Who Were the Twins Boy Singing on the Partridge Family

American sitcom

The Partridge Family
The Partridge Family.jpg
Genre Musical sitcom
Created past Bernard Slade
Starring
  • Shirley Jones
  • David Cassidy
  • Susan Dey
  • Danny Bonaduce
  • Suzanne Crough
  • Jeremy Gelbwaks
  • Dave Madden
  • Brian Forster
Theme music composer
  • Diane Hilderbrand
  • Danny Janssen
  • Wes Farrell
Opening theme
  • "When Nosotros're Singin'" (1970–1971)
  • "C'mon, Get Happy" (1971–1974)
Composers
  • George Duning
  • Benny Golson
  • Warren Barker
  • Hugo Montenegro
  • Shorty Rogers
Country of origin United states of america
Original linguistic communication English
No. of seasons 4
No. of episodes 96 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer Bob Claver
Producers
  • William Bickley
  • Paul Junger Witt
  • Dale McRaven
  • Larry Rosen
  • Mel Swope
Cinematography
  • Fred Jackman, Jr.
  • Irving Lippman
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time 25 minutes
Production company Screen Gems Telly
Benefactor
  • Columbia Pictures Telly (1974–1975)
  • DFS Program Commutation (1984–87)
  • The Programme Exchange (1987–89)
  • Columbia TriStar Telly (1996–2002)
  • Sony Pictures Goggle box (2002–nowadays)
Release
Original network ABC
Sound format Monaural
Original release September 25, 1970 (1970-09-25) –
March 23, 1974 (1974-03-23)
Chronology
Related shows
  • Getting Together
  • Goober and the Ghost Chasers
  • Partridge Family 2200 A.D.

The Partridge Family is an American musical sitcom starring Shirley Jones and featuring David Cassidy. Jones plays a widowed mother, and Cassidy plays the oldest of her five children, in a family unit who embarks on a music career. It ran from September 25, 1970, until August 24, 1974, on the ABC network as office of a Friday-night lineup, and had subsequent runs in syndication. The family was loosely based on the existent-life musical family the Cowsills, a popular band in the tardily 1960s and early 1970s.

Premise [edit]

The Partridge Family, season 1. L-R: Shirley Jones, Jeremy Gelbwaks, Suzanne Crough, Susan Dey, Danny Bonaduce and David Cassidy

In the airplane pilot episode, a group of musical siblings in the fictitious city of San Pueblo, California (said to be "forty miles from Napa County" in episode 24, "A Partridge Past Whatsoever Other Proper name") convinces their widowed mother, bank teller Shirley Partridge, to help them out by singing as they record a popular song in their garage. Through the efforts of precocious 10-year-old Danny they find a manager, Reuben Kincaid, who helps brand the song a Top forty hit. After more persuading, Shirley agrees that the family can go on bout. They acquire an onetime schoolhouse bus, a 1957 Chevrolet[1] Series 6800 Superior, for touring, paint it with Mondrian-inspired patterns, and head to Las Vegas, Nevada, for their first alive gig at Caesars Palace.

Subsequent episodes unremarkably feature the band performing in diverse venues or in their garage. The shows often contrast suburban life with the adventures of a show-business organisation family unit on the road. Subsequently the first season, more of the show's action takes identify in the family's hometown than on tour.

Groundwork [edit]

The Partridge Family unit was created for television past Bernard Slade, and the series' executive producer was Bob Claver. The show was inspired by and loosely based on the Cowsills,[ii] : 51–52 a family unit popular music group that was famous in the late 1960s. In the show's early on evolution, the Cowsill children were considered by the producers, merely because the Cowsills were non trained actors and were too quondam for the roles every bit scripted, Slade and Claver abandoned that idea.[3] Shirley Jones had already been signed as mother Shirley Partridge and star of the show. Insistence that Jones'southward casting in the role of Mrs. Partridge was not negotiable.

