Elinor Donahue Movies

Elinor Donahue's mother, a theatrical costumer, moonlighted as a department store saleswoman in order to pay for her daughter's dancing lessons. Appearing in dancing-chorus film roles from the age of five, Donahue was at one point a ballet-school classmate of future Fred Astaire partner Barrie Chase. Striking out on her own at 12, Donahue attained work as a Las Vegas showgirl at 14; the fact that she was underage was discreetly covered by her agent and her co-workers, who took a paternal interest in the impressionable young dancer's career. Breaking her ankle at 16, Donahue decided to forego dancing in favor of acting; she was almost immediately cast in the role of sensitive teenager Betty Anderson in the long-running (1954-60) sitcom Father Knows Best. It was the first of many TV stints for Donahue; over the next three decades she would appear as a regular on such series as The Andy Griffith Show, Many Happy Returns, The Odd Couple, Mulligan's Stew, Please Stand By and Doctor's Private Lives. She became a special favorite of writer/director Savage Steve Holland, who cast Donahue as the ditsy mother of a teen-aged secret agent on the 1987 Fox network series The New Adventures of Beans Baxter, and as the voice of a suburban mom who spends her waking hours trying to learn an indecipherable foreign language on Holland's cartoon series Eek! The Cat. This fey, eccentric quality was carried over into Donahue's performance as the eternally bathrobe-clad wife of Bob Elliot and mother of 30-year-old paperboy Chris Elliot on the 1990 Fox sitcom Get a Life. Donahue's film appearances have been less frequent; when she showed up in a cameo as a department store clerk in Gary Marshall's Pretty Women (1987), there was an audible appreciative sigh of recognition from movie audiences everywhere. Elinor Donahue was the wife of Columbia TV executive Harry Ackerman from 1961 to Ackerman's death in 1991. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
2004  
G  
Add The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement to QueueAdd The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement to top of Queue
Directed by Garry Marshall, The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement picks up where its predecessor left off -- that is, with American teenager Mia Thermopolis (Anne Hathaway) reeling over the news that she is a princess within the royal family of Genovia, a little-known European nation with a population of barely 50,000. As promised, Mia, along with her best friend, Lilly (Heather Matarazzo), travels to Genovia after their high-school graduation. The unlikely princess has hardly settled into the castle, let alone begun representing the country, when she learns that a larger title is approaching more rapidly than expected; it seems as though Mia will have to take over as queen. Suddenly, in addition to further schooling on the etiquette of royalty, Mia finds herself with a daunting prospect -- according to Genovian law, all princesses must be married before they can be crowned. In addition to Julie Andrews' reprisal of her role as Queen Clarisse Renaldi, The Princess Diaries 2 also features Hector Elizondo and John Rhys-Davies in supporting roles. Though Princess Diaries author Meg Cabot did pen a sequel (The Princess Diaries: Princess in the Spotlight), this film is not an adaptation. ~ Tracie Cooper, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Anne HathawayJulie Andrews, (more)
2001  
 
Add Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman: The Heart Within to QueueAdd Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman: The Heart Within to top of Queue
The long-running CBS drama series Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman was briefly resurrected in this made-for-TV feature film. Jane Seymour again stars as feisty 19th century doctor Michaela "Mike" Quinn, with Joe Lando as her sweetheart Sully. After a few minor crises in their frontier home town, Mike and Byron head to Boston, there to care for Mike's ailing mother Elizabeth (Georgann Johnson) and to attend the graduation of Mike's Harvard-educated daughter Colleen (Jessica Bowman). Spicing up the plot is a tense sequence in which Colleen performs an emergency tracheotomy and Sully settles a political argument by wielding a hatchet. Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman: The Heart Within was originally broadcast on May 12, 2001. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1994  
 
Monica (Courteney Cox) actually has a moment of understanding with her mother (Christina Pickles), brought about by the death of Monica's grandmother (actually grandma's two deaths; the title of this episode is not a misprint). Elsewhere, Chandler's (Matthew Perry) co-worker's assume that he is gay -- not that there's anything wrong with that (oops, that's another sitcom). And Ross (David Schwimmer) swallows a few too many muscle relaxers. Watch for Rachel's (Jennifer Aniston) new, trend-setting hairstyle in this episode. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1992  
 
