George Lopez (TV series): Difference between revisions
68.54.65.211 (talk) No edit summary |
Davejohnsan (talk | contribs) m Correct order of cast listing in infobox |
||
| Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
|camera = [[Film]]; [[Multi-camera]] |
|camera = [[Film]]; [[Multi-camera]] |
||
|genre = [[Sitcom]] |
|genre = [[Sitcom]] |
||
|creator = [[Bruce Helford]]<br>[[George Lopez]]<br>Robert Borden |
|creator = [[Bruce Helford]]<br />[[George Lopez]]<br />Robert Borden |
||
|starring = [[George Lopez]]<br>[[Constance Marie]]<br>[[ |
|starring = [[George Lopez]]<br />[[Constance Marie]]<br />[[Valente Rodriguez]]<br />[[Masiela Lusha]]<br />[[Luis Armand Garcia]]<br />[[Belita Moreno]]<br />[[Emiliano Díez]]<br />[[Aimee Garcia]]<br /> |
||
|executive_producer = Bruce Helford<br>Deborah Oppenheimer<br>[[Sandra Bullock]] <small>(all; entire run)</small><br>Robert Borden <small>(season 1-6)</small><br>Dave Caplan <small>(seasons 3–6)</small><br>Mark Torgove &<br>Paul A. Kaplan<br>George Lopez <small>(all; seasons 2–6)</small> |
|executive_producer = Bruce Helford<br />Deborah Oppenheimer<br />[[Sandra Bullock]] <small>(all; entire run)</small><br />Robert Borden <small>(season 1-6)</small><br />Dave Caplan <small>(seasons 3–6)</small><br />Mark Torgove &<br />Paul A. Kaplan<br />George Lopez <small>(all; seasons 2–6)</small> |
||
|company = Fortis Productions<br>Mohawk Productions<br>[[Warner Bros. Television]] |
|company = Fortis Productions<br />Mohawk Productions<br />[[Warner Bros. Television]] |
||
|distributor = [[Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution]] |
|distributor = [[Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution]] |
||
|theme_music_composer = {{disambiguation needed|Thomas Allen|date=December 2011}}, [[Harold Ray Brown]], [[B. B. Dickerson|Morris Dickerson]], Gerald Goldstein, [[Lonnie Jordan]], Lee Levitin, {{disambiguation needed|Charles Miller|date=December 2011}} and [[Howard E. Scott]] |
|theme_music_composer = {{disambiguation needed|Thomas Allen|date=December 2011}}, [[Harold Ray Brown]], [[B. B. Dickerson|Morris Dickerson]], Gerald Goldstein, [[Lonnie Jordan]], Lee Levitin, {{disambiguation needed|Charles Miller|date=December 2011}} and [[Howard E. Scott]] |
||
|opentheme = "[[Low Rider]]",<br>performed by [[War (band)|War]] |
|opentheme = "[[Low Rider]]",<br />performed by [[War (band)|War]] |
||
|endtheme = Instrumental closing theme, composed by Nicholas "Aqua" McCarrell <small>(select episodes of seasons 2–6 seen in syndication)</small> |
|endtheme = Instrumental closing theme, composed by Nicholas "Aqua" McCarrell <small>(select episodes of seasons 2–6 seen in syndication)</small> |
||
|composer = [[W. G. Walden|W.G. Snuffy Walden]] <small>(season 1)</small><br>Nicholas "Aqua" McCarrell <small>(seasons 2–6)</small> |
|composer = [[W. G. Walden|W.G. Snuffy Walden]] <small>(season 1)</small><br />Nicholas "Aqua" McCarrell <small>(seasons 2–6)</small> |
||
|country = [[United States]] |
|country = [[United States]] |
||
|language = English |
|language = English |
||
| Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
|num_seasons = 6 |
|num_seasons = 6 |
||
|num_episodes = 120 |
|num_episodes = 120 |
||
|picture_format = [[480i]] ([[SDTV]]),<br>[[1080i]] ([[HDTV]]) |
|picture_format = [[480i]] ([[SDTV]]),<br />[[1080i]] ([[HDTV]]) |
||
|audio_format = [[Dolby Digital]] 5.1 Surround Sound |
|audio_format = [[Dolby Digital]] 5.1 Surround Sound |
||
|list_episodes = List of George Lopez episodes |
