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Freddie Prinze Movies

1976  
 
Comedian Freddie Prinze appeared in his only TV movie (in fact, his only movie of any kind) when he starred in The Million Dollar Rip-Off. Prinze plays an ex-convict who happens to be an electronics genius. He woos four toothsome young ladies and convinces them to participate in robbing the payroll of the Chicago Transit Authority. The girls have a little conference among themselves, decide they're all being taken by Freddie, and vow to bollix up the job. Million Dollar Rip-Off was written by character actors William Devane and John Pleshette, both of whom may have harbored hopes of starring in the project themselves. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1976  
 
Season Three of the Freddie Prinze sitcom Chico and the Man begins with a two-part episode, as Ed Brown (Jack Albertson), curmudgeonly owner of a barrio garage and the employer of lovable Latino Chico Rodriguez (Prinze, of course), discovers to his dismay that his new landlady is his old enemy Helen Rogers, the woman who'd committed the unforgivable sin of converting Ed's late wife from a Republican to a Democrat. Della Rogers is played by new series regular Della Reese, who'd been seen the previous season as a long-suffering judge in the episode "The Juror". In addition to her landlady duties, Della Rogers also runs a mobile snack wagon, thereby setting up several situations whereby the resourceful Chico tries to cadge a free meal. In another new development, retired letter carrier Louie Wilson (Scatman Crothers) is also working in Ed's garage. Guest stars this season include Dick Van Dyke Show veteran Rose Marie in the episode "Ready When You Are, CB" (the title refers not to DeMille but to the then-current CB radio craze); onetime matinee idol Cesar Romero as Chico's long-lost father in "Chico's Padre"; deadpan comedian George Gobel in "Louie's CanCan"; and perennial western sidekick Pat Buttram in "Gregory Peck is a Rooster." The third-season episode that garnered the fewest audience laughs when it originally aired on NBC was "Champs Ain't Chumps". Not that this episode was any less hilarious than its predecessors, merely that it was first telecast on January 28, 1977--one day after the suicide of 22-year-old Freddie Prinze. This devastating tragedy would have seemed to spell the end of Chico and the Man, but both NBC and producer James Komack were grimly determined to keep the franchise alive--and to that end filmed an episode in which a new and entirely different "Chico" was introduced in the form of 12-year-old newcomer Gabriel Melgar. That episode, however, would not be aired until Chico and the Man returned for its fourth and final season. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Jack AlbertsonFreddie Prinze, (more)
 
1975  
 
Freddie Prinze (Chico Rodriguez) and Jack Albertson (Ed Brown) are still on hand as the title characters in the warm-hearted ethnic sitcom Chico and the Man as the series enters its second season. Likewise, Scatman Crothers is back in the supporting role of ebullient neighborhood garbage collector Louie Wilson. Missing from the scene this season are such first-series semiregulars as Bonnie Boland, Rodolfo Hoyos and Isaac Ruiz). The one newcomer to the cast is Ronnie Graham (an accomplished farceur and director, then best known as "Mr. Dirt" in a series of popular commercials), as Reverend Bemis, the new curate in the Mexican-American neighborhood where curmudgeonly Ed Brown owns a garage, with Chico as his best (and only) employee. Appearing in guest roles during the season's 24 episodes are impressionist Rich Little in the opener "Paint Job", comedian and future informercial personality Avery Schreiber in "Play Gypsy" and "Misfortune Teller", a post-Star Trek George Takei in "Mister Butterfly" and a pre-Laverne and Shirley Penny Marshall in "Chico and the Van", singer Tony Orlando in "The Big Brush-Off" and the ubiquitous Joey Bishop in "Too Many Crooks". The most unexpected of the guest performers is former silent screen star Carmel Myers in "Bird in a Gilded Cage"; the most prescient is Della Reese, soon to be a series regular in the role of landlady Della Rogers, but for the time being cast as an acerbic judge in "The Juror". Although Chico and the Man still had millions of faithful fans, the series suffered a considerable ratings drop-off during its second season, descending from 3rd to 25th place. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Jack AlbertsonFreddie Prinze, (more)
 