The pilot was filmed in Dec 1969. This unaired pilot differs from the airplane pilot that was broadcast in 1970. In the unaired airplane pilot, Shirley's name is Connie and she has a boyfriend played past Jones's real-life hubby at the time, Jack Cassidy, father of David Cassidy. Laurie mentions her late father once getting drunkard at a Christmas party. The family has a different accost and lives in Ohio.[4]

The bear witness proved pop, but the fame took its price on several, if not well-nigh, of the starring bandage, specially David Cassidy. In the midst of his rise to fame, Cassidy soon felt stifled past the bear witness and trapped by the mass hysteria surrounding his every movement.[2] : 92–95 In May 1972, he appeared nude on the cover of Rolling Stone mag in a cropped Annie Leibovitz photograph. He used the article to go away from his squeaky make clean image.[2] : 167 The article mentioned that Cassidy was riding around New York in the back of a car "stoned and boozer."[5]

Shortly after the serial concluded, scriptwriter Roberta Tatum launched a lawsuit against Screen Gems concerning the creation of the testify. Tatum claimed that she had submitted a similar premise to Screen Gems prior to 1970 called Baker's Half-Dozen. The affair was resolved out of court, with Tatum receiving a reported $150,000 from Screen Gems.[half dozen]

The Partridge Family, flavor one

The Partridge Family, flavour 3

Bandage and characters [edit]

  • Shirley Jones as Shirley Partridge: vocals, keyboard, tambourine, percussion
  • David Cassidy as Keith Partridge: lead vocals, rhythm guitar, electric pb guitar, banjo
  • Susan Dey every bit Laurie Partridge: vocals, harmony, piano, Hammond organ, percussion
  • Danny Bonaduce as Danny Partridge: vocals, bass guitar.
  • Jeremy Gelbwaks as Chris Partridge (Season ane): vocals, drums
  • Brian Forster as Chris Partridge (Seasons two–4): vocals, drums
  • Suzanne Crough every bit Tracy Partridge: tambourine, percussion
  • Dave Madden every bit Reuben Kincaid: band manager
  • Ricky Segall as Ricky Stevens (Season 4): singer
  • Simone, the family unit's pet canis familiaris (Season ane, occasionally in later seasons)
  • Gary Dubin as Punky Lazaar (recurring function): a friend of Danny Partridge[7]

No members of the cast played any music on the evidence or the soundtrack albums and only Jones and Cassidy sang. The actors pretended while listening to recordings by session musicians, who provided the real song and instrumental music attributed to the Partridge Family.

Notable guest stars [edit]

During the show'due south four-season run, many actors made invitee appearances. Some of them were well known at the time, such equally Morey Amsterdam, John Astin, Carl Ballantine, John Imprint, Edgar Buchanan, George Chakiris, Dick Clark (who afterwards hosted The Other One-half from 2001 to 2003 with Danny Bonaduce), Jackie Coogan, Howard Cosell, Jodie Foster, Bernard Fox, Ned Glass, James Gregory, Margaret Hamilton, Pat Harrington Jr., Arte Johnson, Harvey Lembeck, Fine art Metrano, Mary Ann Mobley, Harry Morgan, Slim Pickens, Richard Pryor, Barbara Rhoades, Michael Rupert, William Schallert, Nita Talbot, Larry Wilcox, Dick Wilson, and William Windom. Others would later become famous in other roles, such equally Meredith Baxter, Richard Balderdash, Bert Convy, Farrah Fawcett, Norman Fell, Anthony Geary, Louis Gossett Jr., Harold Gould, Jackie Earle Haley, Marking Hamill, Season Hubley, Ann Jillian, Gordon Bound, Cheryl Ladd, Michael Lembeck, William Lucking, Stuart Margolin, Richard Mulligan, Michael Ontkean, Noam Pitlik, Annette O'Toole, Charlotte Rae, Rob Reiner, Jack Riley, Jaclyn Smith, Vic Tayback, Nancy Walker, and Frank Welker.

Land singer Johnny Cash made an uncredited cameo appearance in the pilot episode. Ray Bolger played Shirley's male parent in three episodes, and Rosemary DeCamp played Shirley's female parent in 4 episodes. Then-Governor Ronald Reagan's daughter, Maureen Reagan, was also featured in 1 episode. Time to come Charlie'south Angels stars Jaclyn Smith, Farrah Fawcett and Cheryl Ladd all made guest appearances on divide episodes.

Baseball Hall of Fame catcher Johnny Bench appeared in a cameo office as a pool waiter in a third-flavour episode.

Bobby Sherman appeared in the last episode of the first season as struggling songwriter Bobby Conway. This episode led into a short-lived spinoff serial on ABC, Getting Together, starring Sherman and Wes Stern as Conway'southward concern partner Lionel Poindexter.

Episodes [edit]

Shirley Jones and Ricky Segall, flavour 4

Production [edit]

At the end of the first season, Jeremy Gelbwaks' family moved out of the Los Angeles area, and the part of Chris was recast with histrion Brian Forster. Co-ordinate to David Cassidy, Gelbwaks "had a personality conflict with every person in the bandage and the producers" and particularly did non become along with Cassidy or Bonaduce.[2] : 87 A dog named Simone was featured in the first flavour, but information technology was phased out during the 2nd season. At the beginning of the 4th season, iv-year-erstwhile neighbor Ricky Stevens (Ricky Segall) was featured and would sing a children'due south vocal during each episode, but the character was dropped mid-season.

