Wings (TV series)

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Wings
Format sitcom
Created by David Angell
Peter Casey
David Lee
Starring Timothy Daly
Steven Weber
Crystal Bernard
David Schramm
Rebecca Schull
Thomas Haden Church
Amy Yasbeck
Tony Shalhoub
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 8
No. of episodes 172
Production
Running time 30 minutes per episode
(with commercials)
Broadcast
Original channel NBC
Original run April 19, 1990May 21, 1997
External links
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

Wings is an American sitcom that ran on NBC from April 19, 1990 to May 14, 1997. The show starred Timothy Daly and Steven Weber as brothers Joe and Brian Hackett. The show was set at the fictional Tom Nevers Field, a small airport in Nantucket, Massachusetts, where the Hackett brothers operated Sandpiper Airlines. Exteriors of Nantucket Memorial Airport were used for the show. Interior scenes were filmed on a sound stage at Paramount Studios in Hollywood, California.

Other regulars include Crystal Bernard, David Schramm, Rebecca Schull, Thomas Haden Church, and Tony Shalhoub. Farrah Forke later joined the cast for a two-season run. When Forke left, Amy Yasbeck joined the cast for the remainder of the show's run. Thomas Haden Church ultimately left the show in the spring of 1995 to star in the Fox sitcom Ned and Stacey.

Wings was created and produced by David Angell, Peter Casey and David Lee who were also producer/writers on Cheers and later went on to create Frasier. Characters from Cheers occasionally made guest appearances on Wings.

Although the show was derisively referred to as "Cheers in an airport" or "Taxi in an airport"[citation needed], it gained a loyal following and was a consistent ratings winner throughout its life. Incidentally, Cheers, Taxi and Wings were all produced by Paramount Television.

In the United Kingdom the series was given a prime time slot on Sky One but failed to garner much critical attention because of the channel's low ratings at the time.

Contents

[edit] Main characters

[edit] Joe Hackett

Joe is a neurotic, compulsively neat pilot who runs a charter flight business called "Sandpiper Air" on Nantucket Island. He dreamed of becoming a pilot as a child, and became the de facto head of the family after their mother disappeared and their father lost his mind. He initially intended to launch Sandpiper Air with his fiancee Carol behind the ticket counter, but his brother Brian ran off with her, causing a falling out between the brothers. The Hackett family moved to Nantucket when Joe and Brian were children. He was played by Timothy Daly.

[edit] Brian Hackett

Brian is the more carefree of the Hackett brothers. His irresponsibility is often a source of consternation to older brother Joe: he had a "free ride" to Princeton and dropped out, was accepted into the astronaut training program at NASA and was soon expelled, and has lost other lucrative opportunities due to his reckless nature. He moved to the island of Mustique in the Caribbean and ran charter flights there after he eloped with his brother Joe's fiancee, Carol, which (as stated above) caused a rift between the brothers. When Carol left Brian, he returned to Nantucket, and Joe was eventually persuaded to allow him not only to move into his house but to give Brian a job at Sandpiper Air. Brian is a shameless ladies' man for most of the series, but has two significant relationships: the first with helicopter pilot Alex Lambert, and then with Casey Chappel-Davenport, Helen's older sister. He was played by Steven Weber.

