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Diff'rent Strokes is an American sitcom that aired on NBC from November 3, 1978, to May 4, 1985, and subsequently on ABC from September 27, 1985, to March 7, 1986. This list includes synopses and air dates. Episodes are in original U.S. airdate order; some syndication and overseas airings have varied the running order. Some markets, such as British satellite channel Sky One in the early 1990s, have aired the episodes in production order.
Series overview
editAll eight seasons have been released on DVD, with the final season released on May 29, 2018.[1]
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | Rank | Rating | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Network | |||||
1 | 24 | November 3, 1978 | May 4, 1979 | NBC | 27 | 19.9 | |
2 | 26 | September 21, 1979 | March 26, 1980 | 26 | 20.3 | ||
3 | 22 | November 12, 1980 | May 13, 1981 | 17 | 20.7 [a] | ||
4 | 26 | October 29, 1981 | May 20, 1982 | 36 | — | ||
5 | 24 | October 2, 1982 | May 14, 1983 | 51 | — | ||
6 | 24 | October 1, 1983 | May 12, 1984 | 50 | 15.1 [b] [2] | ||
7 | 24 | September 29, 1984 | May 4, 1985 | 37 | 14.7 | ||
8 | 19 | September 27, 1985 | March 7, 1986 | ABC | 69 | 11.5 |
- ^ Tied with Fantasy Island and Trapper John, M.D.
- ^ Tied with Matt Houston and Oh Madeline
Episodes
editSeason 1 (1978–79)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Movin' In" | Herbert Kenwith | Ben Starr | November 3, 1978 | 101 | |||||
Wealthy Phillip Drummond (Conrad Bain) prepares to take in two boys from Harlem, Arnold (Gary Coleman) and Willis Jackson (Todd Bridges), who were the sons of his late housekeeper. Mr. Drummond plans to have the boys live in his Park Avenue apartment with him, his daughter Kimberly (Dana Plato), and new housekeeper Edna Garrett (Charlotte Rae). Arnold appreciates Mr. Drummond's offer to take him in, but Willis wants to move back to their former home in Harlem. Arnold helps convince him otherwise. | |||||||||||
2 | 2 | "The Social Worker" | Herbert Kenwith | Budd Grossman | November 10, 1978 | 102 | |||||
A social worker (Ellen Travolta) suggests that Willis and Arnold should live with a black family instead of with the Drummonds and Arnold gets the impression that Mr. Drummond agrees with that. Note: Dana Plato does not appear in this episode. | |||||||||||
3 | 3 | "Mother's Last Visit" | Herbert Kenwith | William Raynor and Myles Wilder | November 17, 1978 | 103 | |||||
Mr. Drummond's mother (Irene Tedrow) visits and is surprised when she sees that his new sons are black, so he tries to make her get over her racial prejudices. Note: Although mentioned by Drummond in many episodes, this is the only occasion where his mother is actually seen. | |||||||||||
4 | 4 | "The Prep School" | Herbert Kenwith | Story by : Michael Russnow Teleplay by : Alan Rosen & Fred Rubin and Michael Russnow | November 24, 1978 | 105 | |||||
Mr. Drummond enrolls Arnold and Willis at his former school, but the headmaster (Howard Morton) makes arrangements for them to fail their entrance exams. Notes: Dana Plato does not appear in this episode. This episode features the first appearance of Willis' catchphrase "Say what?" | |||||||||||
5 | 5 | "The Spanking" | Herbert Kenwith | Fred S. Fox and Seaman Jacobs | December 1, 1978 | 104 | |||||
Arnold hides from Mr. Drummond, to avoid getting spanked for dropping a water bomb on Henry, the maintenance man. Willis decides to dole out the punishment himself, but spanking Arnold proves far more painful for Willis than for Arnold. | |||||||||||
6 | 6 | "Goodbye, Dolly" | Herbert Kenwith | Albert E. Lewin | December 8, 1978 | 106 | |||||
Arnold's prized doll is sold and Arnold has trouble going to sleep without it, so Mr. Drummond hires a private investigator to track down the doll. The P.I. decides to have a replica made instead, but Arnold knows the difference. Eventually he sleeps anyway. | |||||||||||
7 | 7 | "The Trial" | Herbert Kenwith | Alan Rosen & Fred Rubin | December 15, 1978 | 107 | |||||
Arnold is accused of putting his goldfish Abraham in the hot tub and he is put on trial by the Drummond family to prove his innocence. It turns out Willis had done it to prove a point that everyone is "innocent until proven guilty". | |||||||||||
8 | 8 | "Retrospective" "The First Christmas" | Herbert Kenwith | Budd Grossman, Howard Leeds and Ben Starr | December 29, 1978 | 116 | |||||
9 | 9 | ||||||||||
The Drummond family recall past events on their first Christmas with Willis and Arnold. Notes: On first airing, this episode can be found billed as both "The First Christmas" and "Retrospective" in different sources. For reruns, where it would be typically shown out of season, it is listed as "Retrospective". This episode exits in several different versions, and was split into two parts for syndication. Not all syndication and international packages of the series include this episode. Produced later in the season but brought forward to be broadcast at Christmas, the rerun version features clips from "The Fight". However, as "The Fight" episode had not yet aired on original broadcast, due this hour-long retrospective being brought forward to be shown at Christmas, these sequencs were not featured on the original airing, with several of the other flashback clips featured running for slightly longer to make up the difference in time. The sequences from "The Fight" appear in the re-run version. The original airing opened with a unique intro, as the standard closing credits theme plays over a slow pan of a Christmas tree and Arnold and Willis' beds as they sleep, whilst the opening credits appear on-screen. On rerun versions, the standard first season opening is used. For two-part syndicated versions, some have Part One opening with the unique Christmas opening, other versions have the standard first season opening credits on both part 1 and 2. The DVD and on-line streaming version use the original broadcast opening, with the unique opening intro and without scenes from "The Trial". | |||||||||||
10 | 10 | "The Fight" | Herbert Kenwith | Sandy Veith | January 5, 1979 | 108 | |||||
Arnold is forced to deal with a bully at school; Mr. Drummond doesn't want him to fight, but Willis thinks fighting is the only option. Note: This is the first mention of the unseen bully known as "The Gooch," who is often mentioned on the show but never appeared in person. This episode is the only time that the character's first name is ever given - "Stuart". | |||||||||||
11 | 11 | "The Club Meeting" | Herbert Kenwith | Tom and Helen August | January 12, 1979 | 109 | |||||
Arnold and Willis invite their old friends from Harlem to their new Park Avenue home and let their wealth go to their heads. | |||||||||||
12 | 12 | "The Woman" | Herbert Kenwith | Ronald Alexander | January 19, 1979 | 110 | |||||
Mr. Drummond wants to marry a woman (Elinor Donahue) who has plans to send the kids away to boarding school. | |||||||||||
13 | 13 | "No Time for Arnold" | Herbert Kenwith | Albert E. Lewin | January 26, 1979 | 111 | |||||
Arnold fakes bedwetting to get some attention, but when the secret comes out, Willis decides to play a trick on his brother to get even. | |||||||||||
14 | 14 | "The Relative" | Herbert Kenwith | Fred S. Fox and Seaman Jacobs | February 2, 1979 | 112 | |||||
A distant cousin (LaWanda Page) visits Arnold and Willis and when she sees how well they are living, she fakes an injury to overextend her stay. | |||||||||||
15 | 15 | "The Tutor" | Herbert Kenwith | Sandy Veith | February 9, 1979 | 113 | |||||
Mr. Drummond hires a tutor (Barry Diamond) for Willis and Arnold who has very unorthodox methods for getting them to learn, but with his help he discovers a mental block that prevents Willis from remembering things that happened in 1975, the year his father died. | |||||||||||
16 | 16 | "The New Landlord" | Herbert Kenwith | Norman Liebmann | February 16, 1979 | 114 | |||||
A new landlord (Jack Riley) tries to have the Drummonds thrown out of their penthouse apartment because he doesn't like children. | |||||||||||
17 | 17 | "Willis' Privacy" "No Privacy for Willis" | Herbert Kenwith | Alan Rosen & Fred Rubin | February 23, 1979 | 115 | |||||
Willis is tired of having Arnold hang around him all the time, so he goes back to Harlem to get away from him - possibly for good. Arnold imagines himself to be a Superman knockoff named Super Arnold. Note: Dana Plato does not appear in this episode, which was reenacted for the third edition of Live in Front of a Studio Audience. | |||||||||||
18 | 18 | "Mrs. Garrett's Crisis" | Herbert Kenwith | Karyl Geld Miller | March 2, 1979 | 117 | |||||
Mrs. Garrett experiences a midlife crisis when she feels her life isn't as exciting as her friends' lives, but she soon realizes how much she is needed by the Drummond family. | |||||||||||
19 | 19 | "The Job" "Willis' Job" | Herbert Kenwith | Albert E. Lewin | March 16, 1979 | 118 | |||||
Willis is hired and fired from a new job all in one day and tries to hide it from Mr. Drummond since he thinks he'll be disappointed in him. | |||||||||||
20 | 20 | "The Trip"[3] | Herbert Kenwith (Part 1) Doug Rogers (Part 2) | Howard Leeds & Martin Cohan & Ben Starr | March 30, 1979 | 120 | |||||
21 | 21 | ||||||||||
In the first of three crossovers with the series Hello, Larry, Mr. Drummond's company buys the radio station where his old war buddy Larry Alder (McLean Stevenson) works, so he and his family travel to Portland, Oregon to visit Larry and his two daughters, Ruthie (Kim Richards) and Diane (Donna Wilkes). Note: Part 2 was originally a Hello, Larry episode. For syndication, international and DVD markets, it is repackaged as a Diff'rent Strokes episode. Some international packages of the series do not include this or the other Hello, Larry crossover episodes. | |||||||||||