In what is perhaps the most-beloved Get a Life episode ever aired, and a heartfelt homage to Steven Spielberg's E.T., Chris (Chris Elliott) finds and befriends a magical, violent, ugly, smelly, puking being from outer space (played by Arturo Gil and voiced by Frank Welker). The joyfulness starts when Chris hears a loud crash outside, which he at first mistakes for "those darn neighbor kids with their Neil Sedaka records," but which he soon realizes was the crash landing of a squat, bulbous monster from outer space. The creature immediately attacks Chris and beats him up. Interpreting this hostility as "a highly advanced superbeing's greeting that our puny minds can't comprehend," Chris presents the thing with a telephone, inviting him to "phone home," and it promptly begins beating him with the receiver. Chris' delight turns to rapture when the creature begins projectile vomiting all over him. Chris excitedly introduces the creature to Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray) as "SPEWEY," which he says is an acronym for "Special Person...Entering the World...Egg Yolks." SPEWEY beats Gus and pukes all over his house. Nefarious G-Men, having heard about the UFO, soon show up at the house to investigate. Chris hides SPEWEY, while Gus, thinking of selling SPEWEY to the circus, or to Michael Jackson for his zoo, doesn't tell the G-Men. Disappointed to learn that the circus already has an alien ("it can juggle and get shot out of a cannon") Gus later changes his mind. Chris begs him not to turn SPEWEY in. "The government is such a cold, unfeeling bureaucracy. They might tease SPEWEY about the size of his bottom. Or worse, make him work in the post office." ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1992  
 
Chris (Chris Elliott) and Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray) ignore warnings about toxic waste in their neighborhood and develop super powers. The two notice a few minor physical deformities (losing teeth, oversized pinky finger) before a government official (Mitch Pileggi, who would later play FBI deputy director Skinner on The X-Files) comes over to warn them that the neighborhood has become "a death zone" and is being evacuated. "I can't die yet!" Chris frets, "My only goal in life is to be buried in a piano crate...but I foolishly put off getting really fat thinking I would live forever." Gus tells him they're not leaving, reassuring Chris that, "the theory that toxic waste can hurt you is a lotta bunk." As the two hole up in Gus' living room with an arsenal of weapons, they begin to notice a few changes. Gus gets webbed fingers, and Chris grows a second mouth on the side of his body. Thinking they're dying, the two eventually collapse into toxic comas. Miraculously, they wake up, and Chris and Gus quickly notice that Chris has gained the ability to speak coherently, and he can actually follow a conversation. "The trick is not to hum cartoon theme songs in your head while other people are talking," he reasons. Not only that, Chris suddenly knows how to spell, even the word that previously gave him the most trouble -- "pants." "Everything seems so clear to me now," Chris enthuses, "There's no silent 'K'." Meanwhile, Gus finds himself adept at the Japanese paper-folding art of origami. They decide to put Chris' newfound powers to use by winning every spelling bee on the planet. They're unstoppable, but Chris grows weary of life on the road and decides to retire. Gus convinces him to enter one more contest -- the prestigious World Spelling Bee. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1992  
 
The trouble all starts when Chris (Chris Elliott) is standing in the street in front of his house and gets hit by a car. When Tricia, the beautiful driver (Emma Samms of General Hospital) gets out to see if he's okay, Chris instantly falls in love. "You are the most beautiful woman I have ever seen," he tells her, "with the possible exception of Charles Durning." It turns out that Tricia is a brilliant physician and scientist, and when Chris shows up at her job and professes his love she spurns him. At first he accepts this. "There are plenty of other fish out there in the sea of recklessly driving cars," he whines, but Chris can't seem to get her out of his head. His landlord Gus (Brian Doyle Murray) scoffs when Chris thinks of moving on and encourages Chris to try harder to impress Tricia with his devotion. "Don't just call her," he suggests, "Call her every 15 minutes. Write her endless rambling deranged letters in your own blood." Soon Chris is stalking Tricia like there's no tomorrow. After an unsuccessful attempt to woo her by gluing his hand to her shoe ("With this glue, I thee wed."), he visits the local drugstore, where Evelyn (Amy Yasbeck), the cashier, is immediately smitten with him. Before long, Chris has his hands full trying to stalk Tricia while Evelyn is stalking him -- and Evelyn is not going to take no for an answer. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1992  
 
