Something Wilder


title: "Something Wilder" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1990s-american-multi-camera-sitcoms", "1994-american-television-series-debuts", "1995-american-television-series-endings", "american-english-language-television-shows", "television-series-about-families", "television-series-by-warner-bros.-television-studios", "television-shows-set-in-massachusetts", "nbc-sitcoms"] topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Something_Wilder" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox television"]

FieldValue
imageSomethingWilder.png
image_size260
genreSitcom
creator{{Plain list
starring{{Plain list
composer{{Plain list
opentheme"You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me"
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
num_seasons1
num_episodes18 (3 unaired)
executive_producer{{Plain list
cameraMulti-camera
runtime30 minutes
company{{Plain list
networkNBC
first_aired
last_aired
::

| image = SomethingWilder.png | image_size = 260 | caption = | genre = Sitcom | creator = {{Plain list|

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/Something_Gene_Wilder_Cast_Photo.JPG" caption="Cast"] ::

Something Wilder is an American sitcom television series starring Gene Wilder that ran on NBC from October 1, 1994, to June 13, 1995. The series was created by Lee Kalcheim and Barnet Kellman. A total of 18 half-hour episodes were produced over one season.

Synopsis

A fifty-something husband, Gene Bergman (Wilder), and his wife, Annie (Hillary B. Smith), who is in her thirties, are learning to cope with raising 4-year-old fraternal twin sons, Gabe and Sam (Ian Bottiglieri and Carl Michael Lindner). Sensitive, emotional Gene was especially unprepared for the prospect of fatherhood this much later in his life, and could not fathom how the generation gap was going to play out with the kids once they grew older. Sensible Annie pulled him through all the obstacles, and in the meantime, the Bergmans were just settling in for the joy of Sam and Gabe's innocent years. Gene ran an advertising agency with his partner, crabby best friend Jack Travis (Gregory Itzin), whose offices were located adjacent to both their homes. Jack, whose kids were grown, was at first unsure about Gene's newfound habit of dropping work frequently throughout the day to play with the twins, but eventually adjusted and sometimes found himself babysitting Sam and Gabe whenever some situation (usually comedic and slapstick) caused Gene and Annie to be away. Also working for the agency was Annie's irresponsible younger brother, Richie Wainwright (Jake Weber), who doted on the kids almost as much as Gene. Others seen were Annie's niece from another of her siblings, boy crazy teen Katy Mooney (Raegan Kotz), and Caleb (Cleavant Derricks), the neighborhood handyman.

The intended wit and charm of the show was drawn from Gene Wilder's comedic intuitiveness and the frantic mimicry and mugging he put on with his two young co-stars. Wilder and on-screen wife Hillary Bailey Smith also developed a "comedic supercouple" repertoire, as they often found themselves in situations ribbed with slapstick every week, slightly reminiscent of Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball; at the same time, they were found to depict the smart, modern career couple of the 1990s. However, Something Wilder failed to catch on with viewers, which led to cancellation by March 1995.

Cast

Main

Recurring

Guest appearances

Alice Cooper guest starred in the fourteenth episode, "Hangin' With Mr. Cooper", when Gene unexpectedly finds himself cast in a television appearance promoting Cooper's new hit single. Marla Maples guest starred on the episode "Love Native American Style". In this episode, Gene takes a group of children on an Indian troop camping trip. Maples plays Donna Lorenzo, a divorced mother who goes along. Together, they demonstrate wrestling techniques and share a sleeping bag.

Production

The series premiere of Something Wilder was delayed by a few weeks in the fall of 1994, as a result of casting issues. Jennifer Grey had originally won the role of Annie Bergman, and shot the first pilot; test audiences, however, disapproved of the age difference between her and Wilder. Grey was let go, but the search for her replacement proved more challenging than expected. Almost down to the wire, NBC then cast actress Hillary Bailey Smith for the role. Smith, who was playing the contract role of Nora Gannon on One Life to Live at the time, continued appearing on that show (despite the fact that OLTL was on a competing network, ABC) during the run of Something Wilder, and resumed the daytime role full time when Something Wilder was canceled.

Episodes

|EpisodeNumber=1 |Title=Hell No, They Won't Go |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=8.3 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=2 |Title=All in the Game |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy=Gail Honigberg |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=7.5 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=3 |Title=No Kids Allowed |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy=Lee Kalcheim |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=7.3 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=4 |Title=Buster Beefy |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy=Seth Kurland |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=7.4 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=5 |Title=Love, Native American Style |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=16.0 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=6 |Title=Gotta Dance |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=16.3 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=7 |Title=Holy Water |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy=James Berg & Stan Zimmerman |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=14.4 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=8 |Title=The Ex Files |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=18.6 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=9 |Title=For the Boys |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy=Mark Drop |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=16.3 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=10 |Title=Family Tie |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=13.7 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=11 |Title=Sleepless in Stockbridge |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=15.0 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=12 |Title=Love at First Flight |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy=Jennifer Glickman & Seth Kurland |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=13.9 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=13 |Title=Bergman of Alcatraz |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=11.4 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=14 |Title=Hanging with Mr. Cooper |DirectedBy=Barnet Kellman |WrittenBy=Barry Vigon & Tom Walla |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=14.2 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=15 |Title=Dr. Roof |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= |Viewers=10.0 |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=16 |Title=Dumping's Rotten in the State of Massachusetts |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= Unaired |Viewers= |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=17 |Title=Mothers and Other Strangers |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= Unaired |Viewers= |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A |EpisodeNumber=18 |Title=Oy, the Jury |DirectedBy= |WrittenBy= |OriginalAirDate= Unaired |Viewers= |ShortSummary= |LineColor=36BD2A

Release

After the series premiered on October 1, 1994, on Saturdays at 8/7c, lackluster ratings prompted NBC to pull the show after only four episodes had aired. It was relaunched in December in a new Tuesday 8:30/7:30c slot. The series continued steadily for another three months, but it did not do much better in the ratings. NBC dropped the show from its lineup again in March 1995, and officially canceled it not long after. One more original episode turned up in the same Tuesday time slot on June 13, 1995, with three unaired episodes remaining.

References

References

  1. (October 5, 1994). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].
  2. Graham, Jefferson. (October 12, 1994). "CBS edges into No. 1 spot, but can it stay?". [[USA Today]].
  3. DeRosa, Robin. (October 19, 1994). "Regular series put ABC back on top". [[USA Today]].
  4. DeRosa, Robin. (November 2, 1994). "ABC is 'Home' alone at the top". [[USA Today]].
  5. (December 14, 1994). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].
  6. DeRosa, Robin. (December 21, 1994). "ABC's winning way with comedy". [[USA Today]].
  7. DeRosa, Robin. (December 29, 1994). "Football kicks off ABC's winning week". [[USA Today]].
  8. (January 11, 1995). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].
  9. DeRosa, Robin. (January 18, 1995). "'ER' rolls into the No. 1 spot". [[USA Today]].
  10. DeRosa, Robin. (January 25, 1995). "'ER' helps pull NBC to No. 1". [[USA Today]].
  11. (February 8, 1995). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].
  12. (February 22, 1995). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].
  13. (March 15, 1995). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].
  14. (March 22, 1995). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].
  15. (June 21, 1995). "Nielsen ratings". [[USA Today]].

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1990s-american-multi-camera-sitcoms1994-american-television-series-debuts1995-american-television-series-endingsamerican-english-language-television-showstelevision-series-about-familiestelevision-series-by-warner-bros.-television-studiostelevision-shows-set-in-massachusettsnbc-sitcoms