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3!!Trivia for [[Series.TheBradyBunch the TV show]]
4* ActingForTwo:
5** Ann B. Davis plays Alice and the titular character in the episode "Sergeant Emma."
6** Florence Henderson and Robert Reed, in addition to playing Carol and Mike, play the roles of their grandparents in "You're Never Too Old" as Connie Hutchins and Judge Hank Brady, respectively.
7* ActorInspiredElement: Cindy's sausage curl pigtails were 7-year-old Susan Olsen's own idea, because she wanted to look like the character of [[Creator/AnissaJones Buffy]] in ''Series/FamilyAffair'', who had the same hairstyle. She came to [[CreatorBacklash regret it later]], though, as she wasn't allowed to have any other hairstyle until Season 4.
8* BeamMeUpScotty:
9** "Marcia, Marcia, Marcia!!" is said more times on this page (twice) than it was on the actual show (''once''). As with many other so-called [[CatchPhrase catchphrases]], it entered the popular consciousness through [[TheParody parodies]]: first ''Series/SaturdayNightLive''[[note]]with Creator/MelanieHutsell playing Jan, against Creator/BethCahill as Marcia[[/note]], and then ''[[TheMovie The Brady Bunch Movie]]''. That said, the scene re-appeared (as a flashback) in the first episode of ''The Brady Girls Get Married'' as early as 1981, and the plot of that special hinges on Jan ''still'' trying to escape her older sister's shadow even as a grown woman.
10** ''Confessions; Confessions'': As with the even-more famous "Marcia, Marcia, Marcia!", the lines "Mom's favorite vase!" and "She always said don't play ball in the house" are uttered once. (They are repeated, yes, but through Peter's nightmare.) Some people also misquote the latter as, "Mom always says, 'don't play ball in the house.'" A Nick at Nite/TV Land [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLFkxA0P7Q8 promo]] actually referenced that Carol never said this, and even crudely stitched together sound bites of her saying each individual word to give some idea of what it might sound like.
11** Marcia's "Sure, Jan" is from ''A Very Brady Sequel'', not the TV show. Likewise (and contrary to actress Christine Taylor's recollections) Marcia does ''not'' mispronounce "school" as "sküle" in the TV show (although she did sometimes pronounce it as "skew-ell"); this is original to the movies.
12* CastIncest: Barry Williams (Greg) went out to dinner once with Florence Henderson (his TV-(step)mom) and the media made a bigger deal out of it than it actually was. A full-fledged relationship did not come of it, but came to a head at one of the many reunions when Barry straight-up ''made out'' with her, as "something I've been meaning to do for a long time". Barry Williams and Maureen [=McCormick=] also got hot and heavy, as did Chris Knight and Eve Plumb. Finally, Mike Lookinland and Susan Olsen had a fake marriage as little kids, which ended when Mike developed a crush on Eve. They dissolved their fake marriage with a fake divorce, which they figured was doing the marriage ceremony backwards.
13* TheCastShowoff:
14** Creator/EvePlumb was one hell of an artist, which made its way into a few episodes and eventually became Jan's major talent. Florence Henderson was also known for her beautiful voice, which led to two episodes revolving around Carol singing.
15** Florence Henderson also sang the theme to ''The Bradys''.
16** The kids, with their singing talents, although in real life, Barry Williams, Maureen [=McCormick=] and Mike Lookinland had genuine singing talent, and as Williams said, Lookinland was the most musical of all six of them. Although by the time ''[[Series/BradyBunchSpinOffs The Brady Bunch Hour]]'' was being made, it became apparent that he was a terrible dancer. Susan Olsen also had a somewhat decent voice, and Eve Plumb[[note]]Whose father, Neely Plumb, was a respected RecordProducer[[/note]] was OK, but Chris Knight was--by his own admission--[[HollywoodToneDeaf a terrible singer]]. And when the Brady kids, Henderson and Robbie Rist (who played Cousin Oliver) reunited on ''Series/TheWeakestLink'' in 2001, Knight struggled with music questions.
