Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaOriginally is was the saga of a working mom raising her three sons alone while her pilot husband was away, but after star Valerie Harper left, Sandy Duncan stepped in as the boys' aunt.Originally is was the saga of a working mom raising her three sons alone while her pilot husband was away, but after star Valerie Harper left, Sandy Duncan stepped in as the boys' aunt.Originally is was the saga of a working mom raising her three sons alone while her pilot husband was away, but after star Valerie Harper left, Sandy Duncan stepped in as the boys' aunt.
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias e 13 indicações no total
Explorar episódios
Avaliações em destaque
I remember watching Valerie when it first aired. And I remember the huge deal when she left the show, and it continued on. It was one of those rare shows that keep going even after the title character has left the program. I don't remember if I followed the show on it's entire run.
Fast forward to 2021. Over the years I've been a huge fan of Jason Bateman's work in the movies. He's one of the best straight man comedians on the big screen today.
I'm flipping the channels and come across the Hogan Family on TV. Mind you, it's at the Sandy Duncan years. I'm actually enjoying this show. It's not irreverent comedy like Arrested Development, or gut busting hilarious like Seinfeld. I would put it more in the 'feel good' category. I guess it's more of a male-oriented program, considering it's about 3 sons and their father (and aunt), so I can relate to a lot of the issues they talk about.
So if you want to watch something that's entertaining, and like I said, feel good TV, give this show a shot. Give it a shot again, if you hated it back in the day, too. Maybe as you've gotten older, you can appreciate the more simpler times in this sitcom.
Fast forward to 2021. Over the years I've been a huge fan of Jason Bateman's work in the movies. He's one of the best straight man comedians on the big screen today.
I'm flipping the channels and come across the Hogan Family on TV. Mind you, it's at the Sandy Duncan years. I'm actually enjoying this show. It's not irreverent comedy like Arrested Development, or gut busting hilarious like Seinfeld. I would put it more in the 'feel good' category. I guess it's more of a male-oriented program, considering it's about 3 sons and their father (and aunt), so I can relate to a lot of the issues they talk about.
So if you want to watch something that's entertaining, and like I said, feel good TV, give this show a shot. Give it a shot again, if you hated it back in the day, too. Maybe as you've gotten older, you can appreciate the more simpler times in this sitcom.
I can't remember a worse show than this. Family Hogan is boring and meaningless. I never found a laughable joke. This must be product of a lame mind. Pathetic from the very beginning, more ridiculous even than `7th Heaven', although Linkan-3 can doubt it. Too moralist, the subjects are never smart. But the Hogans will please old ladies who had never seen that machine called TV.
This show really belonged to Valerie Harper, no offense to her replacement Sandy Duncan. Harper left the show under uncertain circumstances. Regardless, the show and network wrote her off sadly. While on, she was the mother to three boys and a pilot husband who was often absent. The cast was first rate including Edie McClurg as a neighbor, Christine Ebersole as her snobby unmarried sister-in-law, and the boys played by Jason Bateman, Jeremy Licht, and Danny Ponce. Ponce and Licht played fraternal twins who were as opposite as night and day. They touched on some issues like AIDS and homosexuality and other issues in this series but the show never fully recovered from the blow of Harper's absence.
There's a unique kind of warmth that lives in the television landscape of the 1980s-a mix of light comedy, subtle drama, and a gentle earnestness rarely found in today's irony-soaked content. Few shows embody this better than Valerie, later known as The Hogan Family. What began as a modest family sitcom became a quietly affecting series that dealt with loss, growth, and the shifting dynamics of home. And at its emotional core-quiet but unmistakable-was Roberta Flack's hauntingly beautiful theme song.
Flack's "Together Through the Years" is not your typical sugar-rush jingle sitcom theme. Instead, her voice moves like memory itself-gentle, reflective, touched by melancholy. The lyrics speak to love and continuity, but there's always a wistfulness, as though the song knows how fragile that love can be. It sets the tone for the show's emotional undercurrents, especially after Valerie Harper's departure from the series, which was unexpectedly echoed in the story arc with Valerie Hogan's death in a car accident, and the devastating house fire which followed, where the material traces of her were lost to the family forever. The theme never changes though, and that constancy-of voice, of sentiment-becomes more moving as the family adjusts and carries on. It's one of the most emotionally resonant theme songs in television history, and Roberta Flack sings it like she's holding something sacred.
The show's two successive stars anchored the plotlines with incredible skill and lovability -first Valerie Harper as the same-named mother, then Sandy Duncan as the same-named aunt-becoming exemplary screen role models for motherhood in both their realism and their heart. If they were the soul of the show, then it was the three sons who gave the show its heart. Jason Bateman, as David, delivered a performance far beyond his years, grounding the series in a kind of smart realism that let you believe every moment.