|list_episodes = List of George Lopez episodes |
||
| Line 195: | Line 195: | ||
| 2003 || ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards || Top TV Series || Thomas Allen, [[Harold Ray Brown]], Morris Dickerson, Gerald Goldstein, [[Lonnie Jordan]], Lee Levitin, Charles Miller, and [[Howard E. Scott]] |
| 2003 || ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards || Top TV Series || Thomas Allen, [[Harold Ray Brown]], Morris Dickerson, Gerald Goldstein, [[Lonnie Jordan]], Lee Levitin, Charles Miller, and [[Howard E. Scott]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2005 || [[Primetime Emmy Awards|Emmy Award]] || Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series || Judi Giovanni and John Shaffner<br><small>For episodes "Leave it to Lopez"/"The Simple Life"/"Trouble in Paradise"</small> |
| 2005 || [[Primetime Emmy Awards|Emmy Award]] || Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series || Judi Giovanni and John Shaffner<br /><small>For episodes "Leave it to Lopez"/"The Simple Life"/"Trouble in Paradise"</small> |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2003 || rowspan=5|[[Imagen Awards]] || Best Primetime Comedy Series – Television || <center>-</center> |
| 2003 || rowspan=5|[[Imagen Awards]] || Best Primetime Comedy Series – Television || <center>-</center> |
||
Revision as of 21:13, 4 January 2012
"The George Lopez Show" redirects here. For the late-night program hosted by the same comedian, see Lopez Tonight.
| George Lopez | |
|---|---|
The season 4 cast of George Lopez (from left to right), Valente Rodriguez as Ernie Cardenas, Constance Marie with Luis Armand Garcia as Angie and Max Lopez, Emiliano Díez as Vic Palmero, Belita Moreno as Benny Lopez, George Lopez and Masiela Lusha as Carmen Lopez. | |
| Genre | Sitcom |
| Created by | Bruce Helford George Lopez Robert Borden |
| Starring | George Lopez Constance Marie Valente Rodriguez Masiela Lusha Luis Armand Garcia Belita Moreno Emiliano Díez Aimee Garcia |
| Theme music composer | Thomas Allen [disambiguation needed], Harold Ray Brown, Morris Dickerson, Gerald Goldstein, Lonnie Jordan, Lee Levitin, Charles Miller [disambiguation needed] and Howard E. Scott |
| Opening theme | "Low Rider", performed by War |
| Ending theme | Instrumental closing theme, composed by Nicholas "Aqua" McCarrell (select episodes of seasons 2–6 seen in syndication) |
| Composers | W.G. Snuffy Walden (season 1) Nicholas "Aqua" McCarrell (seasons 2–6) |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 6 |
| No. of episodes | 120 (list of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producers | Bruce Helford Deborah Oppenheimer Sandra Bullock (all; entire run) Robert Borden (season 1-6) Dave Caplan (seasons 3–6) Mark Torgove & Paul A. Kaplan George Lopez (all; seasons 2–6) |
| Camera setup | Film; Multi-camera |
| Running time | 22 minutes |
| Production companies | Fortis Productions Mohawk Productions Warner Bros. Television |
| Original release | |
| Network | ABC |
| Release | March 27, 2002 – May 8, 2007 |
George Lopez is an American sitcom starring comedian George Lopez. The show originally aired on ABC from March 27, 2002, to May 8, 2007.
Synopsis
The show stars George Lopez as manager of Powers Brothers Aviation (originally Powers & Sons Aviation), an airplane parts factory. He is married to Angie Palmero (Constance Marie). They have a rebellious and beautiful daughter, Carmen (Masiela Lusha), and a precocious dyslexic son, Max (Luis Armand Garcia). They all live together in Los Angeles, California.