1974  
 
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Produced by James Komack (Welcome Back, Kotter), the weekly, half-hour NBC sitcom Chico and the Man was built around the talents of 20-year-old standup comedian Freddie Prinze, who had scored a sensation during his first appearance on The Tonight Show. Born in the LA barrio, the "Hugarican" (Hungarian-Puerto Rican) Prinze based his comedy act upon the eccentricities of various ethnic groups, peppering his routines with such catchphrases as "Looking Goooood" and "Is not MY job!" Cashing in on Prinze's gift for dialects and his inherent likability, producer Komack cast him as Chico Rodriguez, a flamboyant, good-hearted Latino youth who sweet-talked his way into a mechanic's job in the garage owned by crusty Ed Brown, the only Anglo-Saxon in a predominantly Mexican-American neighborhood. To help teach Prinze the pacing and rhythm of TV situation comedy, Komack cast Jack Albertson, veteran vaudevillian and Oscar-winning film actor, as Ed Brown. Despite old Ed's grouchiness and disdainful opinion of anyone who spoke with an accent and wasn't lily-white, Chico knew deep down that his boss had a heart of gold--and, of course, he was right. Even before the series debuted on September 13, 1974, Chico and the Man was under fire from several prominent Chicano organizations, who complained that, although Ed's garage was supposed to be in an Mexican-American area, there were no Mexicans in the cast or on the crew. This was quickly remedied when Komack hired two semi-regulars of Mexican descent: Rodolfo Hoyos as Ed's buddy Rudy and (Isaac Ruiz) as Chico's pal Mondo. Also, certain pressure groups complained that the name "Chico" was considered derogatory in many Chicano circles, resulting in a number of hastily added closeups in which Chico Rodriguez explained his true ethnic heritage and the "harmless" origin of his nickname. Finally, the writers were chastised for Ed Brown's occasional racial slurs, and as result such lines as "Get outta here--and take your flies with you" were carefully weeded out of late scripts. Eventually, a handful of African American organizations chimed in with their casting "suggestions", but Komack beat them to the punch by hiring veteran black showman Scatman Crothers to play affable neighborhood garbage collector Louie Wilson. During the second season, only Prinze, Albertson and Crothers remained of the original cast; added to the lineup was Ronny Graham as Reverend Bemis. Season three began with a two-parter introducing Della Reese as Della Rogers, an old "friendly enemy" of Ed Brown's who'd become his landlady. Things proceeded along smoothly thereafter until tragedy struck on January 27, 1977, when Freddie Prinze, who despite his "carefree" TV persona suffered from a variety of personal problems, committed suicide. Since Prinze had already taped most of the season's episodes, his death would not be addressed on the show until the beginning of Season Four (surprisingly those media pundits who assumed that, without Chico, there would be no Season Four for Chico and the Man!) At that time, Ed Brown adopted an 11-year-old Mexican orphan named Raul Garcia (played by 12-year-old Gabriel Melgar), who'd stowed away in Ed's car when he and his pal Louie had gone on a south-of-the-border fishing trip. Conveniently enough, Raul preferred to be called "Chico", enabling the series to retain its title. But audiences, already depressed by the devastating loss of Freddie Prinze, did not warm up to the Ed-Raul combination, nor did the addition to the cast of flamboyant entertainer Charo as Raul's eccentric Aunt Charo help matters any. The final episode of Chico and the Man was telecast on July 21, 1978. Throughout its run, the series had been introduced by a lively theme song, written and performed by Jose Feliciano. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Freddie PrinzeJack Albertson, (more)
 
1974  
 
Season One of Chico and the Man begins as crotchety garage owner Ed Brown (Jack Albertson), the last remaing WASP in a predominately Mexican-American neighborhood of Los Angeles, begrudgingly hires affable Hispanic youth Chico Rodriguez (Freddie Prinze) as a mechanic and Jack-of-all-trades. Although Ed is bigoted, abrasive, and stingy, lovable Chico is able to discern that the old guy is a sweetheart deep down inside, and the two men become friends--or at least, they don't try to kill each other. During the first-season episodes, Scatman Crothers makes regular drop-ins to Ed's garage in the role of neighborhood garbage collector Louie Wilson ("I'm the man who empties your can"). Less frequently seen are Bonnie Boland as letter carieer Mabel, Isaac Ruiz as Chico's friend and confidante Mando, and Rodolfo Hoyos as Ed's old buddy and verbal sparring partner Rudy. Guest stars this season include Jim Backus as a philandering husband in "The Beard", Shelley Winters as a predatory widow in "Ed Steps Out", and Sammy Davis Jr. as Himself in "Sammy Steps In." Thanks largely to Freddie Prinze's bottomless reserve of comic catchphrases ("Looking gooood!") and his warm rapport with costar Jack Albertson, Chico and the Man proved an audience favorite from the get-go, closing out its first season as America's third highest-rated TV program (only All in the Family and Sanford and Son attracted more viewers). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Jack AlbertsonFreddie Prinze, (more)