"Clip Show" opens with Chris (Chris Elliott) sitting on an airplane, in mid-flight, excited about his journey to Iraq, which his father has convinced him is "the Disneyland of the Middle East." Chris gets up to use the men's room. "Too many free Sprites," he explains. Thinking it's the bathroom door, he inadvertently opens the exit to the plane, and begins a long plummet to his probable death. He quickly grows tired of screaming -- he'd hate to die with a sore throat -- and his life begins to flash before his eyes. "For some reason," he says, "I can only remember things that happened about a year and a half ago." His memories take the form of clips from Get a Life's first two (well, as it turned out, only two) seasons. "Sometimes the production values of my life simply amaze me," Chris exalts after a clip of "Zoo Animals on Wheels." The highlight of this wonderful trip down short-term memory lane is a long montage of the times Chris was punched, slapped, beaten, bludgeoned, strangled, stabbed, shot, run over, beheaded, and crushed by a boulder. The last thing Chris remembers is a delightful clip of him inadvertently walking out of the airplane. "How did I get out of that one?" he wonders. The show has added poignancy in hindsight, with the knowledge that it was the last original episode of the series ever to air. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1992  
 
An exceptionally surreal episode written by Bob Odenkirk of Mr. Show fame, this one starts with Chris (Chris Elliott) preparing for a party in the home of his landlord, Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray). Gus tries to object, but Chris tells him, "Everybody knows when you get Chris Peterson, you get parties. I'm like a party animal. Like that dog, Spuds Mackenzie, only I've never bitten a small child's head off." When Gus agrees to let the party happen, no one shows up for the party except the hated Sharon (Robin Riker), who arrives with a stink bomb. When Chris grows despondent and tries to stab himself in the chest with one of Gus' socks, Sharon and Gus agree to party with him. They're not interested in bobbing for meatballs in mashed potatoes, or in Chris' Jell-O-filled piñata, but they do foolishly agree to partake of his wheelbarrow full of rancid shellfish. Gus and Sharon quickly lose consciousness. When they wake up, Chris realizes they have amnesia. He decides to turn the situation to his advantage by telling the two that they are all the best of friends, and that he is the leader of their little group. They're skeptical at first, as Chris tries to convince them they enjoy drinking chocolate syrup straight from the can, egging old women, and, especially, dancing for hours on end to Chris' favorite song, "Alley Cat." At one point during their dance marathon, Gus says, "I don't remember. Did I always wanna blow my brains out?" Chris is having the time of his life, but what will happen when Gus and Sharon remember who they are? ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1992  
 
During the tragically brief run of Get a Life, the show often transcended mere sitcom parody brilliance and became something unique and wonderful in the world of television -- a truly surreal comic masterpiece. That is certainly the case with the bizarrely named "1977 2000" episode (show episodes were frequently given the title "Something 2000," -- such as "Terror on the Hell Loop 2000," the series premiere, or "Meat Locker 2000" from season two -- in an apparent effort to highlight the show's ahead-of-the-curve, millennial bent). This episode finds Chris (Chris Elliott) sadly pondering the fate of Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray), his beloved abusive landlord. Gus reminisces about his glory days beating up jaywalking suspects, and laments getting sacked for drunkenly urinating on his captain at a party after being passed over for a promotion. Assessing the state of his friend's life, Chris tells Gus the painful truth as only he could see it: "You're ugly and you're doughy and you're bursting with love like some kind of rancid wedding cake that was left out in a terrible rainstorm by a drifter who's smelly named Hank who lives in a storm drain and he wears five pairs of pants, even though it's summertime and he'd be much more comfortable wearing five pairs of shorts." Despite a stern warning from Gus about the dangers of time travel, Chris boldly decides to travel back to 1977 and save his friend's law enforcement career. Things don't go as planned, and Chris inadvertently and repeatedly alters the future in terrible ways. As Gus warns him, having seen enough Twilight Zone episodes to know, "You mess with the past, you get screwed over." This cornucopia of darkly comic goodness was written by Charlie Kaufman, who would later go on to write the equally surreal and hilarious Being John Malkovich. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
