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Felicity (TV series)

1998 American drama television series


1998 American drama television series

FieldValue
imageFelicity (Touchstone Television series) logo.svg
image_classskin-invert
genreCollege drama
creator{{Plainlist
starring{{Plainlist
narrated{{Plainlist
theme_music_composer{{Plainlist
open_theme{{Plainlist
composer{{Plainlist
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
num_seasons4
num_episodes84
list_episodesList of Felicity episodes
executive_producer{{Plainlist
location{{Plainlist
cinematography{{Plainlist
cameraSingle-camera
runtime42–45 minutes
company{{Plainlist
networkThe WB
first_aired
last_aired
  • J. J. Abrams
  • Matt Reeves
  • Keri Russell
  • Scott Speedman
  • Amy Jo Johnson
  • Tangi Miller
  • Scott Foley
  • Greg Grunberg
  • Amanda Foreman
  • Ian Gomez
  • Janeane Garofalo
  • Keri Russell
  • Judith Owen
  • J. J. Abrams
  • Andrew Jarecki
  • "Felicity Theme" (seasons 1–2)
  • "New Version of You" (seasons 3–4)
  • W. G. Snuffy Walden
  • Joseph Williams
  • Danny Pelfrey
  • Jon Huck
  • John Zuker
  • J. J. Abrams
  • Brian Grazer
  • Tony Krantz
  • Matt Reeves
  • Jennifer Levin
  • Ron Howard
  • John Eisendrath
  • Laurie McCarthy
  • New York City
  • Los Angeles
  • University of Southern California
  • Robert Primes
  • Michael Bonvillain
  • Marshall Adams
  • Imagine Television
  • Touchstone Television

Felicity is an American drama television series created by J. J. Abrams and Matt Reeves and produced by Imagine Television and Touchstone Television for the WB. Brian Grazer and Ron Howard were executive producers through Imagine Entertainment.

The series revolves around the college experiences of the title character, Felicity Porter (portrayed by Keri Russell), as she attends the "University of New York" (based on New York University), across the country from her home in Palo Alto, California. The show ran for four seasons from September 29, 1998, to May 22, 2002, with each season corresponding to the traditional American university divisions of freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior years.

In 2007, Felicity was one of Time magazine's "All-Time 100 Best TV Shows". AOL TV named Felicity one of the "Best School Shows of All Time". In June 2010, Entertainment Weekly named Felicity Porter one of the "100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years".

Plot

Main article: List of Felicity episodes

The series opens at Felicity's high school graduation, where she asks Ben Covington, a classmate on whom she has a crush, to sign her yearbook. Moved by his comment that he wished they had gotten to know each other further, she changes her education plans completely, deciding to follow Ben to New York rather than attend Stanford University as a pre-med student. Felicity's overbearing parents, concerned about Felicity's seemingly rash decision, come to New York to try to persuade her to return home and "get back on track". Felicity has second thoughts about her decision, but soon realizes that she came not only to follow Ben, but to discover her true inner self.

While Felicity works to sort out her emotions, she continues the basic motions of student life and moves into her dorm. There, she meets the resident advisor Noel Crane. Eventually, the two develop a romantic relationship, and the love triangle among Felicity, Ben, and Noel forms the basic dramatic conflicts in the show throughout the series.

A number of other characters appear and play large roles in Felicity's life. Her roommate for the first two years is Meghan Rotundi, a goth Wiccan who occasionally casts spells on Felicity and others. Julie Emrick is one of Felicity's best friends, as is Elena Tyler, who often takes classes with Felicity. Felicity also has male friends, including Sean Blumberg, who is always trying to produce new off-kilter inventions, and Javier Clemente Quintata, who manages the Dean & DeLuca where Felicity works for most of her college career.

A recurring episode opener of the show is a stark camera shot of Felicity sitting in a dormitory room or apartment holding a tape recorder, recalling events in order to make a cassette tape to send to an old friend named Sally Reardon (voiced by Janeane Garofalo). This occasionally provides a method for Felicity to narrate an entire episode. At the end of episodes like this, Felicity is often shown to be listening to a tape that Sally has sent in reply.

Cast and characters

Characters are listed in title credit order and by appearance on the show.