[edit] Helen Chappel Hackett

Helen is a petite blonde who, despite having lived on Nantucket for most of her life, speaks with a Texas drawl. In real life, this is due to the actress being Texan. In the series, it is explained that Helen's family moved to the island from Texas when she was a child. Her mother does not have a Southern accent, nor does her elder sister Casey. It is mentioned that Casey once had one but lost it, possibly deliberately. Though Helen dreams of playing the cello in a large symphony orchestra, she runs the lunch counter in the airport terminal and never really manages to get a music career off the ground until the final episode. Occasionally Helen would also earn money teaching children the cello. A running gag in regards to her music is that bad luck would always seem to follow her in her playing. Examples of this bad luck would be her having to join a string quartet of neurotic individuals as that was the only group at the time who would accept her. Other parts were Helen getting accepted to a state run symphony, only to soon learn the state legislature eliminated the funding, and getting a chance to play with the Boston Symphony Orchestra only to have the plane crash en route. Yet another example of Helen's bad luck was that one symphony appreciated a cassette of her cello playing, but they lost the label and had no way to contact Helen. Helen also constantly battles a compulsive eating habit which caused her to be morbidly obese in her youth, as well as self-esteem issues which accompanied being an obese child. Though she was successful at losing the weight sometime after Brian eloped with Carol, it is still a spectre in her life and a blight on her self-image. She has been a lifelong friend of both Hackett brothers and dreamed of marrying Joe from a young age. She was briefly married to Antonio to prevent him from being deported, but divorced him and finally married Joe at the end of the sixth season. She was played by Crystal Bernard.

[edit] Fay Evelyn Schlob Dumbly DeVay Cochran

She is Joe's only employee besides Brian. Fay is an ex-stewardess who handles the ticket counter, baggage check, and flight announcements for Sandpiper Air. Fay has buried three husbands (all with the first name George, which she said is a curse that occurs if she marries a man named George; he dies) and is a generally sweet, motherly (though slightly batty) woman who looks after the younger members of their circle as her own children, with the possible exception of Roy Biggins, for whom she often has little patience due to his generally contemptible behavior. One episode dealt with Fay angrily quitting when Joe denied her request for a raise, then shortly afterwards treated himself and Brian to bomber jackets. She was played by Rebecca Schull.

[edit] Roy Biggins

Roy is the owner of Aeromass, the only other airline on Nantucket, and a larger business than Sandpiper, although Roy had been unable to break into the lucrative business of charter flights. Generally competitive, arrogant and unpleasant, Roy often belittles Joe for having a small-time operation, mocks Joe's business skills, and generally implies by his comments that Joe is inferior to him altogether. A prime example of Roy's unpleasant, belittling behavior came when the group attempted to fly to Boston to see Helen play with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, only for the plane to develop engine trouble enroute. As Brian and Joe fought to keep their plane in the air, Roy constantly pestered them, until an irritated Joe told him to "relax, we are handling this." Roy quickly responded, "How the hell can I relax with you two idiots at the controls?" Roy then promised that if they survived, he would personally see to it that both Hacketts lost their licenses. Despite this, Roy obviously feels threatened by Joe's presence as a competitor, and makes numerous attempts to either buy Sandpiper or put them out of business. Roy was married once to a woman named Sylvia; for several years he claimed that she died, but it was later revealed that she had actually left him, and is now living in Boston and married to a wealthy plastic surgeon. Sylvia was played by Concetta Tomei. The couple had one son, R.J. (Roy Junior), who is a homosexual. Roy is a dishonest man. Examples included him forcing a customer on a plane who just ordered a large meal from Helen. The customer leaves his meal and the money for Helen; Roy promptly steals both. Other examples of Roy's dishonesty were establishing false charities to include one for his "late wife" and using the proceeds for fly-fishing trips or to subscribe to the Playboy Channel. It is strongly implied that Roy is a member of the Republican Party, as he had an autographed picture of Richard Nixon in his office and was once arrested for trying to sneak aboard Air Force One to have a picture taken of himself shaking hands with President George H. W. Bush. While normally conniving and arrogant, Roy does have a sense of fun: since his birthday was on February 29th, 1948, he celebrates it only once every four years as if he were only a quarter of his real age. He drives a purple El Camino, to which he claims he can disconnect the brake lights in order to engage in insurance fraud by being intentionally rear-ended by people in luxury cars. Roy is played by David Schramm.

[edit] Antonio Scarpacci

(Season 3-8) He is an Italian immigrant who provides taxi service to and from the airport. Antonio is mild-mannered, deferential, and hopelessly romantic; he falls head-over-heels for Helen's older sister Casey when she returns to Nantucket, though his feelings are not reciprocated. Antonio was originally a waiter, and made a guest appearance in the second season in this role before becoming an official cast member in the third season (by which time he had changed professions). He is often seen wearing a bow tie when in more formal clothes. Antonio is played by Tony Shalhoub, who is rumored to wholly owe his acting career to the show, also known for his leading role on Monk.

