On Our Own (TV Series 1977–1978) Poster

(1977–1978)

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7/10
NYC 400 - #381 - "On Our Own"
DeanNYC25 April 2024
"On Our Own" is about a couple of women who are doing advertising in the late 1970s and the other members of their Ad firm.

I don't mean to say that "Kate & Allie" is the center of the New York TV series universe, however, this program became kind of a template for that series.

The two stars: Lynnie Greene as Maria, the Art Director for the little agency and Bess Armstrong as Julia, the copywriter, were similar personality types to the leads in that future series. This show's creator, Bob Randall, went on to write dozens of episodes of "K&A." Both shows were set in and videotaped in New York, with a live audience, which was extremely rare for any sitcom during this era, and the programs also shared producers.

In addition to our two leads, Gretchen Wyler was the owner of the agency, Dan Resin played her second in command, the "Yes Man" ad agency character that perhaps was perfected by David White as Larry Tate on the magical 60s sitcom, "Bewitched," and John Christopher Jones was a fellow staffer, enamored with Dixie Carter, who played a very affected Euro-Model type, with an equally affected (and almost unbelievable) accent!

Since this still is the 1970s and since the show is about a female-led Ad Agency, the inevitable stories had to do with what we would now consider sexual harassment by male clients (and even occasionally among the men around the office), which is likely why you won't see this series getting any reruns. It's a little disturbing by our 21st Century standards to see these scenarios viewed as "humorous" or even as acceptable.

Despite that difficulty, "On Our Own" still stands as a high profile step to celebrate women having success in business at a time when there were few opportunities for them to climb the Corporate Ladder. And the women of "OOO" stood up for themselves when problems were caused by men in the room, which I have to believe helped nudge society in the right direction.

Showing women who were capable, intent on having success by their own standards and able to stand up for themselves was, perhaps, something audiences of the day weren't quite ready to embrace in the late 70s. But they should have been.
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I used to love it
Larryact9 April 2004
Back in 1977 (when I was 15) I loved 'On Our Own'. Maybe it was because it was filmed in NY and I got to see it taped live twice...but honestly, I loved the characters. Bess Armstrong & Lynnie Green were a great team. Some may compare them to Laverne And Shirley, but these were two very different characters. In addition, Dixie Carter was hysterical with her drawling delivery as well. Her comedic timing was impeccable. As an actor I would be honored to work with anyone involved with that show. It was a fun show and I missed it after the one season. There is always so much 'trash' on the air, yet sometimes the good one's get away. Larry
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10/10
I was on this show..the last 2 episodes and would love to have a copy to show my children..Is there anyway I could get one??
chefmonicacooks29 March 2008
I was only 8 when this show was on the air, so I don't remember it too well. I was on the last two episodes of this show.. I played Danny Aiello's daughter. I have great memories of the cast and it was an experience that will stay with me forever. I was an extra of sorts. I was Danny Aiello's daughter, who was Lynne Greene's love interest. I had a brother who I can't remember his name, but always wondered what ever happened to him. I am now all grown up, and live in Connecticut with two children of my own. I always tell my children how it would be so cool to show them how their Mom was on television. Is there anyway I could acquire a copy of the last two episodes?
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5/10
My house was in the opening
NYTeacher21 February 2010
The front of my house and even my current apartment were used in the opening credits. One of the characters opens a window and leans out holding a cup of coffee. I live on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. I'd love one episode of this to show my husband and child.

It was filmed very quickly in the mid 1970's. I don't think they were here more than two days, it may have only been one day. I just remember being really excited that our building was going to be on TV.

Because of the house I would faithfully watch it each week. Although as an eleven year old I don't think I was quite the target audience and I found it a bit boring.

This same apartment was in the running to be in Spike Lee's Malcolm X. The key selling point to the apartment at that time was that it has bay windows and you could see the living room from the kitchen--it was supposed to be the Boston girlfriend's apartment. We didn't make that one.
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9/10
A Nice Memory
cagleheadinor3 July 2007
I was 12 when this show aired. I remember my whole family really enjoyed watching it every week. I was disappointed it was canceled after only one season. I would love to see it again. Some shows stick in your memory and others don't despite the length of the run of the show. I have always followed what the cast did after the series ended. I'm really glad that Lynne Greene had a successful career behind the scenes. She was a great actress especially in her appearances on Golden Girls as a young "Dorothy". I was sad to hear that Gretchen Wyler died this year of cancer. She was a brilliant actress on TV and on Broadway. Bess Armstrong is still going strong. It is a credit to the casting of On Own that the cast went on to have long careers, although, not high profile. I doubt this show will ever show up on DVD but it would be nice to see it again.
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4/10
Discovering Dixie Carter
dmcbee_dc25 August 2006
The best thing about this show was Dixie Carter. I couldn't even remember the name of it and found it by clicking around until I saw Bess Armstrong's name and looked through her credits.