22 | 22 | "Getting Involved" | Herbert Kenwith | Story by : Howard Leeds & Martin Cohan & Ben Starr Teleplay by : Norman Liebmann | April 6, 1979 | 119 | |||||
Arnold witnesses a robbery and goes to the police, although a threatening phone call forces Mr. Drummond to prevent Arnold's involvement. | |||||||||||
23 | 23 | "Willis' Birthday" "The Birthday Party" | Herbert Kenwith | Michael G. Moye | April 13, 1979 | 121 | |||||
Willis wants to have his birthday party back in Harlem with his friends, but Mr. Drummond is apprehensive about going there. | |||||||||||
24 | 24 | "The Girls School" "Garrett's Girls" | Herbert Kenwith | Story by : Dick Clair & Jenna McMahon and Howard Leeds & Ben Starr Teleplay by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr | May 4, 1979 | 122 | |||||
Mrs. Garrett helps out the girls of the chaotic dormitory at Eastland. Note: This episode is the backdoor pilot for the spin-off The Facts of Life, although it contains a number of differences from the eventual series. Garrett's Girls was an early proposed title for The Facts of Life. |
Season 2 (1979–80)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
25 | 1 | "Arnold's Girlfriend" | Gerren Keith | Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | September 21, 1979 | 202 | ||||||
26 | 2 | 203 | ||||||||||
Arnold is too scared to go to the doctor after he suffers appendicitis, but his fear goes away when he meets a young girl named Alice who is having her tonsils out and they plan to share a room together in the hospital. However, her father (Dabney Coleman) decides against it when he finds out Arnold is black and Mr. Drummond negates a planned real estate deal he had with him. In order to be together, Arnold and Alice run away, which leads to both families frantically searching for them before Arnold's appendix bursts. | ||||||||||||
27 | 3 | "Feudin' and Fussin"[3] | Gerren Keith | Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | September 28, 1979 | 204 | ||||||
28 | 4 | |||||||||||
The Alders visit New York in this second crossover with Hello, Larry, as the Drummonds help Larry get a job hosting a talk show. Note: Basketball player Meadowlark Lemon guest stars. Note: Part 2 was originally a Hello, Larry episode. For syndication, international and DVD markets, it is repackaged as a Diff'rent Strokes episode. | ||||||||||||
29 | 5 | "Mrs. Garrett's Romance" "Mrs. Garrett's Lover" | Gerren Keith | Jerry Winnick | October 12, 1979 | 205 | ||||||
Mrs. Garrett dates a much younger man (Philip Charles MacKenzie), but finds out he's really looking for a mother instead of a lover. | ||||||||||||
30 | 6 | "Birds and Bees" | Gerren Keith | Ed Jurist | October 19, 1979 | 208 | ||||||
When a neighbor's pregnancy leads to Arnold asking about where babies come from, he is given conflicting stories from both Willis and Mr. Drummond. | ||||||||||||
31 | 7 | "Arnold's Hero" "The Hero" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Martin A. Ragaway Teleplay by : Martin A. Ragaway and Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | October 24, 1979 | 201 | ||||||
In order to get boxer Muhammad Ali to visit Arnold, Kimberly and Willis tell him that Arnold is dying. | ||||||||||||
32 | 8 | "The Adoption: Part 1" | Gerren Keith | Alan Rosen & Fred Rubin | October 31, 1979 | 206 | ||||||
The time comes for Mr. Drummond to officially adopt Arnold and Willis, but a junk dealer named Jethro Simpson (Whitman Mayo) pretends to be their cousin and tries to interfere with the adoption in order to obtain an inheritance coming to the boys. Note: First appearance of Robert Rockwell as Mr. Drummond's lawyer, Tom Bishop. | ||||||||||||
33 | 9 | "The Adoption: Part 2" | Gerren Keith | Alan Rosen & Fred Rubin | November 7, 1979 | 207 | ||||||
When it looks like Willis and Arnold will legally have to live with Jethro, the truth about him is revealed and the boys are able to officially become members of Mr. Drummond's family. | ||||||||||||
34 | 10 | "Father and Son Day" | Gerren Keith | Joseph Sirota and Elaine Newman | November 14, 1979 | 209 | ||||||
Willis trades in Mr. Drummond for another man (Reggie Jackson) to win an athletic competition. | ||||||||||||
35 | 11 | "Thanksgiving Crossover"[3] | Gerren Keith | Story by : George Tibbles Teleplay by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | November 28, 1979 | 211 | ||||||
36 | 12 | |||||||||||
The Alders visit the Drummonds in the final Hello, Larry crossover, when Larry and Mr. Drummond argue over a potential business deal. Note: Part 2 was originally a Hello, Larry episode. For syndication, international and DVD markets, it is repackaged as a Diff'rent Strokes episode. | ||||||||||||
37 | 13 | "The Rivals" | Gerren Keith | Albert E. Lewin | December 5, 1979 | 210 | ||||||
A girl feigns interest in Arnold so she can get close to Willis. Note: This is the last episode featuring Charlotte Rae as a cast member, as she continued her role as Mrs. Garrett on the spin-off The Facts of Life. The character exits off-screen, not mentioned until following episodes. | ||||||||||||
38 | 14 | "Hot Watch" | Gerren Keith | Charles Stewart, Jr. and Charles Stewart, Sr. | December 12, 1979 | 212 | ||||||
Arnold and Willis find a lost watch in the building, but soon become suspects when it is discovered the watch was taken from a burglarized apartment. | ||||||||||||
39 | 15 | "The Dog Story" "A Dog Story" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Jess Korman Teleplay by : Roland Wolpert | December 19, 1979 | 213 | ||||||
Arnold may have been bitten by a rabid dog and he tries to do whatever he can to prevent getting rabies shots. | ||||||||||||
40 | 16 | "The Election" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Ed Jurist | January 9, 1980 | 214 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond makes a last minute bid to run for a local political office. Note: First appearance of Nedra Volz as the second housekeeper, Adelaide Brubaker, who would appear as a recurring character during the second through fourth seasons. She is not added to the opening credits, instead always being billed with the guest cast on the closing credits (this was due initially to an agreement in Charlotte Rae's contract that she be permitted to return to Diff'rent Strokes should The Facts of Life be axed). | ||||||||||||
41 | 17 | "Friendly Mate" "Drummond's Blind Date" | Gerren Keith | Dawn Aldredge | January 16, 1980 | 215 | ||||||
Willis and Arnold set Mr. Drummond up on a blind date, but confusion arises when the dating service thinks Mr. Drummond is black and he also ends up with a second date for the same night. | ||||||||||||
42 | 18 | "Poor Drummond" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Jaie Brashar Teleplay by : Ed Jurist and Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan and Jaie Brashar | January 23, 1980 | 217 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond's failure to obtain a business loan causes the family to think they're on the verge of financial ruin, so Arnold and Willis try to put their dad on welfare. However, a man from the welfare office thinks something is fishy and investigates. | ||||||||||||
43 | 19 | "Big Business" | Gerren Keith | Story by : George Geiger Teleplay by : George Geiger and Ed Jurist & Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | January 30, 1980 | 216 | ||||||
Arnold and Willis go into the brownie business, but get in over their heads when they alienate Kimberly and overwork Adelaide, so they're forced to make the brownies themselves. | ||||||||||||
44 | 20 | "Return of the Gooch" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Alan Rosen & Fred Rubin | February 6, 1980 | 218 | ||||||
Arnold takes martial arts lessons to defend himself against the Gooch, then gets in trouble when Willis convinces him he has a "killer foot." Note: Soon-tek Oh and former Mouseketeer Curtis Wong guest star as Arnold's sensei and, respectively, a fellow karate student. | ||||||||||||
45 | 21 | "Valentine's Day Retrospective" "Valentine's Vigil" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan and Stephen Fischer & Arlene Sanford Teleplay by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | February 13, 1980 | 219 | ||||||
Arnold and Willis accidentally get locked in the basement of their apartment building, so they recall previous emotional events to pass the time until someone lets them out. | ||||||||||||
46 | 22 | "Skin Deep or True Blue" "Guess Who?" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Sandy Veith & Donald Ross | February 20, 1980 | 221 | ||||||
Kimberly's new love interest, Roger (Grant Wilson), is found out to be a bigot when he won't let his sister, Emily (Melora Hardin), go on a date with Willis, so Kimberly comes up with a way to teach him a lesson. | ||||||||||||
47 | 23 | "Teacher's Pet" | Gerren Keith | Sandy Veith & Donald Ross | February 27, 1980 | 220 | ||||||
Arnold's teacher, Ms. Osborne (Mary Ann Mobley), begins favoring him after she dates Mr. Drummond. Notes: This is the first appearances of Shavar Ross and Steven Mond as Dudley Johnson and Robbie Jason, respectively. Mobley would eventually take over the role of Mr. Drummond's second wife, Maggie McKinney-Drummond, in the eighth season after Dixie Carter left the series. | ||||||||||||
48 | 24 | "The Slumber Party" | Gerren Keith | Fred S. Fox and Seaman Jacobs | March 12, 1980 | 222 | ||||||
