Gruff but loving Nancy Blansky is busy housing, mothering, and even choreographing for a hotel's showgirls--while providing a home for her nephews, dancer Joey and 12-year-old junior-womaniz... Read allGruff but loving Nancy Blansky is busy housing, mothering, and even choreographing for a hotel's showgirls--while providing a home for her nephews, dancer Joey and 12-year-old junior-womanizer Anthony.Gruff but loving Nancy Blansky is busy housing, mothering, and even choreographing for a hotel's showgirls--while providing a home for her nephews, dancer Joey and 12-year-old junior-womanizer Anthony.
Featured reviews
This show technically was a spin-off from Happy Days and as many things from Happy Days were never really explained, it is true that this took place in the 70's while Happy Days and Laverne and Shirley were supposed to be in the 50's. What the other reviewers got wrong was that yes Eddie Mekka was already playing Carmine in Laverne and Shirley and was doing double duty, but L&S was only in its second season. Scott Baio joined the cast of Happy Days after this show was canceled. His first HD episode was in Sept. of 1977, the start of the 5th season. Lynda Goodfriend didn't really become a part of Happy Days until after this show as well. In the first episode of this show Roz Kelly reprises her Pinky Tuscadero role from Happy Days. It wasn't a great show and I would say goes down as one of the HD spin-off flops, but I remember watching it and liking it, but I was a huge Happy Days fan. It does have its place in 70's and Garry Marshall TV shows history.
Horrible show full of forced laughter. While it was tied in to Happy Days no one seemed to notice that the shows were set in two different decades, the fifties and the seventies. Nancy Walker just showed up on Happy Days and they ignored the time warp. On Blansky, Eddie Mekka announces that he's going to visit his cousin Carmine on Laverne and Shirley, also set in the fifties. It's sad that a truly funny and smart comedian, Nancy Walker, walked into this dog of a show and tried to make it work. I guess she wanted to play lead once in her life. I'm glad to see that they cleaned up the hit-making formula when they got around to Joanie-Loves-Chachi a few years later.
I suppose this is a minority view, but I do not consider Blansky's Beauties to be a spinoff of Happy Days. The facts are these: Nancy Walker appeared as Nancy Blansky in a cameo on the Happy Days Third Anniversary Show, Feb 5 1977. Blansky's Beauties debuted one week later on Feb 12.
So yes, Nancy Blansky appeared on Happy Days before she appeared on Blansky's Beauties. But the fact remains that Blansky's Beauties existed as a series, in every way except having been broadcast, before the Happy Days cameo, which I would therefore classify as a crossover.
So yes, Nancy Blansky appeared on Happy Days before she appeared on Blansky's Beauties. But the fact remains that Blansky's Beauties existed as a series, in every way except having been broadcast, before the Happy Days cameo, which I would therefore classify as a crossover.
This was one of those mid-season fillers the networks threw out to see if it stuck. Throwing together a cast of pretty, semi-recognizable faces ("Hey! Isn't that the chick from that OTHER show?"), a generous laugh-track to mask predictable/ un-funny jokes and a pretense to see women in various stages of undress, this show exemplified how formulaic and un-original programming had become in the 70's. This review has already gone on longer than the actual series lasted, so I'll just quit here, since no one over the age of 30 will ever need to suffer through it.
This show had every 70's teeny bopper element aimed to appeal to the lowest intellect and thus make it a hit - except this time cute boys and inane, jiggly, dumb blondes were not enough to cover for horrible scripts, contrived situations, bad acting, and unbelievable plots. The show tried to be a spin-off/tie-in to Happy Days and Laverne and Shirley (or at least ride on their success) by utilizing actors - most notably Eddie Mekka and Scott Baio - from those shows and making the title role the cousin of Happy Days' Howard Cunningham. Having Nancy Walker as its star, scantily-clad bimbos wiggling around the set, and pretty boy co-stars to elicit screams from young girls in the audience, however, could never have saved it from itself.
This show is best forgotten in a footnote to bad television.
This show is best forgotten in a footnote to bad television.
Did you know
- TriviaThe character of Joey Deluca (Nancy Blansky's nephew) is Carmine Ragusa's lookalike cousin. Nancy is also the cousin of Howard Cunningham, which means Howard and Carmine are related.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Happy Days - Les jours heureux: The Third Anniversary Show (1977)
- How many seasons does Blansky's Beauties have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Le ragazze di Blansky
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content