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Not What You Meant?  There are 4 definitions for Too Good to Be True.  Also try: Small Wonder.

Small Wonder (TV series)

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Small Wonder

The cast of Small Wonder during the first season.
Format SciFi Sitcom
Created by Howard Leeds
Starring Dick Christie
Marla Pennington
Jerry Supiran
Tiffany Brissette
Emily Schulman
Country of origin Flag of the United States United States
No. of episodes 96
Production
Running time approx. 22:15 (per episode)
Broadcast
Original channel first-run syndication
Original run September 7, 1985February 9, 1989
External links
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

Small Wonder was an American science fiction television sitcom in first-run syndication from 1985 to 1989. Created under Metromedia Productions, Small Wonder became acquired by 20th Century Fox Television in 1986. As of 2007, the show has not been released on DVD, nor are there any known plans for a DVD release of the series.

Contents

Premise

Ted Lawson, a professional Roboticist and cybernetic architect, has secretly built V.I.C.I (Voice Input Child Identicant), a Domestic robot and Gynoid. V.I.C.I. (Vicki) was engineered to perform house work at Superhuman speed and designed in the guise of a 10-year-old Caucasian female. Ted had originally intended for V.I.C.I. to help out the lives of disabled veterans. Vicki’s Epigenetic robotics technology falls short of Ted’s scientific aspirations, chiefly in the fields of Pattern recognition and emotional intelligence. Ted's boss at United Robotics, Brandon Brindle, is a man who often passes his work to underlings like Ted, yet rushes to take credit for Ted's hard work. Fearing that his fraudulent boss will once again plagiarize his achievements, Ted conceals the V.I.C.I. Project from The Powers That Be by claiming her to be his adopted daughter. During the pilot episode (Episode 1, Season 1 - September 7 1985), Ted brings Vicki home to his wife Joan and their pre-pubescent son Jamie. Coincidently Brandon Brindle, Ted's boss at United Robotronics, lives next door, along with his wife Bonnie and their young daughter Harriet. These invasive, often spiteful neighbors, led by the madcap Harriet, foster much of the show’s Situation comedy and narrative formulas. For example, "Vicki’s Adoption" (Episode 10, Season 1 - November 9 1985) has Bonnie notifying child welfare of her suspicions and encouraging them to probe the Lawson household. The Lawson familiy deceives authority by dressing Jamie in drag (V.I.C.I. Drag would become a recurring gag), telling labyrinthine lies (another recurring gag), forging adoption papers and utilizing Vicki's robotic powers. In addition to Ted, Joan and Jamie's struggle to suppress Vicki's Personal identity (or lack thereof), much of the show's humor derived from the Gynoid's literal interpretations of language.

Characters

  • Victoria "Vicki" Ann-Smith Lawson (Tiffany Brissette) - A robot modeled after a real human girl. She has real hair and realistic skin. She possesses super human strength and speed and runs on atomic power. Vicki has an access panel in her back, an electric socket in her right armpit, and an RS-232 serial port under her left armpit. Vicki's artificial intelligence is not perfect. She is incapable of emotion, speaks in a monotone voice, and interprets most commands literally. She does manage to blend in to the real world to a point. Vicki attends school, and no one but her family members and a few trusted friends know her secret. Occasionally VICI had rare abilities that seemed to only appear in one or two episodes, such as elongating her neck to reach a door's keyhole, shrinking her size to become as small as a doll or making herself ten feet tall to get noticed by everyone. One recurring theme was that VICI had a superpowered learning system which enabled her to improve upon something such as a new detergent or to greatly increase the gas mileage of cars, to which Ted and Jamie see it as a chance to get rich quick, only to find her improvements were not perfect. Vicki lives in a large cabinet in Jamie's bedroom, and becomes more human over the course of the show.
  • Ted Lawson (Dick Christie) - Jamie's father. Vicki's creator. A robotics engineer. He originally created Vicki as a domestic servant whose girl-child appearance was only meant to be a selling point.
  • Joan Lawson (Marla Pennington) - Ted's wife. Joan regards Vicki as a real person more than anyone else on the show does.
  • Jamie Lawson (Jerry Supiran) - The 12 year old son of Ted and Joan.
  • Harriet Brindle (Emily Schulman) - The young and nosy little neighbors' daughter who has a crush on Jamie.
  • Brandon Brindle (William Bogert) - Harriet's father. Becomes Ted Lawson's boss after stealing Ted's ideas.
  • Bonnie Brindle (Edie McClurg) - Harriet's mother. Written out after the second season.
  • Ida Mae Brindle (Alice Ghostley) - Brandon's outspoken, know-it-all sister, who is nearly identical to his wife Bonnie.
  • Reggie Williams (Paul C. Scott) - Jamie's best friend.

Criticism

In 2002, Robert Blanco, TV critic for USA Today, listed it as a contender for one of the worst TV shows of all time, [1], and according to the BBC, it "is widely considered one of the worst low-budget sitcoms of all time." [2] Since the cancellation of the show, many of the actors and production staff, particularly the stars of the show, have not appeared on any other radio, television, or film program to date.

References in other television Series

  • Family Guy: In the episode "Brian Goes Back to College", Tiffany Brissette is seen at the Small Wonder booth at a convention of fans of 1980s TV series.
  • I'm With Busey: In the episode "Technology: Rise of the Robots", Gary Busey is fooled into believing that a young girl, dressed and acting like V.I.C.I., is actually a robot (series regular Adam de la Pena includes a short explanation describing Small Wonder and Brissette).

Urban myth

An urban myth, circulated widely in the mid-1990s, claimed that the actor playing Jamie Lawson (Jerry Supiran) was in fact Billy Corgan, lead singer of the rock band Smashing Pumpkins[3]. As Corgan was already 18 years old when the show debuted, the myth is untrue.

International airings

In the United Kingdom, the show was screened regionally on the ITV Network.and in the early 90s on Sky One. In Italy, the show appeared in the mid-1980's on Italia 1 network and was titled "Super Vicky". In India, China, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and other Asian countries, Small Wonder was syndicated on the Star TV Network in the mid-1990s. In Latin America, the show appeared on TV Globo in Brazil and was called "Super Vicky", VTV (Venezolana de Television) in Venezuela between 1987 and 1990, and Frecuencia Latina in Peru, where it was called "La Pequeña Maravilla". In the Philippines, it also formerly aired on GMA Network in the mid-1980s, and on ABC in 1992.

References

External links

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Small Wonder (TV series) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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