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Sisters is an American family drama television series that aired from May 11, 1991 to May 4, 1996 on NBC. The series was created by Ron Cowen and Daniel Lipman, who were also the executive producers and showrunners.

Overview[]

Sisters focused on four very different sisters living in Winnetka, Illinois. Their recently deceased father, Thomas Reed, a doctor, had been absent and a workaholic, while their long-suffering mother, Beatrice, turned to alcoholism to cope with his neglect and affairs. Having always wanted sons, their father had called the girls by male versions of their full names: Alexandra was called Alex; Theodora, Teddy; Georgiana, Georgie; and Francesca, Frankie.

For the first two seasons, each episode began with the sisters' weekly ritual of chatting in a steam bath together,[2][3] but switched to a more traditional opening sequence beginning with the 1992–1993 season: glossy, black-and-white filmed scenes of the sisters engaging in various activities during both their childhood and adult years. Initially, the only soundtrack used for the opening was the sounds of the characters, but in the fall of 1993 a piano solo composed by John Debney was added as theme music.

Most episodes of the show featured a number of flashbacks, in which the characters would interact with or simply observe their younger selves (played by younger actresses).[3] Although the show was a drama with soap opera–style storylines,[3] the show was also quirky and offbeat in the style of other shows at the time like CBS's Northern Exposure.

Season One[]

One year after her husband's death, Beatrice reluctantly sold the family home to move into a seniors' condominium building. Depressed, Beatrice relapses on alcohol and is arrested for driving under the influence. Teddy comes back into town from California to discover her ex-husband Mitch is dating her younger sister Frankie. Alex believes her husband Wade is cheating on her, but instead discovers he is a crossdresser. Bea goes to court for her DUI charge; the judge on her case, Truman Ventner, is an acquaintance of hers who also happens to live in her building. Teddy pursues Mitch and although he resists her, they eventually spend a night together; shortly afterward Mitch and Frankie (who is unaware of the encounter) announce their engagement and plan a quick wedding. Teddy breaks up their wedding drunk with a shotgun; Frankie decides not to reschedule the wedding and she and Mitch stop seeing each other. Ashamed of how her behavior is affecting the family and especially her daughter Cat, Teddy leaves Cat with Mitch and announces she will return to California alone. Georgie's son Evan is diagnosed with leukemia, and Teddy decides to stay in Winnetka.

Season Two[]

Georgie attempts to balance her needs with Evan's during his treatment. Alex discovers Wade has been cheating on her for six months with a former patient, and she and Wade divorce. Reed (Ashley Judd) reacts by rebelling and dropping out of school. Frankie makes a financial investment in Mitch's fish market; while filing paperwork at City Hall, they decide to elope. Teddy discovers she is pregnant with Mitch's baby following their earlier brief encounter; she tells the family that she became pregnant after a one-night stand. Mitch eventually finds out the truth, but Frankie never does. Truman and Beatrice begin a relationship. Teddy begins a job doing window dressing at a fashion boutique, then suffers a miscarriage. Alex begins dating her plumber, Victor, while Wade tries to win her back. After Evan's favorite teacher is dismissed for being HIV-positive, Georgie runs for the school board, but narrowly loses. Teddy is let go from the fashion boutique, embarks on a brief career as a "Wonderful You" makeup saleslady, and begins her clothing design career when during an (unsuccessful) makeup sales party, Alex's socialite friends notice Teddy's hand-painted blouse and demand to order blouses of their own. Alex and Wade decide to reconcile. Frankie discovers she cannot carry a child; following a failed adoption, she asks Georgie to be a surrogate mother for her baby.

Season Three[]

Alex plans an elaborate ceremony and reception at her house for Truman and Beatrice's wedding, but they decide to elope; Reed and Kirby (Paul Rudd) are married there instead. Georgie gives birth to Frankie's son Thomas George after a car accident; Georgie has difficulty seeing him as her sister's child. Alex and Teddy feud due to Alex's jealousy of Teddy's newfound success as a clothing designer. Simon Bolt (Mark Frankel) invests in Teddy's fashion design company but later sells it to a Texan investor without consulting Teddy. Teddy walks away from her company when the new owner does not respect her artistic vision. A Hollywood producer makes a TV movie of the family's surrogacy story. Alex is diagnosed with breast cancer, which leads her to doing a standup comedy act about her cancer experience. Frankie and Mitch divorce and spar over custody of Thomas George.

Season Four[]

Cat is attacked and raped by a college acquaintance; James Falconer (George Clooney) is assigned to investigate the case. He is able to help Cat remember her attacker, Kyle, and he is arrested. However the prosecution cannot prove its case and Kyle is found not guilty only to be shot and killed on the courthouse steps by a previous victim. Frankie quits her executive job and buys the Sweet Sixteen diner. Teddy and Falconer run into each other at an AA meeting and begin dating. Trevor rebels and is sent to boarding school, then runs away from the school and disappears. Georgie falls into a depression about her perceived failure as a parent and considers suicide, but decides against it and asks for help. Truman is diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and initially refuses to tell Beatrice. The stress of Trevor's disappearance leads Georgie and John to separate. Alex gets her own talk show with a lesbian producer named Norma (Nora Dunn). Alex meets Big Al (Robert Klein) when he agrees to sponsor her talk show; she initially dislikes him but they soon begin dating. A fifth sister, Charlotte Bennett (Jo Anderson), is introduced. Charlotte is a cancer patient who needs a bone marrow donation from a relative. Although none of the sisters are a match, she receives the bone marrow from an unrelated donor. Keeping the customary manner in which her half-sisters go by male versions of their full names, Charley is brought into the family and welcomed, primarily through Frankie's effort and determination. Alex and Big Al marry; on their wedding night he is arrested for tax evasion. Georgie and John reunite after realizing they cannot control what happens to Trevor. Reed returns for a visit and gives birth to Halsey. Trevor finally returns from the streets when Winnetka is hit by a tornado, and Falconer and Teddy marry on a plane that is caught in the storm.

Season Five[]

Falconer is killed. His murder was ordered by a criminal he was about to testify against in court. Georgie begins seeing a new therapist, Dr. Caspian (Daniel Gerroll), who manipulates her into believing she had been molested by her father. Frankie inherits a boxer, Lucky (John Wesley Shipp), from a former client, and eventually begins a relationship with him. A viewer with terminal cancer asks Alex to take care of her daughter, Roxie (Kathryn Zaremba); Alex wants to adopt the little girl, but her father returns and they move away together. Unable to cope with Falconer's death, Teddy relapses with alcohol. Big Al is released from prison early and runs for mayor. Teddy shows up drunk to his election night victory party and hits Evan on his bicycle with her car; she leaves to enter rehab. Truman gives Alex a videotaped message asking her to help him end his life once his Alzheimer's has advanced. Dr. Caspian and Georgie begin an affair during her therapy sessions; Georgie leaves John, believing Dr. Caspian loves her, but Dr. Caspian ignores her and claims she has misinterpreted their "work" together. Georgie realizes she has been manipulated, but has no evidence to get the psychological board to revoke his license. Charley begins therapy with Dr. Caspian and eventually manages to record him behaving inappropriately toward her during their sessions. Norma fires Alex from her talk show for talking about AIDS against the network's wishes. Frankie accidentally creates Cowlotta, a large pink cow character that children love, and is asked to move to Japan to manage the character. Alex helps Truman end his life; she is arrested, but avoids prison when a terminally ill judge recuses himself from her case. Teddy has an affair with Daniel Albright (Gregory Harrison), the man who had Falconer killed, in an attempt to gather evidence that will send him to jail. With Lucky's help, she succeeds and Albright is arrested. Alex and Norma run a pledge drive for the local PBS station and are asked to create a new version of Alex's talk show. Bea is depressed following Truman's death; Charley offers her a job working as a receptionist in her free clinic. Teddy meets Jack Chambers (Philip Casnoff), the man who received Falconer's transplanted heart, and strikes up a brief relationship with him.

Season Six[]

Now divorced from John, Georgie goes to graduate school in psychology. She begins a relationship with Brian (Joe Flanigan), a 24-year-old student in her classes who was very standoffish to her at first. Teddy and Cat are carjacked; Cat meets police officer Billy Griffin (Eric Close) when reporting the crime. Later, Teddy is accidentally shot in the head with the gun she bought for protection. She falls into a coma, but Alex convinces brilliant neurosurgeon Dr. Gabriel Sorenson (Stephen Collins) to operate and save her life. Teddy eventually begins a relationship with Sorenson, and Cat decides to enter the police academy. Charley (now played by Sheila Kelley) becomes a foster parent to Jesse (Sean Nelson), the son of a woman at her free clinic who died. She also begins dating her colleague Dr. Wes Hayes (Michael Whaley), though he is initially resistant to an interracial relationship. Reed (now played by Noelle Parker) returns to town after divorcing Kirby and losing custody of her daughter Halsey, and ends up running a high-priced call-girl ring. Alex turns crucial evidence over to the police and Reed is sentenced to community service. Teddy and Gabe decide to marry, but their wedding is interrupted when a heart donor is found for Big Al; Teddy and Gabe finally marry at the hospital just before Big Al is taken into surgery. Charley decides to adopt Jesse, and plans to quickly marry Wes because two parents make a more appealing adoptive family; however, Charley eventually realizes Jesse should instead be adopted by the family that had already adopted his brother. Charley and Wes marry anyway. Alex's talk show is canceled again and she decides to take an extended trip to help flooding victims in Tennessee. In the final episode, Georgie's college thesis about her sisters deeply angers Alex and Charley, though Teddy finds it amusing. The sisters must put aside their differences when Beatrice has a major stroke. Shortly before Beatrice dies Frankie returns from Japan and clashes with Charley. Later, Frankie announces she wants to move back home to Winnetka. Georgie sees John at Bea's memorial service and realizes she misses him; shortly afterward, she breaks up with Brian. The sisters scatter their mother's ashes on the rosebushes she named after them. Teddy announces she is pregnant with a daughter, who she plans to name Beatrice Rose. Georgie and John discuss reconciling and share an embrace. Finally, Alex assumes the role of family matriarch.

