming seasons, otherwise they will continue to be dominated by the stronger cast, looking like beautiful people dressed up with sex to look better than they really are.
The "Ally" cast, and their continuing ongoing struggles in the court room and in their personal lives in a dream of a law firm has been for the majority of the season, one of the most entertaining of the shows on the air today.
However, Kelley's creativity and imagery that goes into each special treat of an episode is excellent. For once, plot and character seem to go hand in hand. By breaking the barriers and creating a show that is neither four parts drama to one part comedy, or four parts comedy to one part drama, was the just the beginning of his dealing with controversial issues.
Since the cross over episode with Kelley's even better show "The Practice", I have graduated from little league law to the darker, grittier side of Boston which has now replaced "Ally" as my favourite show. But the allure for more "Ally" is still there.
As long as Kelley can continue to separate sex and controversy entirely from a show of pure genius, "Ally" will be continue to be fresh and by all means, a great show.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDuring a September 2022 interview of Leslie Jordan conducted by Megan Mullally at the Library of Congress's National Book Festival, Jordan recalled that when he met Robert Downey Jr. on the set of Ally McBeal, it was actually not the first time they had met: "I am sober 20, 25 years-completely sober. But I did [have a period of severe alcoholism]. I went to jail five times in one year. The last year of my drinking, I was just on a tear. I had the best time. But anyway. They arrested me and they had me in a holding cell. And I looked over in my room. My roommate was Robert Downey Jr. So. I thought, now that's something, you know, and many, many years later, after, you know, we had--he had cleaned up. I had cleaned up. We were both on a TV show called Ally McBeal. And I don't know if you remember, but everybody in the world was on that. There was Calista Flockhart and Ellen's wife, Portia de Rossi. Lucy Liu. Oh, there was just a whole list of girls. And I was just enthralled meeting everybody. And they were introducing me in the dressing room. And I turned around and there stood Robert Downey Jr, and he said, 'Do I know you?' And I said, 'Zip it.' He said, 'What?' I said. 'Zip it!' He followed me out and asked, 'did we use drugs [together]?' I said, 'No, no, no. 152 Pod A, Cell 13 You were top. I was bottom.' But here's the crazy story. And this is a wonderful story. When I-- When I got out. Of the--of the jail. I worried there was a kid on our pod who was HIV positive and the other prisoners treated him unmercifully. I would sit down with him to eat and the other guys would say, 'Don't eat with him. He's got AIDS, don't eat with him.' And even the kid would get a little teary eyed and he'd look at me and say, 'You don't have to do this, like eat with him.' And I say, 'Oh, no, I do. Trust me, I do have to eat with you.' And. . . . so when I got out, I worried myself sick about who would watch after him. Now that and I thought I bet Robert would--I don't know him, but he seems nice and kind and I was the only person that I knew in the whole United States that was privy to his current address. And so I wrote this letter asking him to please watch after that kid. And I wrote R. Downey Jr 152 Pod A, Cell 13, top bunk, and I threw it in the mail and didn't think anything more about it. Well, when I bumped into him four years later, he took me outside. He said, 'I want to talk to you.' He goes, 'You wrote me that letter.' And I said, Yeah.' And he got kind of teary eyed. He said, 'I carried that letter with me, my entire incarceration, and I want to really thank you.' So I'm responsible for most of his success!"
- Citazioni
[catch-phrases]
John "The Biscuit" Cage: I'm fraught.
John "The Biscuit" Cage: I need to take a moment.
John "The Biscuit" Cage: Unacceptable!
John "The Biscuit" Cage: Repugnant!
John "The Biscuit" Cage: Balls!
John "The Biscuit" Cage: That disparaged me.
John "The Biscuit" Cage: I will not stand to be disparaged.
John "The Biscuit" Cage: I'm troubled.
John "The Biscuit" Cage: I'm drawn to her.
- Versioni alternativeSome footage used in the Fox network previews for the show ended up on the cutting room floor.
- ConnessioniEdited into Ally (1999)
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- Tempo di esecuzione
- 45min
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