Remember WENN
Remember WENN is a comedy-drama television series that aired from 1996 to 1998 on the cable channel American Movie Classics. Created and written by Rupert Holmes (with music also by Holmes) and set at the fictional Pittsburgh radio station WENN in the late 1930s and early 1940s, it depicted events (both dramatic and comic) in the personal and professional lives of the station's staff in the era before and during World War II and the Golden Age of Radio. It is not related to the real radio station in Alabama known with the WENN callsign from 1959 to 1983 and again since 2009. The series title is a play on the phrase "remember when".
Remember WENN | |
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Genre | Comedy drama |
Developed by | Rupert Holmes |
Starring | Tom Beckett Carolee Carmello George Hall Margaret Hall John Bedford Lloyd Melinda Mullins Christopher Murney Amanda Naughton Hugh O'Gorman Kevin O'Rourke Dina Spybey Mary Stout |
Composer | Rupert Holmes |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 4 |
No. of episodes | 56 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Paula Connelly Skorka |
Producers | Frank Doelger Howard Meltzer |
Cinematography | David Sperling |
Production companies | Entertainment Group Turtleback Productions |
Release | |
Original network | American Movie Classics |
Original release | January 31, 1996 – September 11, 1998 |
The show ran for four seasons totalling 56 episodes, including an hour-long Christmas episode. The series was slated for a fifth season, but was cancelled when new management took over AMC. Holmes says that it was his favorite writing experience of his career.[1] After decades of being unavailable to audiences, all four seasons of the series are currently streaming on AMC+ and PLEX TV.
Major characters
- Elizabeth "Betty" Roberts (Amanda Naughton) – Originally an unpaid writing intern at WENN, the plucky and determined Betty is hired as a salaried writer after resolving a crisis at the station in the first episode. Being from Elkhart, Indiana, Betty exhibits a lot of small-town naivete and at times seems overwhelmed by living in a bigger city like Pittsburgh, though she never loses her spirit. While she primarily remains a writer during the course of the show, she also acts, sings, announces, reads advertisements on the air, negotiates with sponsors, and acts as the de facto station manager on many occasions. Throughout the series, Betty shares romantic and reciprocated feelings for both Victor Comstock and Scott Sherwood. Her relationship with Scott sours when he admits to lying about his background. Her relationship with Victor is unconventional. While Betty shows romantic interest in him, he is usually distant and business-like toward her and appears oblivious to her veiled advances.
- Victor Comstock (John Bedford Lloyd) – The station manager of WENN during the most of the first season of the series, Victor Comstock clearly loves working in radio and inspires loyalty amongst his staff. Though generally honest and upright, he is not above reluctantly engaging in mild deception or slightly shady ploys to keep the always-financially-shaky station running. Victor leaves WENN to broadcast for the BBC in London, and is reported to have been killed during a bombing raid. Victor revisits WENN at the end of season two, revealing to Betty that he survived the bombing and is working for the American government. Victor returns as the station manager in season four but is revealed to be suffering from post traumatic stress and has no memory of the time since the bombing. He sees Betty outside of the office but does not appear to be as invested in the relationship as she is.
- Scott Sherwood (Kevin O'Rourke) – Introduced towards the end of the first season as Victor Comstock's chosen successor as station manager. Unlike Victor, Scott has no compunction about engaging in audience pandering, or cheerfully lying to sponsors and staff. His catchphrases are an upbeat "Well, I don't know much about radio..." (to which most of the staff replies with firm agreement), and "Would you look at the time?" (said as he leaves the room whenever there's a unpleasant task to be done, leaving behind someone else to do it.) He does have a well-hidden good side, such as when he swears Gertie and Mr. Foley to secrecy that he helped save Betty's job. In the third season, it is revealed that Scott bluffed his way into his position and is fired. Betty re-hires Scott as an actor for the station. Though Scott was very incompetent as a station manager, he does very well as an on-air performer, even getting nominated for a Golden Lobe award. In addition, Scott shows a knack for cracking secret codes which are suspected of being sent out over the airwaves by WENN sponsors. He makes several romantic advances toward Betty but usually gets rejected. He realizes that Betty is smitten with Victor and often eavesdrops or snoops around to try and gain an advantage in his pursuit of her.
- Jeff Singer (Hugh O'Gorman) – An actor at the station who plays the romantic lead on most of the station's programs. Jeff travels to London to participate in Victor's broadcasts, but returns to WENN after the air raid, having sustained minor injuries. He has a complicated romantic relationship with Hilary Booth throughout the series. They originally married several years before the first season but divorced a short time later in Mexico without telling anyone. They decided to remarry in season two secretly since everyone believed they were still married. In the third season, Jeff goes to London and marries Pavla Nemkova, re-divorcing Hilary in the process. Jeff later reveals that he only married Pavla so that he can use her to relay confidential information back to the US from war-torn London. However, it turns out that Pavla just used him to move to the US and break into the entertainment industry. Even after Hilary learns the truth, she still shuns him until his divorce is finalized. His divorce from Pavla gets finalized on the last episode.