ActorCharacterSeasons1234
Keri RussellFelicity Portercolspan="4"
Scott SpeedmanBen Covingtoncolspan="4"
Amy Jo JohnsonJulie Emrickcolspan="3"Special Guest}}
Tangi MillerElena Tylercolspan="4"
Scott FoleyNoel Cranecolspan="4"
Greg GrunbergSean Blumbergcolspan="1"colspan="3"
Amanda ForemanMeghan Rotundicolspan="1"colspan="3"
Ian GomezJavier Clemente Quintatacolspan="3"colspan="1"

Production

Setting

Felicity was filmed in part in New York City, and is set at the fictional University of New York (UNY), based on New York University (NYU). Like NYU, UNY is located in Greenwich Village near Washington Square Park, and the school is an important part of the show. Although like other universities, NYU normally welcomes being mentioned in film or on television as free product placement, the university refused permission for the show to use its name, stating that "[t]he negatives kind of outweighed the positives".

Writer's age

In 1999, a publicly hyped young writer for the show, Riley Weston, was disclosed as a fraud for claiming to be much younger than she truly was. At the age of 32, she began marketing herself to television studios as a recent high school graduate, passing off her husband as her older brother. She was soon hired by the WB as a writer for Felicity. Hailed as a child prodigy and "wunderkind", she was featured on Entertainment Weeklys October 1998 list of the "100 Most Creative People in Entertainment", which described her as an up-and-coming 19-year-old. Shortly thereafter, she was offered a six-figure screenwriting deal with Disney.

Time-slot and hairstyle changes

In the summer of 1999, after filming the first season, Felicity star Russell—known for what The New York Times described as "[t]hat glorious head of voluminous golden backlit hair"—sent the show's producers a photo wearing a short-haired wig. They panicked before learning that it was a joke but then suggested to the actress that a new hairstyle would be appropriate. After being shifted from Tuesday nights at 9:00pm Eastern to Sunday nights at 8:00pm Eastern (WB's weakest night) for the 1999–2000 season, the ratings for Felicity declined immediately. This decline occurred before the hairstyle change, but the later hair-style change became conflated by some of the public and by some of the popular press and network executives with this earlier event and thus incorrectly blamed the earlier ratings drop partly on the later new hairstyle. After the negative reaction Russell rejected wearing extensions or a wig while her hair grew back. Although storytelling and time-slot changes had already created a ratings decline, a network executive said WB actors' future hair changes would "be given more thought at the network than it previously would have". In 2010, TV Guide Network listed the hairstyle change at No. 19 on their list of "25 Biggest TV Blunders", with several commentators arguing that it was the reason that the ratings of the show dropped. Russell did not agree with the network's attribution of the ratings decline, telling Entertainment Weekly in 2000, "I think that's a pretty lame excuse. I think a lot more than a haircut was deciding the ratings [last year]", whichaccording to a September 29, 2023, Time magazine articleincluded the timeslot change, which cost the show one third of its viewers. Shannon Carlin, author of the Time article, also pointed to a decline in viewership for the network overall, which by May 2000, was in last place in ratings. The haircut incident went on to become a popular culture reference within other television shows, both comedic and dramatic. Despite the controversy, Felicity continued for two more seasons.

Home media

All four seasons were re-released on DVD by ABC Studios on April 7, 2009, in "slimmer" packaging. On February 9, 2012, it was announced that Lionsgate Home Entertainment had acquired the rights to the series and planned on re-releasing it. Seasons 1 and 2 were re-released on May 1, 2012, and do not contain any extras, subtitles, or other languages besides English. Seasons 3 and 4 were re-released on May 7, 2013.

TitleReleaseDetailsSpecial featuresFelicity: Freshman Year CollectionFelicity: Sophomore Year CollectionFelicity: Junior Year CollectionFelicity: Senior Year Collection

Reception

Ratings

The series debut garnered 7.1 million viewers.

SeasonEpisodesOriginal airingRankViewers
(in millions)Season premiereSeason finaleTV season1#1244.42#1382.23#1233.94#1393.2
22September 29, 1998May 25, 19991998–1999
23September 26, 1999May 24, 20001999–2000
17October 4, 2000May 23, 20012000–2001
22October 10, 2001May 22, 20022001–2002

Accolades

Felicity was nominated for 38 awards during its run from 1998 to 2002 and won several, including an Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Series for Robert Primes and Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama for Keri Russell.