17* TheDanza: Linda Gibboney plays Sandy's cousin Linda in "Peter and the Wolf".
18* DirectedByCastMember: Robert Reed directed four episodes. This was partially done in an attempt to ease some of the ongoing tensions between him and the producers.
19* DyeingForYourArt: Mike Lookinland (Bobby) is a natural blond. And for a time, Susan Olsen (although also a natural blonde)'s hair was dyed to match Florence Henderson's — until it started falling out in clumps. Both hated it and eventually producers stopped forcing it.
20* FirstAppearance:
21%%** (Which episode?) Of Sam Franklin, the owner of Sam's Butcher Shop where the Bradys get all their meat and Alice finds her boyfriend and future husband. Veteran character actor Allan Melvin took on what became one of his two signature roles (the other being Barney Hefner on ''Series/AllInTheFamily'').
22** ''Welcome Aboard'' introduces CousinOliver.
23* FollowTheLeader: Creator/SherwoodSchwartz wrote the original ''Brady'' pilot script in 1966. Two years later, while he was pitching it to the networks, the movies ''Film/YoursMineAndOurs'' and ''Film/WithSixYouGetEggroll'', which also dealt comedically with the resulting BlendedFamilyDrama after two single parents with kids get married, were released. While Schwartz always hastened to point out that he was working on the concept before then, he admitted that it was the success of those films (especially ''Film/YoursMineAndOurs'', one of the top 10 box office hits of 1968) that led Creator/{{ABC}} to greenlight ''The Brady Bunch''.
24* FridayNightDeathSlot: ABC aired ''The Brady Bunch'' on Friday nights, giving it only enough ratings for it to be renewed for half seasons after its second.
25* HostilityOnTheSet: Creator/{{Robert Reed|Actor}} hated starring on the "silly" show and constantly butted heads with creator Sherwood Schwartz, often having temper tantrums on set and sending memos criticizing the writing. There were some episodes that Reed outright refused to participate in for being too absurd for his tastes, including the show's final episode "The Hair-Brained Scheme". As a result, Mike Brady was said to be "out of town" for Greg's graduation. Schwartz later stated that he had planned to drop Mike for Season 6 had the show not been cancelled. Despite his problems with Schwartz, Reed got along very well with the kids on the show, and often bonded with them off-screen. He also reprised his role as Mike Brady in all ''Brady'' sequel series and TV movies.
26* KilledByRequest: Robert Reed hated everything about the show except the kids playing the young Bradys. This led to him and producer Creator/SherwoodSchwartz butting heads on numerous occasions. And in fact, had it not been cancelled, one possibility Schwartz considered was to kill off Mike Brady over the summer hiatus so he'd be gone for the sixth season and beyond.
27* MethodActing: "And Now a Word From Our Sponsor" displays this to the extreme, particularly by Mike and Carol after they take lessons from acting coach Myrna Carter, who is a [[BadBadActing bad, bad actress]] and couldn't teach a pencil how to draw.
28* MissingEpisode: As of 2022, Paramount+ has been unable to stream certain episodes for copyright reasons. One notable missing episode is Season 1's "Is There a Doctor in the House?" in which [[SickEpisode the kids all catch the measles]]. This may have been pulled because it treats a potentially fatal illness as just an excuse for sitcom hijinks and because anti-vaxxers have sometimes used it as "proof" that the disease is "no big deal."
29** The full list of missing episodes are:
30*** Season 1: "Katchoo", "A Clubhouse Is Not A Home", "Sorry, Right Number", "Every Boy Does It Once", "Is There A Doctor In The House?", "54-40 And Fight", "The Undergraduate", "The Possible Dream"[[note]] All of these episodes are [[https://diytube.video/?search=Brady+Bunch currently viewable on DIY Tube]], but it is not known if/when the site will add the other four seasons. In addition, "Katchoo", "A Clubhouse Is Not A Home", "Every Boy Does It Once" and "54-40 and Fight" [[https://pluto.tv/en/on-demand/series/the-brady-bunch-cbs-tv/details/season/1 are viewable on Pluto TV.]][[/note]]
31*** Season 2: "Alice's September Song"
32*** Season 3: "Ghost Town U.S.A.", "Juliet Is The Sun", "Getting Davy Jones", "Dough Re Mi", "Jan's Aunt Jenny", "Cindy Brady, Lady", "My Fair Opponent" [[note]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ozb44cnlhoc Getting Davy Jones]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiMmi-SFEWw Dough Re Mi]] can be seen on Youtube-but only as the "Pop Up Video" versions complete with random trivia. [[/note]]
33*** Season 4: "Hawaii Bound", "The Show Must Go On??", "Greg Gets Grounded", "Amateur Nite", "A Room At The Top"
34*** Season 5: "Adios, Johnny Bravo", "Snow White and the Seven Bradys", "Never Too Young", "Two Petes In A Pod", "The Snooperstar" [[note]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPx8ao9G3nA Adios, Johnny Bravo]] is viewable on Youtube (albeit in the "Pop Up Video" form mentioned above). [[/note]]
35* MilestoneCelebration: In 2019, CBS/Paramount celebrated the Brady Bunch's 50th anniversary with a DVD boxset of every ''Brady'' show or movie they own. Meanwhile, HGTV bought the house used for exterior photography, then teamed up with the Brady Kids' actors to renovate the interior and backyard into replicas of the sets; the miniseries ''A Very Brady Renovation'' documents the project.
36* MoneyDearBoy: This may be the only reason Robert Reed stayed with the show, but he said before he died that the show was pitched to him as being more adult and less like ''Gilligan's Island'', which was why he agreed to do it. Another reason he stayed with the show was that he had grown fond of the cast and treated the children like they were his own. Also, as a Paramount contract player during the waning days of the studio system, he was obligated to do the pilot.
37* NeverWorkWithChildrenOrAnimals: An unfortunate example after the original Tiger actor was fatally hit by a car. None of the other dogs could match the chemistry of the child actors, and so Tiger was phased out during the second season.
38* NobodyPoops: In one of the most infamous examples, the bathroom shared by the six Brady children didn't have a toilet. [[MoralGuardians They weren't allowed to show a toilet bowl on television]], and the crew couldn't figure out an angle that would conceal a toilet if one were present.
39* OnlyBarelyRenewed: According to Ann B. Davis, only once was the series renewed for a full season (for the rest of the run, it was half-season renewals).
40* RealLifeRelative:
41** Robert Reed, Sherwood Schwartz and Florence Henderson had daughters who were cast in an episode centering on the girls having a sleepover. Schwartz's daughter Hope (credited as Hope Sherwood) then went on to appear in three additional episodes (two as a semi-steady Greg girlfriend named Rachel), and after that helped out behind-the-scenes on ''The Brady Brides'' and ''The Bradys'', and co-wrote ''The Brady Bunch in the White House'' with her brother Lloyd Schwartz.[[note]]Making that movie even more of a Schwartz family project, the score was composed by Hope's husband, former Music/{{Wings|Band}} guitarist Laurence Juber[[/note]]
42** Music composer Frank De Vol's son Gordon played Jesse James in Bobby's dream sequence in "Bobby's Hero".
43* RealitySubtext:
44** Much like the sisters they played, Maureen [=McCormick=] and Eve Plumb did not get along in real life.
45** The bass guitarist for the theme song, like Carol Brady, was a single mother of three. The bassist? Legendary session musician ''Carol'' Kaye.
46* RecycledScript: A few episodes reuse plot points from Sherwood Schwartz's earlier hit, ''Series/GilligansIsland'', refitted for the different setting and characters. For example:
47** In the ''Gilligan'' episode "A Nose By Any Other Name," Gilligan's nose swells up when he falls out of a tree. In the ''Brady Bunch'' episode "The Subject Was Noses," Marcia's nose swells up from being hit by a football.
48** In the ''Gilligan'' episode "Allergy Time," all the other Castaways seem to be allergic to Gilligan, but it turns out they're just allergic to his hair tonic; in the ''Brady Bunch'' episode "Katchoo," Jan seems to be allergic first to Mike, and then to Tiger the dog, but it turns out she's just allergic to Tiger's flea powder.