[edit] Lowell Mather

(Season 1-6) Lowell is a rather dim-witted and somewhat eccentric mechanic/handyman who works at the airport and is available to everyone when repairs are needed. Because of his poor pay and the high demand for mechanics at Tom Nevers Field, Lowell is employed by both Aeromass and Sandpiper. Lowell claims that, while he is not an orphan, his brother is. He was married to a woman named Bunny with whom he had several children, but they divorced when Lowell learned that Bunny was sleeping around. After Brian sank the houseboat Lowell lived on, Lowell lived with Joe and Brian for a time, where it would be subsequently revealed that Lowell is a surprisingly talented cook. After about a year, however, his eccentricities became unbearable to the Hacketts, and they kicked him out to find his own place. Eventually, Lowell is forced to leave Nantucket and enter the Witness Protection Program after witnessing a mob hit. Lowell was played by Thomas Haden Church.

[edit] Alex Lambert

(Season 4-5) Alex is a helicopter pilot who moves to Nantucket to start her own helicopter tour business. Though she initially rebuffs the amorous attentions of both Hackett brothers, she eventually falls for Brian's boyish charms. She and Brian live together briefly, but after Brian spends a wild night in New York with Joe and an old friend, Alex throws him out of the apartment and leaves Nantucket for good. She returns a season later to resolve some of the bitterness in their breakup; she and Brian briefly get back together before they both finally decide it is best to go their separate ways. Alex was played by Farrah Forke.

[edit] Casey (Davenport) Chappel

(Season 6-8) Casey is Helen's older sister. She returns to Nantucket after being abandoned by her husband, Stuart Davenport, but she has difficulty adjusting her upper crust tastes and sensibilities to a working class life on the small island. (This is again at odds with the fact that she grew up on the island along with her sister Helen; she often behaves as though she is totally unfamiliar with life on Nantucket.) Though Antonio falls madly in love with her, Casey takes little notice of him. After she and Brian spend the better part of a season sniping at each other, they end up having sex the night before Joe and Helen's wedding. Afterward they find themselves unable to stay away from each other, having a passionate sexual affair; while Joe and Helen are on their honeymoon, Casey's bra lands on the hearth of the lit fireplace and leads to Helen's house burning down. Her relationship with Brian cools after that, but they maintain a friendship, with occasional hints of a possible further romance. When she first appears in the show, Casey still goes by her married name of Davenport, but after she and Stuart divorce at the end of Season Seven, she reverts back to Chappel. She was played by Amy Yasbeck.

[edit] Budd Bronski

(Season 7) Budd is an ex-military man who is hired to replace Lowell. He is extremely jumpy and insecure, and somewhat haunted by an incident in his past in which an aircraft he worked on ended up crashing and he faced a court martial. Though the military officially cleared him of charges, Budd continued to blame himself for the incident until Brian convinced him to let it go. Occasionally Budd would astonish everyone with magic tricks, but otherwise had difficulty adjusting to the social scene. After being introduced early in the seventh season, Budd disappears toward the end of the season and is never mentioned again. Some viewers opine that the character was created because the writers had already written Lowell into some scripts, and inserted Budd to provide a quick solution to re-writing the shows. He was played by Brian Haley.

[edit] Recurring characters

Bunny Mather: Lowell's wife at the beginning of the series, whom he ends up separating from and eventually divorces when he learns she sleeps with other men. Bunny's promiscuity is her primary gag; she flirts with nearly every man she encounters, and ends up sleeping with many of them. Not even the divorce was enough to convince Bunny to stay away, as the episode that showed the divorce had Lowell and Bunny sleeping together that very same night. She was played by Laura Innes.

