Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox television

Cybill is an American television sitcom created by Chuck Lorre, which aired for four seasons and 87 episodes on CBS from January 2, 1995, to July 13, 1998. Starring Cybill Shepherd, the show revolves around the life of Cybill Sheridan, a twice-divorced single mother of two and struggling actress in her 40s who has never gotten her big break in show business. Alicia Witt and Dedee Pfeiffer co-starred as Sheridan's daughters, with Alan Rosenberg and Tom Wopat playing their respective fathers, while Christine Baranski appeared as Cybill's hard-drinking friend Maryann.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The sitcom was produced by Chuck Lorre Productions and YBYL Productions in association with Carsey-Werner Productions, with Shepherd, Lorre, Howard M. Gould, Jay Daniel, Caryn Mandabach, Marcy Carsey, and Tom Werner serving as the show's original executive producers. Broadcast to critical praise, Cybill was nominated for 12 Emmy Awards throughout its run and awarded the 1996 Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy. Shepherd won a third Golden Globe Award for her performance, while Baranski received an Emmy, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and an American Comedy Award. Cybill has been in syndication on the comedy-centric digital subchannel Laff since April 2016, along with other Carsey-Werner Productions series shown on the network.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>

PlotEdit

Cybill takes place in Los Angeles and focuses on the character of a somewhat faded actress, Cybill Sheridan (played by Cybill Shepherd), who, because of her age, had been relegated to playing character roles, bit parts, and TV commercials.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Also featured are her daughters: headstrong Zoey (Witt) and uptight Rachel (Pfeiffer), two ex-husbands: Ira (Rosenberg) and Jeff (Wopat), and her hard-drinking best friend Maryann (Baranski).

Due to the show's premise, many episodes featured a show-within-a-show format, usually in the cold opens, showing Cybill Sheridan playing a variety of other characters in her various film and TV acting roles.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

In her autobiography, Cybill Disobedience, Shepherd stated that the Cybill character was based on herself—or at least what her life as an actress could have been without the successes of The Last Picture Show and Moonlighting. Many of the show's details and situations were mined from her own family, marriages, and experiences.<ref name="CD">Cybill Disobedience</ref>

Cast and charactersEdit

Regular and semi-regularEdit

  • Cybill Shepherd as Cybill Sheridan<ref name="fcc">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> – Cybill is a middle aged actress who has had a varied, though mediocre career (which, even in her salad days, seems to have consisted primarily of television commercials, soap operas, and B-movies). She now finds that, due to her age, roles are becoming harder to find and that the quality of roles she is offered is diminishing. Her fortunes seem to vary over the course of the series. Sometimes, she has consistent work and appears to be relatively wealthy, other times, she scrambles to find and keep jobs, and seems to be struggling financially; this inconsistency could be attributed to the nature of her career, as even the most successful actors tend to have their professional ups and downs, both financially and creatively. Cybill is a rather eccentric feminist who practices New Age philosophy, as well as a native Southerner from Memphis, Tennessee. Her loud, public, and honest rantings about female sexuality, her perkiness, bouts of outrage, and hysteria, and her exhibitions of "down-home" Southern behavior often embarrass her two daughters, Zoey and Rachel. Cybill has a civil relationship with her ex-husbands Jeff and Ira, even tolerating their tendency to cling to her. She does sometimes spar, however, with Jeff over his past infidelities, and is quick to remind Ira of how controlling he was when they were married. Cybill's best friend is the wealthy, alcoholic divorcee Maryann Thorpe, whom she supports emotionally and assists in her bitter war with her ex-husband. Cybill has a caustic sense of humor and an acid tongue. Although eccentric and flawed, Cybill's strength and wisdom shines through in her support of her family and friends.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> (87 episodes)