Music [edit]

Music recorded for the pilot episode was produced by Monkees arranger Shorty Rogers. Songs for the ongoing series were recorded by music producer Wes Farrell. Chip Douglas was the first to be offered the job of producing the music, only declined.

The studio concoction that forms the Partridge Family sound features atomic number 82 singer David Cassidy, members of the Ron Hicklin Singers as backing vocalists, and several of the era's virtually highly regarded studio musicians, now known equally "the Wrecking Crew". Cassidy's co-star and real-life stepmother Shirley Jones besides features on the recordings, though there remains speculation that she can be heard more prominently in the Television set mixes of the songs than in the anthology mixes. In each episode of the sitcom the TV family of six are seen on screen together in recording sessions and concert performances, playing the part of performers, but none except Cassidy and Jones was involved in any of the actual recordings. Two tracks on the 1970 debut LP The Partridge Family Album do not characteristic Cassidy. These songs, "I'yard on the Road" and "I Really Want to Know You lot", were sung in blended-harmony style by members of the Ron Hicklin Singers: brothers John and Tom Bahler, Ron Hicklin and Jackie Ward (who in 1963, every bit Robin Ward, charted with the no. xiv hit "Wonderful Summer"[8]). These professional singers feature throughout the Partridge Family unit'south output.

Cassidy was originally to lip sync to dubbed vocals with the rest of the cast but convinced Farrell that he could sing, and was allowed to bring together the studio ensemble as the lead vocaliser.[2] : 56–60

Two different songs were used as the opening theme to the Television receiver serial. Flavour 1 features "When We're Singin'" (Wes Farrell and Diane Hildebrand):

"Come on downward and encounter everybody,
And hear us singin'.
In that location's nothing better than being together,
When nosotros're singin'.
Five of us, and Mom working all day,
We knew we could help her if our music would pay.
Danny got Reuben to sell our vocal,
And information technology actually came together when Mom sang along..." (from "When We're Singin'")

The other seasons all feature "C'mon Get Happy" (Wes Farrell and Danny Janssen), which retained the "When We're Singin'" melody only featured new lyrics by Danny Janssen:

Hello world, hear the song that nosotros're singing.
C'monday get happy.
A whole lot o' loving is what nosotros'll be bringin'
Nosotros'll brand you happy.
We had a dream, we'd go travelin' together,
We spread a piddling beloved and so we keep movin' on.
Somethin' e'er happens whenever we're together;
We go a happy feelin' when we're singing a song..." (from "C'Monday Get Happy")

Broadcast history [edit]

For its final season, ABC moved the show from its 8:30 p.1000. Fri slot (where it rated first in its slot) to Sabbatum at viii p.1000. (opposite CBS' top-rated All in the Family and NBC'due south medical drama Emergency!, against which it lost more than than half of its audience from the previous season).

In the Britain, the offset three episodes were broadcast in a Friday children's slot of 17:20, starting on September 17, 1971. From Oct 2, 1971, the program moved to Saturdays at 17:10, and 8 episodes were shown at this time. A further episode was shown on New Year's Eve (Dec 31, 1971), after which the BBC dropped the programme. Subsequently David Cassidy succeeded with United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland Summit xxx chart hits the following year, the evidence was picked upward by independent commercial television in many regions. On London Weekend Television, it was shown at Saturday lunchtimes.[9] After the show's popularity began to refuse in the Usa, it began to increase in the UK.[ citation needed ] This new popularity in the United kingdom gave the Partridge Family v Uk Height 20 Hits, some of which were less pop in the US.

After 96 episodes and 8 Partridge Family albums, ABC canceled the show in 1974.

Ratings [edit]

Season Time slot (ET) Rank Estimated audience
1970–71 Fridays 8:30 p.m. #26 19.eight rating, xi,899,800 Households
1971–72 Fridays eight:30 p.m. #16 22.half dozen rating, 14,034,600 Households
1972–73 Fridays viii:30 p.m. #19 20.6 rating, 13,348,800 Households
1973–74 Saturdays viii:00 p.chiliad. #78[10] ix.8 rating,[10] 6,487,600 Households [eleven]

Syndication [edit]

Nickelodeon featured a run of The Partridge Family from 1993 to 1994 as part of its Nick at Nite lineup. The network used interviews and commercials featuring cast members, and created a new version of the charabanc for promotion. The show also aired at various times on USA Network, Flim-flam Family unit, Ion Television, and Hallmark Channel. As of Jan 2011[update], it arrogance on Antenna Television. FETV also started airing The Partridge Family in December 2017.