Carlton Blanchard: He is an old man with a high-pitched nasal voice whose outwardly meek yet privately demanding behavior causes everyone who meets him to shudder at his coming. He is also known for asking bizarre questions such as "If you were to carpet Florida, how long would it take to vacuum?" and "If a monkey were to bite you, what kind of drugs do you suppose they'd give you?". He annoyed Joe, Brian, Lowell and Antonio when he won a charity contest sponsored by Sandpiper and demanded he be flown to Las Cruces, New Mexico, way beyond the scope of Sandpiper's routes. He was played by William Hickey.

Lewis Blanchard: Carlton's equally irritating nephew. He is very rude and abrasive, and makes only the slightest of attempts to hide his wish for Carlton to die so he can inherit his money. He seems to have crushes on Casey, Helen, and Alex, who are all completely repulsed by his lewd remarks. Lewis was played by Gilbert Gottfried.

Davis Lynch: Davis is a businessman whom Joe flies to Nantucket to invest in the airline. Though he rejects Joe's offer (and ends up investing the money in Roy's airline), he ends up dating Helen and finally proposing to her. Helen accepts, but ends up leaving him for Joe. Toward the end of the series, Helen reveals she never broke off the engagement. She had figured he was gone after he was skirted off to Burma in wake of a coup d'etat to salvage major investments he had in the company. He was then placed under house arrest by the military junta. Davis comes to break off the engagement to Helen, revealing he has fallen in love with a lady who worked for the State Department and had risked her life to secure his release. Davis was played by Mark Harelik.

Sandy Cooper: Sandy is a friend of Joe, Brian, and Helen from high school. She has an insane obsessive crush on Joe, but he is unable to convince anyone else of this because she acts completely normal except when she is alone with Joe. She would appear at different points and carefully plan her "life with Joe" at points when he is alone. Such life points included a reenacted high school prom, wedding, and first baby. Sandy was played by Valerie Mahaffey.

Roy Biggins, Jr. (a.k.a. R.J.): Roy's only son, and the pride of his life. Roy had trained R.J how to do "guy stuff" such as playing football. The first time he is shown is when he is a high school student taking cello lessons from Helen as an extracurricular activity. R.J. reveals to everyone he is a homosexual. Roy does not take this news well and challenges him to a game of one-on-one basketball on the condition that if R.J. wins he is allowed to be homosexual, but if Roy wins R.J. is not allowed to be homosexual. R.J. wins game after game against Roy, but Roy refuses to give up. R.J. would return much later in the series after being estranged from Roy for a long time. He had since graduated from law school and was looking to take the Massachusetts Bar Exam. Roy is proud of R.J and his accomplishments, but only so long as R.J.'s homosexuality isn't discussed. He was played by Abraham Benrubi.

Kenny McElvey: Kenny is an 18-year-old who becomes Sandpiper's backup pilot during a second season story arc where Joe is grounded for hypertension. The comedic focus of the character was his youth and relative inexperience, but he was the most qualified out of the applicants for Joe's replacement (which did not consist of a very large pool). When Joe began flying again in the third season, Kenny disappeared from the series without explanation and was never mentioned again. One episode showed Kenny also working at a fast food joint to supplement his meager income from Sandpiper. Kenny was played by Michael Manasseri.

Mr. Hackett: Joe and Brian's deceased father who had taken it hard when his wife, and the boys' mother, walked out on the family. He was committed to a mental institution and had died just prior to the beginning of the series. He had a good sense of humor, and in the series premiere had his will required to be read to both Brian and Joe together, which required them to reunite after their six year estrangement. He willed them a key which opened up the lockbox to another key, then another, which had Joe and Brian go to Boston then back to Nantucket airport where they ended up finding a suitcase full of spring snakes and a photograph of them as children, encouraging them to always value their kinship. After Brian and Casey burn down Joe's house, Joe, fed up with Brian's string of irresponsible behavior, fires him from Sandpiper and orders him never to speak to him again. The ghost of his father appears and uses reverse psychology to convince Joe to make peace with Brian. Mr. Hackett was played by Don Murray.