Willis' friends and Kimberly's schoolmates clash over who gets to do what in the apartment and ruin Mr. Drummond's date in the process. Note: Mindy Cohn, Julie Anne Haddock, Kim Fields and Molly Ringwald appear as their characters from The Facts of Life (Natalie, Cindy, Tootie and Molly, respectively). | ||||||||||||
49 | 25 | "Arnold Faces Fatality" "The Will" | Gerren Keith | Albert E. Lewin | March 19, 1980 | 223 | ||||||
Arnold's beloved goldfish Abraham dies, so the family tries to hide it from him until they can get a replacement. When Arnold becomes suspicious and happens to notice Mr. Drummond's will, he jumps to the wrong conclusion and thinks that Mr. Drummond is dying. | ||||||||||||
50 | 26 | "The Squealer" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Joseph Sirota & Elaine Newman Teleplay by : Ed Jurist & Alan Rosen & Fred Rubin | March 26, 1980 | 224 | ||||||
Willis joins a local youth club, the Tarantulas, which turns out to be a street gang. Having had a previous run-in with the Tarantulas, Mr. Drummond forbids Willis to associate with them. Torn between defying Drummond and losing face, Willis ultimately lands in jail (along with his new "friends") for vandalism; so does he learns that there's a time and a place for everything...even "squealing" and "copping out". Note: David Coburn, who would later lend his voice to the wisecracking title superhero from Captain Planet & the Planeteers, portrays the Tarantulas' sole sympathetic member. |
Season 3 (1980–81)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
51 | 1 | "The Bank Job" | Gerren Keith | Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | November 12, 1980 | 302 | ||||||
52 | 2 | 303 | ||||||||||
Arnold wants to impress Tootie with his "riches" when the Drummond family goes on a trip, so he and Willis go to the bank to make a withdrawal, but the two of them along with Mr. Drummond get trapped during a holdup by robbers (Michael Cavanaugh and Jesse D. Goins). In the end, quick thinking by Arnold, Willis, and Mr. Drummond saves the day. Note: Kim Fields guest stars as Tootie. | ||||||||||||
53 | 3 | "Small Claims Court" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Hugh Wedlock & Ben Gershman Teleplay by : Ed Jurist & Gordon Mitchell and Hugh Wedlock & Ben Gershman | November 19, 1980 | 305 | ||||||
Arnold takes a toy store owner to small claims court over a faulty train engine. | ||||||||||||
54 | 4 | "Substitute Mother" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Patricia Kane and Debra Frank & Scott Rubenstein Teleplay by : Debra Frank & Scott Rubenstein | November 26, 1980 | 306 | ||||||
Arnold wants a temporary housekeeper (Denise Nicholas) to become his, Willis' and Kimberly's new mother while Adelaide is away. When Adelaide returns early, Arnold inadvertently gives her the impression that she's being replaced permanently. | ||||||||||||
55 | 5 | "The Accident" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Calvin Kelly and Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | December 3, 1980 | 307 | ||||||
56 | 6 | 308 | ||||||||||
A trip to Disney World is canceled when Mr. Drummond is hospitalized after being hit by a drunk driver in a car crash and is rendered amnesiac. If he can't recover his memory, Mr. Drummond may lose all of his assets, as well as custody of his children, so his kids try to help him get his memory back. When he starts to remember details about Kimberly and not about Willis and Arnold, they decide to leave and go back to Harlem. | ||||||||||||
57 | 7 | "Little Mother" | Gerren Keith | Ed Jurist | December 10, 1980 | 310 | ||||||
Kimberly's friend, Ellen Marshall (Kari Michaelsen), is pregnant and everyone thinks Kimberly is the one who is expecting. | ||||||||||||
58 | 8 | "Football Father" | Gerren Keith | Sandy Veith and Donald Ross | December 17, 1980 | 304 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond bribes a hard-nosed football coach (Greg Mullavey) into letting Arnold join the team by buying new uniforms for them, but he regrets his decision when he finds out how the coach is motivating the kids. Note: This episode marks the first appearance of Le Tari as Dudley's adoptive father, Ted Ramsey. | ||||||||||||
59 | 9 | "First Love" | Gerren Keith | Jerry Winnick | December 31, 1980 | 311 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond does not want Willis to see his girlfriend Charlene (Janet Jackson) because it is interfering with his schoolwork, so the two make secret arrangements to be together. Note: Janet Jackson makes her first appearance on the show as Charlene DuPrey. | ||||||||||||
60 | 10 | "Count Your Blessings" | Gerren Keith | Marshall Goldberg | January 7, 1981 | 309 | ||||||
Arnold is heartbroken when he finds out he will not do much growing when he gets older, so Mr. Drummond arranges for a business associate's handicapped daughter (Melanie Watson, in her first of four appearances as Kathy) to show him how fortunate he really is. | ||||||||||||
61 | 11 | "The Loan" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Mara Lideks Teleplay by : Mara Lideks and Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | January 14, 1981 | 312 | ||||||
Arnold wants to help a young doorman (Tommy Aguilar) get started in business, so he loans him some money to bet on a sure thing in a horse race. | ||||||||||||
62 | 12 | "Roots" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Kurt Taylor Teleplay by : Kurt Taylor and John Donley & Howard Meyers | January 21, 1981 | 313 | ||||||
Willis' friends think that he and Arnold have lost touch with where they came from, so they adopt a more Afro-centric attitude and alienate the rest of the family. | ||||||||||||
63 | 13 | "Junk Food Junkie" "The Junk Food" | Gerren Keith | Dawn Aldredge | January 28, 1981 | 314 | ||||||
Arnold is made to give up junk food, which is difficult, since his school has junk food vending machines and having them removed may hurt his chances at winning a school election. Note: Dody Goodman makes her first appearance as Mr. Drummond's sister, Sophia, who would make occasional appearances on the show during the third and fourth seasons. | ||||||||||||
64 | 14 | "The Bus" | Gerren Keith | Glenn Padnick | February 4, 1981 | 315 | ||||||
Protesters threaten Arnold and his classmates when they become part of a school integration program. | ||||||||||||
65 | 15 | "The Older Man" | Gerren Keith | Albert E. Lewin | February 25, 1981 | 316 | ||||||
Kimberly dons a wig for a class play and ends up getting a date with an older man (Lou Richards), so Arnold and Willis try to put a stop to it. Note: Lisa Whelchel and Mindy Cohn (from The Facts of Life) guest star as Blair and Natalie, respectively. | ||||||||||||
66 | 16 | "Where There's Hope" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Walter E. Smith Teleplay by : John Donley & Howard Meyers | March 4, 1981 | 317 | ||||||
Arnold is adamant about not wanting a pesky young girl (Monika Furness) at his birthday party, but things become serious when he finds out the girl is very sick, so he pays her a visit at the hospital to cheer her up. | ||||||||||||
67 | 17 | "The Magician" "It's Magic" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Louis Smallwood & M. Martez Thomas Teleplay by : Louis Smallwood & M. Martez Thomas and Ed Jurist & Gordon Mitchell | March 11, 1981 | 301 | ||||||
Arnold is trapped on a ledge 30 stories up after he tries to impress his family, a reporter and football player Ed "Too Tall" Jones with his magic act. | ||||||||||||
68 | 18 | "Drummond's Fair Lady" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Jeff Lewis and Sandy Veith Teleplay by : Sandy Veith | March 18, 1981 | 319 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond recommends a woman (Wendy Fulton) for a position at his company, but runs into opposition from his coworkers because of her sex and his children, because they think she's using him to get the job. | ||||||||||||
69 | 19 | "The Ancestors" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Calvin Kelly Teleplay by : Ed Jurist and Calvin Kelly | March 25, 1981 | 320 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond finds out that his ancestor was a slave trader, which affects his plans to build a community center in Harlem. | ||||||||||||
70 | 20 | "Almost American" "Night School" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Glenn Padnick and Warren Murray Teleplay by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan and Glenn Padnick | April 1, 1981 | 318 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond grounds Arnold for a bad grade on his history test. A student in an immigration and naturalization class (Rosalind Chao) becomes the suspect in a robbery. Notes: This episode was a backdoor pilot for a potential series focusing on the immigration and naturalization class; an adaptation of the British sit-com Mind Your Language. The series itself was never picked up, although later in 1986, Mind Your Language was adapted into the short-lived What a Country. The Drummonds have a very small role in this episode. Chao would later play Arnold's teacher, Miss Chung. | ||||||||||||
71 | 21 | "Room for One More" | Gerren Keith | Fred S. Fox and Seaman Jacobs | May 6, 1981 | 321 | ||||||
Arnold tries to get Mr. Drummond to adopt Dudley when he finds out his foster father (Le Tari) may not be able to keep him. | ||||||||||||
72 | 22 | "The Athlete" | Gerren Keith | Gordon Mitchell | May 13, 1981 | 324 | ||||||
A fast-talking baseball coach woos Willis for a high school team and uses expensive gifts and deception to attain his goal.