Characters[]

Main[]

  • Alexandra "Alex" Reed Halsey Barker (Swoosie Kurtz): Eldest sister Alex was wealthy and somewhat superficial, but remained protective and close to her sisters. Her first marriage to wealthy, cross-dressing plastic surgeon Wade Halsey (David Dukes) ended following his infidelity. Alex's experience with breast cancer eventually led to a career as a talk show host, where she met and married "Big Al" Barker (Robert Klein), an outlandish but likeable home appliance retailer who sponsored her talk show as "The Prince of Pricetown". She often clashed with her rebellious daughter Reed (Ashley Judd). Alex is the only character to appear in every episode of the series.
  • Theodora "Teddy" Reed Margolis Falconer Sorenson (Sela Ward): Free-spirited second sister Teddy was a recovering alcoholic who had been living in California prior to the beginning of the series. Upon her return to Winnetka, Teddy reacted poorly when she learned her ex-husband Mitch (Ed Marinaro) was in a relationship with her sister Frankie, and openly pursued Mitch even though he and Frankie were engaged. In the aftermath of her behavior at Frankie and Mitch's wedding, Teddy seemed ashamed of herself, and in the next season of the show, she stopped drinking and stopped pursuing Mitch. Teddy had been an artist as a teenager and during the series launched a career as a fashion designer, which led to a relationship with British millionaire Simon Bolt (Mark Frankel) who purchased and eventually sold her fashion company (then named "Theodora Reed"; Teddy then opened a new fashion company under the name "Teddy Reed," only to be ousted by her shareholders in season six and reopen yet again under the name T.R.). Teddy and Mitch had a teenage daughter, Cat (Heather McAdam). When Cat was raped at college, Teddy met James Falconer (George Clooney), the detective who investigated the rape; he was killed shortly after their marriage. In the final season, Teddy married neurosurgeon Dr. Gabriel Sorenson (Stephen Collins) and became pregnant with a daughter.
  • Georgiana "Georgie" Reed Whitsig (Patricia Kalember): The third and most level-headed and responsible sister, Georgie was a stay-at-home mom and off-and-on real estate agent. She was the most trusted confidant of her sisters. On the surface, she had an ideal domestic life with a loving if eccentric husband John (Garrett M. Brown) and two sons, Trevor (Ryan Francis) and Evan (Dustin Berkovitz). After Evan successfully battled leukemia, Georgie decided to repay the blessing by acting as surrogate mother for her sister Frankie's child Thomas George. Georgie experienced a major crisis when her son Trevor rebelled; he was eventually sent away to a school for troubled teens. Georgie felt she was a failure as a parent and considered suicide, but abandoned the idea after realizing how deeply the rest of her family would feel such a loss. Trevor eventually returned to his family, genuinely remorseful for all the harm he had done and eventually decides to enroll in the military. In the next season, Georgie sought professional help, only to fall under the spell of a corrupt therapist (played by Kalember's real-life husband, Daniel Gerroll). He manipulated Georgie into an affair, which eventually resulted in her divorce from John. During the last season Georgie attended graduate school in psychology, where she met Brian, a younger man who she dated through the season. In the series finale, it was implied that Georgie and John might reconcile.
  • Francesca "Frankie" Reed Margolis (Julianne Phillips) (seasons 1–5, special guest star in season 6): Youngest sister Frankie was a workaholic businesswoman. She married her sister Teddy's ex-husband Mitch, and after discovering she suffered from infertility, asked her sister Georgie to act as a surrogate mother for her child Thomas George. She was also very devoted to her career, which put a strain on her relationship with Mitch and eventually resulted in their divorce. Following their divorce, Frankie quit her executive job and became the owner of the Sweet Sixteen, the sisters' favorite local diner. In the fifth season, Phillips left the show and Frankie moved to Japan for work, although she did return for the two-hour series finale.
  • Dr. Charlotte "Charley" Bennett Hayes (Jo Anderson: recurring, seasons 4–5; Sheila Kelley: main, season 6): During the fourth season, the sisters discovered a fifth sister, the love child of an affair their father had had with another woman. This fifth sister, Charley Bennett, was played initially by Jo Anderson on a recurring basis and then by Sheila Kelley, who received starring status in the final season. Charley was integrated into the story lines as Frankie was phased out, as Julianne Phillips had decided to leave the show. Charley had spent her childhood in foster homes and was initially somewhat cold towards her newfound sisters, but eventually came to accept them into her life. Charley was a doctor who worked in a free health care clinic with her colleague and eventual husband Dr. Wes Hayes. During the final season, Charley took in an orphaned teenager named Jesse and intended to adopt him, but ultimately did not complete the adoption because she realized Jesse should go with his brother who had been adopted by another family.
  • Beatrice Reed Ventner (Elizabeth Hoffman): Beatrice, the sisters' mother and the family matriarch, was a recovering alcoholic who at the start of the series had been recently widowed. Her husband's long-term affair with his nurse had caused her to seek solace in alcohol; she regretted that Teddy had apparently inherited her alcoholism. In the third season she married retired local judge Truman Ventner, who later suffered from Alzheimer's. Beatrice died in the series finale.

Supporting[]

  • John Whitsig (Garrett M. Brown: seasons 1–5, special guest star in season 6): Georgie's husband John was the most prominently featured of all the sisters' husbands. At the beginning of the series John had been laid off and spent much of his time at home in his bathrobe singing old vocal standards. He recorded an album, "The Sound of Whitsig," but when his son Evan was diagnosed with leukemia, John returned to work as an accountant. Brown received starring status for the first five seasons. During season 5, Georgie and John separated in the wake of her affair with Dr. Caspian, and he did not return as a regular for the final season, though while offscreen John wrote a hit song, "Thank You, Babe, For Leavin' Me," which caused Georgie much consternation. John did return in the series finale, and it appeared that he and Georgie might reconcile.
  • Mitch Margolis (Ed Marinaro: seasons 1–4): Mitch was Teddy's high school sweetheart and first husband. Together they had a daughter, Cat, but eventually Teddy and Mitch divorced. Later he started seeing her younger sister Frankie, which caused tension between the sisters. Mitch and Frankie eventually married and had a son, though they too ultimately divorced. Marinaro received starring status for the first four seasons, but did not make any appearances in seasons 5 and 6, though his character was mentioned on several occasions.
  • Catherine "Cat" Margolis (Heather McAdam: recurring, seasons 1–5; main, season 6): The daughter of Teddy and Mitch, Cat was the most prominently featured of all the sisters' children, appearing frequently throughout all the seasons. Cat was featured in a controversial storyline where she was raped. Eventually, as a result of this experience, she decided to become a cop. While training, she met her partner Billy, who she eventually fell in love with. During the final season McAdam received starring status, something none of the other children of the sisters had during the show's run.

Recurring[]