Gail Scott: Joe's girlfriend during the first part of Season Three. They began dating while Helen was in New York. When Joe persuaded Helen to move back to Nantucket when she was unhappy in New York, he did not tell her about his relationship with Gail because of his worry that it would prevent Helen from moving back to Nantucket. Helen, convinced that she and Joe would pick up right where they left off, did come back, but soon discovered the truth about Joe and Gail. Believing that Joe intended to hurt her by not disclosing his relationship with Gail, Helen drove her jeep through Joe and Brian's office. Gail is in three episodes, but is mentioned in several others, including phone conversations. She is a journalist who constantly travels. She and Helen eventually become friends briefly, but Gail leaves Joe when she catches Joe and Helen kissing in his kitchen. She was played by Gretchen German.

[edit] DVD releases

CBS Home Entertainment has released the first six seasons on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time. The seventh season is scheduled for release on September 9, 2008.[1]

DVD Name Release Date Ep #
The Complete First and Second Seasons May 23, 2006 28
The Complete Third Season October 24, 2006 22
The Fourth Season May 15, 2007 22
The Fifth Season November 6, 2007 24
The Sixth Season March 25, 2008 26
The Seventh Season September 9, 2008 26
The Final Season TBA 24

[edit] Music

The theme was a short version of a Franz Schubert piece, Piano sonata No. 20 in A Major, D. 959, IV. Rondo. Allegretto. Schubert received screen credit as the theme composer in every episode.

The opening theme heard during the first two and a half seasons was a fairly straightforward arrangement with piano and strings; a jazzed-up version of the theme was heard during the closing credits. The slow opening theme was dropped in January 1992 as episodes began using a cold open, though it returned for the series finale in 1997.

[edit] Trivia

  • Wings takes place in the same universe as Cheers, and by extension, its spin-off Frasier. Several episodes had tie-ins with Cheers; Kelsey Grammer, Bebe Neuwirth, George Wendt, John Ratzenberger, and Kirstie Alley all appeared on Wings playing their Cheers characters. In an episode of Cheers that preceded Kelsey Grammer and Bebe Neuwirth's appearances on Wings, Grammer's character Frasier even mentions that he and wife Lilith (Neuwirth) were going to Nantucket.
  • Tim Daly was originally considered to play Jack Torrance in the 1997 miniseries The Shining. Due to contractual obligations he was unable to accept, and instead recommended his Wings costar Steven Weber, who was awarded the role. Two years later, Daly himself would star in another Stephen King miniseries, Storm of the Century.
  • A number of episodes featured guest appearances by relatives of the cast.
    • Tim Daly's wife Amy von Nostrand made an appearance in the Season Six episode "Have I Got a Couple for You" as a wife in a married couple who meets the Hacketts. His sister Tyne Daly appeared in Season Three's "My Brother's Keeper" as a wealthy woman who attempts to make Brian a "kept man".
    • Amy Yasbeck's husband John Ritter guest starred in the Season Seven episode "Love Overboard" as Casey's estranged husband Stuart.
    • Brooke Adams, wife of Tony Shalhoub, guest starred in Season Eight's "All About Christmas Eve" as a nun who looks to Antonio for help completing a mission.
    • Crystal Bernard's father Jerry Wayne Bernard had a small role as a bank customer in Season Three's "The Bank Dick".

[edit] Series Finale

NBC aired the last episode of the show on May 21, 1997 (a week after ABC aired the last episode of its sitcom Coach). The episode's plot was a callback to the very first episode of the series, in which Joe and Brian are left a suitcase by their father containing a picture of the two as boys with a note written on it, "You're rich". In the finale, the brothers discover that not only does the lining of the suitcase contain money, but it sets them off on a treasure hunt which ends up making them $250,000 richer. They argue over what to do with the money; Joe wants to put it into the airline while Brian wants to use the money to retire and move away. Joe's resolve to stay on Nantucket is further tested by the news that Helen has been offered an opportunity to go to Vienna to study music.

The finale featured no guest stars; the story was completely carried by the cast. Most of the extras in the episode were writers and members of the production crew making cameo appearances. Rumors swirled that departed cast member Thomas Haden Church would return for the finale, but this did not come to pass.