This episode is told completely through flashbacks, as Chris (Chris Elliott) writes in his diary about his encounter with three construction workers, Dick (Ritch Brinkley), Ray (Mickey Jones), and Don (Pete Spellos), who do some work on his parents' kitchen. For some unexplained reason, Chris has always been obsessed with construction workers (though, of course this obsession has never been mentioned on the show before), and when they show up on his doorstep, he describes the three sloppy, unshaven gentlemen (in his diary) as "glorious mythical creatures." Chris is eager to gain entry to their inner circle, but he can't seem to break the ice. Staring at them for hours doesn't work. Neither does asking inane questions like, "When were sinks invented?" Even his ventriloquist act doesn't get a rise out of them. Dressing like them, with a toy tool belt, merely brings on their ridicule. Then one day, while Chris is napping in their work area, a "blessed event" occurs that Chris sums up "in four sweet simple words -- Dick fell on me." After Chris breaks Dick's fall, the three embrace him, and teach him how to harass female passersby, while filling his head with tall tales of "late trailer payments, one-eyed prostitutes, and...tool belt fights." But when Chris hears that his beloved construction crew is ripping off his dear, sweet papa (Bob Elliott), he finds himself in need of spiritual guidance. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
Chris Peterson (Chris Elliott) buys a defective watch and ends up taking part in a dangerous undercover police sting operation in "The Counterfeit Watch Story." After watching re-runs of Sea Hunt, Chris decides it would be neat to have a watch he could wear in the shower. He races off to Transistor Hut to get a "Mr. Underwater" watch. Chris warns the store's proprietor, Vic (Duke Moosekian, who played the photographer in Get a Life: "The Prettiest Week of My Life"), that he won't be fooled by any "bait-and-switch tap dance." But when Vic tells him the watch he wants is a "piece of junk," and that the Chronosync 2000 is "the Cadillac of underwater watches," Chris changes his mind. He's a bit concerned when the watch stops ticking in the store, but Vic explains that it's what's known as a "tap watch. You just tap it now and then to get it started, and that keeps it from burning itself out by running constantly." Chris buys the Chronosync 2000, and invites his parents to view the watch's "christening" in his shower. Fred (Bob Elliott) sees the gaudy-looking, oversized watch and asks Chris, "Are you sure it's not the Dodge Dart of underwater watches?" Chris is horrified when the Chronosync 2000 falls apart after three seconds in the shower. He returns to the store to demand a refund. Vic is nowhere to be found, and the salesman is not helpful, so Chris stages an angry protest in his underpants until the cops come to take him away. The police explain that they've had the store under surveillance for selling counterfeit merchandise, and ask for Chris's help in nabbing Vic and his supplier. Chris eagerly agrees to wear a wire for the perilous sting operation. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
In this charming homage to Meet John Doe, Chris (Chris Elliott) sleepwalks into his parents' kitchen to tell them he's saved up enough money for his trip to The Big City. When they warn him about how dangerous the city is, he chides them. "You've kept me hidden away for too long, under your skirt and in your pants," Chris proclaims, "It's time for me to eat of the fruited loins of our forefathers." Once he figures out how to open the door, he's on his way. When he arrives in town, he's approached by a shady character who slips him a mickey, and he wakes up to find his wallet missing. Things take a turn for the better, though, when a cub reporter from The Evening Star, May Evans (Anastasia Barzee, who also played Jane in Get a Life: Drivers License) makes Chris' sad story front-page news. The Big City opens its heart to this poor naïve hick who's lost everything, dubbing him "Walletboy," and giving him a luxury hotel suite and the key to the city. Chris quickly learns to appreciate the perks of celebrity. He even orders an unbaked pizza with no topping, sauce, or cheese, because he can. When May explains how cutthroat the pathetic rube business is, Chris gladly goes out on the town with her to keep his name in the papers. Chris' exciting new life is soon put in jeopardy, though, by a call from his parents. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
"The One Where Chris and Larry Switch Lives" finds the intrepid hero, Chris Peterson (Chris Elliott), and his best friend, Larry Potter (Sam Robards), exploring the ancient Indian burial ground behind the mall. Their reason for going there is unclear, but once they get to the spot, Chris decides it's "the perfect place for a pretend make-out date," and proceeds to sweet talk and kiss his own hand. Larry is eager to leave and get back to what Chris thinks of as his hellish life, with his nagging wife, Sharon (Robin Riker), and their two young children. Before the two leave, Chris picks up a lovely ancient arrowhead, laughing off Larry's warnings about curses and such. "Hit me with your best mojo!" Chris taunts the gods. Chris drifts off while chattering to himself excitedly about his plans for the next day. He plans to surreptitiously place the arrowhead on his father's chair, and watch the expression on his face when he sits on it. But when Chris wakes up the next morning, he finds himself in Larry's bed, perilously close to the hated Sharon, wearing Larry's "old man pajamas, and his underwear, and something with string and elastic." Unable to convince Sharon or the kids that he's Chris and not Larry, Chris runs off to Larry's job, hoping to find him there. Instead he finds Jackie (Beth Broderick), Larry's demanding boss, who immediately sets Chris to work, accounting stuff. Soon Chris realizes that he has actually switched lives with Larry because of the Indian curse, and he is living out his worst nightmare. He has to find a way to get Larry (who is enjoying living Chris' life) and the arrowhead back to the Indian burial ground and the curse will be broken. Or will it? ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
An adventure on the brink of death brings Chris (Chris Elliott) and his dad, Fred (Bob Elliott), closer together in the memorable Get a Life episode, "Neptune 2000." The show begins in 1971, when Young Chris (Brandon Crane) decides to take a newspaper job to pay for the $19.95 two-man submarine he wants to order from the back of a comic book. When the submarine finally arrives 20 years later, Chris complains, "You'd think the postal service would have improved after we sold it to the Japanese," adding for good measure, "Lousy krauts." His mom, Gladys (Elinor Donahue), points out that the ad says delivery will take four to 600 weeks. At first, Chris can't convince Fred to help him assemble the sub. "There's only so many hours in the day," Fred explains, "I can't spend time with you and drink coffee." Chris tries to build it on his own, naming his sub, "Tony," after Tony the Tiger, he explains, "because there's no sub-stitute for breakfast." When Chris' dry run results in dangerous sparks and flame, Fred relents and helps him rebuild "Tony." Chris then convinces his dad to join him, testing the sub in his bathtub, which he has sealed off for the occasion. To Fred's horror, he and Chris end up trapped in the sub, with only 20 minutes worth of air. Even worse, he has to endure Chris' imitations of Jacques Cousteau and Quinn, the Robert Shaw character from Jaws. With their doom all but sealed, Chris asks Fred to finally open up to him. Fred responds, "The only thing I can think about is that this is going to be the most embarrassing obituary ever to hit the papers." ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
Brilliant screenwriter Charlie Kaufman, who also wrote the time-travel episode, "1977 2000," and went on to write Being John Malkovich, wrote this episode, in which Chris (Chris Elliott) gets a visit from his prison pen pal, Irma (Nora Dunn), that ends in a terrifying stand-off with the cops. Chris excitedly opens the mail one day, only to find that the "Hat of the Month" club has sent him his eighth derby in a row. "I specifically requested the alternate this month," Chris gripes, "the charming yet provincial Peruvian gaucho hat." His hat worries are quickly forgotten when he learns that Irma is getting out of jail and plans to visit him. A frightened Chris does his best to prepare to scare the ex-con off, putting a big cardboard box in his garage with "A tiger is in here" painted on the side, and putting a sheet over his head and pretending to be a ghost. But when the butch Irma shows up, he is instantly smitten. "Oh, fair lady," he tells her, "you, sir, are the most exquisite creature my puny mortal eyes have ever beheld." "Yeah, well, you're kinda gross," she replies, "I can see why you wear a sheet." Irma agrees to stay with Chris, but warns him, "If you so much as lay a finger on me, I'll rip your throat out so fast it'll be screaming 'uncle' in my fist." Chris points out that she sounds like every other girl he dates. Chris is making plans to marry Irma ("We're gonna wanna put the rabbi on the revolving platform right about here"), but Irma's more interested in running guns and drugs, as well as a counterfeit operation right out of Chris's garage. Chris doesn't suspect a thing, even after the police show up, and Irma takes him hostage. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
