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Ami Foster Movies

1991  
 
Add Danielle Steel's 'Changes' to Queue Add Danielle Steel's 'Changes' to top of Queue  
In this made for TV movie based on Danielle Steele's novel, Cheryl Ladd portrays a successful New York television anchorwoman. When she marries a successful surgeon in Los Angeles, romance becomes difficult with their careers on opposite ends of the country. ~ Tana Hobart, Rovi

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Starring:
Cheryl LaddMichael Nouri, (more)
 
1988  
 
A party held by DJ (Candace Cameron) in honor of Kimmy's 12th birthday degenerates into a shouting match which may completely destroy DJ's lifelong friendship with Kimmy (Andrea Barber). Elsewhere, Danny (Bob Saget) is removed from his sportscasting job in order to cohost the morning talk show "Wake Up San Francisco" with a very attractive--and highly unpredictable--young woman. Lori Loughlin makes her first series appearance as Danny's new coworker Rebecca "Becky" Donaldson. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1987  
 
Television star Gary Coleman gives the kids a lesson on how to live and play safely in their neighborhoods. ~ Iotis Erlewine, Rovi

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1986  
 
Based on a toy manufactured by Coleco, this children's feature follows the adventures of the lovable Wrinkles characters. ~ Iotis Erlewine, Rovi

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1986  
 
Add Punky Brewster: Season 03 to Queue Add Punky Brewster: Season 03 to top of Queue  
Canceled by NBC at the end of its second season in 1986, the family sitcom Punky Brewster was revived in off-network syndication one year later -- partly due to public demand, and partly to add more episodes to the series' surprisingly successful network-rerun package. Back on duty are Soleil Moon Frye as feisty 11-year-old Penelope "Punky" Brewster and George Gaynes as her irascible-but-lovable foster father, Henry Warnimont. Also on hand are Punky's loyal school chums Cheri (Cherie Johnson), Margaux (Ami Foster), and Allen (Casey Ellison), as well as Cherie's legal guardian, registered nurse Mrs. Betty Johnson (Susie Garrett). The first of the syndicated episodes is "Reading, Writing, and Rock & Roll," featuring the then-hot singing group DeBarge. In a later two-part installment, Punky's beloved dog, Brandon, runs away from home, only to end up being "adopted" by a boy who is exactly Punky's age -- and who is about to leave for California. Also worth noting is "It's a Dog Life," in which series regular George Gaynes plays the dual role of Henry Warnimont and his man-about-town brother Lars. And of course, season three has its share of "very special episodes," notably "The Anniversary," in which Punky's friend Cherie is overcome with grief on the anniversary of her parents' deaths. In the season finale, Henry abandons his career as a photographer to open up his own restaurant -- and since it was Punky's idea to make this career move, the new establishment is christened "Punky's Place." ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Soleil Moon FryeGeorge Gaynes, (more)
 
1986  
 
Add Punky Brewster: Season 04 to Queue Add Punky Brewster: Season 04 to top of Queue  
After two years on NBC and an additional two in off-network syndication, the warmhearted family sitcom Punky Brewster closes shop at the end of its fourth season. Still starring on the series are several of the actors who had been around since season one: Soleil Moon Frye as spunky 12-year-old Penelope "Punky" Brewster; George Gaynes as her lovably grumpy foster father, Henry Warnimont, who has abandoned his career as a photographer to set up his own restaurant; Cherie Johnson as Punky's best friend, Cherie; Susie Garrett as Nurse Betty Johnson, Cherie's legal guardian; and Ami Foster and Casey Ellison as Punky's classmates Margaux (the snooty one) and Allen (the funny one). Highlights during the series' valedictory season include "Crushed," in which Punky carries a torch for an older man (four whole years older!); "Going to Camp," which is just what Punky and her pals do; "Brandon's Commercial," wherein Punky's pet dog is given a shot at TV stardom; "Passed Away at Punky's Place," in which Punky and Cherie mistake a narcoleptic man for a corpse; and "See You in Court," focusing on Betty Johnson's legal misadventures before a judge played by former Jeffersons regular Roxie Roker. In addition, there were a handful of obligatory "very special episodes," in which Punky helps a youngster who is being battered by her mother, Cheri provides emergency assistance to a woman going into labor in a stalled elevator, and a deaf girl resents Punky's efforts to make friends. Like many another sitcom, Punky Brewster winds up its four-year run with a wedding episode. Unlike many another sitcom, the "groom" in this instance turns out to be Brandon the Dog! ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Soleil Moon FryeGeorge Gaynes, (more)
 
1985  
 
Add Punky Brewster: Season 02 to Queue Add Punky Brewster: Season 02 to top of Queue  
Spunky nine-year-old Penelope "Punky" Brewster (Soleil Moon Frye) and her foster father, middle-aged bachelor photographer Henry Warnimont (George Gaynes), continue to adjust themselves to one another's presence (sometimes successfully) as the heartwarming sitcom Punky Brewster begins its second season on NBC. Likewise coming back for more is Susie Garrett as nurse Betty Johnson, Henry's upstairs neighbor. New to the series this year is T.K. Carter as schoolteacher Mike Fulton, who is extremely simpatico with Punky and her classmates Cherie (Cherie Johnson), Margaux (Ami Foster), and Allen (Casey Ellison). The season opens with an episode featuring a guest-star turn by boxer Marvelous Marvin Hagler. In subsequent stories, former Happy Days regular Cathy Silvers appears as a confused "client" when Punky and Cherie establish their own baby-sitting service; teacher Mike Fulton helps Punky through a difficult emotional crisis by revealing that he, like she, was adopted; Allen learns a vital lesson when he foolishly pokes fun at a mentally challenged classmate; and Peter Billingsley, star of the classic theatrical feature A Christmas Story, is seen, appropriately enough, in the series' Yuletide episode (but he doesn't shoot his eye out!). Perhaps the most memorable of the second-season Punky Brewsters is the two-part "The Perils of Punky," in which Soleil Moon Frye plays a dual role. With the season's final episode, "Accidents Happen," featuring Buzz Aldrin in a cameo role, Punky Brewster's NBC run came to an end. However, the series proved so successful in rerun syndication that it was revived as a syndicated series in 1987 -- nearly two years after its initial cancellation. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Soleil Moon FryeGeorge Gaynes, (more)
 