|
Season 4 (1981–82)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
73 | 1 | "Growing Up" | Gerren Keith | Debra Frank & Scott Rubenstein | October 29, 1981 | 322[5] |
With Arnold's help, Willis gets everyone out of the house so he and his girlfriend Charlene can make love for the first time. However, when the moment occurs, things don't go as smoothly as he expected. | ||||||
74 | 2 | "First Day Blues" | Gerren Keith | Bruce Taylor | November 5, 1981 | 402 |
Willis has trouble making friends at his new school, until it is discovered that his family is rich, so he gets asked to buy marijuana for a party. Notes: Gary Coleman does not appear in the episode. Kim Fields guest stars as Tootie. Clarence Gilyard appears as Frank Simpson, one of Willis' classmates. | ||||||
75 | 3 | "The Model" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Bill Shinkai Teleplay by : John Donley & Howard Meyers and Bill Shinkai | November 12, 1981 | 323[5] |
Kimberly's job leads to her beginning a modeling career. | ||||||
76 | 4 | "The Team" | Gerren Keith | Glenn Padnick | November 19, 1981 | 403 |
Willis is upset when he doesn't make the basketball team because a white student (Todd Lookinland) takes his place, so he plans to take legal action. Notes:
| ||||||
77 | 5 | "The Big Heist" | Gerren Keith | Bruce Taylor | November 26, 1981 | 405 |
Arnold attempts to steal an expensive comic book (Amazing Spider-Man issue 14) to get into the Gooch's club and gets taken to court when he's caught. | ||||||
78 | 6 | "The Double Date" "Blind Date" | Gerren Keith | Jerry Winnick | December 3, 1981 | 406 |
Arnold gets his first date with a girl he likes, but things turn sour when Dudley butts in on them. | ||||||
79 | 7 | "The Ski Weekend" | Gerren Keith | Dawn Aldredge | December 10, 1981 | 401 |
Kimberly goes on a ski trip with her friend, but doesn't let the family know that there will be boys there. Mr. Drummond and Willis end up surprising her by paying an unannounced visit, but get surprised themselves when they see the boys. | ||||||
80 | 8 | "The Health Club" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Sheryl Levine Teleplay by : Joe Bonaduce | December 17, 1981 | 407 |
Arnold and Willis try to get into Mr. Drummond's health club, but are turned away because they are black. When Drummond is honored by the club, a confrontation takes place. | ||||||
81 | 9 | "The Burial Ground" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Bernard Burnell Mack Teleplay by : John Donley & Howard Meyers | January 7, 1982 | 409 |
Drummond's building project is discovered to be on the site of an Indian burial ground, which leads to a conflict with a member of the Indian tribe. | ||||||
82 | 10 | "Hello, Daddy" "Like Father, Like Son?" | Gerren Keith | Donald Ross | January 14, 1982 | 404 |
The son of a woman Mr. Drummond knew during the Korean War (Keone Young) shows up claiming that Mr. Drummond is his father. This leads to a reunion with the woman (Nobu McCarthy) and the truth about who the father really is. Notes: Due to Gary Coleman's temporary absence due to a contract dispute, Arnold appears briefly at the beginning and ending of the episode. | ||||||
83 | 11 | "Jilted" | Gerren Keith | Ed Jurist | January 21, 1982 | 408 |
When Charlene feels Willis is taking her for granted, she dumps him. Willis soon hears she's seeing another guy and he decides it is time to move on, but Arnold has plans to bring them back together. | ||||||
84 | 12 | "Dreams" | Gerren Keith | Kurt Taylor & Booker Bradshaw | January 28, 1982 | 412 |
Arnold begins having nightmares after he finds out Mr. Drummond is going on a business trip, so a therapist is needed to unlock Arnold's fears. | ||||||
85 | 13 | "Kathy" | Gerren Keith | Marshall Goldberg | February 4, 1982 | 411 |
Arnold gets reassurance from Kathy (Melanie Watson) when he plays Abraham Lincoln in a school play, but when he tries to get her to use her crutches instead of sitting in a wheelchair, she is furious and blows his confidence before showtime. Note: Rosalind Chao makes her first appearance as Miss Chung, the teacher of Arnold's class. (She had previously played a different character in the third season episode "Almost American") | ||||||
86 | 14 | "Fire" | Gerren Keith | Jill Gordon | February 11, 1982 | 413 |
A fire has the family trapped in the building and when smoke starts coming through the vents, it makes everyone think the end is near. | ||||||
87 | 15 | "The Squatter" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Shelley Landau & Jane Gould Teleplay by : Danny Simon | February 18, 1982 | 410 |
A woman (Audrey Meadows) becomes a squatter in the Drummonds' house after she is forced out of her apartment due to a condominium conversion Mr. Drummond is involved with. | ||||||
88 | 16 | "The Car" | Gerren Keith | Warren Murray | February 25, 1982 | 414 |
Willis takes the car out without Mr. Drummond's permission in order to pick up Charlene for a date and gets in trouble when he hits a police officer's motorcycle. | ||||||
89 | 17 | "Crime Story: Part 1" "Crime in the Schools: Part 1" | Gerren Keith | Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | March 11, 1982 | 415 |
Arnold and Dudley are harassed by two bullies who force them to hand over their lunch and money. Willis decides to interfere and gets more than he bargained for. Note: Shannon Presby, who co-starred in The New Kids, portrays one of the bullies. | ||||||
90 | 18 | "Crime Story: Part 2" "Crime in the Schools: Part 2" | Gerren Keith | Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | March 18, 1982 | 416 |
After Willis is hospitalized for trying to stop the bullies, Arnold is asked to participate in a sting operation to nab them. When Mr. Drummond refuses to allow this, Arnold takes matters into his own hands, as he feels responsible for Willis being hospitalized. | ||||||
91 | 19 | "B.M.O.C." | Gerren Keith | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | March 25, 1982 | 417 |
Willis lets his potential membership in an exclusive club go to his head, but falls hard when he alienates the club members. | ||||||
92 | 20 | "Green Hair" | Gerren Keith | Albert E. Lewin | April 1, 1982 | 418 |
Kimberly's hair turns green before a date, due to using a copper bowl affected by acid rain to wash her hair, which gets the Drummond family talking about how to help the environment. | ||||||
93 | 21 | "Have I Got a Girl for You" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Dawn Aldredge | April 8, 1982 | 419 |
Mr. Drummond has a good time going out with a hairdresser (Candy Azzara), but when he doesn't invite her to a posh party, she feels like he is secretly embarrassed by her. | ||||||
94 | 22 | "Lifesavers" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Jim Tisdale Teleplay by : Ed Jurist | April 15, 1982 | 420 |
Willis saves Arnold's life, so Arnold feels obligated to dote on him constantly. In order to get Arnold off his back, he sets up a fake robbery at his job so Arnold can save him and even the score. When Arnold finds out what Willis is up to, he decides to have a little fun with the "robber," not knowing that a real robber has come to hold up the place. | ||||||
95 | 23 | "Stress? What Stress?" | Gerren Keith | Glenn Padnick | April 22, 1982 | 421 |
Willis finds out he has very high stress levels, so Mr. Drummond wants him to lay off on his extracurricular activities, much to Willis' chagrin. | ||||||