49** Both shows also have IOweYouMyLife episodes: ''Gilligan'' has "Slave Girl," where a native girl becomes Gilligan's slave after he saves her life, while ''Brady Bunch'' has "My Brother's Keeper," where Peter becomes Bobby's slave.
50* ShootTheMoney: Episodes took the Bradys on location to Grand Canyon and Hawaii.
51* SpinOffCookbook: ''Alice's Brady Bunch Cookbook'' by Ann B. Davis. This was the actress who played Alice, the Bradys' housekeeper (and cook) on the show.
52* TechnologyMarchesOn:
53** "The Underground Movie": Super8 movie cameras were the "in" thing in 1970, and the fact that this is a camera that also records sound made it even cooler. Of course, 8-mm films and the projectors used to play the films have long since bit the dust, replaced by video cameras and eventually camera phones. Additionally, until the advent of today's tablets (including those with movie-making applications) being issued to students, movies and videos as school projects was relatively novel.
54* TheOtherDarrin:
55** Most famously, Geri Reischl as "Fake Jan" in ''The Brady Bunch Hour''
56** As well as Cindy in ''A Very Brady Christmas'' and Marcia in ''The Bradys''. ''The Brady Girls Get Married'' was the only project which reunited the entire original cast.
57** The Mexican Spanish dub of the TV series suffered one of the biggest casting shifts ever: Only the first three seasons were dubbed in Spanish in the 70s, since the series was canceled possibly due to low ratings in Mexico. The last two seasons weren't dubbed ''until the 2000s'' (about '''26 years''' after the TV series ended both in the U.S. and when the series was canceled in Mexico) and when they dubbed the last seasons, they had to replace the ''entire'' cast, since almost all the original voice cast were retired from voice acting or dead.
58** Starting with ''midway through the first episode'' (due to the real Tiger's death before the essential scenes were taped), and continuing through to his final appearance in late 1970, a number of dogs played "Tiger." None of them worked out, and since the focus was more on the human members of the family, Tiger was ultimately retired.
59* ThrowItIn: While shooting Season 1, Chris Knight was heard singing the show's theme song. Schwartz took this idea and rearranged the theme to have the six Brady kids themselves sing it from Season 2 onward.
60* TypeCasting: The actor who played the bully Buddy Hinton (Russell Schulman) also played a bully on ''Series/TheAndyGriffithShow''.
61* VindicatedByReruns: Was OnlyBarelyRenewed several times until its cancellation in 1974. Afterward, syndication markets aired the series in the afternoon hours, and it become a hit among younger audiences.
62* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
63** Sherwood Schwartz's original title for the series was ''Yours and Mine'', but after the similar-themed film ''Film/YoursMineAndOurs'' was released, the name was changed. Another title considered was ''The Brady Brood'', but Schwartz decided that the word "brood" sounded too dark.
64** Schwartz originally wanted Creator/GeneHackman to play Mike but the network turned him down. At the time, Hackman was mostly unknown when the Brady Bunch was first cast; with Creator/{{Paramount}} [[ExecutiveMeddling more or less pushing Reed]] (still under contract to the studio) to be cast[[note]]By the mid-point of the Brady Bunch's run, Hackman would have gone on to stardom - and received an Academy Award for Best Actor - as Popeye Doyle in ''Film/TheFrenchConnection''[[/note]]. At one point, Creator/JeffreyHunter was also considered for the Mike Brady role.[[note]]He died in May of 1969, by which time the pilot - filmed almost a year before the show went into production - had already been completed.[[/note]]
65** As mentioned above, Robert Reed wasn't going to come back if the show got renewed for a sixth season. According to different reports, either Mike was going to get killed off, or was going to get TheOtherDarrin treatment with Creator/RobertFoxworth taking over the role. If the '90s dramedy SequelSeries ''[[Series/BradyBunchSpinOffs The Bradys]]'' hadn't been cancelled after just six episodes, Mike would've been killed off there as well.
