Some content on this page has been sourced from and/or is being used on another Wikia website: Happy Days Wiki.
Laverne & Shirley is an American sitcom that ran on ABC-TV from January 27, 1976 to May 10, 1983. It starred Penny Marshall as Laverne DeFazio and Cindy Williams as Shirley Feeney, single roommates who work as bottle cappers in a fictitious Milwaukee brewery called Shotz Brewery. The series was known for Marshall and Williams' physical comedy.
The show was a spin-off from Happy Days, as the two lead characters were originally introduced on that series as acquaintances of Fonzie (Henry Winkler). Set in roughly the same time period, the timeline started in approximately 1958, when the series began, through 1967, when the series ended. As with Happy Days, it was made by Paramount Television, created by Garry Marshall (along with Lowell Ganz and Mark Rothman) and executive produced by Garry Marshall, Edward K. Milkis, and Thomas L. Miller.
Plot[]
Opening sequence[]
At the start of each episode, for the first five seasons, Laverne and Shirley are skipping down a Milwaukee street, arm in arm, reciting a Yiddish-American hopscotch chant: "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 Schlemiel! Schlimazel! Hasenpfeffer Incorporated," which then leads into the series' theme song titled "Making Our Dreams Come True," performed by Cyndi Grecco. The hopscotch chant came from Penny Marshall's childhood. In Season 1, the title of the show read "Laverne DeFazio & Shirley Feeney", from Season 2 onward, the show was retitled "Laverne & Shirley".
In seasons 6–7, the opening sequence consisted of Laverne and Shirley leaving their apartment building, lip-syncing to their original version of the chant, and then a re-recorded version of the theme song is played. During the final season, Laverne watches a group of children performing their own version of the chant.
Setting: Milwaukee[]
For the first five seasons, from 1976 to 1980, the show was set in Milwaukee (executive producer Thomas L. Miller's home town), taking place from roughly 1958–59 through the early 1960s. Shotz Brewery bottle cappers and best friends, Laverne DeFazio and Shirley Feeney, live in a basement apartment, where they communicate with upstairs neighbors Lenny and Squiggy by screaming up the dumbwaiter shaft connecting their apartments. Also included in the show are Laverne's father, Frank De Fazio, proprietor of the Pizza Bowl, and Edna Babish, the apartment building's landlady, who would later marry Frank. Shirley maintained an off-again on-again romance with dancer/singer/boxer Carmine Ragusa. During this period, characters from Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley would make occasional guest appearances on each other's shows. During the fifth season, the girls went in to the U.S. Army, and they contended with a tough-as-nails drill sergeant named Alvinia T. Plout (Vicki Lawrence).
Michael McKean and David L. Lander created the characters of Lenny and Squiggy while both were theater students at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, PA. Lander told an interviewer in 2006 that they created the characters while high on marijuana. After graduating, they continued to perform the characters in live comedy routines before joining the show's cast.
Setting: Burbank[]
For the fifth season in 1980, Laverne and Shirley and their friends all moved from Milwaukee to Burbank, California. The girls took jobs at a department store, Frank and Edna managed a Texas BBQ restaurant called Cowboy Bill's, Carmine delivered singing telegrams and sought work as an actor, and Lenny and Squiggy started a talent agency called Squignowski Talent Agency. From this point until the end of the series' run, Laverne & Shirley was set in the mid-1960s. In one of the shots in the show's new opening sequence, the girls are seen kissing a 1964 poster of The Beatles. With each season, a new year passed in the timeline of the show, starting with 1965 in the 1980–81 season, and ending in 1967 with Carmine heading off for Broadway, to star in the musical Hair.
When the show moved to California, two new characters are added: Sonny St. Jacques, a stunt man, landlord of the Burbank apartment building and love interest for Laverne; as well as Rhonda Lee, the girls' voluptuous neighbor and an aspiring actress.
Laverne without Shirley[]
In March 1982, Cindy Williams became pregnant with her first child. In May, Williams and her then manager-husband Bill Hudson presented a list of demands to accommodate her pregnancy and pending child birth, which Paramount refused. In August, two episodes into production of the series' eighth season, Williams left the show and filed a $20 million lawsuit against Paramount. The case was later settled out of court and Williams was released from her contract. Alas, sources say, if it would've been Marshall who left, not Williams, the show would've then ended on the spot. It was the brother-sister familial relationship of Penny and Garry, that kept the show running, even though they had a bumpy siblinghood.
As for Shirley, she quickly falls in love in the two episodes produced before Williams' departure, and marries Army medic Walter Meany (making her Shirley Feeney Meany). In Williams' final scenes, Shirley discovers that she is pregnant. Shirley's absence is explained with a note left for Laverne saying that she had left town quickly to join her husband overseas.
Despite the departure of Williams, ratings held steady and Laverne & Shirley ranked at #25 for the 1982–83 season. Syndication asked Penny Marshall to return for a ninth year, but she insisted that the show move its production base from Los Angeles to New York. Eyeing the cost of such an endeavor, and given the age of the show, Syndication quietly canceled Laverne & Shirley in May 1983 after 178 episodes.
The final episode was produced like a backdoor pilot for a spin-off series for Carmine, which showed him moving to New York City to star in the Broadway show Hair. Laverne was seen only at the beginning and middle of the episode. The spin-off show never materialized.