In the final parts of the episode, faced with Helen's dream of music, the airline, and a choice to make Brian shows truly family love. He offers to run the airline, for one year, while Joe and Helen are off in Europe. With Joe's portion of the money a second airplane is ordered, doubling the airline's size. This whole turn of events ran against Roy's desire to "tear down this `lemonade stand' of a business" as Joe had initially agreed to sell his airline giving Roy the monopoly on air travel to and from the island (at least non-chartered). Helen leaves her lunch counter position. Casey, Helen's sister, having told off everyone on the island has no where to work and no means of supporting herself. Helen steers her into her old lunch counter, a fate Casey cannot believe.

[edit] References in other media

  • In the animated sitcom Family Guy, Wings is Glenn Quagmire's favorite television show (appropriate, for an airline pilot). He becomes outraged in the episode "Whistle While Your Wife Works" when his friends Peter Griffin, Cleveland Brown, and Joe Swanson exhibit unfamiliarity with the show or claim never even to have heard of it or Tim Daly.
  • In the The Simpsons episode "Brother from the Same Planet", Homer is watching a television advertisement in which the announcer cheerfully opens with "Tonight on Wings!" and then utters an apathetic "Ah, who cares?" In a later episode, Homer claims to have loved the show.
  • In the Scrubs episode "My Unicorn", guest star Matthew Perry sits at his workplace, an airport, and watches Wings, commenting, "I'll tell you something about Wings: They really got it right.'
  • In the Sopranos episode "University", Meadow meets with the father of her then-boyfriend Noah, who says as an entertainment lawyer he recently represented Tim Daly, to which Meadow excitedly asks "The man from Wings?" Daly would later appear on The Sopranos as J.T. Dolan.
  • In an episode of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, when Will is asked by Carlton if he is gonna be watching him while he handles money, will says "like white folks watch Wings!" Will Smith also did some promotional material in voice overs for NBC during some of the closing credits of Wings episodes, which showed the Sandpiper plane flying into the sunset, to which he would end by saying "This is Will from inside the plane, over and out!"
  • In an episode of The Critic, Satan is asked if Wings can have another season, to which he responds, "Tell them there are limits to even my power!"
  • In the "Mr. Monk and the Airplane" episode of Monk, which stars Wings alum Tony Shalhoub, Monk's assistant recognizes Timothy Daly on the plane, identifying him as an actor who was on "that show Wings," to which Shalhoub's character promptly replies, "Never saw it, was it good?" To which his assistant replies "Well, he was."
  • In the Corner Gas episode "Grad '68", Lacey's concept of "wing night" confuses Wanda, who believed it to be related to the TV show. When nobody else knows what she's talking about, she describes it as "the Dharma & Greg of its day".
  • On the short-lived comedy series The Winner, main character Glen Abbot mentions Wings in 4 of the 6 episodes aired, referring to the show as the best on television and actor Steven Weber being like a chameleon, as he could slip into any role.
  • On The Late Show with David Letterman, Peter Griffin gave his top ten list, and one said, "Shouldn't Crystal Bernard be in Playboy by now? I mean, we already sat through 7 seasons of Wings."

During the 1990s, cable's USA Network was well-known for heavily rerunning episodes of Wings several times each weekday as well as weekends. As a result of the show being heavily rerun, it became the source of humor for several other shows including:

  • Saturday Night Live: In the October 2, 1999 episode, host Jerry Seinfeld gives a monologue in which he lists the things he has been doing to keep busy since Seinfeld went off the air; "watched Wings" appears in the list several times.
  • Married With Children: Al gets an illegal link to his neighbor's cable channels and all he can find while channel-surfing are episodes of Wings non-stop.
  • The King of Queens: Doug's (a character played by Kevin James) friends are channel surfing in his garage and name off different shows that were on at that time including Wings being said several times (as if to let viewers/audience know that it's aired on a lot of different channels).
  • In an episode of Becker, when Becker said he was watching Wings as an alibi, the cop says "you'll have to be more specific than that, that shows on six times a day"

[edit] External links