96 | 24 | "The Music Man" | Gerren Keith | Larry Rhine | May 6, 1982 | 422 |
Willis joins a musical group and wants Charlene to join as well, but Kimberly ends up impressing his bandmates so much that they want her in the group instead. | ||||||
97 | 25 | "Short But Sweet" | Gerren Keith | Howard Leeds & Ben Starr & Martin Cohan | May 13, 1982 | 424 |
Arnold isn't interested in celebrating his birthday because he feels girls aren't interested in him, particularly one girl he really likes, but things change when he invites the girl to his party. However, his intentions aren't made clear and she comes to the party with someone else. Note: This is the last episode featuring Nedra Volz as Adelaide. | ||||||
98 | 26 | "On Your Toes" | Gerren Keith | Albert E. Lewin | May 20, 1982 | 423 |
Arnold attends Kimberly's ballet recital and decides he wants to learn ballet, which makes Willis very uncomfortable and he tries to put a stop to it. Note: Roger C. Carmel guest stars. |
Season 5 (1982–83)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
99 | 1 | "Shoot-Out at the O.K. Arcade" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds, Martin Cohan & Blake Hunter Teleplay by : Howard Leeds & Martin Cohan | October 2, 1982 | 0501 |
Arnold tries to beat Willis' score on an arcade game, but constant playing takes a toll on his schoolwork. | ||||||
100 | 2 | "In the Swim" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Blake Hunter, Howard Leeds & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Blake Hunter | October 9, 1982 | 0502 |
Kimberly transfers to Willis' school and faces resistance when she tries to join the all-male swim team. Notes:
| ||||||
101 | 3 | "Cyrano De Jackson" | Gerren Keith | Paul Robinson Hunter | October 16, 1982 | 0504 |
Arnold tries to help Dudley woo classmate Lisa Hayes (Nikki Swasey), but the plan backfires when Lisa thinks that Arnold is the one who likes her. Note: First episode to feature Arnold's classmate Lisa. However, despite being sweet on Arnold in this episode, subsequent appearances portray them as enemies. | ||||||
102 | 4 | "Big Brother" | Gerren Keith | Bruce Taylor | October 23, 1982 | 0503 |
Arnold's classmate (Joey Lawrence) receives attention from the Drummond family, leaving Arnold feeling unwanted. Note: Huntz Hall guest stars. | ||||||
103 | 5 | "The Peacemaker" | Gerren Keith | Don Segall | October 30, 1982 | 0506 |
Willis tries to negotiate between two rival groups of students at his school but becomes the prime suspect in a theft and obtains a gun to protect himself. | ||||||
104 | 6 | "Substitute Teacher" | Gerren Keith | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | November 6, 1982 | 0505 |
Arnold and Dudley play pranks on a tough substitute teacher (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar). | ||||||
105 | 7 | "The Older Woman" | Gerren Keith | Debra Frank & Scott Rubenstein | November 13, 1982 | 0507 |
Willis wears a fake mustache to gain admittance to a club and dates the older waitress (Shari Belafonte). | ||||||
106 | 8 | "A Case of Overexposure" "Overexposure" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Bob Peete & Sandy Fries Teleplay by : Bob Peete | November 20, 1982 | 0509 |
Kimberly submits a candid photo of Arnold's backside into a contest. | ||||||
107 | 9 | "Memories" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Meyers, Paul Haggis & Brian K. Moody Teleplay by : Howard Meyers & Paul Haggis | November 27, 1982 | 0508 |
Arnold is saddened to hear his mother's (Betty A. Bridges, Todd Bridges' real-life mother) voice on an old audio tape and pretends to lose it. | ||||||
108 | 10 | "Push Comes to Shove" | Gerren Keith | Richard Eckhaus | December 4, 1982 | 0510 |
After Arnold's confrontation with the son of the new building manager, Mr. Drummond punches the manager (William G. Schilling) and almost causes the family to be evicted. | ||||||
109 | 11 | "The Executives" | Gerren Keith | Albert E. Lewin | December 11, 1982 | 0511 |
Arnold, Kimberly and Willis take jobs at Mr. Drummond's company but Willis discovers that minorities may not have equal opportunities there. | ||||||
110 | 12 | "Santa's Helper" | Gerren Keith | Bruce Taylor | December 18, 1982 | 0512 |
Arnold helps a street-corner Santa Claus (Garrett Morris), who takes advantage of the Drummonds' kindness by robbing them. | ||||||
111 | 13 | "A Growing Problem" | Gerren Keith | Ed Jurist | January 8, 1983 | 0513 |
After a fight with Mr. Drummond about drinking, Willis moves out and ends up in a car crash. | ||||||
112 | 14 | "Parents Have Rights Too" | Gerren Keith | Martin Cohan | January 15, 1983 | 0514 |
Pearl and the kids return early from a camping trip, but Mr. Drummond's love interest (Louise Sorel) is spending the weekend at the penthouse. | ||||||
113 | 15 | "Independent Woman" | Gerren Keith | John Donley | January 22, 1983 | 0515 |
Kimberly's boss uses her romantically to advance in Mr. Drummond's company, but Arnold discovers the truth and tells Kimberly. | ||||||
114 | 16 | "The Bicycle Man: Part 1" | Gerren Keith | Blake Hunter | February 5, 1983 | 0516 |
Arnold and Dudley befriend a bicycle shop owner named Mr. Horton (Gordon Jump), a pedophile seeking new victims. Note: The show begins with a message by Conrad Bain advising families to watch the episode together and then discuss the topic of child molestation. | ||||||
115 | 17 | "The Bicycle Man: Part 2" | Gerren Keith | Blake Hunter | February 12, 1983 | 0517 |
After watching a pornographic cartoon at the bicycle shop, Arnold leaves Dudley behind and Mr. Drummond calls the authorities. The police save Dudley in the nick of time. Note: Conrad Bain delivers another message about child molestation at the beginning of the episode and also delivers a voiceover announcement before the end credits, saying "If you know of a problem with child sexual abuse, please contact your local law enforcement or social service agency." | ||||||
116 | 18 | "Family On Ice" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Jennifer Burton Kurtz & Mitchell Wayne Cohen Teleplay by : Bruce Taylor | February 19, 1983 | 0518 |
After impressing professional skater Dorothy Hamill, Kimberly is overwhelmed by the hard work involved in becoming a professional skater. Note: Dana Plato, who plays Kimberly, had abandoned a figure skating career in favor of acting. | ||||||
117 | 19 | "Hall Monitor" | Gerren Keith | Marshall Goldberg | March 12, 1983 | 0519 |
Kathy transfers to Arnold's school and is treated poorly because of her disability, also drawing scorn for her heavy-handed approach to her position as hall monitor. | ||||||
118 | 20 | "The Cricket" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Bill Shinkai Teleplay by : Howard Meyers & Paul Haggis | March 26, 1983 | 0520 |
After Arnold's lucky cricket escapes, he must devise a backup plan to avoid trouble with the Gooch. | ||||||
119 | 21 | "The Roommates" | Gerren Keith | Howard Leeds | April 9, 1983 | 0521 |
Mr. Drummond trades rooms with Willis, who is busy studying for exams. | ||||||
120 | 22 | "The Reporter" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Jennifer Burton Kurtz, Sheila Scott & Diane Schroeder Teleplay by : Mitchell Wayne Cohen | April 30, 1983 | 0522 |
Arnold discovers that drugs are being sold at his school and reports it to the newspaper, prompting a visit by First Lady Nancy Reagan, who visits the Drummond home and speaks to Arnold's class about the dangers of drugs.