  • Christine Baranski as Maryann Thorpe<ref name="fcc" /> – Cybill's best friend is a former receptionist who is now fabulously wealthy due to her divorce settlement with her unfaithful ex-husband, celebrity plastic surgeon Richard Thorpe (an infrequently and never fully seen character, to whom she always refers with a sneer as "Dr. Dick"). Maryann is a bored, bitter alcoholic who often seems unstable and emotionally dependent on Cybill. When she is not stalking her ex-husband and playing elaborate and destructive pranks on him, she spends lavishly, drinks, and pursues younger men. She has a few healthy relationships with men of her own age over the course of the series, including Cybill's ex-husband Ira, but these do not last. She has a son, Justin, who infrequently visits. A passionate environmentalist with excessive liberal beliefs, Justin is at odds with her frivolous and extravagant lifestyle. Maryann's most consistent and healthy relationship is with Cybill. They seem to be endlessly sharing martinis in an upmarket Hollywood restaurant and are accomplices in each other's bad behavior. Maryann seems to spend most of her time at Cybill's house and involving herself in Cybill's family life to alleviate her own boredom. Her caustic tongue vies with Cybill's, but her remarks are more inappropriate, bitter, and cynical. She is, however, a constant support for Cybill at crucial moments. Her first name was Theresa, which her mother called her but she dropped when she moved to Los Angeles. (87 episodes)
  • Alicia Witt as Zoey Woodbine<ref name="fcc" /> – Cybill's younger daughter, she is a high-school teenager, and is brilliant, rebellious, and more sarcastic than her mother. She is a piano virtuoso (as is Witt) and hopes to attend the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music. A self-imposed outcast, she is a vocal advocate of celibacy. She is in an on-again-off-again relationship with Maryann's estranged son. (87 episodes)
  • Alan Rosenberg as Ira Woodbine<ref name="fcc" /> – Cybill's second husband, Ira is the polar opposite of Cybill's first husband, Jeff. Unassuming and rather neurotic, he is a brilliant writer, though prone to "writer's block". His marriage to Cybill ended because he was unable to stop trying to control her life; even in divorce, he cannot help meddling in her life. For several episodes of the second season he was involved with Maryann. (85 episodes)
  • Dedee Pfeiffer as Rachel Robbins Manning<ref name="fcc" /> – Cybill's elder daughter, she is uptight and pretentious, and is married to Kevin Manning. She is prone to outbursts of hysteria similar to her mother's, especially during her pregnancies of the first and fourth season. Rachel and Kevin's first child is a boy named William; the second is a girl, Amanda. (Initially a regular but the role became more semi-regular in later seasons) (42 episodes)
  • Tom Wopat as Jeff Robbins<ref name="fcc" /> – Cybill's first husband, Jeff is a Hollywood stuntman with a roving eye. Though his many indiscretions were the cause of the divorce, Cybill and Jeff still have a good relationship, bound together by their daughter and grandson (and the fact that Jeff lived over Cybill's garage in the early seasons of the show). Jeff is somewhat dim, making him a prime target for Zoey's dry wit, but possesses a good heart. (Initially a regular in first couple of seasons, semi-regular in later seasons) (22 episodes)

Recurring and special guestsEdit

  • Tim Maculan as a waiter and friend of Cybill's.<ref name="fcc" /> Despite his prominence, the character was never given a name. Appeared in over 50 episodes (the fifth-most appearing cast member with more episodes than some of the semi-regular cast).
  • Peter Krause as Kevin Manning,<ref name="fcc" /> Rachel's equally uptight husband, an untenured assistant professor from Boston. (Recurring from Season 2 onwards) (23 episodes)
  • Jay Paulson as Sean,<ref name="fcc" /> Zoe's first boyfriend in Season 2 & 3. (Recurring) (12 episodes)
  • Ray Baker as the second Dr. Richard Thorpe,<ref name="fcc" /> Maryann's veterinarian boyfriend who is also the namesake of her ex-husband. (Recurring in Seasons 3 & 4) (11 episodes)
  • Jane Kaczmarek as Holly,<ref name="fcc" /> Ira's girlfriend - and later fiancee - in Season 3. (5 episodes)
  • Linda Wallem appeared in 5 episodes as various characters including Julie, Cybill's co-host on a morning show in 3 episodes.<ref name="fcc" /> Wallem was also a producer and writer on the show.
  • Mary Page Keller as Julia Bishop,<ref name="fcc" /> Zoey's piano teacher and Ira's girlfriend. (4 episodes)
  • Kim Murphy as Nina,<ref name="fcc" /> Zoey's friend and one-time roommate. (4 episodes)
  • Morgan Fairchild as Andrea Thorpe,<ref name="fcc" /> Cybill's rival and later wife of Maryann's often mentioned but never seen husband, Dr. Dick. She and Cybill have mutual enmity which has resulted in personal humiliations, professional loss, and injury on both sides. (4 episodes)
  • Audra Lindley as Virginia Sheridan,<ref name="fcc" /> Cybill's mother. (3 episodes and another episode dedicated in her honour)
  • Florence Stanley as Ruth Woodbine,<ref name="fcc" /> Ira's mother and Zoey's grandmother, who had a friendly relationship with Cybill and once posed as Maryann's mother. (3 episodes)
  • Eileen Heckart as Marge,<ref name="fcc" /> Maryann's mother. (3 episodes)
  • Dick O'Neill as Roy,<ref name="fcc" /> Maryann's father. (3 episodes)

Additionally, many prominent actors appeared playing themselves, often humorous or self-deprecating caricatures of their real personas. These included Jonathan Frakes, Joan Van Ark, Dick Van Patten, Burt Reynolds, and Cybill Shepherd's real-life ex-partner, director Peter Bogdanovich.

EpisodesEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} List of Cybill episodes

RatingsEdit

Average seasonal ratingsEdit

Season Time slot (ET) Premiere Finale Season
rank
Viewers
(millions)
1 1994–1995 Monday at 9:30 pm January 2, 1995 May 15, 1995 #22 12.8
2 1995–1996 Sunday at 8:00 pm (Episodes 1-11, 13–16, 18-20)
Monday at 9:30 pm (Episode 12)
Sunday at 8:30 pm (Episode 17, 21-24)
September 17, 1995 May 20, 1996 #50 Template:Citation needed 10.0
3 1996–1997 Monday at 9:30 pm (Episodes 1-18)
Monday at 9:00 pm (Episodes 19-26)
September 16, 1996 May 19, 1997 #30Template:Citation needed 10.5
4 1997–1998 Monday at 9:00 pm (Episodes 1-12, 18-21)
Wednesday at 8:30 pm (Episodes 13-17)
Monday at 9:30 pm (Episodes 22-24)
September 15, 1997 July 13, 1998 #50<ref name="season8">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

8.3

CancellationEdit

The series got respectable (though never spectacular) ratings throughout most of its run, but was abruptly canceled by CBS at the end of the 1997–98 season after a noticeable ratings decline. The show was actually pulled from the CBS schedule after the April 8, 1998, episode had aired; the remaining new episodes that had already been produced were aired over the summer. Shepherd much later alleged that the cancellation occurred because the network was uncomfortable with Cybill's feminist leanings and frank depiction of female sexuality.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

The cancellation was not expected by the show's staff, as the series ends with a cliffhanger and the words "To Be Continued..." on the screen. At the time of its cancellation, the show's ratings were higher than Nash Bridges (1996–2001) and Chicago Hope (1994–2000); those shows continued to air on CBS.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2018, Shepherd claimed that Les Moonves hit on her during a dinner date, but she refused him. As a result, she said, he soon interfered with the series' concepts, and ultimately canceled the show.<ref>Deadline.com Cybill Shepherd Says Her ’90s Sitcom Ended Because She Refused Les Moonves’ Advances</ref>

Awards and nominationsEdit

Cybill was nominated for twelve Emmy Awards throughout its entire run, winning three. Nominated for her performance in each season, Baranski was the only cast member to win an Emmy.<ref name="awards">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Baranski also received an American Comedy Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award and a Viewers for Quality Television Award for her portrayal, while Shepherd was awarded the 1996 Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy.<ref name="awards" /> The same year, the sitcom also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy, its only win for both the crew and the cast.<ref name="awards" />

Award Year Category Recipients Result Template:Abbr
American Comedy Awards 1996 Funniest Supporting Female Performer in a TV Series Christine Baranski Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

GLAAD Media Awards 1997 Outstanding TV - Individual Episode "Cybill and Maryann Go to Japan" Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Golden Globe Awards 1996 Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy Template:Won <ref name="auto">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy Cybill Shepherd Template:Won
Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film Christine Baranski Template:Nom
1997 Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom <ref name="auto"/>
Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film Christine Baranski Template:Nom
Online Film & Television Association Awards 1997 Best Supporting Actress in a Series Christine Baranski Template:Nom <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Actress in a Comedy Series Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom
Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series Christine Baranski Template:Nom
1998 Best Actress in a Comedy Series Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series Christine Baranski Template:Nom
Primetime Emmy Awards 1995 Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series Christine Baranski Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Individual Achievement in Art Direction for a Series Garvin Eddy and Rochelle Moser Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Individual Achievement in Costume Design for a Series Robert Turturice Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

1996 Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series Christine Baranski Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Individual Achievement in Art Direction for a Series Garvin Eddy and Rochelle Moser Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Costume Design for a Series Marion Kirk, Daniel Grant North and Leslie Simmons Potts Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Comedy Series Or A Special Jerry Clemans, Edward L. Moskowitz and Craig Porter Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

1997 Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series Christine Baranski Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

1998 Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Satellite Awards 1997 Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy Template:Nom <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom
Screen Actors Guild Awards 1996 Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series Christine Baranski Template:Won <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series Christine Baranski, Dedee Pfeiffer, Alan Rosenberg, Cybill Shepherd, Alicia Witt and Tom Wopat Template:Nom
1997 Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Serie Christine Baranski Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Viewers for Quality Television Awards 1996 Best Actress in a Quality Comedy Series Cybill Shepherd Template:Nom <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Best Supporting Actress in a Quality Comedy Series Christine Baranski Template:Won
1997 Template:Nom citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Home mediaEdit

Region 1Edit

On September 16, 2008, First Look Studios released Cybill: The Collector's Edition, Vol. 1, a 2-disc best of DVD.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Region 2Edit

Anchor Bay Entertainment has released the entire series on DVD in the UK.

DVD Name Template:Abbr Release Date
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

13 24 April 2006
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

24 2 July 2007
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

26 5 May 2008
citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

24 4 August 2008
The Complete Box Set 87 29 September 2008

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

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