The Hogan Family

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The Hogan Family
Genre Sitcom
Running time 30 minutes
(with commercials)
Creator(s) Charlie Hauck
Executive producer(s) Thomas L. Miller
Robert L. Boyett
Starring Valerie Harper (1986-1987) as Valerie Hogan
Sandy Duncan (1987-1991) as Sandy Hogan
Josh Taylor as Michael Hogan
Jason Bateman as David Hogan
Danny Ponce as Willie Hogan
Jeremy Licht as Mark Hogan
Edie McClurg as Patty Poole
Christine Ebersole (1986) as Barbara Goodwin
Judith Kahan (1986-1987) as Annie Steck
Tom Hodges as Rich
Steve Witting as Burt
John Hillerman (1990-1991) as Lloyd Hogan
Angela Lee (1990-1991) as Brenda Walker
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
Original channel NBC
CBS
Original run March 1, 1986July 20, 1991
No. of episodes 110

The Hogan Family was an American television situation comedy that aired from March 1, 1986 to July 20, 1991.

Early in the series' life, the show was known as Valerie, to reflect the show's star, Valerie Harper. She played the matriarch of the Hogan family, Valerie. Other stars were Josh Taylor as her husband, Michael, an airline pilot (who, in the early seasons, was seldom around); Jason Bateman as her eldest, girl-crazy son, David; and Danny Ponce and Jeremy Licht as her fraternal twin sons, Willie and Mark (Mark was the brainy one, Willie the irresponsible one).

In 1987, during the summer taping hiatus, Harper had a falling out with the show's producers and left the series. As a result, her character was written out of the show by being killed in an automobile accident.

When the 1987-1988 season premiere aired, the show was retitled Valerie's Family. Taking Valerie's place in the household was Sandy Duncan as Michael's divorced sister, Sandy (she took a job as a guidance counselor at the high school where the boys attended). The show later dropped Valerie's name completely, being retitled The Hogan Family in June 1988.

The other big change came in 1990 when Michael and Sandy's father, Lloyd (John Hillerman) moved in. The series, which had aired on NBC, moved to CBS for its final season. Now ABC Family has bought the rights and will be airing it in September 2006.

The show's theme song, "Through the Years", was sung by Roberta Flack and composed by Charles Fox.

The show was produced by Miller-Boyett Productions in association with Lorimar-Telepictures (1986-1988); Lorimar Television (1988-1991).

During its five and a half-year run, "The Hogan Family" was known to poke fun at sitcom clichés, such as defying the "happy ending in 30 minutes" ending. In that episode, Willie causes a hit-and-run accident and says nothing when David is blamed. Willie, it seems, is obsessed with a "Leave it to Beaver"-knockoff sitcom, which frequently used the "happy ending" plot device. David suspects Willie is guilty and, after finding proof, confronts him, but Willie denies his involvement. Later, he sees a positive resolution to his predicament played out in a fantasy sequence (Valerie gave Willie a brief lecture about lying, then let him go to a much-anticipated party), making him reason he has nothing to lose. Willie admits what happened, but the "real life" ending is much different – Valerie becomes very angry and tells him he may have damaged a lot more than just a car, specifically, her trust. She then tells Willie that the lecture will continue after she apologizes to David.

There were several serious episodes, however, including:

  • David and a former girlfriend renew their relationship. Shortly thereafter, they decide to sleep together, then reverse themselves when they realize they are not ready for the accompanying responsibility. The episode sub-titled "Bad Timing" addresses birth control and the first prime-time use of the word "condom". Parental discretion warnings were issued in ads for the episode.
  • Shortly after Valerie's death, the house catches fire (an electrical short in a lamp stored in the attic), rekindling the family's grief over Valerie.
  • When David jeopardized a long-standing friendship with his friend, Rich (Tom Hodges) by refusing to let him drive home from a party while drunk.
  • In the series finale, when David learns Rich had contracted AIDS.

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