| ||||||
121 | 23 | "Romeo and Juliet" | Dolores Ferraro | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | May 7, 1983 | 0523 |
122 | 24 | "My Fair Larry" "My Fair Lady" | Gerren Keith | John Donley & Bruce Taylor | May 14, 1983 | 0524 |
Willis' classmate Larry (Andrew Dice Clay) wants to secure a date with a girl at school (Jami Gertz) but instead falls for Kimberly. |
Season 6 (1983–84)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
123 | 1 | "Mr. T and Mr. t" "The Idol" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds, Blake Hunter, Martin Cohan & David W. Duclon Teleplay by : Bruce Taylor | October 1, 1983 | 0606 | ||||||
When an episode of The A-Team is filmed in the Drummonds' apartment, Arnold has to compete with Mr. T for the affection of Dudley's cousin Angela, so Arnold tries to turn himself into a mini Mr. T, with embarrassing results. | ||||||||||||
124 | 2 | "The Goat" | Gerren Keith | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | October 15, 1983 | 0603 | ||||||
When Arnold is given the cold shoulder from teachers and classmates at his new school, he concocts a plan to steal the school mascot and pretend to rescue it to get some positive attention, but he gets in trouble with the family when the goat gets loose in the apartment. | ||||||||||||
125 | 3 | "Rashomon II" | Gerren Keith | Howard Meyers | October 22, 1983 | 0601 | ||||||
A burglar (Terry Kiser) holds the family hostage in the apartment, but is knocked out and arrested. Mr. Drummond, Willis and Arnold all have different interpretations of what happened, but Pearl, who was in the kitchen and saw everything, tells Kimberly what really took place. Note: The episode title and plot device of the story are inspired by the movie Rashomon. | ||||||||||||
126 | 4 | "The Lie" | Gerren Keith | John Donley & Clay Graham | October 29, 1983 | 0604 | ||||||
Willis lies to Arnold about knowing first aid in order to get a job at the school carnival, but when Arnold gets an electrical shock, Willis doesn't know how to save him. He later confesses to Arnold what happened and Arnold is angry when he finds out the truth. | ||||||||||||
127 | 5 | "Drafted" | Gerren Keith | Dawn Aldredge | November 12, 1983 | 0608 | ||||||
A computer error leads to Arnold getting mail to sign up with the Selective Service System, even though he is too young. When Mr. Drummond complains, he is visited by the authorities, leading Arnold to think he will be drafted. | ||||||||||||
128 | 6 | "The Van Drummonds" | Gerren Keith | Paul Haggis | November 19, 1983 | 0609 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond's cousin Anna (Bonar Bain, Conrad Bain's identical twin brother) and her son Hans (Dana Plato in a dual role) visit the family. As soon as they arrive, Hans starts causing trouble and blames Arnold and Willis for it. | ||||||||||||
129 | 7 | "The Moonlighter" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Rosemary Lee Potter and Phil Margo & Jack Gross Teleplay by : Phil Margo & Jack Gross | November 26, 1983 | 0611 | ||||||
Arnold finds out his favorite teacher (Jayne Kennedy) is moonlighting at a gentlemen's club and sneaks into the club to find out if it is true. | ||||||||||||
130 | 8 | "Coming of Age" | Gerren Keith | Dawn Aldredge | December 3, 1983 | 0605 | ||||||
131 | 9 | "Assert Yourself" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds, Blake Hunter & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Tim O'Donnell | December 10, 1983 | 0607 | ||||||
Arnold plans to have Dudley run for class president so he can control him behind the scenes. When Arnold sees that Dudley isn't doing things the way he wants him to, he decides to run against him. In the end, both lose out to a third candidate. | ||||||||||||
132 | 10 | "Mrs. Z" | Gerren Keith | Al Lewin | December 17, 1983 | 0610 | ||||||
After Mr. Drummond becomes the target of an extortionist, he hires an imposing female bodyguard (Sheron Chambers) to protect his family. | ||||||||||||
133 | 11 | "The Senior Class Queen" | Gerren Keith | Bernard Burnell Mack | January 7, 1984 | 0613 | ||||||
When Kimberly tries to get into Willis' all-male letterman's club at school, he gets back at her by becoming a contestant in the school's beauty pageant. | ||||||||||||
134 | 12 | "Where's There's Smoke" | Gerren Keith | Bruce Taylor | January 14, 1984 | 0602 | ||||||
When Arnold and Dudley are caught smoking cigarettes in a bid to impress their "cool" classmates, there are no ifs or ands or butts...they're grounded. Taking this especially hard is Dudley's father Ted, a long-time smoker from whom Dudley has been sneaking packs...and who, more recently, has lost a lung to cancer. | ||||||||||||
135 | 13 | "Drummond's Lady" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds, Blake Hunter & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Howard Leeds, Howard Meyers & Mark Miller | January 21, 1984 | 0615 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond tries to make a business deal with exercise instructor Maggie McKinney (Dixie Carter) and falls in love with her. Note: This is Carter's first appearance as Maggie McKinney (later Maggie McKinney-Drummond), who appeared as a recurring character in this season, and is added to the opening billed cast in the following season. | ||||||||||||
136 | 14 | "The Hitchhikers: Part 1" | Gerren Keith | Glenn Padnick & Sydney Julien | January 28, 1984 | 0616 | ||||||
Arnold and Kimberly hitchhike to get home for Mr. Drummond's birthday party and are picked up by a man (Woody Eney) who takes them to his apartment and tries to have his way with Kimberly. Note: This episode begins with an introduction from Conrad Bain, who urges children and their parents to discuss the dangers of hitchhiking. | ||||||||||||
137 | 15 | "The Hitchhikers: Part 2" | Gerren Keith | Glenn Padnick & Sydney Julien | February 4, 1984 | 0617 | ||||||
Arnold escapes from the kidnapper and makes it home, but leaves Kimberly behind and can't remember where she is. A policeman helps Arnold remember by hypnotizing him and getting him to reveal the license plate number of the kidnapper so the police can track him down to arrest him. After the police arrested the man, Kimberly and Arnold have reunited with the family and to celebrate Mr. Drummond's birthday party. Note: Conrad Bain again delivers a message at the beginning, urging children and their parents to discuss the dangers of hitchhiking and does a voiceover announcement at the end, saying "If you know of a case of sexual assault or an attempted sexual assault, please contact your local law enforcement agency or emergency medical facility." | ||||||||||||
138 | 16 | "Hooray for Hollywood: Part 1" | Gerren Keith & Leslie H. Martinson | Howard Leeds, Blake Hunter & Martin Cohan | February 11, 1984 | 0618 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond travels to Hollywood and proposes to Maggie and finds out she has a young son named Sam (Danny Cooksey). Meanwhile, Arnold and Dudley try to meet the star of Knight Rider (David Hasselhoff) and sneak into a car on the set that's about to be blown up. Note: An un-billed Jonathan Harris is the voice of "Frankenstein's Creature". This is Cooksey's first appearance as Sam McKinney, Maggie's 6-year-old son; he appears in all remaining episodes of the series, and is added to the opening billed cast for the final two seasons. | ||||||||||||
139 | 17 | "Hooray for Hollywood: Part 2" | Gerren Keith & Leslie H. Martinson | Story by : Howard Leeds, Blake Hunter & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Bruce Taylor | February 18, 1984 | 0619 | ||||||
David Hasselhoff rescues Arnold and Dudley just in time and the rest of the family find out about Mr. Drummond's marriage plans. Arnold is less than thrilled, especially when he finds out he's getting a new little brother as part of the deal. | ||||||||||||
140 | 18 | "The Wedding" "Drummond's Wedding" | Gerren Keith | Howard Meyers & Mark Miller | February 25, 1984 | 0620 | ||||||
141 | 19 | Story by : Ifa Baeza Teleplay by : Dawn Aldredge & Judith Bustany | 0621 | |||||||||
Arrangements are being made for the wedding between Mr. Drummond and Maggie and Maggie becomes furious when she finds out that Mr. Drummond's lawyer suggested a pre-nuptial agreement. The wedding is about to take place, until Maggie and Mr. Drummond realize that neither of them called anybody to perform the ceremony. Note: Wedding guests include Mrs. Garrett, Adelaide, and Aunt Sophia, all of whom hadn't appeared on the show for some time prior to this episode. This is also the only time in which Mr. Drummond's current and previous housekeepers all appear together. Additionally, Drummond's lawyer and friend Tom Bishop, Willis' girlfriend Charlene, Dudley, and Dudley's father Ted all appear in this episode, resulting in the highest number of recurring guest characters seen within a single episode of the series. | ||||||||||||
142 | 20 | "The Honeymoon's Over" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds, Blake Hunter & Martin Cohen Teleplay by : Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | March 3, 1984 | 0622 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond and Maggie return from their honeymoon and find out that Arnold had been taking advantage of Sam while they were away. | ||||||||||||
143 | 21 | "The Bar Mitzvah Boy" | Linda Day | Martin Cohan | March 17, 1984 | 0623 | ||||||
When Arnold loses interest in attending church, he tries to find a religion more to his liking, so he decides to convert to Judaism, but is convinced otherwise by a rabbi (Milton Berle). | ||||||||||||
144 | 22 | "Kathy's Olympics" | Ellen Chaset Falcon | Story by : Bobby Herbeck Teleplay by : Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | March 24, 1984 | 0624 | ||||||
Arnold is in charge of keeping donations for a fundraising drive at school, but loses the money when he puts it in an old pair of shoes that gets thrown out, so the rest of the family has to dig through the garbage to find them. Fortunately for Arnold, Sam saved the shoes and money from being thrown away. | ||||||||||||
145 | 23 | "The Houseguest" | Gerren Keith | Bruce Taylor | May 5, 1984 | 0612 | ||||||
After an argument with her father, Charlene moves in with the Drummonds and ends up fighting with Willis. Note: This is Janet Jackson's final appearance as Charlene DuPrey. | ||||||||||||
