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IMDbPro

Femmes d'affaires et dames de coeur

Original title: Designing Women
  • TV Series
  • 1986–1993
  • TV-PG
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
7.7K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,046
295
Annie Potts, Delta Burke, Jean Smart, and Dixie Carter in Femmes d'affaires et dames de coeur (1986)
Trailer for Designing Women: The Complete First Season
Play trailer1:32
8 Videos
99+ Photos
SitcomComedy

The misadventures of four women and their handyman running a design firm in Atlanta, Georgia.The misadventures of four women and their handyman running a design firm in Atlanta, Georgia.The misadventures of four women and their handyman running a design firm in Atlanta, Georgia.

  • Creator
    • Linda Bloodworth-Thomason
  • Stars
    • Delta Burke
    • Dixie Carter
    • Annie Potts
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    7.7K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,046
    295
    • Creator
      • Linda Bloodworth-Thomason
    • Stars
      • Delta Burke
      • Dixie Carter
      • Annie Potts
    • 40User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 22 wins & 39 nominations total

    Episodes163

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated

    Videos8

    Funny Women of Television
    Video 3:41
    Funny Women of Television
    Designing Women: The Final Season
    Clip 3:20
    Designing Women: The Final Season
    Designing Women: The Final Season
    Clip 3:20
    Designing Women: The Final Season
    Designing Women: The Complete Sixth Season
    Clip 1:14
    Designing Women: The Complete Sixth Season
    Designing Women: The Complete Fifth Season
    Clip 2:12
    Designing Women: The Complete Fifth Season
    Designing Women: Season 2
    Clip 1:23
    Designing Women: Season 2
    Designing Women: The Complete First Season
    Trailer 1:32
    Designing Women: The Complete First Season

    Photos397

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Delta Burke
    Delta Burke
    • Suzanne Sugarbaker
    • 1986–1991
    Dixie Carter
    Dixie Carter
    • Julia Sugarbaker
    • 1986–1993
    Annie Potts
    Annie Potts
    • Mary Jo Shively
    • 1986–1993
    Meshach Taylor
    Meshach Taylor
    • Anthony Bouvier
    • 1986–1993
    Jean Smart
    Jean Smart
    • Charlene Frazier Stillfield
    • 1986–1991
    Alice Ghostley
    Alice Ghostley
    • Bernice Clifton
    • 1986–1993
    Jan Hooks
    Jan Hooks
    • Carlene Frazier Dobber
    • 1991–1993
    Julia Duffy
    Julia Duffy
    • Allison Sugarbaker
    • 1991–1992
    Judith Ivey
    Judith Ivey
    • B.J. Poteet
    • 1992–1993
    Richard Gilliland
    Richard Gilliland
    • J.D. Shackelford
    • 1986–1991
    Douglas Barr
    Douglas Barr
    • Bill Stillfield…
    • 1987–1991
    Priscilla Weems
    • Claudia Shively
    • 1986–1990
    Hal Holbrook
    Hal Holbrook
    • Reese Watson
    • 1986–1989
    Brian Lando
    • Quinton Shively
    • 1986–1991
    Sheryl Lee Ralph
    Sheryl Lee Ralph
    • Etienne Toussaint Bouvier
    • 1992–1993
    Michael Goldfinger
    • Rusty
    • 1990–1991
    Scott Bakula
    Scott Bakula
    • Dr. Ted Shively
    • 1986–1988
    Lexi Randall
    Lexi Randall
    • Randa Oliver
    • 1990–1991
    • Creator
      • Linda Bloodworth-Thomason
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    7.37.6K
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    Featured reviews

    SkippyDevereaux

    Without Delta Burke and Jean Smart, this show floundered

    This show was funny most of the time--and a might preachy some of the time, but always fun to watch. As long as Delta Burke and Jean Smart were on the show, it really was great, but when these two funny women left the show, it went downhill FAST!! That means that the first five years of the show were the best and should not be missed. Suzanne, Charlene and Anthony were the funniest characters on this show and Julia was too preachy, while Mary Jo was a pain in the neck--always whining about something!!
    sadierose

    A witty and wonderful show

    This show had a lot of wit and humor. It was such a greatly written show about issues that were (and still are) important. They were brought to light for others to learn and understand.

    Additionally, the comedy was hilarious. I found the women to be fantastic characters and the actresses did such wonderful jobs. I loved the speeches Julia fired upon people, the useless stories Charlene recalled, the wit that Mary Jo displayed, and the way that Suzanne was ignorant and it was done in such a humorous and revealing way. I just think this show was ingenious!
    9vs661966

    Witty and Extremely Funny

    "Designing Women" centered on four Southern women who worked at an interior design firm in Atlanta, Georgia. The original cast included Dixie Carter, Delta Burke, Annie Potts, Jean Smart, and Meshach Taylor. The humor was outrageously funny, witty and topical and the actors all worked well as an ensemble since their characters were so well-defined and very different. I am puzzled by the many negative comments about this show stating that it was not funny. Were these people watching the same show that I was?

    In 1991, both Delta Burke and Jean Smart left the series and were replaced by Julia Duffy, who had played Stephanie on "Newhart," and Jan Hooks, an alumna of "Saturday Night Live." Both were fine actresses but their characters were not well fleshed-out. Duffy's Allison Sugarbaker was a New Yorker and, in my opinion, just never caught on with viewers. Hooks' Carlene Dobber was simply a nitwit, which is a shame because Jan Hooks was hysterical and very versatile on all the seasons she was on SNL. They never developed a multi-layered character that utilized her full comedic potential, but rather one that was mostly a one-note caricature. So, this truly fine and funny actress was wasted in a silly role. Julia Duffy was replaced the next and final season by Judith Ivey, whose character was again a Southern type who fit seamlessly into the ensemble.

