Call Her Mom
{{Short description|1972 American TV movie}}
{{Infobox television
| image =
| image_size =
| image_alt =
| caption =
| genre = Comedy
| creator =
| based_on =
| developer =
| writer = Gail Parent
Kenny Solms
| screenplay =
| story =
| director = Jerry Paris
| starring = Connie Stevens
Thelma Carpenter
John David Carson
| narrated =
| theme_music_composer =
| country = United States
| language = English
| num_episodes =
| executive_producer = Wilford Lloyd Baumes
Douglas S. Cramer
| producer = Herb Wallerstein
| location =
| cinematography = Emil Oster
| editor = Jim Faris
Robert Moore
| camera =
| runtime = 73 minutes
| company = Douglas S. Cramer Company
Screen Gems Television
| budget =
| network = ABC
| released = {{Start date|1972|02|15}}
}}
Call Her Mom is a 1972 American TV movie produced by Screen Gems. It was the pilot for a proposed series that was not picked up. It instead premiered on February 15, 1972, as a stand-alone film, and as an installment of The ABC Movie of the Week.{{Cite news|author=Smith, C.|title=New pilots star TV war-horses.|date=Feb 17, 1972|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|156941537}}}}
It was directed by Jerry Paris.{{Citation needed|date=January 2023}}
Plot
A waitress becomes housemother for a college fraternity. The setting is Beardsley College, where Alpha Rho Epsilon House (the Greek letters are APE) is a party-all-the-time fraternity. The housemother has quit because she cannot control their wild behavior. Twelve other housemothers had left before her.
Connie Stevens enters as a waitress fed up with her job. She loudly quits during a busy rush at the restaurant. The fraternity brothers witness her quitting and offer her a job as housemother.
The fraternity members expect that she will be lenient, but she takes her role as housemother seriously and lays down the law. She also gets involved with the national women's liberation movement, which causes a rift with the conservative college dean, played by Van Johnson. Beardsley College experiences picketing and protests like other American universities in 1972.
Mini-skirt clad Connie Stevens sings "Come On-a My House" and provides the sexual tension in the all-male fraternity. Jim Hutton and Charles Nelson Reilly are the co-stars. Mike Evans, who co-starred in All in the Family and The Jeffersons as Lionel Jefferson, also appeared as a fraternity member.
Cast
- Connie Stevens as Angie Bianco
- Thelma Carpenter as Ida
- John David Carson as Woody Guinness III
- Gloria DeHaven as Helen Hardgrove
- Mike Evans as Wilson (as Mike Jonas Evans)
- Jim Hutton as Prof. Jonathan Calder
- Van Johnson as President Chester Hardgrove
- Corbett Monica as Bruno
- Charles Nelson Reilly as Dean Walden
- Steve Vinovich as Randall Feigelbaum
Reception
The TV movie was a huge ratings success, earning a 30.9 rating and a 46 audience share, making it the second highest show of the week after All in the Family.{{Cite news|title=ABC's movie of week up in ratings|date=Mar 2, 1972|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|156974755}}}} It was the eighth most widely seen film on television, after Ben Hur, The Birds, The Bridge on the River Kwai, The Night Stalker, Brian's Song, Women in Chains, and Born Free (the ninth and tenth were A Death of Innocence and The Feminist and the Fuzz).{{cite news|title=Made-for-TV movies find big ratings. |date=Apr 9, 1972|work=The Washington Post and Times-Herald|id={{ProQuest|148353437}}}}
The Los Angeles Times, however, thought the movie was poor and the cast "wasted".{{Cite news|title='This is real life'. |date=Feb 17, 1972|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|156955081}}}}
ABC next cast Connie Stevens in the TV movie Playmates, co-starring Alan Alda.{{Cite news|author=Haber, J.|date=Jul 6, 1972|title= Connie to fatten her batting average|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157012040}}}} This was another large success, ranking among the 20 most viewed films on TV for a time.{{Cite news|title='Sex symbol' due in nation's homes. |date=Jul 25, 1974|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157599961}}}}{{cite news|title=Unbreakable connie cries real tears. |date=Sep 15, 1974|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157644271}}}}
The film was repeated in 1973 and was the 12th most popular show of the week.{{Cite news|title=ABC'S 'SAN FRANCISCO' TOP OF NIELSEN POLL. |date=Jun 7, 1973|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157260767}}}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb title|0068330}}
Category:1972 television films
Category:ABC Movie of the Week
Category:Television films as pilots
Category:Television pilots not picked up as a series
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