146 | 24 | "The Boyfriend" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Howard Leeds, Blake Hunter & Martin Cohan Teleplay by : Ifa Baeza, Bruce Taylor, Howard Meyers & Mark Miller | May 12, 1984 | 0614 | ||||||
Kimberly plans to move in with her boyfriend, whom her dad doesn't like, by tricking the family into thinking she's moving in with her girlfriend, Michelle (Dana Kimmell) instead. Note: This is Dana Plato's final appearance as a regular cast member; starting in the seventh season, Plato becomes a recurring guest star. |
Season 7 (1984–85)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
147 | 1 | "A Haunting We Will Go" | Gerren Keith | Ken Hecht & Bob Brunner | September 29, 1984 | 0708 |
In this take-off on Ghostbusters, Arnold and Sam explore a haunted house. Note: John Astin and Ray Bolger guest star. Starting this season, Danny Cooksey and Dixie Carter join the cast as regular cast members. | ||||||
148 | 2 | "Arnold and Lisa's Mother" | Gerren Keith | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | October 6, 1984 | 0706 |
Lisa's mother takes over teaching Arnold's class and Lisa forces him and his friends to be nice to her or she'll rat them out to her mom. But Arnold finds out that Lisa's mom doesn't like her telling on her classmates, so he decides to sabotage her science project as revenge. | ||||||
149 | 3 | "Bed-Wetting" | Gerren Keith | Bruce Taylor | October 13, 1984 | 0701 |
Sam develops a bedwetting problem and the family begins showing him a lot more attention, which rubs Arnold the wrong way. | ||||||
150 | 4 | "Undercover Lover" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Susan Kessler & Maria Alexander Teleplay by : Ken Hecht & Bob Brunner | October 20, 1984 | 0703 |
Willis' new girlfriend (Anne-Marie Johnson) is actually an undercover cop trying to bust drug dealers at school. | ||||||
151 | 5 | "Arnold's Strike" "The Strike" | Gerren Keith | Howard Meyers | October 27, 1984 | 0704 |
Arnold and his classmates protest dress code changes at school, but when the principal (Dick Sargent) threatens suspension, Arnold is the only one willing to stand for his beliefs. | ||||||
152 | 6 | "Sam's Father" | Gerren Keith | Dan Kennicott & Michael Curley | November 3, 1984 | 0710 |
Maggie's ex-husband (Hoyt Axton) wants Sam to stay with him instead of with the Drummonds. | ||||||
153 | 7 | "Carmella Meets the Gooch" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Bruce Taylor, Bob Brunner & Ken Hecht Teleplay by : Bruce Taylor | November 10, 1984 | 0711 |
Foreign exchange student Carmella faces off against Arnold, develops a crush on Willis and helps Sam fight the Gooch. | ||||||
154 | 8 | "Arnold the Entrepreneur" | Gerren Keith | John B. Collins | November 17, 1984 | 0713 |
Arnold and Sam go into business selling roach spray, but Arnold's greed causes Sam to go his own way. Note: Hervé Villechaize and Edie McClurg guest star. | ||||||
155 | 9 | "The Honorable Arnold J. Jackson" | Mel Ferber | Dan Kennicott & Michael Curley | November 24, 1984 | 0707 |
Arnold is forced to choose between his friend Robbie and a girl he likes when she accuses Robbie of being a nerd and Arnold has to judge the matter in student court. | ||||||
156 | 10 | "The Gymnasts" | Gerren Keith | Bob Brunner & Ken Hecht | December 1, 1984 | 0714 |
Willis' friend, a promising athlete who lost the use of his legs in a car accident, gets a gymnasium named after him and sees a performance by the gold-medal-winning U.S. men's gymnastics team from the 1984 Summer Olympics. After seeing them perform, he becomes self-conscious about the fact that he can never walk again and decides to give up on himself. Note: Gary Coleman does not appear in this episode. | ||||||
157 | 11 | "Tonsils" | Mel Ferber | Bruce Taylor | December 8, 1984 | 0705 |
Sam has to have his tonsils removed but is afraid to go to the hospital. When Mr. Drummond has to undergo surgery himself, he and Sam try to face their fears together. | ||||||
158 | 12 | "Arnold's Songbird" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Bruce Taylor, Bob Brunner & Ken Hecht Teleplay by : Bruce Taylor | December 15, 1984 | 0712 |
Arnold has to ask Carmella for help when his plans for a school fundraiser fall apart. | ||||||
159 | 13 | "Baseball Blues" | Gerren Keith | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | January 5, 1985 | 0716 |
Mr. Drummond tries to turn around Sam's losing baseball team; in order to do so, he has to leave Sam on the bench. Note: Baseball player Lance Parrish guest-stars. Gary Coleman does not appear in this episode. | ||||||
160 | 14 | "Arnold Saves the Squirrel" | Mel Ferber | Toni Wunsch & Max Katz | January 12, 1985 | 0709 |
Arnold and Sam try to keep a children's television show from getting taken off the air. Note: Chuck McCann guest stars as Sam the Squirrel. | ||||||
161 | 15 | "Sam Adopts a Grandparent" | Gerren Keith | Susan H. Lee and Sylvia Alan | January 19, 1985 | 0715 |
Sam's scout troop is asked to work with a bunch of senior citizens on projects, but Sam's assigned senior citizen (John McIntire) calls Sam a brat and refuses to help, so Sam has to put together a model airplane by himself. Failing to do so, Sam is so humiliated by his troopmates, he decides he hates all old people, so Mr. Drummond has a talk with the senior to get him to patch things up with Sam. Note: Stephen Dorff and Troy Slaten play a couple of Sam's troopmates. | ||||||
162 | 16 | "Happy Birthday Drummond" | Gerren Keith | Jack Gross, Jr. & Phil Margo | January 26, 1985 | 0718 |
Maggie and Sam surprise Mr. Drummond for his birthday by having Kimberly return from France to visit him. She brings a present of her own, the Drummond family tree, but the happiness turns to sadness when Mr. Drummond realizes that he is the last person to carry on the Drummond name. Arnold comes up with a solution; he and Willis will have their names legally changed to "Drummond," which makes Mr. Drummond happy, but Willis has second thoughts. Note: Dana Plato guest stars. | ||||||
163 | 17 | "Sam's New Pal" | Gerren Keith | Ken Hecht & Bob Brunner | February 2, 1985 | 0717 |
Sam becomes friends with another kid in the building, but is horrified when he finds out the kid isn't a boy but is a girl (Soleil Moon Frye). Mr. Drummond convinces him that being friends with a girl isn't so bad, so Sam decides to have her stay the night for a sleepover, which makes both their fathers nervous. Note: Ron Masak guest stars. | ||||||
164 | 18 | "Russian Embassy" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Max Katz & Toni Wunsch Teleplay by : Jose Rivera | February 9, 1985 | 0719 |
Arnold's toy rocket crash lands at the Russian embassy and nearly causes an international incident. | ||||||
165 | 19 | "Cheers to Arnold" | Lee Lochhead | Bruce Taylor | February 16, 1985 | 0720 |
Arnold is pressured to drink by his friend Ricky (Robert Jayne), who is alcoholic. His parents find out and lay down the law, but when he catches Ricky with some of Mr. Drummond's liquor-- and is mistakenly accused of using it himself-- he has to get his friend to clean himself up. | ||||||
166 | 20 | "A Camping We Will Go" | Lee Shallat Chemel | Bruce Taylor | February 23, 1985 | 0721 |
Mr. Drummond takes Sam and Arnold camping, but is unable to compete with Sam's more-experienced dad. | ||||||
167 | 21 | "Beauty is in the Eye of Arnold" | Selig Frank | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | March 2, 1985 | 0722 |
Arnold enjoys going out with a classmate, but his friends think she isn't good enough for him and gets him to dump her for a pretty cheerleader. | ||||||
168 | 22 | "Blue Collar Drummond" | Gerren Keith | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | March 9, 1985 | 0702 |
Mr. Drummond goes undercover at his company to find out how his employees really feel about working there. Note: This is Dixie Carter's final appearance as Maggie. Note: Barney Martin, Jack Riley, Lee Weaver, Ron Karabatsos, and Spice Williams-Crosby guest star. | ||||||
169 | 23 | "Street Smarts" | Gerren Keith | Story by : Gary Coleman Teleplay by : Bruce Taylor | March 23, 1985 | 0723 |
Arnold is mugged on his way home from school and is so traumatized that he begins carrying a knife with him. In order to get him to open up about the incident, Mr. Drummond arranges for a crime-prevention demonstration at his school, but the demonstration becomes too real for Arnold. Note: Mary Jo Catlett does not appear in this episode. | ||||||
170 | 24 | "A Special Friend" | Gerren Keith | Ken Hecht & Bob Brunner | May 4, 1985 | 0724 |
Arnold and Sam befriend Karen (Lori Lethin), a street performer, much to Mr. Drummond's dismay. When they try to tell her they can't hang out with her anymore, she begins having an epileptic seizure. At first, the two are scared by the incident, but later on they start to make jokes about her condition. When Pearl overhears them, she reveals that she herself is epileptic, which causes the two to patch things up with their friend. Notes: Dana Plato guest stars. This is the final episode airing on NBC. Dixie Carter left the series at the end of this season and was replaced by Mary Ann Mobley in the final season. |
Season 8 (1985–86)
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
171 | 1 | "Sam's Missing" | Gerren Keith | Ken Hecht & Bob Brunner | September 27, 1985 | 0804 | ||||||
172 | 2 | Richard Gurman | 0805 | |||||||||
Royce D. Applegate portrays family man Donald Brown, whose wife (Ronne Troup) and he have never recovered from the death of their son. Accordingly, he kidnaps Sam as a replacement, while he is shopping for snacks at the grocery store. Telling his family that Sam was rescued from the streets, Donald tells Sam that he'll kill Sam's parents if Sam doesn't cooperate. During the middle of a home makeover, the Drummonds learn of Sam's kidnapping and they distribute flyers and go on the news to raise awareness. Maggie unravels emotionally. Mr. Drummond offers a $50,000 reward, which an extortionist attempts to claim. Meanwhile, Donald becomes more and more distant from his wife and son, trying to prevent them from learning that Sam was not found but stolen. Sam calls his family and gives them the Browns' phone number, which the police trace to Sam's location. They arrest Donald, and Sam returns home.
