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IMDbPro

Frank's Place

  • TV Series
  • 1987–1988
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
8.5/10
564
YOUR RATING
Frank's Place (1987)
ComedyDrama

A professor from Boston runs his late father's New Orleans restaurant.A professor from Boston runs his late father's New Orleans restaurant.A professor from Boston runs his late father's New Orleans restaurant.

  • Creator
    • Hugh Wilson
  • Stars
    • Tim Reid
    • Robert Harper
    • Daphne Reid
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.5/10
    564
    YOUR RATING
    • Creator
      • Hugh Wilson
    • Stars
      • Tim Reid
      • Robert Harper
      • Daphne Reid
    • 36User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 3 Primetime Emmys
      • 7 wins & 11 nominations total

    Episodes22

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Photos9

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    Top cast99+

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    Tim Reid
    Tim Reid
    • Frank Parrish
    • 1987–1988
    Robert Harper
    Robert Harper
    • Sy 'Bubba' Weisberger
    • 1987–1988
    Daphne Reid
    Daphne Reid
    • Hanna Griffin
    • 1987–1988
    Francesca P. Roberts
    Francesca P. Roberts
    • Anna-May
    • 1987–1988
    Frances E. Williams
    • Miss Marie
    • 1987–1988
    Virginia Capers
    Virginia Capers
    • Bertha Griffin-Lamour
    • 1987–1988
    Tony Burton
    Tony Burton
    • Big Arthur
    • 1987–1988
    Charles Lampkin
    Charles Lampkin
    • Tiger Shepin
    • 1987–1988
    Lincoln Kilpatrick
    Lincoln Kilpatrick
    • Reverend Tyrone Deal
    • 1987–1988
    William Thomas Jr.
    • Cool Charles
    • 1987–1988
    Don Yesso
    Don Yesso
    • Shorty
    • 1987–1988
    Jorga Caye
    • Extra…
    • 1987–1988
    Troy Curvey Jr.
    Troy Curvey Jr.
    • Herbert…
    • 1987–1988
    Ray Oliver
    • Pokie LaCarre
    • 1987
    John Marshall Jones
    John Marshall Jones
    • Gregory
    • 1987–1988
    Hank Rolike
    Hank Rolike
    • Ace…
    • 1987–1988
    Jay Brooks
    • Grand Driver…
    • 1987–1988
    Larenz Tate
    Larenz Tate
    • Other Boy
    • 1987
    • Creator
      • Hugh Wilson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    8.5564
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    Featured reviews

    Scritzy

    LA, not L.A., and thank God for it

    Frank's Place is one of my favorite shows. Very underrated, very unappreciated and quite ahead of its time. The episode in which the corpse shows up sitting in the back row at his own funeral, with Bach's marvelously macabre "Toccata in D Minor" as the stinger, is pure genius. The episode in which the homeless man stands at the back door singing "Daaaaaaaaaaayyyyy-OOOOOOOO!" (Harry Belafonte, eat your heart out) is classic. And who could believe that Shorty! The use of subtitles to translate that spicy-as-gumbo Louisiana gush - what a hoot! My husband, whose father was from Louisiana, could always understand every word Shorty said. I had to rely on the subtitles. Why, why, why wasn't this show given a chance? Because it was sensitive, intelligent and enormously funny, that's why. Diversity, the dearth of which is so lamented today, came to TV in 1987 and was shuffled off with less finesse than was the missing corpse. Our loss. TV Land, bring it back! I promise to set my VCR!
    richard.fuller1

    Masterpiece

    Going on twenty years later, and it was one of a kind. Best show hands down.

    Too funny, without being sexually explicit with adult material. Brilliant.

    Beah Richards would deservedly win the guest actress Emmy as the widow of the man who "may" have killed himself, but to this day I enjoy fellow nominee Conchata Farrell from the same episode as the lawyer representing Richards. The lines "I spit up on her. My mother died in her arms" is a chilling, stunning setup.

    "In other words, gentlemen, I am your worst nightmare come true."

    Fantastic.

    The Rosalind Cash-Lynne Thigpen episode. Subtle, yet memorable. Cash was the old voodoo ways, Thigpen was the updated voodoo ways. Too classic.

    Loved the "spell" being carried in by Thigpen in a paper bag covered in aluminum.

    I had forgotten about the dead body being removed from the funeral home. The "body" would tip his hat and smile at the very end after credits rolled.

    The boxing match. Sensational.

    I suppose my fave was the restaurant episode with the country band, the drag queens, the white family and "Pick a bale of cotton." Around the same time, Robin Williams had pulled the same joke on a special "Carol, Carl, Robin & Whoopi" but it was still funny here.

    My brother managed to record most of the episodes, only missing a two parter dealing with drugs.

    I still think about this grand show.

    Daphne Maxwell-Reid and Virginia Capers. Hilarious when she got mad and was in that wheelchair.

    And the reverend! How could I forget him! "But the Lord loves me!"

    He would have a quick scene in the boxing match that was too funny.

    Toward the end, Frank would be told that Daphne was getting married to a football player and he would meet the guy, who had a voice like a cartoon character. Frank felt vindicated. At the very end, he mimicked MIckey Mouse giving football calls.

    This show would be replaced with that horrendous retirement community show that starred Glynis Johns, Alan Young and the fellow who played Wimpy in the Robin Williams-Shelly Duvall Popeye movie.

    Was Frank's Place ahead of its time? Who knows?

    It would receive numerous nominations in the only year it was on, and other than Richards' guest win, it would only receive writing.

    Yes, it seemed to be because they were Black. Even in the eighties it could be too much. It was a shame.

    But thankfully the show was done for that year.
    subcityii

    Victim of CBS

    This show was a victim of CBS. As other posters here have so adroitly put it, this was a wonderful, well done show about a New Orleans restaurant. The setting, the characters, the little touches throughout were positively intoxicating. The episodes I remember are "The Bum Out Front" and "Dueling Voodoo". The "Voodoo" episode was especially memorable because the lead character literally had to use magic powder to undo a curse. I remember when the show aired, it did have low ratings, but I thought they would renew it and give it another shot, because the show was of such high quality. I thought CBS would do what NBC did when it renewed the low rated but high quality "Cheers" and "Hill St. Blues" and gave them the time to find their audience. It was canceled by CBS and I have never forgotten how disappointed I was at that decision. Part of the reason it was taken off of the air, was so that the leads actors in the series, Tim Reid and his wife Daphne Maxwell Reid could do a forgettable hour long detective show called "Snoops". "Frank's Place" truly was a victim of CBS, I'd love to see the series on DVD or on Nick at Night again.
    Micheaux

    A classic series set in New Orleans.

    This series was the story of Frank Parrish, a Boston-based professor, who, upon his father's death, inherits a restaurant in New Orleans, the Chez Louisianne (called "The Chez" (pronounced shez) by the employees and patrons). He relocates to Louisiana and learns the restaurant business through fits and starts.

    Other characters were Hanna Griffin, the object of Parrish's affections and the assistant to Bertha Griffin-Lamour, her mother and the owner of a prominent funeral home; Reverend Deal, a part-time entrepeneur and part-time preacher; Tiger Shepin and Cool Charles, bartenders of the Chez; Big Arthur, the Cook (NOT the Chef, he insisted) and Shorty his assistant; Anna-May, who was the waitress and Miss Marie, the senior waitress who only waited on customers of the Chez that were customers for 20 years or more; Bubba was a lawyer who was a regular customer (Hugh Wilson said in an interview that this was the character that was a representation of him in the show, "the White guy").

    There was much talent to be had in front of and behind the camera; playwright Samm-Art Williams wrote an episode, Hugh Wilson not only helped write the show, but even made a cameo; guest stars included Conchata Ferrell, the late Rosalind Cash and boxer Joe Frazier.

    The show could have easily relied on humor, which it certainly had a handle on (one wonderfully absurd episode, "The Body" has the restaurant trying to deal with a pesky corpse, ala, "The Trouble With Harry"), however, it addressed many topics; relationships within the African-American community, it featured Dizzy Gillespie on one show and another one show had a strong Voodoo influence.

    The most famous episode (shown on Nick at Nite's TV Land) and the most lauded was "The Bridge", which won Emmys for the writer, Hugh Wilson and guest star Beah Richards.

    BET (Black Entertainment Television) re-ran the show, but has since stopped. TV Land, by all appearances has the rights to show it, but does not do so regularly.

    This was a truly great show, culturally enlightening, funny, touching and always engaging. It can be said that there was not a single clunker in 17 episodes. The cast was predominately Black, however, it was a show that anyone could watch and enjoy. As Tom Shales said in a review, "This was not a "Black" show, this was a "People" show."
    aussie-20

    So lovely, so real

    I've got to agree, this is closer to real Louisiana folks & New Orleans than anything else you'll find, and there's a lot of heart to it. I sense that the series was a labor of love, and I wish I could have it on DVD, along with Evening Shade.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Tim Reid, Walter Cronkite, who was a member of the board of directors at CBS, told him that the series was cancelled because of the final episode. In "The King of Wall Street", a Wall Street tycoon condemns junk bonds. Laurence Tisch, the CEO of CBS, was offended by this episode because he had bought the network with junk bonds. He demanded that the series be cancelled despite the objections of Cronkite and other board members.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 40th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?
      Performed by Louis Armstrong

      (opening theme)

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    FAQ

    • How many seasons does Frank's Place have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 14, 1987 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El local de Frank
    • Production company
      • Viacom Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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

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