  • Dr. Wade Halsey (David Dukes: seasons 1–3): Dr. Wade Halsey was Alex's first husband and the father of their daughter Reed. Wade was a successful plastic surgeon who resented that Alex needed everything in her life to be perfect, including him. During the first season, Alex suspected Wade was cheating on her when she discovered lingerie receipts and hotel room charges on their credit card, but when she confronted him, she discovered he was actually a crossdresser. In the second season it was revealed that Wade actually had been cheating on Alex with a former patient, and they divorced. Wade decided he wanted Alex back and they reconciled toward the end of the second season, but during the third season when Alex expected him to propose remarriage, Wade announced he was marrying a different woman. Wade's character did not appear after the third season.
  • Reed Halsey Philby (Kathy Wagner: season 1; Ashley Judd: seasons 2–4; Noelle Parker: season 6): Alex and Wade's daughter Reed appeared on and off throughout the show's run and was played by three different actresses. Kathy Wagner originated the role of Reed in season one; Ashley Judd took over the role in fall 1991, playing Reed in seasons 2–4. Judd left the show in 1994 to focus on her film career after winning critical acclaim for the film Ruby in Paradise. Reed was absent for season 5, and the character returned in season 6, portrayed by Noelle Parker. Reed rebelled against her parents by dropping out of school, and later eloped with aspiring filmmaker Kirby Philby (Paul Rudd). They had a daughter, Halsey, at the end of season 4. By the final season Reed had divorced Kirby, lost custody of her daughter, and moved back to Winnetka where she eventually came to run a high-priced call girl ring. After being arrested and sentenced to community service, Reed finally seemed to abandon her rebellious ways.
  • Truman Ventner (Philip Sterling: seasons 1–5): Beatrice's second husband Truman was a judge, and an acquaintance of Beatrice's because her first husband occasionally testified in medical trials. They became reacquainted when Beatrice was arrested for driving under the influence and Truman was assigned to her case. Beatrice and Truman eloped in the third-season premiere. Truman was later diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease; once the disease had progressed, he asked Alex to assist him in taking his own life.
  • Victor Runkel (David Gianopoulos: season 2): Victor was Alex's plumber who she dated after divorcing her husband. Victor was actually an heir of the wealthy van Runkel family, but had grown up an orphan and decided to make his own way in life by becoming a plumber. His access to family money, however, allowed him to pay off Alex's mortgage without her knowledge, though Alex was eventually able to discover he was her benefactor. Victor left Winnetka to live in France to tend to his ailing uncle and take over managing the family fortune.
  • Kirby Philby (Paul Rudd: seasons 3–4, 6): Alex's daughter Reed eloped with Kirby, an aspiring filmmaker, and together they had a daughter, Halsey. Kirby eventually realized he could not support his family as a filmmaker and decided to settle down in Bemidji, Minnesota and manage a video store. Reed could not accept this change in their circumstances and divorced Kirby; he received full custody of their daughter. Reed initially told Alex that Kirby had left her and kidnapped their daughter, but Alex tracked him down and learned the truth.
  • Simon Bolt (Mark Frankel: seasons 3–4): Simon was a wealthy British investor who transformed Teddy's fashion design business from a small home operation to a large design company. Simon and Teddy dated during the third season, but broke up when he sold her company to a Texan investor without consulting Teddy. Later, Simon returned, claiming to have seen the error of his ways, and proposed to Teddy; she accepted, only to turn him down shortly thereafter when he again made plans for their married life without consulting her. During the fourth season, Simon faked his own death in a sailing accident; he had actually embezzled a sizable amount of money from a European company, which he claimed was necessary to protect the workers' pensions. He turned up on Teddy's doorstep, only to find her with Falconer; Falconer in turn discovered Simon was a wanted man and notified Scotland Yard. However, instead of handing him over to Scotland Yard, Falconer ultimately let Simon escape.
  • Detective James Falconer (George Clooney: seasons 4–5): Detective Falconer met Teddy when he investigated the rape of her daughter Cat. They began dating after running into each other at an AA meeting, thus discovering they were both recovering alcoholics. Falconer had been married before, but his marriage ended after his six-year-old son accidentally killed himself using Falconer's service revolver; Falconer could not forgive himself for his son's death. Teddy and Falconer married, and shortly afterward he was killed by a car bomb set by a criminal he was planning to testify against in court.
  • Norma Lear (Nora Dunn: seasons 4–6): Former Saturday Night Live cast member Nora Dunn portrayed Alex's TV producer Norma Lear (a clear play on the name of famous real-life TV producer Norman Lear). She and Alex initially did not get along, but eventually became great friends. Norma is a lesbian (though her partner Chris never appeared onscreen), and in season five Alex's husband Big Al donated sperm to her so that she and her partner could have a baby.
  • Alvin "Big Al" Barker Barkowitz (Robert Klein: seasons 4–6): Big Al was the owner of Pricetown, a home goods and appliance store that sponsored Alex's talk show. Alex disliked him at first, as did much of her family, but eventually she fell in love with him and he became her second husband. Big Al served time in prison for tax evasion, which he blamed on his accountant; he was released from prison early for saving the governor's wife from drowning in the prison pool. He subsequently ran for mayor of Winnetka and won. In the sixth season Big Al decided to embrace his Jewish heritage and reverted to his family surname, Barkowitz.
  • Dr. Wes Hayes (Michael Whaley: seasons 5–6): Wes served as director of the free health clinic where he and Charley both worked. He and Charley were attracted to each other, but Wes was uncomfortable having a relationship with a white woman. He eventually began a relationship with Charley after she convinced him to turn down an offer to open another free clinic in Detroit. At the end of season six, he and Charley married.
  • Dr. Gabriel Sorenson (Stephen Collins: season 6): Dr. Sorenson was Teddy's neurosurgeon, then love interest and eventual husband during the show's final season. He had been married three times before marrying Teddy and had a daughter, Melissa, who was attending medical school in Boston. Sorenson was a brilliant doctor and received a presidential nomination for health czar, but turned down the appointment after government officials asked Teddy to stay away from Washington due to her checkered past.
  • Brian Kohler-Voss (Joe Flanigan: season 6): Georgie's much-younger lover was a graduate student she met after returning to school following her divorce from John. Brian was the son of a famous psychologist who was following in his father's footsteps. Georgie eventually broke it off with Brian when she realized she missed John.
  • Billy Griffin (Eric Close: season 6): Billy was Cat's police partner and eventual love interest. He had a difficult relationship with his father, an ex-con who claimed to have mended his ways but ultimately stole money from Bea.

Notable guest stars[]

Many well-known TV stars guest starred on the show, including Gregory Harrison (5 episodes), Charlotte Rae (3 episodes), and William Katt (2 episodes). Diane Ladd and Joyce Van Patten both guest starred as Belle, Charley's mom. Real-life sisters Audrey Meadows and Jayne Meadows played sisters on the show. Other guest stars included Darren McGavin, Denise Crosby, Ilene Graff, Christina Pickles, Dorothy Lyman, Gloria Henry, Carrie Snodgress, Deborah Harmon, and Elayne Boosler.

Patricia Kalember's real-life husband Daniel Gerroll guest starred as her predatory therapist for 11 episodes in season 5. Also Naomi Judd guest starred in the episode that marked her real-life daughter Ashley's final appearance as Reed.

Episodes[]

Series overview[]

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
17May 11, 1991 (1991-05-11)June  20, 1991 (1991-06-20)[4]
222September 21, 1991 (1991-09-21)May  2, 1992 (1992-05-02)
324September 26, 1992 (1992-09-26)May  22, 1993 (1993-05-22)
422September 25, 1993 (1993-09-25)May  21, 1994 (1994-05-21)
524September 24, 1994 (1994-09-24)April  29, 1995 (1995-04-29)[5]
628September 23, 1995 (1995-09-23)May  4, 1996 (1996-05-04)

Season 1 (1991)[]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
11 Moving In, Moving Out, Moving OnRobert ButlerRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanMay 11, 1991 (1991-05-11)15.5[6]
Winnetka, Illinois. One year after the death of their father from a long battle with cancer, the four very different sisters of the Reed family try to put aside their personal differences and help their widowed, alcoholic mother, Beatrice, sell her house. Alex, the eldest of the sisters, is a wealthy and snobbish, WASP wife of Wade Halsey, a plastic surgeon, with a teenage daughter, Reed, and is too self-involved with her perfect life to notice anything else, until she's forced to bail out her own mother from jail when she's arrested for drunk driving. Georgie is a real estate agent who takes over as the matriarch of the family to support it and her two sons, Trevor and Evan, when her flaky, unemployed husband, John Whitsig, confines himself to their house singing karaoke in his bathrobe after suffering a nervous breakdown since losing his job. Teddy, the second oldest of the sisters, is a free-spirited drifter and artist who arrives in town after years of living on the road with her teenage daughter Cat and tries to win back her ex-husband Mitch Margolis, a fish store owner, who is now romantically involved with the youngest sister Frankie, an ambitious marketing analyst living in nearby Chicago. 
22 80%Robert ButlerRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanMay 18, 1991 (1991-05-18)15.9[7]
Alex, on the eve of her 15th wedding anniversary party with Wade, realizes that her idyllic marriage may be falling apart when she finds out that he is a cross dresser. Meanwhile, Teddy continues to try to win back her ex-husband Mitch, who will not give in to her pleads for a renewed commitment. 
33 A Thousand SprinklesSteven RobmanEric Overmyer & Ron Cowen & Daniel LipmanMay 25, 1991 (1991-05-25)12.8[8]
Teddy looking for work, asks Frankie to give her a job at her office as an intern, which only heats up tensions between them over Teddy's continuing ploy to win back Mitch, and Frankie trying to steal the affection of Cat by giving her expensive gifts. Meanwhile, Alex and Wade join a counseling group for cross-dressing husbands much to his anger when he feels that their marital problems be kept private. Georgie tries to find psychiatric help for John while he continues to sulk around the house and sing to himself. Elsewhere, Beatrice meets Judge Truman Ventner after she is indicted for drunk driving and shortly afterward, begins a relationship with him. 
44 Devoted Husband, Loving FatherJan EliasbergRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanJune 1, 1991 (1991-06-01)10.2[9]
Frankie, probing into their dead father's past, finds some disturbing secrets she never knew which hints of an extra marital affair he had with one of Beatrice's friends. Meanwhile, Georgie wrestles with temptation when she considers romance with an old college boyfriend when he comes into town, while John decides to pursue a singing career. 
55 Of Mice and WomenJames A. ContnerDiana GouldJune 8, 1991 (1991-06-08)12.8[10]
Georgie, trying to get a raise and a promotion at the reality office, invites her boss over at her house for dinner, which nearly turns disastrous due to Trevor and Evan's problems, and everyone else crashing the event to dump their problems on Georgie. Meanwhile, Alex begins to realize that her financial situation is more in trouble then she thought when all her credit cards are rejected, and she meets a repo man who repossesses her car for non-payments, and at this point, she finally realizes that Wade had invested all of their wealth in a stock that failed. Mitch phones a party-line where he confides his problems about his problems with Frankie, unaware that it is Teddy, now employed as a phone operator. Also, John hires a film crew to rent out the house to record his songs for a cable TV commercial. 
66 Deja Vu All Over AgainArlene SanfordEric OvermyerJune 15, 1991 (1991-06-15)12.5[11]
Frankie and Mitch announce their engagement to everyone and decide to get married quickly, and Alex is more than happy to hold the wedding at her house. But Teddy is the only one not happy, and after falling off the wagon, she crashes the exchange of vows with a shotgun she stole from Alex and gives the new meaning to the term: "shotgun wedding. While the family members talk to the camera about Frankie and Mitch, Alex gets stuck with some unexpected bills after Wade skips town to escape bill collectors. 
77 Some Tuesday in JulyAnita W. AddisonRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanJune 20, 1991 (1991-06-20)[4]13.5[12]
With Cat angry and at her for falling off the wagon, Teddy decides that Cat is better off living with Mitch while she thinks about leaving town again. Alex tries to get Reed the lead part in her high school play of 'Romeo and Juliet' despite the fact that Reed cannot act and cannot remember her lines. Meanwhile, Georgie's youngest son Evan, is hospitalized for leukemia. The grim turn of events begin to push Georgie to her breaking point, but it also brings John to his senses when he finally sees the seriousness of his life which brings him out of his near-catatonic state to take a job offer and give support to his family again. 