The bandage was reunited in 1977 on the special Thanksgiving Reunion with The Partridge Family and My Iii Sons. They reunited again in the 1990s on The Arsenio Hall Show and the short-lived talk show Danny! (1995) and were featured on E! Truthful Hollywood Story, Biography and VH1's Backside the Music.

When the digital subchannel Antenna Boob tube premiered in January 2011, The Partridge Family became 1 of its offerings through the network's distribution agreement with Sony Pictures Television (parent company and successor of serial producer Screen Gems).[12] [13] [14] [xv] From Nov 25–27, 2020, Antenna Television set aired all 96 episodes in chronological guild to commemorate the 50th ceremony of the series' debut.[sixteen]

Reception [edit]

Awards and nominations [edit]

Year Association Category Result
1971 Grammy Awards Best New Artist[17] Nominated
Gilded Globe Awards Best TV Show – Musical/One-act Nominated
1972 All-time Television receiver Show – Musical/Comedy Nominated
2003 TV Country Awards Quintessential Non-Traditional Family Nominated
Hippest Style Plate – Male to David Cassidy Won
2004 Favorite Teen Dream – Female to Susan Dey Won
Irreplaceable Replacement for Brian Forster replacing Jeremy Gelbwaks Nominated
2006 Favorite Singing Siblings Nominated
The Nearly Irreplaceable Replacement for Brian Forster replacing Jeremy Gelbwaks Nominated
2007 Nigh Beautiful Braces – Susan Dey Nominated

Media [edit]

Discography [edit]

The Partridge Family unit was produced for ABC by Screen Gems. The company promoted the show past releasing a series of albums featuring the family band, though David Cassidy and Shirley Jones (as backing vocalist) were the only cast members who were actually featured on the recordings.[ii] : 56–sixty

As the testify and other associated merchandising soared, Cassidy became a teen idol.[2] : 68–73 The producers signed Cassidy every bit a solo act as well. Cassidy began touring with his own group of musicians, performing Partridge songs, as well as hits from his own albums, to thousands of screaming teenagers in major stadiums across the US, Uk, Europe, Japan and Commonwealth of australia.

The Partridge Family remain all-time known for their 1970 smash debut single "I Recall I Beloved Y'all", written by Tony Romeo, who had penned the big 1968 striking "Indian Lake" (and other records) by the Cowsills. "I Think I Love You" spent three weeks at number one on Billboard'due south Hot 100 in Nov and December of 1970. It sold more five meg copies, outselling the Beatles' "Permit It Be", was awarded a gold disc, and made the group the third fictional artist to have a number one hit (after the Chipmunks and the Archies).[18] The unmarried'southward parent LP, The Partridge Family Anthology, reached No. 4 on the Billboard 200. It was too awarded gold status by the RIAA in December 1970, having sold more 500,000 copies.[eighteen] A string of US and/or UK hit singles followed: "Doesn't Somebody Want to Be Wanted", "I'll Come across You lot Halfway", "I Woke Up In Beloved This Morning", "It's One of Those Nights (Yep Beloved)", "Am I Losing You", and covers of the early- to -mid-1960s hits "Looking Through the Eyes of Love", "Breaking Upwardly Is Difficult to Do" and "Walking in the Rain".[xix] These singles were showcased on the 3 gold-certified albums Upwardly To Date (1971), Sound Magazine (1971) and Shopping Bag (1972), plus The Partridge Family Notebook (1972), Crossword Puzzle (1973) and Bulletin Board (1973).[20] The holiday album A Partridge Family Christmas Card was the meridian-selling Christmas record of 1971.[21] Tape sales success was replicated internationally, with both the Partridge Family group and Cassidy every bit a solo singer achieving huge hits in Canada, Great Britain, Europe, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and Southward Africa. In all, the Partridge Family released 89 songs on nine albums betwixt 1970 and 1973.