1984  
 
Child actress Soleil Moon Frye played the title role in the lightweight half-hour sitcom Punky Brewster. After being abandoned by her parents, resourceful eight-year-old Penelope "Punky" Brewster moved into an an empty Chicago apartment with her little dog, Brandon. They were discovered and subsequently adopted by the building's owner, middle-aged photographer Henry Warnimont (George Gaynes), the archetypal "old grouch with the heart of gold." Punky quickly became friends with Cherie Johnson (played, amazingly enough, by Cherie Johnson), who lived in the apartment upstairs with her legal guardian, registered nurse Betty Johnson (Susie Garrett). The two youngsters attended school with their other friends, stuck-up Margaux Kramer (Ami Foster) and mischievous Allen Anderson (Casey Ellison). Their teacher during season one was Mrs. Morton (Dody Goodman), succeeded in season two by Mike Fulton (T.K. Carter). Also on hand during the series' inaugural season was Eddie Deezen as the apartment's goofy maintenance man, Eddie Malvin. The series debuted September 18, 1984, on the NBC network, whose programming head, Brandon Tartikoff, had actually had a childhood friend named Punky Brewster (still alive at the time the series was produced -- and, incidentally, generously compensated for the use of her name). Though the series lasted only two seasons on NBC, it proved to be a huge hit in rerun syndication after its cancellation on September 7, 1986. Thus, beginning in the fall of 1987, new episodes of Punky Brewster were seen in first-run syndication with virtually the entire cast (except for T.K. Carter) intact. The property remained in production for an additional two years, during which time the character of Henry Warnimont forsook his photography career to open up a restaurant, appropriately christened "Punky's Place." And from 1985 to 1989, an animated cartoon spin-off featuring the same cast in voice-over roles, It's Punky Brewster, was seen on NBC's Saturday-morning manifest. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Soleil Moon FryeGeorge Gaynes, (more)
 
1984  
 
Add Punky Brewster: Season 01 to Queue Add Punky Brewster: Season 01 to top of Queue  
Abandoned by her parents, eight-year-old Penelope "Punky" Brewster and her little dog, Brandon, set up a home of their own in an abandoned Chicago apartment, where they are discovered by the building's manager, Henry Warnimont (George Gaynes). A bachelor with no great love for either kids or dogs, Henry nonetheless takes a liking to Punky and Brandon, and arranges with the authorities to have the two castaways live with him -- temporarily of course. Thus begins season one of the NBC sitcom Punky Brewster, in which the wide-eyed, spunky heroine brings happiness and purpose to the life of grumpy old Mr. Warnimont -- and several others along the way. During the series' initial season, Eddie Deezen appears as eccentric apartment-building maintenance man Eddie Malvin, while Dody Goodman is seen as Punky's schoolteacher, Mrs. Morton. Both Deezen and Goodman would be gone from the series before long, but three other characters introduced this year, Punky's classmates Cherie Johnson (played by Cherie Johnson!), Margaux Kramer (Ami Foster), and Allen Anderson (Casey Ellison), would "go the distance" right to the end of the run. Likewise seen throughout the series' four seasons, both on and off the network, is Henry's upstairs neighbor Betty Johnson (Susie Garrett), a registered nurse who has been legal guardian to Cheri ever since the deaths of the girl's parents. Once past its three-part opener, "Punky Finds a Home," the series settles into a unique pattern. While most of the subsequent episodes run a full half-hour, others ("Punky Gets Her Own Room," "Gone Fishin," "Go to Sleep") run a scant 15 minutes each. This is because Punky Brewster was originally telecast on Sunday evenings, just after NBC's weekly football telecasts; whenever a game ran overtime, Punky lost half of its 30-minute time slot, necessitating a stockpile of shorter episodes. Conversely, Punky Brewster's season-one finale, "Fenster Hall," ran a full hour -- that is, it was seen in two half-hour segments over a period of two weeks. In addition to bringing the season to a lively close, this elongated episode was also intended as the pilot for a series starring Billy Lombardo as a resourceful orphan named T.C. Fenestra. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Soleil Moon FryeGeorge Gaynes, (more)
 
1989  
PG  
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Shelly Long stars in this comedy as a spoiled Beverly Hills wife who decides--wanting to prove her husband's accusation of her selfishness wrong--to become the leader of her daughter's wilderness group. Though taking them on outings at the mall rather than in the woods, she later must prove her worth as a legitimate troop leader. After some zany incidents, all parties learn lessons of teamwork and selflessness. ~ Kristie Hassen, Rovi

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Starring:
Shelley LongCraig T. Nelson, (more)