This episode opens with Chris (Chris Elliott) undergoing a makeshift medical exam. Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray) is using a cigarette lighter to look at his throat. Chris mentions a burning sensation (he does have a lighter in his mouth), but Gus reassures him, "I wouldn't worry about it, unless it was in your urinary tract." Chris nevertheless takes an ambulance to his doctor's office (he finds them "much more courteous and quicker than taxi cabs") where Dr. Garrett (Earl Boen, who played Dr. Kramer in three episodes the first season) breaks the bad news. Chris' tonsils will have to come out. "Now my voice will get high," Chris laments, "and I'll sprout breasts and sit around all day in lingerie -- not that that'd be the worst thing in the world." But Dr. Kramer reassures him that there's only a .001 percent chance that there will be complications. Chris poignantly expresses his fear that he's "doomed...isolated from the rest of the world, like a free-floating blob of cellulite cast adrift in a sea of cotton candy soaked in dog saliva. Which is so ironic because dogs are allergic to cotton candy." After the doctor throws Chris out, he goes to break the bad news to his parents, who promise to "pull the plug" if the operation renders Chris unable to enjoy life. Chris then goes to make his peace with his nemesis, Sharon (Robin Riker), who knees him in the groin and scares him off with a pistol when she learns he's just having a tonsillectomy. After spending a day living life to the fullest (including defacing the Mona Lisa and giving birth to a baby), Chris goes under the knife. When he wakes up, he's horrified to discover he is unable to speak. No one else is upset about it. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
The trouble starts when Chris (Chris Elliott) and his best friend, Larry (Sam Robards), are going through a box of memorabilia in the attic, because Larry has bet Chris that it was the Beatles, and not Peter & Gordon, that recorded "Hey Jude." Chris comes across a photo of himself as an infant, in the arms of an Amish couple. Along with the photo is a receipt, which Chris thinks is for a 10,000-dollar payment for a baby boy named Emmett. Chris immediately leaps to the conclusion that his parents, Fred (Bob Elliott) and Gladys (Elinor Donahue), bought him from the Amish couple. He confronts his confused parents about it, and when Fred points out their physical resemblance, Chris whines, "It's obvious that you've had extensive plastic surgery to make yourself look more like me." Chris, now calling himself "Emmett," then leaves to find his "real" parents. He takes a circuitous route to Pennsylvania Dutch Country, where he barges in on the confused Amish couple, Jedidiah (Steven Gilborn) and Marta (Elsa Raven), and tells them he's moving back "home." Frightened, they try to humor Chris, letting him stay, and Chris tries to adjust to their old-fashioned ways. When Fred and Gladys show up the next day, anxious to clear up the confusion, Chris chides them. "We are simple people, and we shun the ways of your people, with your pre-sweetened cereals, and your silent dog whistles," he tells Fred. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
Funnyman Bob Odenkirk (later to star on HBO's Mr. Show) wrote this episode of Get a Life, in which Larry (Sam Robards) runs away from home. The trouble begins when Chris visits the Potter home, where Larry is doing household chores while his wife, Sharon (Robin Riker), supervises. Chris mocks Larry's servility, and brags about his own carefree life living in a garage. "I'm all alone, carefree, happy," he tells Larry, "plus I finally have a place to practice my nude robot dancing." Larry has an epiphany and runs off, leaving a goodbye note. Chris is concerned that Larry may have been kidnapped by "some South American goon squad," and suggests a visit to the American embassy. His mother (Elinor Donahue) has to point out, "This is America. We don't have American embassies here." A disappointed Chris takes matters into his own hands, going on an exhaustive search which mostly involves standing in the middle of the street and calling Larry's name. Eventually, Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray) agrees to help Chris, first taking him to the morgue, where Chris mistakes a slab of barbecued ribs for the remains of his friend. Gus then tries grabbing a random passerby (played by the show's director, David Mirkin) and pumping him for info. That doesn't work either, and eventually Chris gives up, and goes out to look for a new best friend. His efforts to find someone to play jacks with at the local biker bar end in disaster, as he later tells Gus: "I think those jacks are giving me indigestion." Gus asks, "They made you eat jacks?" to which Chris responds, "No...but they're in me." ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