George had a difficult childhood. He was abandoned by his father, Manny Lopez, and further mistreated and traumatized by a careless, abusive, chain smoking, alcoholic mother, Benita "Benny" Lopez (Belita Moreno). She usually criticizes Angie's cooking and parenting skills. George and Benny's adult relationship mainly consists of the two of them trading insults about each other, mainly referring to George's childhood (one example being how George was forced to eat a chair because Benita did not feed him). They appear to care for each other, and George has admitted his feelings for Benny in some episodes. Benny works at Powers Brothers Aviation, as does George's best friend, Ernesto "Ernnie" Cardenas (Valente Rodriguez), who is mostly luckless in the dating area and still lives with his obese mother.
George's father-in-law, Dr. Victor "Vic" Palmero (Emiliano Diez),thinks Angie should have married someone better than George, but as the series progresses, he begins to respect and accept him.
George always tries to catch his children getting in trouble when they misbehave, whether it be by confronting them straight on, or sneakily investigating, then punishing them later. It is still always shown that George loves and cares deeply for his family.
Production
For the first five seasons, the show had an all-Latino cast with the exception of Albanian American actress Masiela Lusha, who played George's daughter Carmen. George Lopez said that due to creative differences between him and Lusha, Lusha's character was written out of the show after Season 5. Lusha did appear in the 2007 season premiere, when her character left to attend college in Vermont. She was replaced by Aimee Garcia as George's niece, Veronica. When the show first aired on ABC a few episodes were rated TV-14 for language, violence, and strong profanity in Spanish. Nick at Nite changed every episode to TV-PG. When ION started airing reruns, most episodes were rated TV-PG-D-L, with the exception of "A Pain in the Ash", which was rated TV-14-L.
On May 15, 2007, the series ended after airing its 120th episode.[1] The final episode aired on May 8. Nightly episode repeats continue to air on various networks both in the United States and abroad.
Characters
Cast
| Actor/Actress | Character | Season |
|---|---|---|
| George Lopez | George Lopez | All Seasons |
| Constance Marie | Angelina "Angie" Lopez (née Palmero) | All Seasons |
| Belita Moreno | Benita "Benny" Lopez (née Diaz) | All Seasons |
| Masiela Lusha | Carmen Consuelo Lopez | Seasons 1-5 Regular ; last appears in first episode of Season 6 |
| Luis Armand Garcia | Maximillian "Max" Lopez | All Seasons |
| Valente Rodriguez | Ernesto "Ernie" Cardenas | All Seasons |
| Emiliano Díez | Victor "Vic" Palmero | Seasons 2–3 Recurring; Seasons 4–6 Regular |
| Aimee Garcia | Veronica Palmero | Season 5 Recurring; Season 6 Regular |
Episodes
Nielsen ratings
| Season | (EDT) | Episodes | Season Premiere | Season Finale | Ranking | Viewers (in millions) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2001-02 | Wednesday, 8:30 | 4 | March 27, 2002 | April 17, 2002 | #70[2] | 9.0[2] |
| 2 | 2002–03 | 24 | October 2, 2002 | May 14, 2003 | #50[3] | 10.4[3] | |
| 3 | 2003–04 | Friday 8:00 | 28 | September 26, 2003 | May 21, 2004 | #96[4] | 7.44[4] |
| 4 | 2004–05 | Tuesday 8:30 | 24 | September 28, 2004 | May 17, 2005 | #79[5] | 7.2[5] |
| 5 | 2005–06 | Wednesday 8:00 | 22 | October 5, 2005 | April 12, 2006 | #82[6] | 7.2[6] |
| 6 | 2006–07 | 18 | January 24, 2007 | May 8, 2007 | #95[7] | 6.1[7] | |
Syndication
The show entered syndication one month after the series finale on ABC, and is distributed by Warner Bros. Television Distribution. The show aired in broadcast syndication on independent stations, and affiliates of Fox, The CW and MyNetworkTV as well as The CW Plus stations in the United States from 2007-2011 and on Telelatino in Canada. The show moved to ION Television on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2011. [8]
On March 8, 2007, it was announced that George Lopez would join the Nick at Nite lineup. It first aired on Nick at Nite on September 10, 2007 – it was the most current non-original show to air on Nick at Nite[9] (until it was announced that Everybody Hates Chris would join the lineup). To this date, it continues to be their highest rated series and one of cable's best for an off-network sitcom.