66** The plan was originally for Carol to be the wacky comic relief character with Alice as a more traditional StraightMan housekeeper (helping to explain why a household with a stay-at-home mom even ''needed'' a housekeeper in the first place). To this end, Joyce Bulifant (later of ''Series/TheMaryTylerMooreShow'' and ''Series/MatchGame'') was tapped to play Carol and Creator/KathleenFreeman (a character actress perhaps most famous for her role as foil for Creator/JerryLewis in many of his films and also for playing Sister Mary Stigmata the Penguin in ''Film/TheBluesBrothers'') was to play Alice. Florence Henderson was considered a dark horse for the part of Carol but absolutely ''nailed'' her screen test... but as she was a StraightMan herself, for balance, the housekeeper would have to be the comic relief. Ann B. Davis, known at the time for her Emmy-winning role as Schultzy in ''The Bob Cummings Show'', was then cast to play the new "goofy" Alice.
67* WordOfGod: While the pilot episode makes it clear that [[MissingMom Mike's first wife had passed away]], Sherwood Schwartz has said that Carol was divorced. It was never brought up on the show since divorce was taboo at the time.
68* WriteWhoYouKnow: In "And Now a Word From Our Sponsor"; this is how Skip Farnum envisioned the Bradys when he hired them, expecting natural performances.
69* YouLookFamiliar: Chris Beaumont, a teen actor of the late 1960s and early 1970s, plays four different characters – always, opposite Barry Williams' Greg – during the final four seasons. Chris first appeared in Season 2's "Our Son, the Man" as a high school senior Greg tries to emulate (none too well). In Season 3, he was slick-talking Eddie in "The Wheeler Dealer," who tries to sell him a wreck of a used car. Season 4's season finale was "A Room at the Top," where Chris' Hank is a college sophomore and one of Greg's buddies (no indication if he's the same kid that Greg encountered a couple of years earlier, but still ... ). But perhaps Chris' most prominent, best-received role was that as the unethical quarterback Jerry Rogers in "Quarterback Sneak."
70
71!!Trivia for [[Film.TheBradyBunch the movies]]
72* ActorInspiredElement: Marcia's [[MemeticMutation memetic]] pronunciation of "school" as "sküle" was a specific affectation cooked up by Christine Taylor, based around Maureen [=McCormick=]'s quirky [[ValleyGirl San Fernando Valley]] accent.
73* BillingDisplacement: Creator/ShelleyLong gets first billing as Carol, but has a less prominent role than not only Gary Cole (Mike) but also several of the kids. Long being the biggest star in the cast at the time of the film's release justifies this. This was rectified for the sequel, where she was again billed first, but she has a much more substantial role and carries the film's main plot.
74* DawsonCasting: Creator/ChristineTaylor (Marcia), Creator/JenniferEliseCox (Jan), and Creator/ChristopherDanielBarnes (Greg) were all in their twenties when cast. Interestingly, Cox is actually ''older'' than Taylor in real life.
75* EditedForSyndication: Some "family friendly" networks remove the MushroomSamba, cutting directly to disheveled Roy waking up the next day, late for the auction.
76* FollowTheLeader: Although the ''Dragnet'' movie did it first, it was the success of this film that inspired other big screen remakes to lampoon their source material rather than play it straight. Films such as ''Starsky & Hutch'', ''I Spy'', ''The Green Hornet'', and ''21 Jump Street'', to name a few.
77* MethodActing: To help maintain the tension between Marcia and Jan, Christine Taylor and Jennifer Elise Cox (both huge fans of the original series) decided to stay in character between takes.
78* MissingTrailerScene: The trailer for the first movie showed Peter delivering his Creator/HumphreyBogart impression ("Porkshops and appleschause") to one of the girls at school. The original trailer for the second movie featured two gags involving the Brady Bunch grid: one in which the clan [[BreakingTheFourthWall breaks the fourth wall]] to exclaim, "We're back!", and one in which Trevor walks into Mike's square.