| ||||||||||||
173 | 3 | "Bully for Arnold" | Gerren Keith | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | October 4, 1985 | 0802 | ||||||
A tough guy (Forest Whitaker) wants Arnold to take care of his girlfriend while he is away, but the girl develops feelings for Arnold. Note: Jason Hervey makes his first appearance as Arnold's friend, Charlie. | ||||||||||||
174 | 4 | "Love on the Run" | Gerren Keith | Jose Rivera | October 11, 1985 | 0801 | ||||||
Mr. Drummond and Maggie are too busy to spend time together, which has Sam worried that their marriage may be in trouble, so he and Arnold put together a romantic evening for the two of them. Note: Dana Plato guest stars. | ||||||||||||
175 | 5 | "Willis Goes to College" | Tony Singletary | Richard Gurman | October 18, 1985 | 0807 | ||||||
Willis has a hard time adjusting to college, so he decides to drop out. However, he changes his mind when he finds out he's not the only one having trouble adjusting. | ||||||||||||
176 | 6 | "Arnold's Job" | Gerren Keith | Ken Hecht & Bob Brunner | October 25, 1985 | 0803 | ||||||
Arnold hopes to become a photojournalist and ends up getting a job at a newspaper, but he becomes disillusioned when he's asked to run errands instead of taking pictures. | ||||||||||||
177 | 7 | "A Tale of Two Teachers" | Gerren Keith | Richard Gurman | November 8, 1985 | 0808 | ||||||
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar returns and has Arnold take over teaching the class for one day. Arnold isn't thrilled about the assignment at first, but after reading the assigned book (A Tale of Two Cities), he gets excited about the opportunity. His classmates, however, give him a hard time. | ||||||||||||
178 | 8 | "So You Want to Be a Rock Star" | Mel Ferber | Al Aidekman & Barry Rubinowitz | November 15, 1985 | 0810 | ||||||
Arnold tries to impress a girl by organizing his friends into a rock group, and by learning the saxophone himself. He even recruits Sam as lead vocalist (since Robbie, the only other member with singing experience, makes Alfalfa Switzer sound like Freddie Mercury). Yet the more Arnold practices, the worse he sounds; after a couple of rehearsals, his friends are ready to throw him out of his own band. Note: Musician Clarence Clemons guest stars. | ||||||||||||
179 | 9 | "Speak No Evil" | Gerren Keith | Glenn Padnick | November 29, 1985 | 0809 | ||||||
Arnold and his friends find out that a white-supremacist group will be speaking on campus, so they decide to interrupt their assembly by throwing rotten food at them. When Mr. Drummond finds out, he objects to Arnold's behavior, saying the group has as much right to speak as everyone else because of the First Amendment. This leads to the rest of the family choosing sides, but soon Arnold comes around and sees things his dad's way. | ||||||||||||
180 | 10 | "Arnold's Bad Rep" | Mel Ferber | Story by : Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. Teleplay by : Jose Rivera | December 6, 1985 | 0812 | ||||||
Arnold lies to his friends about having sex with a girl, which leads to her deciding to have sex for real... which Arnold isn't ready for. | ||||||||||||
181 | 11 | "It's My Party and I'll Cry If I Want To" | Gerren Keith | Al Aidekman | December 13, 1985 | 0806 | ||||||
Sam manages to get a popular children's show host for his birthday party, but is disappointed when his friends are more interested in the guest than him. | ||||||||||||
182 | 12 | "Arnold's Initiation" | Tony Singletary | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | January 10, 1986 | 0813 | ||||||
Arnold pulls a prank at the local burger place in order to get into a club, but his prank causes a mentally challenged worker (John Schuck) to get fired, so Arnold tries to make things right. Note: Moosie Drier plays John, one of the club members. | ||||||||||||
183 | 13 | "Bulimia" | Barbara Schultz | Story by : Janna Lowell Teleplay by : Ken Hecht & Bob Brunner | January 17, 1986 | 0811 | ||||||
Arnold gets blamed when food starts disappearing from the house, but he soon discovers that Kimberly, who has developed bulimia, is the one who has been eating all the food in the house. Note: This is Dana Plato's final appearance in the series as Kimberly Drummond. Note: Todd Bridges does not appear in this episode. | ||||||||||||
184 | 14 | "Sam's Big Brother" | Mel Ferber | Susan H. Lee | January 24, 1986 | 0814 | ||||||
Sam begins to hang out with Willis a lot more than with Arnold, making Arnold feel left out. Meanwhile, Mr. Drummond is enthusiastic about seeing Halley's Comet with the family, but the brotherly feud almost ruins the occasion. | ||||||||||||
185 | 15 | "Arnold's Tangled Web" | Selig Frank | Barry Rubinowitz | January 31, 1986 | 0815 | ||||||
Arnold enlists a hustler (Chick Vennera) to help him conceal a poor grade from Mr. Drummond, but the ruse becomes increasingly tricky to maintain. | ||||||||||||
186 | 16 | "Lifestyles of the Poor and Unknown" | Mel Ferber | Barry Gold | February 7, 1986 | 0816 | ||||||
Sam gets into a fight at Hamburger Hangar with Kurt, a kid (Carl Steven) who constantly picks on him. Sam later learns that Kurt is a foster child, and is very jealous of what Sam has. Note: This is Mary Ann Mobley's final appearance in the series as Maggie McKinney. | ||||||||||||
187 | 17 | "The Big Bribe" | Mel Ferber | Story by : Janna Lowell Teleplay by : Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | February 21, 1986 | 0817 | ||||||
Willis gets the sister of one of his old girlfriends (Robin Givens) to go out with Arnold by giving her concert tickets. When Arnold finds out, he is angry at what Willis did, but it turns out the girl likes Arnold for real. Note: This is Todd Bridges' final appearance in the series as Willis Jackson. | ||||||||||||
188 | 18 | "The Photo Club" | Jeremiah Morris | Robert Jayson & A. Dudley Johnson, Jr. | February 28, 1986 | 0818 | ||||||
Arnold and Lisa get stuck working together on a school assignment and get locked in their school's darkroom. This leads to the two of them coming to an understanding about their adversarial relationship and they both end up liking each other, but it doesn't last. Note: This is Mary Jo Catlett's final appearance in the series as Pearl Gallagher. | ||||||||||||
189 | 19 | "The Front Page" | Gerren Keith | Al Aidekman & Richard Gurman | March 7, 1986 | 0819 | ||||||
Arnold finds out that several athletes at school are using anabolic steroids, so he goes undercover to expose the full story. Note: Peter DeLuise portrays the sole sympathetic jock. |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ DVD release info Archived October 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine at TVShowsOnDVD.com
- ^ "The TV Ratings Guide: 1983-84 Ratings History".
- ^ a b c Part 2 is an episode of Hello, Larry.
- ^ Diff'rent Strokes Imgur
- ^ a b This episode was originally produced for Season 3 but was postponed because of a writer's strike. "Diff'rent Strokes Episode Guide - Diff'rent Strokes Season Episodes - TV.com".
- ^ Diff'rent Strokes. The Reporter Imgur