Season 2 (1991–92)[]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
81 One to Grow OnSteven RobmanChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanSeptember 21, 1991 (1991-09-21)15.8[13]
Georgie and her sisters plan a birthday party for Evan, who is returning from the hospital. Frankie must decide whether to attend the party or travel to Japan on business. Teddy's continued drinking drives the other sisters away. 
92 The Picture of PerfectionSandy SmolanCathryn MichonSeptember 28, 1991 (1991-09-28)14.9[14]
Mitch and Frankie get married. 
103 Strikes and SparesSteven RobmanAlex Gansa & Howard GordonOctober 5, 1991 (1991-10-05)14.7[15]
Wade's mistress, Tiffany Blue, tries to convince Wade to have a hit man kill Alex before she can finalize their divorce. Teddy's relationship with Hank Seawall heats up. 
114 Living ArrangementsSandy SmolanCynthia SaundersOctober 12, 1991 (1991-10-12)14.9[16]
Cat runs away to avoid living with Mitch and Frankie. Teddy, Mitch, and Frankie go looking for her. Teddy can't bring herself to tell her family she's pregnant and that Mitch might be the father, so she considers having an abortion. 
125 A Kiss is Still a KissDeborah ReinischChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanOctober 19, 1991 (1991-10-19)15.1[17]
Alex finds romance when she attends her 20-year high school reunion. Truman asks Beatrice to spend the weekend with him. John wants to spend some romantic time with Georgie. 
136 Freedom's Just Another WordChristopher HiblerRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanNovember 2, 1991 (1991-11-02)14.5[18]
Hank's nude photographs of Teddy surface at an art exhibit hosted by Alex. Teddy lands in jail when she assaults a police officer. Alex asks Victor to escort her to the art exhibit in order to make Wade jealous when she learns that he is bringing a date. Two radio DJs humiliate John during an on-the-air interview. 
147 The Family WayFred GerberChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanNovember 9, 1991 (1991-11-09)16.1[19]
Hank tries to convince Teddy to tell Mitch about her pregnancy. Alex finds out about her mother's relationship with Truman. Trevor becomes rebellious due to feeling neglected by John and Georgie, who have been giving all their attention to his sickly younger brother Evan. 
158 The Kindness of StrangersJan EliasbergRichard GollanceNovember 16, 1991 (1991-11-16)16.5[20]
Alex, getting no help from a computer dating service, decides that Victor is the perfect choice to fit the bill despite that fact that they both come from very different backgrounds. While Mitch is out of town with Cat, his overbearing and meddlesome mother, Naomi, pays an unexpected and unwelcome visit to Frankie at her loft. But they soon discover that they have a lot in common. Georgie and John's cranky neighbor, Mr. Ratner, causes problems for them over property rights, and Georgie eventually discovers the real deep-rooted reason for Mr. Ratner's unhappiness. 
169 Georgie Through the Looking GlassLorraine Senna FerreraRichard GreenbergNovember 23, 1991 (1991-11-23)14.2[21]
On Thanksgiving, Georgie visits the old Reed home where she grew up and mysteriously is transported back in time where she views one particular Thanksgiving that put a change on her life. Back at the Wistig house, John and the others wait impatiently for Evans health tests to say if he will live or not. Meanwhile, Reed returns from a six-month trip to France transformed into a rebellious activist and causes problems for both Alex and Wade over her newfound personality. 
1710 Two Steps Forward, Three Steps BackJames A. ContnerJeff BaronDecember 14, 1991 (1991-12-14)13.9[22]
While trying to keep her window decoration job, Teddy has a miscarriage that is an emotional setback for her. Alex discovers that Reed has her own reasons why she wants to enter with her in the annual Mother/Daughter costume pageant, that Reed wants to use the first prize money to return to France since learning that her parents are now divorced. Meanwhile, Frankie can't decide whether or not to complain of an annoying office Lothario who makes unwanted sexual passes at her because he is her ticket to becoming corporate vice president of the firm. 
1811 EggnogKevin InchRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanDecember 21, 1991 (1991-12-21)16.9[23]
On Christmas Eve, Georgie attempts to infect the family with Christmas cheer, but Bea's contaminated eggnog infects them with food poisoning. Alex attempts to get out of the family Christmas and go on a vacation to Mexico with Victor. Frankie and Mitch come to blows over Mitch's attention to Teddy over her recent miscarriage. Meanwhile, Teddy receives an emotional boost when she begins having conversations with the ghost of Charles Dickens (Tony Jay) over what to do with her life. Also, Trevor, Evan, and Cat rent a series of horror movies ("Santacide") with a Christmas theme. 
1912 Good Help is Hard to FindJames A. ContnerJeffrey StepakoffJanuary 11, 1992 (1992-01-11)14.2[24]
Georgie finds her voice when she comes to the defense of Evan's HIV-positive teacher (Raphael Sbarge), who the school wants to fire. Alex tries to stop the deportation of her Guatemalan maid (Shelley Morrison), and Frankie reluctantly helps Mitch and Teddy with their tax audit. 
2013 Troubled WatersJan EliasbergAmy Lippman & Christopher KeyserJanuary 18, 1992 (1992-01-18)15.3[25]
Alex has to decide between going with ex-husband Wade or new boyfriend Victor to an awards show. Mitch tries to convince Frankie to go on a fishing trip. Teddy has difficulty deciding on a car. 
2114 Working GirlsSteven RobmanGardner SternJanuary 25, 1992 (1992-01-25)15.9[26]
Frankie is faced with a difficult choice when the man who harassed her at work has started to harass a new coworker (Heidi Swedberg). Teddy is fired from her job as a window dresser, and decides to start selling cosmetics door-to-door. Bea and Truman announce their plans to move in together, but find it hard to make compromises. 
2215 Tippecanoe and Georgie Too!Kevin InchAbraham TetenbaumFebruary 8, 1992 (1992-02-08)12.0[27]
Georgie announces her candidacy for the Local School Board. However, she has second thoughts when a campaign consultant (Nicholas Pryor) starts to alienate her from her family. Alex and Wade interview a private school for Reed. Frankie and Mitch try to sell a stove that they think is worthless. 
2316 The Four ElementsJames A. ContnerRon Cowen & Daniel Lipman & Michael FilermanFebruary 15, 1992 (1992-02-15)10.1[28]
Teddy's new clothing designs are destroyed in a fire. Victor saves Reed from drowning in the bath tub. 
2417 A Matter of Life and DeathGwen ArnerThomas BabeFebruary 22, 1992 (1992-02-22)11.3[29]
Georgie continues to campaign before the city council election, while Teddy and Frankie quarrel over personal items they want to keep. Beatrice is rushed to the hospital suffering a heart attack. 
2518 The First TimeJan EliasbergStory by : Christopher Keyser & Amy Lippman
Teleplay by : Daniel Lipman & Jeffrey Stepakoff
February 29, 1992 (1992-02-29)15.7[30]
Teddy and Mitch are upset upon learning that Cat intends to have sex with her boyfriend. 
2619 Empty RoomsFred GerberJeff BaronApril 11, 1992 (1992-04-11)13.7[31]
The sisters try to cheer up Beatrice, who has become depressed after her heart attack. Frankie considers adoption when she learns that she can't become pregnant. 
2720 Heart and SoulDavid CarsonChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanApril 18, 1992 (1992-04-18)13.4[32]
Teddy finds a new romantic interest in her Alcoholics Anonymous sponsor, Harry Chris Sarandon. Wade asks Alex to reconcile. 
2821 Pandora's BoxFred GerberJeffrey StepakoffApril 25, 1992 (1992-04-25)14.5[33]
A teenage mother has second thoughts after offering her baby to Mitch and Frankie to adopt. Beatrice decides to break up with Truman if he doesn't marry her. 
2922 Not in a Million YearsKevin InchRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanMay 2, 1992 (1992-05-02)14.7[34]
Georgie agrees to carry Frankie and Mitch's baby. 