Two extraordinary and beautiful looking young actors named Danny Ponce and Jeremy Licht rounded out the trio of boys, providing a lovely contrast as the twins Willie and Mark. Ponce's Willie brought a highly charismatic and lovable presence-the sporty jokester of the sons, he was also at times insecure about not measuring up to his twin brother's academic achievements, which made Willie all the more lovable and sympathetic. Licht, as the bookish and sensitive Mark, offered a sincere sense of innocence and kindness, his delivery often disarmingly thoughtful. An incredibly moving example was the episode where Mark was the only one of the three sons to remember his mother's wedding anniversary, who was anxiously waiting for a call from their overseas father. The chemistry among the three brothers felt lived-in and unforced, which became even more essential as the series matured and dealt with the absence of their mother. The actors playing the twins have remained extremely close friends since the show ended, which speaks to their sense of brotherhood being a very real fact, not just an illusion.
In closing there is something profoundly bittersweet about The Hogan Family-the way it grew out of tragedy (on-screen and off) and kept moving forward. Like Flack's voice, the show quietly insisted that love can survive change, and family, in all its complications, is the enduring source of continuity in this life. It was never the loudest or flashiest sitcom on air. But it was one of the most honest and beautiful.
In revisiting it today, what lingers isn't just the jokes or the plotlines-it's that gentle theme song echoing over scenes of ordinary life, and the quiet brilliance of those three young actors growing up in front of us, together through the years.
Flack's "Together Through the Years" is not your typical sugar-rush jingle sitcom theme. Instead, her voice moves like memory itself-gentle, reflective, touched by melancholy. The lyrics speak to love and continuity, but there's always a wistfulness, as though the song knows how fragile that love can be. It sets the tone for the show's emotional undercurrents, especially after Valerie Harper's departure from the series, which was unexpectedly echoed in the story arc with Valerie Hogan's death in a car accident, and the devastating house fire which followed, where the material traces of her were lost to the family forever. The theme never changes though, and that constancy-of voice, of sentiment-becomes more moving as the family adjusts and carries on. It's one of the most emotionally resonant theme songs in television history, and Roberta Flack sings it like she's holding something sacred.
The show's two successive stars anchored the plotlines with incredible skill and lovability -first Valerie Harper as the same-named mother, then Sandy Duncan as the same-named aunt-becoming exemplary screen role models for motherhood in both their realism and their heart. If they were the soul of the show, then it was the three sons who gave the show its heart. Jason Bateman, as David, delivered a performance far beyond his years, grounding the series in a kind of smart realism that let you believe every moment.
Two extraordinary and beautiful looking young actors named Danny Ponce and Jeremy Licht rounded out the trio of boys, providing a lovely contrast as the twins Willie and Mark. Ponce's Willie brought a highly charismatic and lovable presence-the sporty jokester of the sons, he was also at times insecure about not measuring up to his twin brother's academic achievements, which made Willie all the more lovable and sympathetic. Licht, as the bookish and sensitive Mark, offered a sincere sense of innocence and kindness, his delivery often disarmingly thoughtful. An incredibly moving example was the episode where Mark was the only one of the three sons to remember his mother's wedding anniversary, who was anxiously waiting for a call from their overseas father. The chemistry among the three brothers felt lived-in and unforced, which became even more essential as the series matured and dealt with the absence of their mother. The actors playing the twins have remained extremely close friends since the show ended, which speaks to their sense of brotherhood being a very real fact, not just an illusion.
In closing there is something profoundly bittersweet about The Hogan Family-the way it grew out of tragedy (on-screen and off) and kept moving forward. Like Flack's voice, the show quietly insisted that love can survive change, and family, in all its complications, is the enduring source of continuity in this life. It was never the loudest or flashiest sitcom on air. But it was one of the most honest and beautiful.
In revisiting it today, what lingers isn't just the jokes or the plotlines-it's that gentle theme song echoing over scenes of ordinary life, and the quiet brilliance of those three young actors growing up in front of us, together through the years.
First of all, back in late-1985, early 1986, NBC was originally gonna name the show "The Hogan Family," but later changed their mind and opted for a name that reflected its original famed star "Valerie Harper." Thus, it was retitled "Valerie."
After, the famed contract dispute over her salary, Valerie Harper left the show, or was fired - depending who's side of the story you hear- thus the show was renamed "Valerie's Family: The Hogan's." This angered "Valerie Harper" very much, and she sued the producers for still using her name as the title of the show without her permission.
Thus, the producers opted to revert back to the original suggested production title: "The Hogan Family."
In reality they were always 'The Hogan Family.'
After, the famed contract dispute over her salary, Valerie Harper left the show, or was fired - depending who's side of the story you hear- thus the show was renamed "Valerie's Family: The Hogan's." This angered "Valerie Harper" very much, and she sued the producers for still using her name as the title of the show without her permission.
Thus, the producers opted to revert back to the original suggested production title: "The Hogan Family."
In reality they were always 'The Hogan Family.'
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesMany sets used in scenes inside the house were also used in Step by Step (1991) and Family Matters (1989).
- ConexõesFeatured in Camp Midnite: Show 108 (1989)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How many seasons does Valerie have?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Valerie
- Locações de filme
- 840 Bellefontaine Place, Pasadena, Califórnia, EUA(Hogan's house exteriors)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente