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Come On, Get Happy: The Partridge Family Story

  • TV Movie
  • 1999
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
597
YOUR RATING
Come On, Get Happy: The Partridge Family Story (1999)
ComedyDramaMusic

The behind the scenes story of "The Partridge Family" TV show, told from the point of view of young Danny Bonaduce. Problems include Danny's jealous father, David Cassidy's overnight fame, a... Read allThe behind the scenes story of "The Partridge Family" TV show, told from the point of view of young Danny Bonaduce. Problems include Danny's jealous father, David Cassidy's overnight fame, and even conflicts with the Brady Bunch!The behind the scenes story of "The Partridge Family" TV show, told from the point of view of young Danny Bonaduce. Problems include Danny's jealous father, David Cassidy's overnight fame, and even conflicts with the Brady Bunch!

  • Director
    • David Burton Morris
  • Writers
    • Jon S. Denny
    • Jacqueline Feather
    • David Seidler
  • Stars
    • Eve Gordon
    • Rodney Scott
    • Kathy Wagner
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    597
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Burton Morris
    • Writers
      • Jon S. Denny
      • Jacqueline Feather
      • David Seidler
    • Stars
      • Eve Gordon
      • Rodney Scott
      • Kathy Wagner
    • 30User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast44

    Edit
    Eve Gordon
    Eve Gordon
    • Shirley Jones…
    Rodney Scott
    Rodney Scott
    • David Cassidy…
    Kathy Wagner
    Kathy Wagner
    • Susan Dey…
    Shawn Pyfrom
    Shawn Pyfrom
    • Danny Bonaduce…
    Michael Chieffo
    Michael Chieffo
    • Dave Madden…
    William Russ
    William Russ
    • Joseph Bonaduce
    Roxanne Hart
    Roxanne Hart
    • Betty Bonaduce
    Richard Fancy
    Richard Fancy
    • Harold
    Willie Garson
    Willie Garson
    • Sam
    Mark Harelik
    Mark Harelik
    • Alex
    Debby Boone
    Debby Boone
    • Beth
    Terry Anzur
    Terry Anzur
    • Reporter
    Sarah Ashley
    • Girl Fan
    Tara Blanchard
    Tara Blanchard
    • Suzanne Crough…
    Danny Bonaduce
    Danny Bonaduce
    • Narrator
    N. Barry Carver
    • George
    Catherine Christensen
    Catherine Christensen
    • Groupie
    Ruth de Sosa
    Ruth de Sosa
    • Press Agent
    • Director
      • David Burton Morris
    • Writers
      • Jon S. Denny
      • Jacqueline Feather
      • David Seidler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    5.7597
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    Featured reviews

    Cyprus386

    Come on Get Happy: The Danny Bonaduce Story

    I knew that this movie was going to be biased towards Danny Bonaduce, since he worked on it somehow. What I didn't know is how much of the story they DIDN'T tell. The only really good performances came from Kathy Wagner (Susan Dey) and Rodney Scott (David Cassidy). The kid who played Danny was too fake for the part. Overall, this movie was a sappy biased biopic.
    mbilbrey

    Worth a second showing

    The movie showed a lot more depth than the recent David Cassidy Story and addressed one of the major flaws in that movie. By focusing on only the 4 years of the Partridge Family, it gave a more complete portrait of the Partridge Family phenomena. From recent interviews of cast members, "Come On Get Happy" seemed pretty accurate. Even so, like the David Cassidy Story, it tried to cover too much territory. They should have focused more on 1 or 2 of the characters - like Cassidy and Dey or Danny Bonaduce - instead of cramming all the characters in 1 movie. (I'm still waiting for the Danny Bonaduce story which I think has the most dramatic appeal).

    Second, they didn't really show the sheer hysteria surrounding the program, which was covered better in the DC Story. They also didn't show the emotional devastation of the death of the fan at Cassidy's farewell show or cover the greed of the producers. All in all, I'd give it 3 stars. It's worth a second showing.
    6gjw

    OK, but superficial

    This TV movie bio is very similar to "Daydream Believers: The Monkees Story", which was shot the following year (although the two productions weren't the effort of the same company or crew).

    Both are somewhat simplistic biographies about the making a fictional pop-rock band that starred in a TV show, and the friction behind the scenes.

    Both movies used look-alike actors to play the original cast members. And both movies focused on young men who got a tremendous break in showbiz, and achieved teen Idol status, yet who weren't satisfied because the roles they played didn't represent who they really were.

    In the case of the Monkees, the boys resented the fact that they weren't originally allowed to play their own music, and spent much of their time trying to become a real band. In this case, it is David Cassidy who is the disgruntled member, chafing at the fact that he has to play a high school student on the show and be a heartthrob to a lot of little girls, when he was really 20 years old and apparently a bit of a scoundrel in real life. And it appears that members of both groups resented being on rather silly, unrealistic shows.

    Yet they all sought out those parts, auditioned for them; they were actors who knew what they were getting into, and their job as actors was to play the roles written for them. If they didn't like the parts, it seems they shouldn't have taken them in the first place, rather than whine about their roles once they had them.

    In the case of the Monkees, their effort to perform their own songs did not turn out well in the long run. The group had some of the best songwriters in the industry, and churned out a large number of hits when they were performing them. But once they switched to their own music, they started sliding down the charts into obscurity.

    And according to this movie, David Cassidy's adult antics and threats to leave the show apparently resulted in them canceling the sitcom earlier than they otherwise would have. And his post-Partridge career didn't exactly set the world on fire.

    In both instances, it seems that the adults in the room actually knew what they were doing when they were making the shows, and the kids rocking of the boat ultimately just cut short their own careers. They would probably have been a lot better off if they had just kicked back and enjoyed the ride on the fame train while they were on it.

    But back to the movie itself.

    It kept repeating the same beats: focusing on Danny and his sullen, unemployed father who resents his son's success; the youngest boy on the show, who is constantly pictured as a hyperactive, out-of-control child; and David's resentment about playing a younger role and being a teen idol.

    Honestly, David Cassidy was incredibly lucky to land this role to begin with, so it's a bit irritating to hear that his character complain about it not reflecting his real life. Fictional TV roles aren't supposed to reflect an actor's real life; the actor is supposed to pretend to be the fictional character. That's why it's called acting.

    And they spend much too much time focusing on Danny's grumpy father. Since he never turned out to be an ax murderer or anything, there is no reason for the camera to spend that much time staring at the sad guy, except for a poverty of other ideas.

    They throw in mock concert footage of most of "The Partridge Family"'s major hits, so newcomers can at least get a taste of what they sounded like. And the songs are still catchy today.

    There isn't much new here. Most of the anecdotes we see are probably already well-known to fans of the show, via various biographies and cast interviews. And those situations are presented in a very abbreviated fashion.

    But the movie is also dotted with scenes that seem exaggerated.

    One example is when David "kidnaps" Danny, steals the Partridge Family bus, rams it through the studio gate (breaking it), and then the bus just happens to break down next to a private school so that obsessed teenage girls on the playground can spot David and mob the bus. And if that's not enough, a public school bus stops at the same exact moment, so the girls from that bus can join the screaming mob. Good grief.

    There's probably just a grain of truth to that story. David probably did once borrow the bus and drove some of the kids that around the Valley, but, as usual, Hollywood just can't resist goosing it up into nonsense territory.

    On the positive side, the actors they found to portray the original cast members did actually resemble the original players (at least to some extent), although the actor playing David Cassidy lacked that somewhat debauched look that David often had, despite his young age.

    Overall, there are worse ways to spend 100 minutes. But it's sort of like reading a Reader's Digest version of a gossip magazine.
    7fshepinc

    The Author's Point of View

    So many reviewers bash this film for focusing on Danny Bonaduce's point of view. For heaven's sake -He wrote it! How could he tell anyone's story but his own?

    Back in the day, The Partridge Family was a phenomenon. Other than Shirley Jones and Dave Madden the cast were plucked from obscurity and placed under the glare of the spotlight. Instant fame and recognition. The film deals well with that issue, focusing on its effects on Bonaduce and David Cassidy. Yes, there were certainly many other possible topics to address -But how much can you cover in a 90-minute TV movie?

    The film was well-cast, with actors who strongly resembled the people they were portraying. Other than Cassidy, there was little time for character development, but he, Jones, Madden, and Susan Day were treated sympathetically (and accurately according to the interviews I've read). The three actors who portrayed the two youngest Partridges were treated the same as their real-life counterparts: little screen time and almost no dialogue. The real focus was on Danny Bonaduce and how his on-screen family became a happy surrogate for his dysfunctional off-screen family. Shawn Pyfrom's portrayal of Bonaduce was nicely understated. The scenes of domestic abuse and his relationships with his TV family were told from the child's perspective and rang truer than the rest of the film.

    The Partridge Family was never high art. What kept it going for four years were the songs and the on-screen chemistry between Bonaduce, Cassidy, and Madden. This TV film shows a little of what was behind that -And what more could a fan ask for?
    dvdfreak87

    Really?

    I don't know a lot about the partridge family, I've only seen maybe two episodes from beginning to end, but did this stuff behind the scenes really happen. Such as, when David just kidnaps Danny and drives away in the bus, the scene when they were in the bunny costumes, how they took care of Danny for different weekends or how they would refer to each as Keith or Laurie, Just to name a few. But the acting was pretty bad and i didn't like how the jumped around a lot. The only thing I liked about the movie was the Brady Bunch scene. I would like to see what happened to the actors after the show. I am looking forward to the "new" family on VH1. But I wouldn't see it again though. It was pretty bad.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Alison MacInnis's debut.
    • Goofs
      In the opening narrative, Danny explains that each month when the mortgage was due his brother and sister would sit outside while his parents "Re-enacted the fall of Saigon." Saigon fell in 1975, a year after the Partridge Family went off the air so they could not re-enact it since it had not yet occurred.
    • Quotes

      Suzanne Crough: If we get rid of Danny, can I pretend to play the guitar?

      Danny Bonaduce: My, God! Three years on the show, and it's the first time I've ever heard her speak!

      Shirley Jones: That's it, Danny! Go to your room!

    • Connections
      References The Partridge Family (1970)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 13, 1999 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • C'Mon Get Happy: The Partridge Family Story
    • Filming locations
      • Blondie Street, Columbia/Warner Bros. Ranch - 411 North Hollywood Way, Burbank, California, USA(The scenes of the cast filming the show at the Partridge Family house.)
    • Production companies
      • Columbia TriStar Television
      • Randwell Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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