Chris (Chris Elliott) gets a job as a health inspector and ends up testifying before a senate subcommittee in this shocking episode. Chris is sitting down to a nice healthy breakfast with Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray) when a dead rat plops down out of the milk carton and into his cereal bowl. Chris decides right then and there that he wants to be a food inspector. Gus makes some phone calls on Chris' behalf, and soon thereafter, Chris shows up for his on-the-job training. The first restaurant kitchen he inspects is filthy. Among other violations, there's a litter of puppies in an open sack of flour and a bug zapper positioned directly over a pot of soup. Chris is shocked when his trainer, Rob (Thom Sharp), takes a stack of money from the restaurant owner and gives the place a clean bill of health. "I simply cannot condone a system that allows insects to go careening through our small intestine as though it were a really cool waterslide," Chris tells him indignantly. But he changes his tune when Rob hands him a five-dollar bill. When a secretive government agent shows up in Chris' garage, asking him to testify, Chris tells him, "So you want me to sing, huh? Like a little rat bastard canary, huh? Chewing on its own cuttlebone in a cage made by your own gilded saliva!" "Peterson, pretending to be a yammering half-wit isn't going to help you in prison," the agent responds. Chris still isn't ready to give up his "perks," until his parents find a sweat sock on top of a delivered pizza. "My dear parents could have choked a woolly death on this evil stink-hose," he laments. But things take an ugly turn when Rob shows up at the senate hearing, holding Gus at gunpoint. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
The trouble begins when Chris (Chris Elliott) tries to cook something in the Potter kitchen, and ends up setting the place on fire. Assessing the damage, Chris tries to reassure Sharon (Robin Riker), telling her, "It's not burned, Sharon -- it's blackened." Chris then helpfully informs the insurance agent that he always disables the fire alarm before he does any cooking, thus voiding the Potters' insurance policy. He offers to give them a little bit out of his salary each month to pay them back, optimistically telling Sharon and Larry (Sam Robards), "We should be even by the year 2011. Hey, maybe even 2010 if I go back to domestic cheese." Sharon is ready to murder Chris, but Chris convinces her that he can work off his debt. Ignoring Larry's dire warnings, he agrees to be her personal servant. Larry goes away on business for a couple of days, and by the time he gets back, Sharon has completely broken Chris' will. Larry is horrified, and misses the "really fun, terrific idiot" Chris used to be, so he kidnaps Chris and, in a scene reminiscent of Clockwork Orange, "deprograms" him. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
When lifelong enemies Chris (Chris Elliott) and Sharon (Robin Riker) get trapped in a meat locker together, unlikely romance blooms, thanks to the fertilizer of hypothermic delirium. The trouble starts when Chris barges in on Sharon's date with the wealthy Dr. Glen Morris (Drew Pillsbury). Since Sharon's husband Larry has abandoned her, Chris comes over to the Potter home to borrow some of Larry's underpants. Before she can throw him out, Chris scares the new boyfriend off by telling him that Sharon murdered Larry. After beating Chris bloody, Sharon decides she'll spare his life if he'll agree to pose as Glen for her dinner party that night, so she can impress her old sorority sisters. Later, when one of the guests asks "Glen" about his work as a micro neurosurgeon, Chris gets defensive. After declaring himself the "King Hot Pants" of brain doctors, Chris starts talking about his relationship with Sharon. "I have never been more content in my life," he brags to the assembled guests, "and you're talking to a guy who's slept with every high-priced hooker in the state!" When Sharon takes him aside -- into the walk-in meat locker she has in her living room -- to chastise him, she slams the door so hard it gets stuck. Sharon's guests, thinking they've gone into the meat locker to have sex, leave in a huff. It seems that their doom is sealed, and the two embrace in order to share their body heat. Before they die, Sharon tells Chris, "there's something that I want to get off my chest." "You know, I pray you are talking about your bra," Chris responds, "Otherwise, you are the worst kind of tease." ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
It's time for the Peterson family reunion, and Fred (Bob Elliott) is stuck hosting the event this year. Fred and Gladys (Elinor Donahue) don't want to be there because Fred's relatives are mostly obnoxious buffoons like Uncle Sid (Bill Cort), who shows up with a bullhorn every year. Chris dreads the event even more than his parents, because he'll have to listen to all the accolades of his more successful cousin, Donald (former child star Jackie Earle Haley of The Bad News Bears and Breaking Away) who owns a thriving melon stand and a late model used car. Chris is distraught about Donald's impending arrival. He flashes back to the 1968 Peterson reunion, when Fred gave Donald a trophy and savings bond for being "the Peterson with the most wit, charisma, and intelligence." Fred also presented Chris with a stick he found lying on the ground, and said of his own son, "He'll make a great rodeo clown someday." When Donald finally arrives, he and Chris engage in some verbal sparring, before Donald silences Chris by whipping out his bankbook, showing a 900 dollar balance. Chris flies into a jealous rage and decides to vandalize Donald's car. After hiding a few tuna balls in the glove compartment, Chris has a temper tantrum, and accidentally uncovers an incriminating document that he thinks will show the Peterson clan that their "precious little Donald" is not so impressive after all. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