Dixie Carter was this alluring mature woman who worked at the advertising company. One of the guys - a young pup would just melt whenever she walked by. She rarely said much.

And then one episode she pulled out her southern drawl and gave a sales pitch for some product that she was working on - I about fell out of my chair. She gave this big souther smile and then switched back to the cool, aloof character she had been playing all along. I loved it!
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4/10
NYC 70's Vibes
chm200623 February 2024
Like a hazy dream, i am watching on FreeVee and wondering...is this really happening, or rather did this happen in 1978? I guess it did because I am having fun watching. The lead characters are examples of career women being manhandled in a male dominated 70's society, but the humor is maudlin and somewhat excruciating. It was shot in NYC and you can really tell the difference in acting styles, and set design. Exterior shots look like Rhoda's building, but i cant be sure. And sometimes the scripts and pacing feel like a NY stage play, esp since there's quite a bit of cringe in the way the lead girls over act and emote in very silly ways, but it is an incredible unintentional expose on feminism in the 70's. Everyone is sweet natured and people acted kinder. The men in the supporting cast are misfits and all the women are heroes. Dixie Carter is surprisingly bad here and her bad timing is difficult to explain, but Gretchen Wyler is pretty funny and every once in a while a good joke or a comic bit lands well. Bess is the stronger of the two, but her character is often forced to deliver lines all alone onstage, and it is campy. Lynnie is very presentational and indicated a lot and had too many jokes about being Catholic that completely sink with a thud. Her 2 part episode w/Danny Aiello as her love interest is extremely sappy like a Kmart version of Moonstruck. There are workplace ensemble scenes and apartment scenes, and lots of new york extras and actors playing parents and or agency clients. Kay Medford was in ep 3, James Naughton (I Love My Wife) was in ep4. Christopher Hewitt was in ep 5. The wardrobe is from Bloomingdale's and both women have those curled under joan of arc/bowl haircuts from 1978 that look a bit like mushroom caps. The theme song is noisily sung (belty/wail broadway style) and difficult to understand the lyrics until you hear it more than once. It's a sorta cute sitcom but episodes always feel half finished, like a lot of mistakes were included, set walls dont actually look real... as if this were taking place on the new york stage. Still it is fun to discover an ancient, fully -formed sitcom shot in NYC that history and vintage tv networks seem to have forgotten, and i managed to get thru all 19 episodes posted at free vee. Imdb seems to credit both leading ladies with 22 episodes, so maybe there are lost episodes?!
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Size of TV audiences amazing in the '70's
Noir-It-All14 February 2007
You can tell from the posts on this page that On Our Own was not a big hit. But, the audience for this show would be phenomenally large for any show today. I watched a few episodes but millions of others must have, too. I looked and acted a lot like Lynne Greene. Everywhere I went, parties, discos, total strangers told me I looked and acted like this actress (who was an inch taller and ten pounds thinner than me.) Even my family, living 1,500 miles away, called me long distance telling me to turn on the TV to watch my double. Not just because I look like her, I thought the character was a good one, really funny. In the second season, the characters were no longer roommates. One night, the Bess Armstrong character got sick. Being out of town and young, she did not have a doctor in NYC, so she called Maria, the New Yorker. Of course, Maria had the phone number of a cousin who was a doctor. When reading the number to Bess, she began, "Area code...." Back then, that meant long distance! What a trip.
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2/10
Boring, trite
pmike-113127 July 2021
Found this page by accident and have a vague memory of the show. - mainly that I watched it a couple of times and couldn't figure out why it was on. Scripts were rehashings, dialogue was cliched; just boring. None of the characters or actors were memorable (never was a fan of Carter- what an overactor!).

It's telling that about half the posters here remember it fondly because they had some attachment to it ( my house.... I saw it filmed....... I was on it...etc. ). Forgotten, as it should be.
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Cute Bess Armstrong not enough to save boring show.
SanDiego27 March 2000
An attempt at creating another "Laverne and Shirley," "On Our Own" also featured the pairing of a cute perky Shirley-type (Julia) and a not-so-cute street-wise Laverne-type (Maria). The best thing about this series was the discovery of Bess Armstrong as Julia. She was very cute in this series which otherwise was a snooze-fest. Not a terrible show, just nothing to distinguish it from any other sitcom.
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