79* OrphanedReference: In the Sears musical number scene, Dittmeyer is shown in the store wearing a neck brace and buying a new toilet with no explanation ever given for the brace or toilet. This was a reference to a deleted subplot in which Dittmeyer attempts to use his daughter's science experiment, a jar full of termites, to infest the Bradys' home. The termites, instead, infest Dittmeyer's home which causes him to fall through the floor of his bathroom while sitting on the toilet. The sublot was eventually reinstated in the TV edit.
80* TheOtherDarrin:
81** Due to the TV series dating back to 1969 and some of its cast being too old or having died long ago[[note]]such as Robert Reed[[/note]], every member of the Bradys was inevitably recast.
82** Since ''The Brady Bunch in the White House'' came six years after ''A Very Brady Sequel'', all of the kids received new actors. Alice received one as well.
83* PredecessorCastingGag: Several members of the original cast have cameo roles:
84** Creator/ChristopherKnight, the original Peter, plays Peter's gym coach who stops him from getting bullied in the lunch room.
85** Creator/BarryWilliams, the original Greg, plays a record producer whom Greg visits to pursue his dreams of pop stardom...and tells Greg that the music he writes is terrible and he shouldn't bother.
86** Creator/FlorenceHenderson, the original Carol, appears at the end of the movie as Carol's mother.
87** Creator/AnnBDavis, the original Alice, plays the truck driver who picks up Jan after she runs away from home, though she doesn't interact with the movie's Alice.
88* PromotedFanboy: As noted elsewhere, both Christine Taylor (Marcia) and Jennifer Elise Cox (Jan) were devoted fans of the original series, had previously played their roles in ''The Real Live Brady Bunch'', and were ''so'' committed to getting their characters and the dynamic between them right that they stayed in character between takes. It's certainly hard to imagine two actors more committed to these roles than they were, and their devotion and hard work paid off in that they're widely recognized as the strongest performers in the films.
89* RealitySubtext: Mrs. Cummings encourages Jan in the first movie to stand out with a new look, and in the second movie to act true to herself, even if others mock Jan for doing so. This sounds rather meta coming from drag queen Creator/{{Rupaul}}, especially since Mrs. Cummings' lecture in the sequel contains a "drag" pun.
90* RoleReprise: Five of the six actors to play the Brady Kids appeared as their characters in a fantasy sequence in ''Series/{{Wings}}'' (with one of the main characters standing in for Creator/ChristineTaylor as Marcia).
91* SeparatedAtBirthCasting: Christine Taylor as Marcia looks uncannily similar to a young Maureen [=McCormick=], to the point where the latter reportedly mistook footage of the former as being of herself. Taylor says when she was in high school she was constantly told she looked like Marcia.
92* StarMakingRole: Of a sort for Creator/GaryCole. While he was already an established actor, his performance as Mike Brady marked [[LeslieNielsenSyndrome the first of many roles he would go on to have as a comedic actor]].
93* UncreditedRole: Several of the actors who make cameo appearances in ''A Very Brady Sequel'' are uncredited, including Creator/RosieODonnell as Zsa Zsa's companion at the auction, Creator/DavidSpade as Sergio the hairdresser, and [[spoiler:Creator/BarbaraEden as [[Series/IDreamOfJeannie Jeannie]].]]
94* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
95** Original plot lines/character changes for the first movie and as a "sign of the times" would have had Mike flipping burgers instead of his usual career of an architect and Marcia being a lesbian. Fortunately, a successful lawsuit put an end to these radical changes, though they were worked into the films in other ways (Greg ended up being the BurgerFool in the sequel, though it's only shown in one scene and Marcia is given a lesbian friend who, of course, [[EvenTheGirlsWantHer is in love with her.]])
96** Florence Henderson's RemakeCameo in the first movie was reportedly intended to be as the trucker who takes Jan home (her CB handle was going to be "Wessonality"), but she turned it down and Ann B. Davis took the role instead. After focus group audiences kept asking why Henderson wasn't in the movie, the producers convinced her to participate and the Grandma Brady scene was quickly written and filmed.

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