Season 3 (1992–93)[]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
301 SunstrokeJames A. ContnerRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanSeptember 26, 1992 (1992-09-26)15.5[35]
During a late-summer heat wave, Alex wants to have the perfect wedding for her mother and Judge Trueman Ventner. But Beatrice doesn't like her daughter's plans. While Alex spends a romantic evening with her ex-husband, Wade, Reed informs them that she wants to quit college to be with her boyfriend Kirby. Later, Reed informs everyone that she has married Kirby, and Alex reacts by breaking EVERY piece of crystal in her house. Meanwhile, Frankie is concerned that Georgie, who is seven months pregnant, may be over-exerting herself, so she hires a housekeeper for Georgie. While Cat prepares to leave town for college, Teddy fears that Beatrice will move away from everyone after she marries Truman. 
312 The Bottom LineSteve RobmanKimberly CostelloOctober 3, 1992 (1992-10-03)13.0[36]
Teddy finds a way to help her struggling clothing business when, after Alex invites her to a dinner party, Teddy meets Simon Bolt, a wealthy but cynical British corporate magnate who becomes interested in her work and wants to invest $10 million to help expand her business. Meanwhile, Laura, a sexy TV reporter, wants to know about Mitch and his fish store which makes Frankie jealous. Also, the very pregnant Georgie fights her sudden craving for chocolate. 
323 A Promise KeptJames A. ContnerLisa MelamedOctober 10, 1992 (1992-10-10)15.0[37]
Frankie decides to convert and raise a Jewish family with Mitch, much to the shock of the family, especially the conservative Beatrice. Meanwhile, Teddy and Simon fight over how to run Teddy's new clothing factory and over McKinley working for the company. Also, Alex helps Reed and Kirby with moving into their new apartment and afterward takes them into her house after they are evicted. 
334 And God LaughsSteve RobmanChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanOctober 17, 1992 (1992-10-17)15.6[38]
Georgie flashes back after learning John's plane crashed; Bolt coaches Teddy for a news conference spotlighting her line. 
345 Sins of the MothersHarry HarrisKimberly CostelloOctober 24, 1992 (1992-10-24)13.2[39]
Teddy becomes concerned when she catches Cat drunk, Alex gets a lesson in political correctness, and Frankie fears she might be pregnant. 
356 Lost SoulsBarbara AmatoRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanOctober 31, 1992 (1992-10-31)13.6[40]
Alex thinks she accidentally killed a man, Frankie and Mitch spend the night in a haunted house, and Teddy learns of the secret that haunts Simon. 
367 Accidents Will HappenKevin InchLisa MelamedNovember 7, 1992 (1992-11-07)14.9[41]
Mitch gets into a dispute with a friend who takes a fall outside of Mitch's Store, and Beatrice, Georgie and Alex win the lottery. 
378 Crash and BornNancy MaloneChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanNovember 14, 1992 (1992-11-14)17.6[42]
After being hit by a drunk driver, Georgie now trapped inside her car, goes into labor-while her sisters look on helplessly. 
389 The Best Seats in the HouseMichael EnglerStory by : Christopher Keyser & Amy Lippman
Teleplay by : Kimberly Costello & Lisa Melamed
November 21, 1992 (1992-11-21)16.9[43]
Teddy has her first Fashion Show, and Georgie struggles with postpartum depression and her feelings toward Frankie and their shared child. 
3910 RivalsJames A. ContnerHugh O'NeillDecember 5, 1992 (1992-12-05)12.8[44]
Alex proposes a line of Jewelry to Simon, Frankie and Beatrice feud over the upbringing of Frankie's baby, and Reed is caught in a test of wills between her father and Kirby. 
4011 Portrait of the ArtistsMichael LangeLisa MelamedDecember 12, 1992 (1992-12-12)14.3[45]
Teddy learns that her high school beau has Aids, Alex enrolls in a writing class taught by a famous author and Frankie drives Georgie's family crazy. 
4112 Teach Your Children WellGwen ArnerChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanDecember 19, 1992 (1992-12-19)12.0[46]
During Frankie's first Hanukkah, a swastika is painted on Mitch's storefront, and John's dad shows up to make peace. 
4213 All That GlittersBarbara AmatoKimberly CostelloJanuary 9, 1993 (1993-01-09)15.1[47]
Restless Frankie wants to curtail her maternity leave, putting her at odds with Mitch; Teddy cautiously agrees to live with Bolt. 
4314 Crimes and Ms. DemeanorsGwen ArnerJanet Himelstein & P.K. KnelmanJanuary 16, 1993 (1993-01-16)14.3[48]
Teddy declares war on a fashion critic (Concetta Tomei); Georgie backs over a neighbor's (George Furth) chihuahua. 
4415 The Whole TruthJan EliasbergRuth WolffJanuary 23, 1993 (1993-01-23)12.9[49]
A screenwriter profiles Georgie's surrogacy and starts family fights; Alex tries to get her daughter and son-in-law to leave. 
4516 Things Are Tough All OverHarry HarrisChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanFebruary 6, 1993 (1993-02-06)13.9[50]
A TV movie on the sisters unites Alex with her romantic idol. 
4617 Moving PicturesKevin IncnRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanFebruary 13, 1993 (1993-02-13)13.0[51]
As Alex undergoes breast-augmentation surgery, a small malignancy is found, forcing the removal of the tumor and part of her breast. 
4718 Mirror, MirrorFred GerberRichard GreenbergFebruary 20, 1993 (1993-02-20)14.7[52]
Worry over chemotherapy makes Alex more sarcastic; Teddy offers to sell her shares to ward off a takeover; tests indicate Evan is a genius. 
4819 DifferentHarry HarrisLisa MelamedFebruary 27, 1993 (1993-02-27)12.3[53]
Georgie is hired to write an advice column for the local newspaper; John thinks Teddy has fallen in love with him; Alex and Frankie accuse Truman of cheating on their mother. 
4920 Dear GeorgieFred GerberLisa MelamedApril 24, 1993 (1993-04-24)14.2[54]
Georgie is hired to write an advice column for the local newspaper; John thinks Teddy has fallen in love with him; Alex and Frankie accuse Truman of cheating on their mother. 
5021 Some Other TimeFred GerberChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanMay 1, 1993 (1993-05-01)12.5[55]
A podiatrist (John Schuck) romances Alex; Frankie spends time with an executive; Georgie and John try to rekindle romance. 
5122 The Cold Light of DayKevin InchRon Cowen (story), Daniel Lipman (teleplay), Kimberly Costello (teleplay & story)May 8, 1993 (1993-05-08)12.7[56]
Bolt proposes to Teddy; Alex buys a wig from a mystic who claims it has powers; Frankie and Mitch consult a marriage counselor. 
5223 Out of the AshesMichael EnglerAmy Lippman & Christopher KeyserMay 15, 1993 (1993-05-15)12.9[57]
Moving into a new house makes Mitch confront Frankie; a diminutive Texas billionaire (Henry Gibson) buys out Teddy's firm. 
5324 The Icing on the CakeKevin InchStory by : Christopher Keyser & Amy Lippman
Teleplay by : Lisa Melamed & Daniel Lipman
May 22, 1993 (1993-05-22)12.7[58]
The siblings fight as the airing of their TV movie approaches; Frankie takes a job offer in New York. 

Season 4 (1993–94)[]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
541 Back on TrackKevin InchLisa MelamedSeptember 25, 1993 (1993-09-25)13.6[59]
Frankie and Mitch battle in court over their son; Cat trains Alex for a marathon; the first lady seeks Teddy's services. 
552 The Land of the Lost ChildrenSteven RobmanKathryn PrattOctober 2, 1993 (1993-10-02)12.1[60]
Seeking to avenge the attack on Cat, Teddy interferes in the investigation; Reed joins a religious cult. 
563 DemonsSharron MillerStory by : Christopher Keyser & Amy Lippman
Teleplay by : Ron Cowen & Lisa Melamed
October 9, 1993 (1993-10-09)14.9[61]
Teddy overreacts when Cat's attacker makes bail; Frankie prepares for a date with a man she met over her computer; Alex wants John on her show. 
574 A Kick in the CabooseSteven RobmanChristopher Keyser & Amy LippmanOctober 16, 1993 (1993-10-16)11.2[62]
Alex is offered a job as a talk show host. Frankie buys the Sweet Sixteen with Georgie as her partner. Teddy decides that she and Mitch should remain friends. 
585 Sleepless in WinnetkaMichael EnglerRon Cowen, Daniel Lipman & Lisa MelamedOctober 23, 1993 (1993-10-23)11.5[63]
 
596 The Good DaughterJames A. ContnerRon Cowen, Daniel Lipman & Georgia JeffriesOctober 30, 1993 (1993-10-30)16.1[64]
 
607 Something in CommonMel DamskiKathryn PrattNovember 6, 1993 (1993-11-06)14.4[65]
Teddy falls for Falconer (George Clooney). Georgie's older son begins dating an older girl, drinking, and failing in school. 
618 A Bolt From the BlueNovember 13, 1993 (1993-11-13)12.7[66]
 