Never a major hit in primetime, the show became an unexpected success in syndication. Many markets also moved the show from overnight timeslots to more desirable ones.[10]
Episodes from the first four seasons of George Lopez do not use those respective seasons' opening titles, the season five version is used instead (this is evident as Emiliano Diez is credited in the sequence, which is slightly longer than how they were originally broadcast on ABC, though there is also a short version also used in syndication that also differs from the original short opening credits that does not credit him for seasons 1-3, even though Diez did not make his first guest appearance until season two and did not become a cast regular until season four); the final two seasons use those seasons' appropriate versions of the opening credits.
On MTV Tr3s, the show premiered on the network's redebut July 12, 2010 and reruns are being shown there.
On ION Television, the show premiered on the network's Sunday marathon starting on October 2, 2011.
DVD release
On April 17, 2007, Warner Home Video released seasons 1 and 2 on DVD in Region 1.
| DVD Name | Release Date | Ep # | Additional Information |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Complete First and Second Seasons | April 17, 2007 | 28 | Bonus features include "Inside the Comedic Mind" featurette and Gag reel.
The theme song "Low Rider" has been replaced due to licensing costs. George Lopez came in with the producers to record a new theme. |
The first, second, and third seasons have also been published on iTunes.[11] It is unknown whether the remaining seasons will be released. Also, according to Amazon.com, the third season is set to be released, however no release date has been announced.
Awards
| Year | Award | Category | Recipient |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards | Top TV Series | Thomas Allen, Harold Ray Brown, Morris Dickerson, Gerald Goldstein, Lonnie Jordan, Lee Levitin, Charles Miller, and Howard E. Scott |
| 2005 | Emmy Award | Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series | Judi Giovanni and John Shaffner For episodes "Leave it to Lopez"/"The Simple Life"/"Trouble in Paradise" |
| 2003 | Imagen Awards | Best Primetime Comedy Series – Television | |
| 2004 | Best Supporting Actress in a Television Comedy | Belita Moreno | |
| Best Primetime Series – Comedy | |||
| Best Actress in a Television Comedy | Constance Marie | ||
| Best Actor in a Television Comedy | George Lopez | ||
| 2003 | Young Artist Award | Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) – Leading Young Actress | Masiela Lusha |
| Best Family Television Series (Comedy or Drama) | |||
| 2004 | Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) – Leading Young Actress | Masiela Lusha |
References
- ^ 2007 Cancelled Shows: ABC Cuts Some Beloved Series, TV Series Finale, May 15, 2007
- ^ a b "How did your favorite show rate?". USA Today. May 28, 2002. Retrieved 02-12-2010.
{{cite web}}: Check date values in:|accessdate=(help) - ^ a b "Rank And File". Entertainment Weekly Published in issue #713 Jun 06, 2003. Retrieved 02-12-2010.
{{cite web}}: Check date values in:|accessdate=(help) - ^ a b "I. T. R. S. Ranking Report: 01 Thru 210". ABC Medianet. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved 02-12-2010.
{{cite web}}: Check date values in:|accessdate=(help) - ^ a b "Primetime series". The Hollywood Reporter. Nielsen Business Media. May 27, 2005. Retrieved 02-12-2010.
{{cite web}}: Check date values in:|accessdate=(help) [dead link] - ^ a b "Series". The Hollywood Reporter. Nielsen Business Media. May 26, 2006. Retrieved 02-12-2010.
{{cite web}}: Check date values in:|accessdate=(help) [dead link] - ^ a b "2006-07 primetime wrap". The Hollywood Reporter. Nielsen Business Media. May 25, 2007. Retrieved 02-12-2010.
{{cite web}}: Check date values in:|accessdate=(help) [dead link] - ^ http://blog.sitcomsonline.com/2011/09/ion-television-fall-2011-schedule-now.html
- ^ "George Lopez at Nick At Nite". Nick At Nite. Retrieved 2007-12-27.
- ^ Albiniak, Paige (2008-04-13). "'Lopez' A Sleeper Hit". broadcastingcable.com. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
- ^ http://www.apple.com/search/ipoditunes/?q=George+Lopez Under Section "TV Shows". Retrieved on July 29, 2009.