By then, MTM Productions founder Grant Tinker had taken
over. He was left with a faltering schedule, the aftermath of the 1981 writer’s
strike, and a handful of commitments which would finally bow at midseason, for the
spring of 1982: “Teachers Only” and “Cassie & Co.” (part of the network’s
commitment to purchase series from Johnny Carson’s company), “One of the Boys”
(with Mickey Rooney), “Jokebook” (Hanna-Barbera), the ambitious “Chicago Story”
(from Eric Bercovici, producer of “Shogun”) and “Fame.”
All of these appear to be deals that Fred Silverman made on
his way out the door. Always a fan of variety and the ABC show “Soap” (which he
greenlit) he also put “The Billy Crystal Comedy Hour” on the air in the spring
of 1982.
Largely forgotten today, there are just three clips online, all from the first episode, linked below. The somewhat conventional visual look was offset by a pretty hip slate of guest stars. An episode guide follows.
Episode 1: January 30, 1982
The Pointer Sisters, John Candy as Orson Welles, Dave Thomas and Rick Moranis as Bob Hope and Woody Allen, “The Punk Honeymooners” sketch. This episode possibly includes Joe Flaherty as Bing Crosby.
Episode 2: February 6, 1982
Robert Urich, Morgan Fairchild. Includes a spoof of early-morning talk shows, a one-man stage show, “The Alexander Haig Story,” and a parody of “Young Man with a Horn” (“Young Man with a Mouth.”) The Manhattan Transfer performs “Trickle Trickle” and “Spies in the Night.”
Episode 3: February 13, 1982
Robert Conrad, Nell Carter. Sketches include a sex change for Reggie Jackson (Nell Carter), a screen test for Robert Conrad directed by Fernando Lamas (Crystal), and a medley of Lou Carter songs including “What's a Matter with Me?” and “If I Had a Nose Full of Nickles.”
Episode 4: February 20, 1982
Mel Tillis, Lynn Redgrave. Sketches include Fernando Lamas
(Crystal) interviewing Tillis, a doctor's X-ray machine suddenly becomes a
video game, and Uncle Julius (Billy) is upset with his bridge partner (Michael
McManus). Tillis sings “It's Gonna Be One of Them Days.”
Episode 5: February 27, 1982
Rob Reiner, Smokey Robinson, Shelley Duvall. Includes a
carload of irritated vacationers who get on each other’s nerves, TV wrestling parody,
and Uncle Julius (Billy) is mugged. Billy compares baseball player's names and
how they each effect their image. Smokey Robinson sings “Tell Me Tomorrow.”
The show struggled on Saturday nights at 10 p.m., up against a movie on CBS and the #30 show, “Fantasy Island” on ABC. When NBC announced its 1982-83 season, all the midseason shows were gone except “Fame.” In their place was a slate of new shows: “Cheers,” “Family Ties,” “St. Elsewhere,” “Taxi” (imported from ABC), “Knight Rider,” “Remington Steele," "Silver Spoons," "Mama's Family" and midseason shows including “The A-Team" and "Buffalo Bill."