629 The Best IntentionsNovember 20, 1993 (1993-11-20)13.9[67]
 
6310 The Things We Do for LoveJan EliasbergLinda Mathious & Heather MacGillvrayNovember 27, 1993 (1993-11-27)14.0[68]
 
6411 Broken AngelDecember 11, 1993 (1993-12-11)12.3[69]
 
6512 Second ThoughtsDecember 18, 1993 (1993-12-18)12.1[70]
 
6613 A Path Through the SnowJanuary 15, 1994 (1994-01-15)13.2[71]
 
6714 Chemical ReactionsBethany RooneyJanuary 22, 1994 (1994-01-22)14.2[72]
 
6815 PoisonMel DamskiJanuary 29, 1994 (1994-01-29)13.5[73]
 
6916 Tangled WebsFebruary 5, 1994 (1994-02-05)13.3[74]
 
7017 Up to His Old TricksJames A. ContnerStory by : Daniel Kipman & Kathryn Pratt
Teleplay by : Ron Cowen & Kathryn Pratt
February 12, 1994 (1994-02-12)12.2[75]
 
7118 Blood is Thicker Than WaterApril 23, 1994 (1994-04-23)14.1[76]
 
7219 Lock and KeyApril 30, 1994 (1994-04-30)13.3[77]
 
7320 Life Upside-DownMay 7, 1994 (1994-05-07)11.8[78]
 
7421 Protective MeasuresMay 14, 1994 (1994-05-14)12.2[79]
 
7522 Up in the AirMay 21, 1994 (1994-05-21)12.7[80]
 

Season 5 (1994–95)[]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
761 BombshellSeptember 24, 1994 (1994-09-24)13.5[81]
 
772 BlindersOctober 1, 1994 (1994-10-01)13.8[82]
 
783 I Only Have Eyes for YouOctober 8, 1994 (1994-10-08)11.2[83]
 
794 Falling LeavesAlan MyersonPeter SchneiderOctober 15, 1994 (1994-10-15)12.5[84]
 
805 HeroesJanet G. KnutsenAllison HockOctober 22, 1994 (1994-10-22)10.9[85]
 
816 ScandalousBethany RooneyTammy AderOctober 29, 1994 (1994-10-29)10.7[86]
 
827 Down for the CountKevin InchKathryn PrattNovember 5, 1994 (1994-11-05)11.8[87]
 
838 Cold TurkeyHelaine HeadLisa MelamedNovember 12, 1994 (1994-11-12)11.4[88]
 
849 Paradise LostJames A. ContnerPeter SchneiderNovember 19, 1994 (1994-11-19)12.6[89]
 
8510 Twilight TimeAllison HockDecember 3, 1994 (1994-12-03)12.8[90]
 
8611 A Child Is GivenDecember 17, 1994 (1994-12-17)11.2[91]
 
8712 No Pain, No GainJanuary 7, 1995 (1995-01-07)13.0[92]
 
8813 A Lullaby to My FatherJanuary 14, 1995 (1995-01-14)13.0[93]
 
8914 A Good DeedMichael SchultzJanuary 21, 1995 (1995-01-21)12.2[94]
 
9015 A House DividedDavis GuggenheimLindsay HarrisonFebruary 4, 1995 (1995-02-04)12.6[95]
 
9116 A Proper FarewellBruce HumphreyTammy AderFebruary 11, 1995 (1995-02-11)13.2[96]
 
9217 Angel of DeathFebruary 18, 1995 (1995-02-18)11.3[97]
 
9318 Sleeping with the DevilMarch 4, 1995 (1995-03-04)12.5[98]
 
9419 Judgement DayApril 1, 1995 (1995-04-01)11.7[99]
 
9520 Word of HonorApril 8, 1995 (1995-04-08)10.9[100]
 
9621 Remembrance of Sisters PastApril 15, 1995 (1995-04-15)9.9[101]
 
9722 A Fighting ChanceApril 22, 1995 (1995-04-22)10.1[102]
 
9823 Matters of the HeartApril 29, 1995 (1995-04-29)10.5[103]
 
9924 Enchanted MayMay 6, 1995 (1995-05-06)[5]10.5[103]
 

Season 6 (1995–96)[]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date Viewers
(millions)
1001 100Kevin InchRon Cowen & Daniel LipmanSeptember 23, 1995 (1995-09-23)9.6[104]
 
1012 Out of the WoodsJames A. ConterJan EliasbergSeptember 30, 1995 (1995-09-30)10.4[105]
 
1023 The Passion of Our YouthHarry HarrisTammy AderOctober 7, 1995 (1995-10-07)9.8[106]
 
1034 One Fine DayRachel FeldmanKathryn Pratt & Deborah Starr SeibelOctober 21, 1995 (1995-10-21)10.4[107]
 
1045 DeceitMichael SchultzKathryn Pratt & Lindsay HarrisonNovember 4, 1995 (1995-11-04)[108]8.9[109]
 
105, 1066, 7 For Everything a Season: Parts 1 & 2
"A Perfect Circle"
"Change of Life"
Joan Micklin Silver
Kevin Inch (part 2)
Jan Eliasberg
Molly Newman (part 2)
November 11, 1995 (1995-11-11)[110][111][112]8.3[113]
 
1078 Renaissance WomanTammy AderNovember 18, 1995 (1995-11-18)10.1[114]
 
1089 A Perfectly Reasonable ExplanationNovember 25, 1995 (1995-11-25)10.6[115]
 
10910 Sleeping BeautyJan EliasbergDecember 2, 1995 (1995-12-02)9.7[116]
 
11011 A Tough Act to FollowLindsay HarrisonDecember 9, 1995 (1995-12-09)8.9[117]
 
11112 A Sudden Change of HeartHarry HarrisMolly NewmanJanuary 6, 1996 (1996-01-06)8.0[118]
 
11213 The Man That Got AwayRonald L. SchwaryTammy AderJanuary 13, 1996 (1996-01-13)7.7[119]
 
11314 Double, Double, Toil and TroubleJanuary 20, 1996 (1996-01-20)8.1[120]
 
11415 ImpersonatorsJanuary 27, 1996 (1996-01-27)10.1[121]
 
11516 The Best ManRachel FeldmanJan EliasbergFebruary 3, 1996 (1996-02-03)9.0[122]
 
11617 A Little SnagFebruary 10, 1996 (1996-02-10)7.6[123]
 
11718 Don't Go to SpringfieldKathryn PrattMarch 2, 1996 (1996-03-02)7.5[124]
 
11819 Where There's SmokeMarch 9, 1996 (1996-03-09)8.2[125]
 
11920 Leap Before You LookMarch 16, 1996 (1996-03-16)8.2[126]
 
12021 DreamcatcherGraeme CliffordDeborah Starr SeibelMarch 23, 1996 (1996-03-23)6.6[127]
 
12122 The PriceMarch 30, 1996 (1996-03-30)8.7[128]
 
12223 Guess Who's Coming to SederMel DamskiTammy Ader & Lindsay HarrisonApril 6, 1996 (1996-04-06)7.4[129]
 
12324 Nothing PersonalShawn NelsonNora DunnApril 13, 1996 (1996-04-13)7.6[130]
 
12425 HousecleaningDeborah Starr SeibelApril 20, 1996 (1996-04-20)7.3[131]
 
12526 Taking a GambleGraeme CliffordLindsay HarrisonApril 27, 1996 (1996-04-27)8.8[132]
 
126, 12727, 28 War & Peace: Part 1 & 2James A. ContnerStory by : Ron Cowen & Daniel Lipman
Teleplay by : Kathryn Pratt & Tammy Ader
May 4, 1996 (1996-05-04)10.1[133]
 

Home media[]

On June 2, 2015, it was announced that Shout! Factory (under WB license) had acquired the rights to the series in Region 1; they have subsequently released all six seasons on DVD.[134][135][136][137][138]

DVD Name Ep # Release date
Seasons One and Two 29 September 15, 2015
Season Three 24 January 19, 2016
Season Four 22 April 12, 2016
Season Five 24 July 19, 2016
Season Six 29 November 8, 2016

Reception[]

Ratings[]

Season U.S. ratings Network Rank
1 1990-1991 N/A NBC N/A
2 1991–1992 10.45 million NBC #55
3 1992–1993 10.11 million NBC #56
4 1993–1994 10.11 million NBC #52
5 1994–1995 9.0 million NBC #75
6 1995–1996 6.8 million NBC #103

Accolades[]

The series received eight Emmy Award nominations over the course of its run, winning once in 1994 for Sela Ward as Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series. Swoosie Kurtz was also nominated twice in the Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series category in 1993 and 1994.[139]

References[]