    I often think the best character was Bernice Clifton as played by the outrageously funny and talented Alice Ghostley. Next to Suzanne Sugarbaker, this character had some hilarious and unforgettable lines.

    There are many terrific episodes of this series. They are currently being rebroadcast on the Lifetime Network along with "The Golden Girls," another great series. Those who commented that "Designing Women" is a rip-off of "The Golden Girls" are mistaken; both are fine situation comedies in their own right but are also very unique and distinct from one another. The only thing common to both is that each show starred four wonderful comedic actresses. It would be great to have some solid programming such as both of these shows on the networks today.
    drednm

    Landmark TV

    For five seasons this TV comedy was a solid hit starring Dixie Carter, Delta Burke, Annie Potts, and Jean Smart as four friends and co-workers in an Atlanta interior design firm.

    They shared their lives in a series of funny episodes that involved their work, family, friends, romance, and the sling and arrows of outrageous fortune.

    The semi-regulars during these years included Meshach Taylor, Alice Ghostley, Hal Holbrook, Douglas Barr, and Richard Gilliland.

    Starting around season 5, Burke and show creator Linda Bloodworth Thomason started fueding about Burke's weight and the zaniness of her character, Suzanne Sugarbaker. By the end of the season, Burke was out of the show and was soon followed by Smart, who wanted more time with her family.

    Season 6 brought in Jan Hooks to replace Smart and Julia Duffy to replace Burke. While Hooks was mostly annoying, Duffy was an outright disaster as the unlikable Alison Sugarbaker. Neither actress came close to capture the warmth and humor of Burke and Smart.

    Season 7 saw Duffy gone and with Judith Ivey coming in as a blowsy millionaire widow. An improvement, but the bad writing that plagued season 6, continued into season 7. Stupid storylines and predictable plots defeated anything the cast could do with the material.

    Also, by season 6 the women talked about their design firm but their work was virtually erased from any plots. Taylor's character of Anthony also descended from a lovable and hapless man to a smug jerk. They eventually married him off to a Vegas showgirl (Sheryl Lee Ralph) which went nowhere.

    Even the beloved and zany character of Ghostley's Bernice went from being loopy to being just one of the women.

    In most shows in the last 2 seasons, they just sit around yapping. Meanwhile the production values of the show plummeted with sets that look like high school productions.

    An attempt to spin off Taylor and Ralph into their own show, with Della Reese and Sherman Hemsley as her parents, flopped. The hit show went out with a whimper.
    9zombiemockingbird

    Great, Funny Show

    Loved this show for 5 seasons. It was witty, funny, sad, sentimental and had a lot of good moral lessons; like Suzanne's speech at her high school reunion after everyone made fun of her for being fat. Sometimes the producers pushed their personal political agenda too much, but overall it all evened out. Delta Burke and Dixie Carter carried the show with solid support from Jean Smart, Annie Potts, Meshach Taylor and Alice Ghostly. When Delta and Jean left, the show took a real nose dive. I just don't like Julia Duffy. I will give her the benefit of the doubt and say it's the characters she plays; I didn't like her on Newhart either. A lot of the problem was that she wasn't southern, and it threw off the cohesiveness of the characters. Jan Hooks was okay, but the show just didn't work anymore without Delta and Jean. When Judith Ivey joined in Season 7 it was on it's way to being good again; but by that point it was too late to save it, the audience was gone. I'm amazed at reviews that say the show wasn't funny; they must not have watched the same shows I was watching. Also people who kept comparing it to the Golden Girls; aside from being four women, I don't find them at all similar.

    Related interests

    Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Matt LeBlanc, and Matthew Perry in Friends (1994)
    Sitcom
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Of the original cast, Jean Smart was the only one not born in the south or southeastern United States. She was born and raised in Seattle, Washington.
    • Goofs
      In several episodes the characters reference going to the fast-food restaurant Carl's Jr. There are no Carl's Jr. restaurants in the Southeast. In this region they have always been Hardee's.
    • Quotes

      Julia: Excuse me, aren't you Marjorie Leigh Winnick, the current Miss Georgia World?

      Marjorie: Why, yes I am.

      Julia: I'm Julia Sugarbaker, Suzanne Sugarbaker's sister. I couldn't help over hearing part of your conversation.

      Marjorie: Well, I'm sorry. I didn't know anyone was here.

      Julia: Yes, and I gather from your comments there are a couple of other things you don't know, Marjorie. For example, you probably didn't know that Suzanne was the only contestant in Georgia pageant history to sweep every category except congeniality, and that is not something the women in my family aspire to anyway. Or that when she walked down the runway in her swimsuit, five contestants quit on the spot. Or that when she emerged from the isolation booth to answer the question, "What would you do to prevent war?" she spoke so eloquently of patriotism, battlefields and diamond tiaras, grown men wept. And you probably didn't know, Marjorie, that Suzanne was not just any Miss Georgia, she was the Miss Georgia. She didn't twirl just a baton, that baton was on fire. And when she threw that baton into the air, it flew higher, further, faster than any baton has ever flown before, hitting a transformer and showering the darkened arena with sparks! And when it finally did come down, Marjorie, my sister caught that baton, and 12,000 people jumped to their feet for sixteen and one-half minutes of uninterrupted thunderous ovation, as flames illuminated her tear-stained face! And that, Marjorie - just so you will know - and your children will someday know - is the night the lights went out in Georgia!

    • Connections
      Featured in The 39th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      Georgia on My Mind
      by Hoagy Carmichael and Stuart Gorrell

      Performed by Doc Severinsen

      (seasons 1-5)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 29, 1986 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Designing Women
    • Filming locations
      • Stage 26, Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Bloodworth-Thomason
      • Columbia Pictures Television
      • Mozark Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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