- Hilary Booth (Melinda Mullins) – An actress at WENN who plays the female lead on most of the station's programs. A former Broadway star, Hilary makes several attempts to return to the stage. Hilary often exhibits diva-like behavior at the station. She acts as if she is bigger than the radio programs themselves often incorporating her real life drama into the on-air scenes instead of reading from Betty's scripts. She is extremely possessive of her on-and-off again husband Jeffrey Singer. She often will put a stop to even the slightest of his interactions with other women.
- Mackie Bloom (Christopher Murney) – The "Man of a Thousand Voices" who plays many of the character roles on WENN's programs—everything from comic sidekicks to mellifluously-voiced romantic leading men. Short, balding and husky in real life, Mackie can be very self-conscious about the fact that his appearance doesn't match up with his voice. In the third season, it was learned that Mackie served time for unknowingly driving a getaway car in a robbery. In the fourth season, he tours with an off-Broadway production and is absent from many of the episodes.
- Celia Mellon (Dina Spybey) – An ambitious young actress (who claims ties to Pittsburgh's prominent Mellon family), Celia works at WENN during the series' first season. While maintaining a fresh-faced, (mostly) innocent demeanor, she is not averse to sleeping her way to the top, and leaves the station to pursue a career as a film actress in Hollywood. She is seen briefly on a Hollywood set filming a picture in a single season 2 episode.
- Maple LaMarsh (Carolee Carmello) – An actress and fill-in organist for WENN. A brassy, cheery former burlesque dancer, Maple is initially hired by Betty in the second season of the series. Scott seems to be familiar with Maple's previous career—as WENN began looking for a fill-in organist, it was Scott who suggested Gertie call Maple backstage at the theater, and he knew that backstage phone number by heart. Maple essentially replaces Celia as a regular character.
- Tom Eldridge (George Hall) – A retired Broadway doorman who does general chores for WENN and fills in occasionally as an actor for the station. Mr. Eldridge is very absent-minded and often misinterprets puns and other forms of wordplay. In the fourth season, he buys a winning lottery ticket. He pretends to lose the ticket but it is later revealed that he used the proceeds of the ticket to keep the radio station afloat.
- Gertrude "Gertie" Reese (Margaret Hall) – The station's switchboard operator. Gertie writes two scripts that serve as "fantasy" plots for two separate episodes of the series.
- Eugenia Bremer (Mary Stout) – The station's organist who also briefly serves as the host of a short-lived nighttime program. Eugenia begins to develop a romantic relationship with Mr. Foley late in the series.
- Mr. Foley (Tom Beckett) – WENN's foley artist. Mr. Foley has no on-screen dialogue throughout the series, though his off-screen speech is often noted by other characters to a generally comedic effect. In the second season, Mr. Foley is revealed to have a brother, who is very loud and crude.
- C.J. McHugh (C.J. Byrnes) – WENN's sound engineer for the first three seasons of the series.
Episodes
Season 1 (1996)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "On the Air" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | January 13, 1996 |
2 | 2 | "Klondike 9366" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | January 13, 1996 |
3 | 3 | "A Rock and a Soft Place" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | February 7, 1996 |
4 | 4 | "There But for the Grace" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | February 21, 1996 |
5 | 5 | "Sight Unseen" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | June 1, 1996 |
6 | 6 | "Emperor Smith" | Frank Doelger | Rupert Holmes | June 8, 1996 |
7 | 7 | "Who's Minding the Asylum?" | Howard Meltzer | Story by : Rupert Holmes Teleplay by : Rupert Holmes & G. Ross Parker | June 15, 1996 |
8 | 8 | "Armchair Detective" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | June 22, 1996 |
9 | 9 | "Hilary Booth, Registered Nurse" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | June 29, 1996 |
10 | 10 | "Valentino Speaks!" | Juan José Campanella | Story by : Rupert Holmes Teleplay by : G. Ross Parker | July 13, 1996 |
11 | 11 | "A Capital Idea" | Frank Doelger | Rupert Holmes | July 20, 1996 |
12 | 12 | "Popping the Question" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | August 3, 1996 |
13 | 13 | "World of Tomorrow" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | August 17, 1996 |
Season 2 (1996–97)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
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14 | 1 | "Radio Silence" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | November 16, 1996 |
