Anson Williams Movies
The "watershed moment" for American actor
Anson Williams arrived in February 1972. On a seemingly minor and inconsequential note,
Williams -- then a 22-year-old, aspiring actor -- signed to appear opposite TV vet
Ron Howard on a one-shot episode of the anthology series
Love, American Style. Entitled "Love and the Happy Days," the segment featured two characters named Richie and Potsie -- a rather conservative teen and his "experienced" pal, attending high school together and coming of age in 1950s Milwaukee. The ratings for that episode rocketed off the charts, and prompted series producers to spin off a sitcom entirely devoted to the said adolescent friendship. And yet, though
Happy Days premiered in January 1974 and ran for 11 seasons to consistently sensational ratings (virtually becoming an American pop-culture phenomenon),
Williams and the Potsie character soon paled in comparison to the dynamism of
Henry Winkler's rebel Fonzie -- carrying the show off in a much different direction than that originally intended.
Williams nevertheless stuck with
Happy Days through the end of its
tenth season, and continued to pursue additional roles, though subsequent efforts (such as a turn in the dull telemovie
I Married a Centerfold) never even came close to generating as much exposure as
Days. Perhaps for this reason,
Williams (like
Henry Winkler, in fact) stepped behind the camera and began helming television projects -- initially, prime-time feature soapers (
Little White Lies,
All-American Murder), then, as the years rolled on, episodes of hit series including
Xena: Warrior Princess,
Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, and
Star Trek: Voyager. In the early 2000s,
Williams also directed episodes of the popular Disney Channel series
Lizzie McGuire, starring
Hilary Duff. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide