Before Degrassi Junior High and Seventh Heaven, there was
The Facts of Life--a feel-good sitcom where a lesson was learned
at the end of each episode. Set in an all-girl boarding school, the series
spanned nine seasons, countless hairdos, and an array of cast members and
guest stars--some of whom (George Clooney, Helen Hunt, Molly Ringwald)
would become very, very famous in the future. But in the 29 episodes
that cover the first two seasons, the series introduces TV viewers to characters
that represent girls everyone knows--Blair, the rich, spoiled girl; Natalie,
the chubby smart aleck; Jo, the rebellious tomboy; and Tootie, the rollerskating
tattletale.
A spin-off of Diff'rent Strokes, The Facts of Life was designed
as a showcase for Charlotte Rae, who played jack-of-all-trades den mother
Edna Garrett. But the show's central plots all revolved around the girls.
Back in 1979, certain words weren't common on television. So when Blair
tries to make a schoolmate feel bad, insinuating that the girl is a lesbian,
she uses the word "strange" instead of the "L" word. The series is a coming-of-age
story that plays to its target audience of teenage girls. While much of
the humor isn't very sophisticated, the homespun messages the show spread
are right on target, whether it's dealing with eating disorders, sexual
promiscuity, or acknowledging that handicapped people are people, too.
From 1979 to 1988, the girls would grow into young women who go to college,
get jobs, and lose their virginity (not necessarily in that order). But
in the early seasons, there's a sweet innocence that still rings true today. |
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