YearAwardCategoryNominees(s)ResultRef.
1999Artios AwardsBest Casting for TV, Dramatic PilotMarcia Shulman
Eddie AwardsBest Edited Series for TelevisionStan Salfas, Warren Bowman
Golden GlobesBest Actress – Drama SeriesKeri Russell
Best Series – DramaFelicity
People's Choice AwardsFavorite TV DramaFelicity
Favorite TV Drama ActressKeri Russell
OFTA Television AwardsBest Actress in a Drama SeriesKeri Russell
Best Actress in a New Drama SeriesKeri Russell
Best Direction in a Drama SeriesFelicity
Best Music in a SeriesFelicity
Best New Drama SeriesFelicity
Best New Theme Song in a SeriesW. G. Snuffy Walden
Best New Titles Sequence in a SeriesFelicity
Primetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Cinematography for a SeriesRobert Primes
Teen Choice AwardsChoice TV: ActorScott Foley
Choice TV: ActressKeri Russell
Choice TV: Breakout PerformanceScott Foley
Keri Russell
Scott Speedman
Choice TV: Drama SeriesFelicity
Television Critics Association AwardsOutstanding New ProgramFelicity
2000ALMA AwardsSpecial Achievement AwardIan Gomez
American Society of Cinematographers AwardsOutstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Regular SeriesRobert Primes
GLAAD Media AwardsOutstanding TV Drama SeriesFelicity
Primetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Music Composition for a SeriesDanny Pelfrey, W. G. Snuffy Walden
Teen Choice AwardsChoice TV: ActorScott Foley
Scott Speedman
Choice TV: ActressKeri Russell
Choice TV: SidekickIan Gomez
Amy Jo Johnson
Choice TV Show: DramaFelicity
2001GLAAD Media AwardsOutstanding TV Drama SeriesFelicity
Teen Choice AwardsChoice TV: ActressKeri Russell
Choice TV Show: DramaFelicity
2002NAACP Image AwardsOutstanding Actress in a Drama SeriesTangi Miller
Teen Choice AwardsChoice TV: Action/DramaFelicity
Choice TV Actor: DramaScott Foley
Scott Speedman
Choice TV Actress: DramaKeri Russell

References

References

  1. Poniewozik, James. (September 6, 2007). "The 100 Best TV Shows of All-''Time''".
  2. (August 26, 2008). "Best School Shows of All Time". AOL TV.
  3. Vary, Adam B.. (June 1, 2010). "The 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years: Here's our full list!".
  4. Gates, Anita. (September 2, 1998). "N.Y.U. Says, 'No, Thanks' To Star Role in a Sitcom". New York Times.
  5. Weinraub, Bernard. (October 17, 1998). "TV Writer, 32, Passed for 19; Bloom Is Off Her Contract". [[The New York Times]].
  6. Elber, Lynn. (October 15, 1998). "Teen Wunderkind TV Writer Unmasked". Associated Press News.
  7. Hontz, Jenny. (October 15, 1998). "Old enough to know better". Variety.
  8. Gates, Anita. (January 21, 2000). "Entering the Lovelorn Zone: Felicity's Fifth Dimension". The New York Times.
  9. Owen, Rob. (January 21, 2000). "On the Tube: The ratings dropped with her golden locks – WB says grow it back". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  10. (March 2, 2010). "TV Guide Network's ''25 Biggest TV Blunders'' Special Delivers 3.3 Million Viewers". The Futon Critic.
  11. Carlin, Shannon. (September 29, 2023). "25 Years After ''Felicity'', It's Time to Revisit TV's Most Infamous Haircut".
  12. "Felicity: The Complete First Season". Amazon.
  13. (April 7, 2009). "Felicity: Season Two". Amazon.
  14. (April 7, 2009). "Felicity: Season Three". Amazon.
  15. (April 7, 2009). "Felicity: Season Four". Amazon.
  16. "''Felicity'' – Lionsgate Picks Up Rights, Schedules Re-Issues for Felicity, Samantha Who? and Dirty Sexy Money". TV Shows on TV.
  17. "Felicity – Season 1". Lionsgate Shop.
  18. "Felicity – Season 2". Lionsgate Shop.
  19. "Felicity DVD news: Box Art for Felicity - Season 3 and Felicity - Season 4". tvshowsondvd.
  20. "Felicity: The Complete Second Season". Video.com.
  21. "Felicity: The Complete Third Season". Video.com.
  22. "Felicity: The Complete Fourth Season". Video.com.
  23. de Moraes, Lisa. (September 11, 2008). "Why Did ''Fringe'' Unravel? Blame It on the TV God". The Washington Post.
  24. "Final ratings for the 1998–1999 TV season". OoCities.org.
  25. "NIELSEN RATINGS FOR 1999-2000". SFGATE.
  26. (June 1, 2001). "The Bitter End".
  27. (May 28, 2002). "How did your favorite show rate?". USA Today.
  28. "Awards for ''Felicity''". Amazon.com.
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