Notes
  1. Vilkomerson, Sara (November 7, 2014). "1991 to 1996: 'Sisters'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved November 10, 2023.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  2. Horowitz, Joy (May 6, 1991). "The Taming of a TV Series Teaser, Or Less Talk About the Bedroom". The New York Times. Retrieved January 27, 2008.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 O'Connor, John J. (May 4, 1996). "Critic's Notebook; After 5 Years of Family Fractiousness, 'Sisters' Exits Elegantly". The New York Times. Retrieved January 27, 2008.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "TV Listings for June 20, 1991". TV Tango.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "April 29, 1995". Statesman Journal. April 29, 1995. p. 32.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  6. Donlon, Brian (May 15, 1991). "Movies are NBC's ace". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  7. Donlon, Brian (May 22, 1991). "The verdict: 'L.A. Law' No. 1". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  8. Donlon, Brian (May 30, 1991). "Ratings start summer slump". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  9. Donlon, Brian (June 5, 1991). "CBS news streak ends". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  10. Donlon, Brian (June 12, 1991). "Hoops Net NBC a win". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  11. Donlon, Brian (June 19, 1991). "Bulls Win One for NBC". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  12. Donlon, Brian (June 26, 1991). "'PrimeTime' Lifts No. 2 ABC". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  13. Donlon, Brian (September 25, 1991). "New faces try to save 'One Life to Live'". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  14. Donlon, Brian (October 2, 1991). "'Roseanne' comes out on top". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  15. Donlon, Brian (October 9, 1991). "Cable pulls network's plug". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  16. Donlon, Brian (October 16, 1991). "Hearings score a win for NBC". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  17. Donlon, Brian (October 23, 1991). "CBS bats one out of the park". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  18. Donlon, Brian (November 6, 1991). "Ratings contest narrows". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  19. Donlon, Brian (November 13, 1991). "NBC's hurricane windfall". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  20. Donlon, Brian (November 20, 1991). "'60 Minutes' clocks a 3rd win". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  21. Donlon, Brian (November 27, 1991). "CBS scores a strong win". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  22. Donlon, Brian (December 18, 1991). "St. Nick arrives early for CBS". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  23. Donlon, Brian (December 26, 1991). "Ratings for CBS to celebrate". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  24. "Pigskin plays in to CBS win". Life. USA Today. January 15, 1992. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  25. Gable, Donna (January 22, 1992). "Brooks ropes ratings for NBC". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  26. Donlon, Brian (January 29, 1992). "NBC's horror tale surprise". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  27. Donlon, Brian (February 12, 1992). "CBS mines Olympic gold". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  28. Donlon, Brian (February 19, 1992). "CBS wins, but ABC gets silver". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  29. Donlon, Brian (February 26, 1992). "CBS' all-around Olympic win". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  30. Donlon, Brian (March 4, 1992). "Last-place Fox is rising fast". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  31. Gable, Donna (April 15, 1992). "CBS' historic jump". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
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  34. Gable, Donna (May 6, 1992). "'Cosby' goes out on top". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  35. Gable, Donna (September 30, 1992). "'Murphy' wave carries CBS". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
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  38. Gable, Donna (October 21, 1992). "Baseball hits big for CBS". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  39. Gable, Donna (October 28, 1992). "Baseball cleans up for CBS". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  40. Gable, Donna (November 4, 1992). "Politics, Halloween scare up an ABC win". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  41. Gable, Donna (November 11, 1992). "Election news, football kick up ABC's ratings". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  42. Gable, Donna (November 18, 1992). "'Jacksons,' solid gold for ABC". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  43. Gable, Donna (November 25, 1992). "Jacksons help as-easy-as-ABC win". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  44. Gable, Donna (December 9, 1992). "ABC's Tuesday lineup ends up rosy". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  45. Donlon, Brian (December 16, 1992). "No royal ratings for ABC's 'Charles and Diana'". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  46. Donlon, Brian (December 23, 1992). "Early Christmas gift for CBS". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
  47. "Women help push CBS to victory". Life. USA Today. January 13, 1993. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
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  49. Gable, Donna (January 27, 1993). "Inaugural gala helps carry CBS to top". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
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  55. Gable, Donna (May 5, 1993). "'Fried Green Tomatoes' gives NBC sizzle". Life. USA Today. p. 3D.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
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  134. Shout! Factory Does It Again! Announces 'Seasons 1 and 2' of This Long-Awaited Show! Archived June 17, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  135. 'Season 3' Box Art and Details are Released by Shout! Factory Archived October 21, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  136. Shout! Announces 'Season 4' for DVD Archived January 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  137. Shout! Announces 'Season 5' for DVD Archived April 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  138. The 6th and 'Final Season' is Coming to DVD Soon from Shout! Factory Archived August 6, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  139. Search result. "Advanced Primetime Awards Search". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (2008).


External links[]


