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  1. Bea Dallas. ... assistant: NRW / assistant to the producers / program coordinator / assistant to producers / assistant / unspecified assistant / assistant to executive producers / assistant to producer (172 episodes, 1977-1984) Jim Rice. ... stage manager (122 episodes, 1976-1982) Bob Schulz.

  2. Three's Company: Created by Don Nicholl, Michael Ross, Bernard West, Larry Gelbart. With John Ritter, Joyce DeWitt, Richard Kline, Don Knotts. The misadventures of two women and one man living in one apartment and their neighbors.

    • (16K)
    • Comedy
    • TV-PG
    • 1977-03-15
  3. 2 days ago · The main cast consisted of several talented actors and actresses who played the memorable characters in the series. Here are the details of the cast members and the characters they portrayed in Three's Company. The most popular cast member today is John Ritter (Jack Tripper). Actor online popularity data updated today, May 9, 2024.

    • Overview
    • Characters and cast
    • References

    This page lists all of the primary and supporting cast members of Three's Company, as well as guest characters central to the storyline of the series.

    Primary characters
    Secondary characters
    Recurring characters
    Cast changes
    had many cast changes over its run. The first of these changes took place in the spring of 1979 with the relocation of the Ropers to their own television series (The Ropers), which revolved around Helen and Stanley, and their neighbors in a townhouse community after Stanley had sold the apartment building. Man About The House had similarly spun the Ropers off for the series George and Mildred. Two changes took place in the fall of 1979, at the beginning of the fourth season. The first was the addition of Lana, an older woman who chased Jack around. She liked to pursue him but he did not appreciate her advances. Since Ann Wedgeworth did not appreciate her diminishing role in the series, Lana was dropped from the show without any explanation before the season was half over. The other new addition that fall was the new building manager, Ralph Furley (played by Don Knotts), whose brother Bart bought the building from the Ropers. Mr. Furley pursued Lana unsuccessfully, as she unsuccessfully pursued Jack. Unlike Lana, he appeared until the end of the series. Season five (1980–1981) marked the beginning of contract re-negotiations and sparked friction on the set. When Somers' demands for a heavily increased salary (from $30,000 to $150,000 per episode, plus 10% of the show's profits) were not met, Somers went on a strike of sorts. Executives believed that a complete loss of Somers could damage the program's popularity so a compromise was reached. Somers, who was still under contract, continued to appear in the series, but only in the one-minute tag scene of a handful of episodes. Somers' scenes were taped on separate days from the show's regular taping; she did not appear on set with any of the show's other cast members. According to the story, her character had returned to her hometown of Fresno to care for her ailing mother, and was only seen when she telephoned her former roommates, and they recounted that week's adventures to her. This arrangement continued for one season. Somers' contract was not renewed and Chrissy's place in the apartment was taken by her clumsy cousin Cindy Snow (Jenilee Harrison). Another replacement, Terri Alden (played by Priscilla Barnes), a clever, sometimes sassy nurse, joined the cast in the sixth season (1981–1982). In the script, Cindy was to move to college to fulfill her dream of becoming a veterinarian, and would continue to visit throughout the sixth season. The show ended with the departure of all cast members except Ritter, who moved on to the spin-off Three's a Crowd, itself based upon Man About the House’s spin-off Robin's Nest. After more than 30 years of not talking to each other, Suzanne Somers and Joyce DeWitt finally made up and reunited for Suzanne's web series Breaking Through which aired February 2, 2012.

    1."Three's Company" at the Museum of Broadcast Communications. Museum.tv (1977-03-15). Retrieved on 2011-02-03.

    2.Suzanne Somers Breaking Through. CafeMom. Retrieved on 31 August 2012.

  4. 1 Episode 1978. Ziggy Steinberg. 1 Episode 1978. Phillip Hahn. 1 Episode 1977. Susan Sisko. 1 Episode 1979. Jim Rogers. 1 Episode 1978.

    • Dave Powers
    • 8
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  6. Mar 30, 2024 · Three's Company, The Ropers, Win. Norman Fell (born Norman Noah Feld, March 24, 1924 – December 14, 1998), was an American actor of film and television, most famous for his role as landlord Mr. Roper on the sitcom Three's Company and its spin-off, The Ropers. Early in his career, he was billed as Norman Feld.

  7. Jenilee Harrison. Cindy Snow (42 Episodes) Jordan Charney. Frank Angelino (10 Episodes), Mr. Layton (1 Episode) Paul Ainsley. Jim the Bartender (10 Episodes) Ann Wedgeworth. Lana Shields (9 Episodes) William Pierson.

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