Women_of_the_House

<i>Women of the House</i>

Women of the House

Spin-off of Designing Women TV series


Women of the House is an American sitcom television series and a spin-off of Designing Women that aired on CBS from January 4 to August 18, 1995, and the last four episodes airing on Lifetime on September 8, 1995. The series starred Delta Burke, reprising her role of Suzanne Sugarbaker, who had reconciled with producers of Designing Women after a bitter, highly publicized, off-screen battle.

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Premise

Suzanne Sugarbaker's latest husband has died, and as his widow, she assumes his political office for the remainder of his term. Washington, D.C. was ill-prepared for the outspoken, "big, dumb, hick beauty queen's" arrival to the United States House of Representatives, though she did form an unusual bond with then-current President Bill Clinton, who was frequently heard off-screen. Along with her, Suzanne dragged her mentally disabled brother Jim (Jonathan Banks); her young, adopted daughter Desiree (Brittany Parkyn); and her often mentioned (but only once seen) maid, Sapphire Jones (Barbara Montgomery).

Teri Garr starred as Suzanne's press secretary Sissy Emerson, a washed up reporter who had turned to the bottle a few years earlier, but was starting to clean up her act. Patricia Heaton portrayed Natty Hollingsworth, Suzanne's snooty, conservative administrative assistant whose married Congressman boyfriend was serving a prison sentence. Jennifer Malone (Valerie Mahaffey, Julie Hagerty), known to her co-workers as "Malone," was a vivacious, naïve housewife who was recently left by her husband, and whose children were tyrants. Years of sexual repression had taken their toll on Malone and she was becoming obsessed with sex.

Malone was later replaced by Veda Walkman (Lisa Rieffel), a ditzy young woman who took an internship at the office. In more minor roles were William Newman as Dave, an older gentleman with bad arthritis who worked in the office and Adam Carl as Adam, another intern (which was not the same-named character Carl played in several episodes of Designing Women).

Cast

Main

Recurring

Notable guest stars

Episodes

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Home media

Mill Creek Entertainment had secured the rights to the complete series, which was slated to be released on DVD in early 2011.[8] In April 2011, it was announced that the DVD release had been cancelled due to "issues surrounding the source material delivery."[9] On February 6, 2018, Questar Entertainment released Women of the House: The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1.[10]


References

  1. "Nielsen ratings". Life. USA Today. January 11, 1995. p. 3D.
  2. DeRosa, Robin (January 18, 1995). "'ER' rolls into the No. 1 spot". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.
  3. DeRosa, Robin (January 25, 1995). "'ER' helps NBC to No. 1". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.
  4. DeRosa, Robin (February 1, 1995). "Super Bowl kicks ABC to the top". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.
  5. "Nielsen ratings". Life. USA Today. February 8, 1995. p. 3D.
  6. "Nielsen ratings". Life. USA Today. March 29, 1995. p. 3D.
  7. "Nielsen ratings". Life. USA Today. August 23, 1995. p. 3D.
  8. "Women of the House DVD News". TVShowsOnDVD.com. October 15, 2010. Archived from the original on October 18, 2010.
  9. "Women of the House - Mill Creek's Planned DVD Release is Off the Schedule". TVShowsOnDVD.com. April 19, 2011. Archived from the original on September 12, 2011.

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