Characters[]
Laverne Marie De Fazio (Penny Marshall) – Laverne DeFazio is known for being a tough-talking tomboy. She grew up in Brooklyn with her Italian immigrant parents. Laverne's parents moved to Milwaukee, where her mother died. Laverne works alongside best friend and roommate Shirley. Milk and Pepsi is Laverne's favorite drink. Her trademark is the script letter "L" monogrammed on her shirts and sweaters, an idea Marshall got from seeing a vintage sweater in the wardrobe department with an initial sewn in the upper left corner, something that would help the audience remember that she is Laverne.
Shirley Wilhelmina Feeney (Cindy Williams) – Shirley is the perky, positive one. She also tends to be meek, while Laverne is more outspoken. She later becomes a huge fan of teen-idol Fabian. She has an overbearing mother named Lily (Pat Carroll), who expects more from her than what she can give. Shirley is sensitive and she tends to overreact. When Shirley tries to hold back a laugh, she bites her knuckle on her index finger. Shirley works at Shotz brewery with Laverne. Her lucky charm is a stuffed cat called Boo Boo Kitty.
Leonard "Lenny" Kosnowski (Michael McKean) is a lovable goof who pesters Laverne and Shirley, along with his best friend and roommate Squiggy, both of whom live upstairs from Laverne and Shirley's lower-level apartment. Lenny works as a truck driver at the Shotz brewery. Lenny says that, while he is not completely sure, he thinks his last name (Kosnowski) is Polish for "Help, there's a hog in my kitchen".
Andrew "Squiggy" Squiggman (David L. Lander) works and lives with childhood friend Lenny. Squiggy makes nearly every entrance with his trademark "Hello" said in a comically dopey voice. In the final season, Squiggy's lookalike sister, Squendoline is introduced.
Frank De Fazio (Phil Foster) is Laverne's father who runs the Pizza Bowl, a local hang out. He later opens up Cowboy Bills in Burbank, California. Although he could be harsh and lose his temper, he did have a heart of gold. He loves Laverne very much, having been her only parent for years. His pet name for his daughter was "Muffin". Frank is also protective of Shirley, becoming somewhat of a surrogate father to her since her family was far away.
Carmine Ragusa (Eddie Mekka) is Shirley's high-school sweetheart and on-again, off-again romance. "The Big Ragoo" is a part-time boxer and former Golden Gloves boxing champion who owns a dance studio and is constantly working to make it big as a dancer and singer. In the final episode of the series, he auditions for the musical Hair, at last landing a major role on Broadway.
Edna Babish De Fazio (Betty Garrett) is the five-times-divorced landlady who eventually marries Laverne's father. Edna also occasionally sings and dances in the local brewery talent shows. When the series was extended beyond the intended final season, actress Betty Garrett committed to another project and was written out as having left Frank.
Big Rosie Greenbaum (Carole Ita White) is the girls' childhood nemesis. She married a rich doctor and rubs this in the girls' faces, though they make fun of the fact that he is a proctologist. She is Laverne's rival and upsets her by calling her a "bimbo". Big Rosie and fellow Milwaukee classmate Terri Buttefuco both return in the season-seven episode "Class of '56".
Rhonda Lee (Leslie Easterbrook) is a tall, voluptuous, ditzy blonde actress/singer/dancer/model trying to make it big. She is Laverne and Shirley's neighbor and a regular character after they move to Burbank. Rhonda usually (always?) refers to herself in the third person, by her first name. Rhonda often bursts into Laverne and Shirley's apartment (occasionally at inopportune times, much like Lenny and Squiggy often do) to borrow things without really asking and to brag about her social engagements or romantic dates with desirable men with the intention of making the girls envious.
Sonny St. Jacques (Ed Marinaro) is a stuntman and Laverne and Shirley's landlord in Burbank. A tall, handsome, muscular man, Sonny is often seen with his shirt off or open. He was intended as a love interest for Laverne in the sixth season. After several episodes in Burbank, Sonny was written out of the show and rarely is ever mentioned again. (In reality, Marinaro left the series to star in Hill Street Blues.)
Mork & Mindy Connection[]
Laverne & Shirley has an oddly defined connection with Mork & Mindy within the Happy Days 'Universe'. To begin with, all three appear connected, with Mork relaying to Mindy one of his adventures back in 1950s Milwaukee, on his second trip there, when he encountered Fonzie, and went on a disastrous fact finding date with Laverne.
Mork returns to the 50s and the Cunningham's again in Mork Returns, bearing greetings to Richie from Mindy, so the shows remain within the same Universe.
Thereafter from Season 2 however, things shift and Laverne & Shirley specifically are referenced as in house gags and like the TV show they are. Despite the fact that Mork met Laverne. Mork tells Mindy that if they moved to Latvia they would be known as 'Laverne & Shirley' in Little Orphan Morkie. Mindy hums/sings the Laverne & Shirley theme tune in The Mork Syndrome, and in Putting the Ork Back in Mork Mork groggily suggests moving Laverne & Shirley to Thursday Nights as a punch drunk decision, poking fun at the ABC execs who did just that, causing the shows ratings to drop.