15 | 2 | "I Now Pronounce You Man and Wife Again" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | November 23, 1996 |
16 | 3 | "Some Good News, Some Bad News" | Bruce Leddy | Rupert Holmes | November 30, 1996 |
17 | 4 | "Don't Act Like That" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | December 7, 1996 |
18 | 5 | "The Diva That Wouldn't Die" | Richard Shepard | Story by : Rupert Holmes Teleplay by : Rick Mitz | December 14, 1996 |
19 | 6 | "Christmas in the Airwaves" | Peter Lauer | Rupert Holmes | December 21, 1996 |
20 | 7 | ||||
21 | 8 | "Behind Every Great Woman" | Danny Leiner | Story by : Rupert Holmes Teleplay by : Rupert Holmes & Rick Mitz | December 28, 1996 |
22 | 9 | "Strange Bedfellows" | Chris Koch | Rupert Holmes | January 4, 1997 |
23 | 10 | "Close Quarters" | Peter Lauer | Rupert Holmes | January 11, 1997 |
24 | 11 | "Scott Sherwood of the F.B.I." | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | January 18, 1997 |
25 | 12 | "The First Mrs. Bloom" | Julian Petrillo | Rupert Holmes | January 25, 1997 |
26 | 13 | "Like a Brother" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | February 1, 1997 |
27 | 14 | "Magic" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | February 8, 1997 |
Season 3 (1997)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
28 | 1 | "In the WENN Small Hours" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | August 16, 1997 |
29 | 2 | "Prior to Broadway" | Richard Shepard | Story by : Emily Whitesell & Rupert Holmes Teleplay by : Rupert Holmes | August 23, 1997 |
30 | 3 | "Who's Scott Sherwood?" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | August 30, 1997 |
31 | 4 | "The New Actor" | Joanna Kerns | Rupert Holmes | September 6, 1997 |
32 | 5 | "Two for the Price of One" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | September 13, 1997 |
33 | 6 | "The Importance of Being Betty" | Michael Tuchner | Rupert Holmes & Leon Seidman | September 20, 1997 |
34 | 7 | "Mr. & Mrs. Singer" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | September 27, 1997 |
35 | 8 | "Nothing Up My Sleeve" | Jason Alexander | Rupert Holmes | October 11, 1997 |
36 | 9 | "A Star in Stripes Forever" | Jill Mitwell | Rupert Holmes | October 18, 1997 |
37 | 10 | "A Girl Like Maple" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | October 25, 1997 |
38 | 11 | "From the Pen of Gertrude Reece" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | November 1, 1997 |
39 | 12 | "Eugenia Breimer, Master Spy" | Julian Petrillo | Rupert Holmes | November 8, 1997 |
40 | 13 | "Courting Disaster" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | November 15, 1997 |
41 | 14 | "And How" | Julian Petrillo | Rupert Holmes | November 22, 1997 |
42 | 15 | "The Ghost of WENN" | Jill Mitwell | Rupert Holmes | December 6, 1997 |
43 | 16 | "Caller I.D." | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | December 13, 1997 |
44 | 17 | "Happy Homecomings" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | December 27, 1997 |
Season 4 (1998)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
45 | 1 | "Some Time, Some Station" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | June 19, 1998 |
46 | 2 | "Thanks a Lottery!" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | June 26, 1998 |
47 | 3 | "You've Met Your Match" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | July 3, 1998 |
48 | 4 | "And If I Die Before I Sleep" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | July 10, 1998 |
49 | 5 | "Hillary's Agent" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | July 17, 1998 |
50 | 6 | "Birth of a Station" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | July 24, 1998 |
51 | 7 | "Follies of WENN" | Richard Shepard | Rupert Holmes | July 31, 1998 |
52 | 8 | "Pitfall" | Joanna Kerns | Rupert Holmes | August 7, 1998 |
53 | 9 | "Work Shift" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | August 14, 1998 |
54 | 10 | "Past Tense, Future Imperfect" | Danny Leiner | Rupert Holmes | August 21, 1998 |
55 | 11 | "The Sunset Also Rises" | Juan José Campanella | David Ives | August 28, 1998 |
56 | 12 | "At Cross Purposes" | Howard Meltzer | Rupert Holmes | September 4, 1998 |
57 | 13 | "All's Noisy on the Pittsburgh Front" | Juan José Campanella | Rupert Holmes | September 11, 1998 |
Notable guest stars
- Jason Alexander
- Eddie Bracken
- Betty Buckley
- David Canary
- Daniel Davis
- Bob Dorian
- Peter Gerety
- Greg Germann
- Malcolm Gets
- Julie Hagerty
- Harry Hamlin
- Simon Jones
- Patti LuPone
- Peter Noone
- Rue McClanahan
- Roddy McDowall
- Russell Means
- Donna Murphy
- John Ratzenberger
- Dan Resin
- Molly Ringwald
- Howard Rollins
- Mickey Rooney
- J.K. Simmons
- Irene Worth