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v - e - d
Warner Bros. Television 2023 (Alt)
1950s
Warner Bros. Presents (1955–1956) •Casablanca (1955–1956) • Cheyenne (1955–1962) • Conflict (1956–1957) • Sugarfoot (1957–1960) • Colt .45 (1957–1960) •Maverick (1957–1962) • Lawman (1958–1962) • Bronco (1958–1962) • 77 Sunset Strip (1958–1964) • The Alaskans (1959–1960) • Bourbon Street Beat (1959–1960) • Hawaiian Eye (1959–1963)
1960s
The Bugs Bunny Show (1960–2000) • The Roaring 20's (1960–1962) • Surfside 6 (1960–1962) • Room for One More (1962) • The Gallant Men (1962–1963) • GE True (1962–1963) • The Dakotas (1963) • Temple Houston (1963–1964) • Wendy and Me (1964–1965) • No Time for Sergeants (1964–1965) • F Troop (1965–1967) • Mister Roberts (1965–1966) • Hank (1965–1966) • The F.B.I. (1965–1974) • The Road Runner Show (1966–1972) •Tarzan (1966–1968)
1970s
The Chicago Teddy Bears (1971) • The New Dick Van Dyke Show (1971–1974) • Nichols (1971–1972) • The Jimmy Stewart Show (1971–1972) • The Merrie Melodies Show (1972) • Search (1972–1973) • Banyon (1972–1973) • The Delphi BureauThe Brian Keith Show (1972–1974) • The Streets of San Francisco (1972–1977) • Kung Fu (1972–1975) • The Cowboys (1974) • Kodiak (1974) • The New Land (1974) • Shoulder to Shoulder (1974) • Harry O (1974–1976) • Shazam! (1974–1976) • Give-n-Take (1975) • The Neighbors (1975–1976) • Wonder Woman (1975–1979) • Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle (1976–1980) • Alice (1976–1985) • Code R (1977) • The New Adventures of Batman (1977) • Rafferty (1977) • Second Chance (1977) • Roots (1977) • The Fitzpatricks (1977–1978) • The Daffy Duck Show (1978–1979) • Life on Earth (1979) • Roots: The Next Generations (1979) • Time Express (1979) • Dorothy (1979) • California Fever (1979) • The Dukes of Hazzard (1979–1985) • Young Maverick (1979–1980)
1980s
Flo (1980–1981) • Enos (1980–1981) • Freebie and the Bean (1980–1981) • Park Place(1981) • Private Benjamin (1981–1983) • Love, Sidney (1981–1983) • Bret Maverick (1981–1982) • Bare Essence (1983) • The Thorn Birds (1983) • Casablanca (1983) • The Dukes (1983) • Wizards and Warriors (1983) • High Performance (1983) • Goodnight, Beantown (1983–1984) • The Mississippi (1983–1984) • The Yellow Rose (1983–1984) • Scarecrow and Mrs. King (1983–1987) Steambath (1984) • V: The Series (1984–1985) • Night Court (1984–1992) • Off the Rack (1984–1985) • Eye to Eye (1985) • Double Dare (1985) • I Had Three Wives (1985) • Spenser: For Hire (1985–1988) • Growing Pains (1985–1992) • North and South (1985–1986; 1994) • Shadow Chasers (1985–1986) • Head of the Class (1986–1991) • My Sister Sam (1986–1988) • Shell Game (1987) • Ohara (1987–1988) • The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd (1987–1991) • Full House (1987–1995) • Just in Time (1988) • China Beach (1988–1991) • Police Academy: The Animated Series (1988–1989) • Superman (1988) • Just the Ten of Us (1988–1990) • Murphy Brown (1988–1998; 2018) • Superboy (1988–1992) • A Man Called Hawk (1989) • Beetlejuice (1989–1991) • Tales from the Crypt (1989–1996) • Life Goes On (1989–1993) • Family Matters (1989–1998)
1990s
Molloy (1990) • The Flash (1990–1991) • The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (1990–1996) • Swamp Thing (1990–1993) • Sisters (1991–1996) • Step by Step (1991–1998) • Billy (1992) • Human Target (1992) • Angel Street (1992) • Room for Two (1992) • Hangin' with Mr. Cooper (1992–1997) Family Dog (1993) • Tall Hopes (1993) • The Trouble with Larry (1993) • It Had to Be You (1993) • Family Album (1993) • Against the Grain (1993) • Time Trax (1993–1994) • Getting By (1993–1994) • The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. (1993–1994) • Café Americain (1993–1994) • Living Single (1993–1998) • Kung Fu: The Legend Continues (1993–1997) • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (1993–1997) • The John Larroquette Show (1993–1996) • Tales from the Cryptkeeper (1993–1999) • Tom (1994) • Free Willy (1994) • Daddy's Girls (1994) • The George Carlin Show (1994–1995) • On Our Own (1994–1995) • Something Wilder (1994–1995) • Under Suspicion (1994–1995) • Babylon 5 (1994–1998) • Friends (1994–2004) • ER (1994–2009) • Pointman (1995) • The History of Rock 'n' Roll (1995) • Muscle (1995) • Medicine Ball (1995) • The Great Defender (1995) • Charlie Grace (1995) • The Monroes (1995) • Double Rush (1995) • The Office (1995) • Dweebs (1995) • New York News (1995) • The Wayans Bros. (1995–1999) • The Parent 'Hood (1995–1999) • In the House (1995–1999) • Hope & Gloria (1995–1996) • High Society (1995–1996) • Bless This House (1995–1996) • The Client (1995–1996) • Minor Adjustments (1995–1996) • Too Something (1995–1996) • Kirk (1995–1996) • Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1995–2000) • The Drew Carey Show (1995–2004) • Mad TV (1995–2016) • Access Hollywood (1996–present) • Lush Life (1996) • Party Girl (1996) • The Show (1996) • Local Heroes (1996) • Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1996) • My Guys (1996) • Common Law (1996) • Life with Roger (1996–1997) • Pearl (1996–1997) • Nick Freno: Licensed Teacher (1996–1998) • Suddenly Susan (1996–2000) • The Jamie Foxx Show (1996–2001) • Chicago Sons (1997) • Prince Street (1997) • Spy Game (1997) • Leaving L.A. (1997) • The Shining (1997) • Meego (1997) • Built to Last (1997) • La Femme Nikita (1997–2001) • Veronica's Closet (1997–2000) • Prey (1998) • Kelly Kelly (1998) • Maximum Bob (1998) • The Brian Benben Show (1998) • The Closer (1998) • Vengeance Unlimited (1998–1999) • Trinity (1998–1999) • Brimstone (1998–1999) • Hyperion Bay (1998–1999) • Two of a Kind (1998–1999) • Jesse (1998–2000) • For Your Love (1998–2002) • Will & Grace (1998–2006) • Everything's Relative (1999) • The Chimp Channel (1999) • Katie Joplin (1999) • Crusade (1999) • The PJs (1999–2001) • Mission Hill (1999–2002) • Odd Man Out (1999–2000) • The Strip (1999–2000) • The Norm Show (1999–2001) • Jack & Jill (1999–2001) • Third Watch (1999–2005) • The West Wing (1999–2006)
2000s
Freedom (2000) • Opposite Sex (2000) • Bull (2000) • Hype (2000–2001) • The Fugitive (2000–2001) • Baby Blues (2000–2002) • Nikki (2000–2002) • X-Men: Evolution (2000–2003) • Gilmore Girls (2000–2007) • Queer as Folk (2000–2005) • Citizen Baines (2001) • Night Visions (2001) • Thieves (2001) • The Oblongs (2001–2002) • Witchblade (2001–2002) • The Nightmare Room (2001–2002) • Off Centre (2001–2002) • Maybe It's Me (2001–2002) • Smallville (2001–2011) • The Court (2002) •My Guide to Becoming a Rock Star (2002) • Presidio Med (2002–2003) • Fastlane (2002–2003) • Birds of Prey (2002–2003) • Good Morning, Miami (2002–2003) • The Jamie Kennedy Experiment (2002–2004) • Everwood (2002–2006) • What I Like About You (2002–2006) • George Lopez (2002–2007) • Without a Trace (2002–2009) • Wanda at Large (2003) • Black Sash (2003) • Skin (2003) • On the Spot (2003) • Tarzan (2003) • Run of the House (2003–2004) • Like Family (2003–2004) • All About the Andersons (2003–2004) • The Mullets (2003–2004) • I'm with Her (2003–2004) • Rock Me Baby (2003–2006) • Eve (2003–2006) • The O.C. (2003–2007) • All of Us (2003–2007) • Nip/Tuck (2003–2010) • Cold Case (2003–2010) • The Ellen DeGeneres Show (2003–2022) • One Tree Hill (2003–2012) • Two and a Half Men (2003–2015) • The Help (2004) • The D.A. (2004) • Come to Papa (2004) • Next Action Star (2004) • The Stones (2004) • Dr. Vegas (2004) • Salem's Lot (2004) • Jack & Bobby (2004–2005) • The Real Gilligan's Island (2004–2005) • The Mountain (2004–2005) • Center of the Universe (2004–2005) • Blue Collar TV (2004–2006) • Joey (2004–2006) • Veronica Mars (2004–2019) • Unscripted (2005) • Eyes (2005) • Hot Properties (2005) • Reunion (2005) • Jonny Zero (2005) • Twins (2005–2006) • Just Legal (2005–2006) • Related (2005–2006) • E-Ring (2005–2006) • Freddie (2005–2006) • Invasion (2005–2006) • The War at Home (2005–2007) • Close to Home (2005–2007) • The Comeback (2005–2014) • The Closer (2005–2012) • Supernatural (2005–2020) • Four Kings (2006) • Twenty Good Years (2006) • Modern Men (2006) • The Bedford Diaries (2006) • The Evidence (2006) • Justice (2006) • Happy Hour (2006) • Smith (2006) • Men in Trees (2006–2008) • The New Adventures of Old Christine (2006–2010) • The Class (2006–2007) • Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (2006–2007) • The Nine (2006–2007) • Traveler (2007) • Moonlight (2007–2008) • Big Shots (2007–2008) • Aliens in America (2007–2008) Notes from the Underbelly (2007–2008) • Pushing Daisies (2007–2009) • Chuck (2007–2012) • Gossip Girl (2007–2012) • The Big Bang Theory (2007–2019) • Eleventh Hour(2008–2009) • Privileged (2008–2009) • Terminator: The Sarah Connor ChroniclesFringeThe Mentalist (2008–2015) • The Life & Times of Tim(2008–2012) • Childrens Hospital (2008–2016) • The Beautiful Life (2009) • Eastwick (2009) • Hank (2009) • The Forgotten (2009) • V (2009–2011) • Southland (2009–2013) • The Middle (2009–2018) • The Vampire Diaries (2009–2017)
2010s
Past Life (2010) • Miami Medical (2010) • Romantically Challenged (2010) • UndercoversThe Whole Truth (2010) • Human Target (2010–2011) • Life Unexpected (2010–2011) • Hellcats (2010–2011) • Chase (2010–2011) • Better with You (2010–2011) • $#*! My Dad Says (2010–2011) • Nikita (2010–2013) • Mike & Molly (2010–2016) • Shameless (2011–2021) • The Paul Reiser Show (2011) • Harry's Law (2011–2012) • Ringer (2011–2012) • The Secret Circle (2011–2012) • I Hate My Teenage Daughter (2011–2012) • 2 Broke Girls (2011–2017) • Person of Interest (2011–2016) • Hart of Dixie (2011–2015) • Suburgatory (2011–2014) • Are You There, Chelsea? (2012) • Alcatraz (2012) • Coma (2012) • Partners (2012) • Major Crimes (2012–2018) • Arrow (2012–2020) • Revolution (2012–2014) • Work It (2012–2013) • 666 Park Avenue (2012–2013) • Emily Owens, M.D. (2012–2013) • Cult (2013) • Golden Boy (2013) • The Carrie Diaries (2013–2014) • Hostages (2013–2014) • Super Fun Night (2013–2014) • The Tomorrow People (2013–2014) • Almost Human (2013–2014) • Newsreaders (2013–2015) • The Following (2013–2015) • Mom (2013–2021) • The Originals (2013–2018) • Reign (2013–2017) • Believe (2014) • Star-Crossed (2014) • Surviving Jack (2014) • Selfie (2014) • Undateable (2014–2016) • Candidly Nicole (2014–2015) • The Mysteries of Laura (2014–2016) • Forever(2014–2015) • Stalker (2014–2015) • A to Z (2014–2015) • Constantine (2014–2015) • Gotham (2014–2019) • The 100 (2014–2020) • The Flash (2014–2023) • Jane the Virgin (2014–2019) • The Leftovers (2014–2017) • iZombie (2015–2019) • Blindspot (2015–2020) • Crazy Ex-Girlfriend (2015–2019) • Supergirl (2015–2021) • Significant Mother (2015) • The Messengers (2015) • One Big Happy (2015) • Legends of Tomorrow (2016–2022) • Lucifer (2016–2021) • Animal Kingdom (2016–2022) • Queen Sugar (2016–2022) • Westworld (2016–2022) • Lethal Weapon (2016–2019) • Containment (2016) • 11.22.63 (2016) • Rush Hour (2016) • Frequency (2016–2017) • Roadies (2016) • No Tomorrow (2016–2017) • Time After Time (2017) • Powerless (2017) • Training Day (2017) • Me, Myself & I (2017–2018) • Disjointed (2017–2018) • Trial & Error (2017–2018) • Riverdale (2017–2023) • Claws (2017–2022) • Young Sheldon (2017–2024) • Valor (2017–2018) • Black Lightning (2018–2021) • Life Sentence (2018) • Deception (2018) • Living Biblically (2018) • Splitting Up Together (2018–2019) • Castle Rock (2018–2019) • You (2018–2024) • Manifest (2018–2024) • God Friended Me (2018–2020) • Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (2018–2020) • All American (2018–present) • Titans (2018-2023) • Legacies (2018–2022) • The Kominsky Method (2018–2021) • Roswell, New Mexico (2019–2022) • Doom Patrol (2019-2023) • Whiskey Cavalier (2019) • In the Dark (2019–2022) • The Red Line (2019) • Special (2019–2021) • It's Bruno! (2019) • What/If (2019) • Swamp Thing (2019) • Pennyworth (2019–2022) • All Rise (2019-2023) • David Makes Man (2019–present) • Bob Hearts Abishola (2019-2024) • Prodigal Son (2019–2021) • Batwoman (2019–2022) • Watchmen (2019) • Dolly Parton's Heartstrings (2019)
2020s
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