Starland Vocal Band's "Afternoon Delight" is the unofficial theme song of this episode, as little Chris Peterson (Chris Elliott) shows cynical show biz celebrity Sandy Connors (Martin Mull) "a world of life, hope, and laughter." The episode has a special resonance for fans because Sandy bears an uncanny resemblance to one David Letterman, Elliott's former employer. Like Letterman, Sandy is an acerbic, cigar-chomping late night talk show host who seems uncomfortable in his own skin. Chris sends 3,000 entries in to "Sandy's Laugh and Song Jackpot," and wins a weekend with the curmudgeonly star. Sandy, arriving at the Peterson home, immediately tries to get out of his obligation, proposing he stay at the Marriott and meet Chris for breakfast the next day. Chris knows the contest rules, and warns Sandy, "If you're going to challenge me, I'll run right over to the mall and get myself a lawyer." He sums up the situation thusly: "It's like a little game of chess, isn't it, Sandy? The only problem is, I own Boardwalk, and you keep landing on it." The miserable Sandy can't even get out of sharing Chris' bed, as Chris tells him, "Yeah, that's a good idea -- sleep on the sofa. But I warn you, it's loaded with chiggers." After a frightening night, Sandy offers Chris money to let him leave, but instead, Chris takes him on a life-affirming journey around town, to the strains of the aforementioned song. He's ecstatic to have won Sandy over, until the celeb decides to give up show biz, with its "grueling...five hours of work every week," and "those horrible synthetic hairpieces," and move in with Chris and his parents. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
Season two of the bizarrely hilarious TV series Get a Life begins with Chris (Chris Elliott) walking into the kitchen of his parents, Fred (Bob Elliott) and Gladys (Elinor Donahue), and performing his "I have a big announcement to make" dance, which entails dancing around in a circle and waving his arm over his head while shouting, "I have a big announcement to make," in a high-pitched voice. Chris lets his parents know that, as he has reached the age of 31, he is "officially, unequivocally, irreversibly, and pooky-pockily [sic] moving out" of the room above their garage. Chris soon finds himself at the home of Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray), a retired cop with a mean temper. At first, Gus mistakes Chris for a "slobbering brain-dead derelict," but Chris quickly dispenses any question of his social status by pointing out that he is wearing Jordache designer pants. Gus doesn't actually have a room for rent, but when he learns that Chris has 150 dollars to spend each month, he convinces Chris to move into his garage. Actually, he almost convinces Chris that his garage is a spare room, designed with a "garage motif." Chris assesses his new situation astutely, telling Gus, "As Bogart said at the end of Casablanca, this looks like the beginning of two guys who kind of tolerate each other." But Chris soon discovers that spending the night alone in a strange place can be a frightening experience. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)
1991  
 
Chris Peterson (Chris Elliott) wakes up one morning and tells his beloved landlord, Gus (Brian Doyle-Murray), that he's going to get a job with the local escort service. The main appeal of the job for Chris is going to free plays. After noting that Chris has "a certain, goony, misshapen quality," the agency hires him and sends him out on his first job. When he realizes that the elderly Margaret (Dena Dietrich) is his date, he freaks out. Things get off to a bad start, and he tells his disgruntled client, "I'm sorry if I've been remiss in my duties, but your excessive age really knocked my ass out of whack for a second." After Chris makes his halfhearted apologies, the two are off to the theater to see a production of Equus starring Max Baer Jr. After the play, Chris is ready to go home, but Margaret has other plans, especially after she sees him do his famous "Alley Cat" dance. Despite Chris' offer to refund her money, and even clean her bathroom, Margaret has her way with him. Then she takes him on trips around the world and buys him expensive gifts. But one night, in the middle of Chris' own brand of love talk, an unexpected visitor arrives and threatens to destroy Chris' new life. This episode is notable for an unusually high number (even for this show) of pop culture references, including Horshack, Robert Conrad, Barry White, Chuck Connors, Red Dawn, Amazing Discoveries, and The Benny Hill Show. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Chris ElliottBob Elliott, (more)

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