
FANS:
MEMORIES:
Kapatsos remembers...was a very good show untill freddie passed away and the replaced him with a little kid. thats when it ... More »
Posted on 07/22/08
Cast:
Ed Brown, The Man...Jack Albertson
Chico Rodriguez (1974-77)...Freddie Prinze
Louie Wilson...Scatman Crothers
Mabel (1974-75)...Bonnie Boland
Mando (1974-77)...Isaac Ruiz
Rev. Bemis (1975-76)...Ronny Graham
Della Rogers (1976-78)...Della Reese
Raul "Chico" Garcia (1977-78)...Gabriel Melgar
Aunt Charo (1977-78)...Charo
Chico Rodriguez (1974-77)...Freddie Prinze
Louie Wilson...Scatman Crothers
Mabel (1974-75)...Bonnie Boland
Mando (1974-77)...Isaac Ruiz
Rev. Bemis (1975-76)...Ronny Graham
Della Rogers (1976-78)...Della Reese
Raul "Chico" Garcia (1977-78)...Gabriel Melgar
Aunt Charo (1977-78)...Charo
Studio:
Warner Bros. Television
Network:
NBC
Release History:
9/13/74 - 7/21/78 NBC
Chico and the Man was the first TV series to be set in a Mexican-American neighborhood, bringing tension in the midst of laughter by giving audiences another look into everyday situations. Ed was a hard-drinker, who after the passing of his wife began to alienate all of those around him. Despite having a shop in a Chicano-heavy area, he distrusts all of them, including Chico, who he berates with ethnic slurs to try and get him to leave. Slowly, however, he sees the effort Chico puts into his work, and his heart begins to soften, giving the two a father-son like relationship, even if Ed wouldn’t ever admit it.
Chico and Ed weren’t the only things the show had to offer: there was the garbage man, Louie, whose friendship with Ed and snappy one-liners like, “Put out your can, here comes the garbage man!” won over the hearts of TV viewers everywhere. Then there was Mabel, the mail carrier, and Ramon, Chico’s friend. As the show progressed, Reverend Bemis holy rolled himself right into the sitcom. Della, played by the inimitable Della Reese, was Ed’s feisty landlady and local lunch-cart owner who took on old man Ed in verbal duels that kept audiences tuning in every week to see what was said next.
From its get-go in 1974, the series was a hit for NBC, bringing praise for vaudeville veteran Albertson, and for newcomer Freddie Prinze, whose stand-up comedy routine couldn’t have prepared for the humorous, yet touching performances he would give that helped solidify the shows broad-spectrum success. With his winning combination of personality and good looks, Prinze soon found himself on the covers of magazines across the country. Plus, his Chico and the Man catchphrase, “Looking gooooood!” was on the tips of tongues everywhere, inspiring the title of his 1975 comedy album, Loookin Good. The show’s popularity was enough to have all the stars come out of the woodwork for guest appearances, like Tony Orlando, Star Trek’s George Takei, Sammy Davis Jr. and Jose Feliciano, who happened to be the writer of the show’s theme song.
Just after the start of 1977, fans of Chico and the Man and Freddie Prinze mourned the loss of his life to an apparent suicide, just hours after taping an episode where Ed is tricked by Chico and one of his army buddies into thinking he’s talking to God. The episode that was set to air the night of his death was one TV execs figured might be too hard for fans to take, so they put on the one where he becomes a professional boxer. Months later, NBC aired the "Ed Talks to God" episode, which proved to be an traumatic moment for fans, as Chico offers a knife to Ed so that Ed could exact his revenge against Chico.
With Prinze gone, the show’s producers considered cancelling the series, but instead decided that Chico and the Man could pick up the pieces, as they were, and bring in someone knew. Though many have felt that this was the moment the series ‘jumped the shark,’ in its fourth season the show introduced 12-year old Raul. Discovered by Ed and Louie on a fishing trip in Tijuana, Mexico, Raul climbs into Ed’s trunk – a stowaway that was discovered upon their return. As Ed puts Raul to bed, he mistakenly calls Raul ‘Chico,’ which Ed defends with “You’re all Chicos to me.” Soon, Ed adopts Raul, calls him Chico, and finds out that Raul’s overprotective Aunt Charo, a Spanish entertainer, had found him and wanted to be a part of the family.
Chico and the Man was never able to pull out from under the death of Prinze and the loss of comedic chemistry between he and Albertson. Gone were the massive audiences, and by the end of its 77-78 season, the show was wrapped up – going on as a nostalgic syndication favorite. Today, the chemistry between Ed and Chico is “loooookin gooood” as ever, bringing smiles to the faces of those catching it for the first time, and those who fondly remember.
