Danny Bonaduce album [edit]

Though Danny Bonaduce was non part of the session band, he also got a recording contract. His self-titled debut LP was released in 1973 by Panthera leo Records, a subsidiary label of MGM Records. The single from the album, "Dreamland", was a minor hit.[22] [23] Though Bonaduce was credited equally lead singer on all songs, he insists that he had a weak phonation and that Bruce Roberts provided virtually of the vocals on the album. The first track, "I'll Be Your Sorcerer", in which the 13-year-old Bonaduce seduces a woman into having sexual intercourse with him, has adult a cult following for its campy entertainment value. The original, watered-down version was recorded with Cassidy for the Audio Mag anthology, just was discarded and never released. In autumn 2010, Cassidy dared Bonaduce to larn how to play the bass guitar lines for the songs the Partridge Family performed. Bonaduce learned the bass guitar line for "Doesn't Somebody Want to Be Wanted", stating that although he had no ability to read music, the vocal was relatively like shooting fish in a barrel to larn; Cassidy and Bonaduce subsequently performed together on rare occasions.[24]

Ricky Segall anthology [edit]

In conjunction with the songs featured by Ricky Segall in the fourth flavor of the Tv bear witness, Bell Records released the anthology Ricky Segall and The Segalls in 1973. 7 of the album's 10 tracks were featured on the Television set show. Two tracks were besides released as a unmarried, "Sooner or Afterwards"/"Say Hey Willie" (Bong 45429).

Animated spin-off [edit]

The Partridges had a brief resurgence in animated form that saw the family unit propelled into the future. The animated Partridges first appeared when the kids did a series of guest spots on Goober and the Ghost Chasers. That idea evolved into a CBS Saturday forenoon Hanna-Barbera-produced cartoon in 1974, Partridge Family 2200 A.D. (also chosen The Partridge Family in Outer Space when rerun later every bit part of Fred Flintstone and Friends). Jones and Cassidy did not vox their animated characters and Susan Dey and Dave Madden had very limited interest with this drawing.

Lath game [edit]

Released in 1971 by Milton Bradley, The Partridge Family unit Game offers a glimpse of what life on the road was like for one of Television receiver's favorite fictional popular bands. The back of the box explains, "As on TV, many happenings occur to the Partridge family, this game describes i of them. They have finished playing at a local arena and must hurry to their BUS to get traveling again. On the way, they may have some delays." The object of the game is to be the first histrion to get back to the tour coach.[25]

Comic books [edit]

Charlton Comics produced a comic volume featuring the Partridge Family unit betwixt March 1971 and Dec 1973 and afterwards on just David Cassidy comic books. Information technology features stories about the characters, song lyrics and features about Cassidy.[26] The drawings were provided by Don Sherwood.[27] [28]

Reunion special [edit]

Three years subsequently the show's cancellation, Jones and other cast members gathered with cast members of My Three Sons for the ABC special Thanksgiving Reunion with The Partridge Family unit and My Three Sons, which aired on November 25, 1977. The show featured the casts discussing the histories of their shows, although other than Jones and Fred MacMurray both portraying single parents of big families, the ii series had no narrative link.

Reunion on Danny! [edit]

In 1995, a majority of the cast appeared on Bonaduce's talk show Danny!, including Shirley Jones, Dave Madden, Jeremy Gelbwaks, Brian Forster, Suzanne Crough, Ricky Segall and the show's executive producer Bob Claver. Susan Dey was working on a movie at the time only chosen into the show to briefly reminisce with Bonaduce. David Cassidy was also unable to appear as he was working on a new album at that fourth dimension.

Come up On Get Happy: The Partridge Family Story [edit]

In 1999, a "behind-the-scenes" Telly flick called Come On Become Happy: The Partridge Family Story aired on ABC. The film focuses on the lives of Danny Bonaduce (who narrated) and David Cassidy.

The New Partridge Family [edit]

In 2004, VH1 produced a pilot for a syndicated The New Partridge Family, starring Suzanne Sole equally Shirley, Leland Grant every bit Keith, Emma Stone (in her first role) equally Laurie, Spencer Tuskowski as Danny, and French Stewart as Reuben Kincaid. The pilot was the only episode produced. The episode ended with a teaser for "next calendar week'southward episode" in which the children's estranged father, played by Danny Bonaduce, drops in for a surprise visit with his same-sex life partner.[ citation needed ]

Home media [edit]

Sony Pictures Domicile Entertainment has released all four seasons of The Partridge Family on DVD in Region 1. Seasons 1 and 2 have been released in Regions 2 and four.

On Oct xv, 2013, Sony released The Partridge Family – The Complete Series on DVD in Region one.[29] The 12-disc set features all 96 episodes of the serial as well as bonus features.

The Screen Gems closing logo was removed from episodes for the starting time 3 seasons on DVD.

On August 27, 2013, it was announced that Factory Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to diverse television receiver serial from the Sony Pictures library including The Partridge Family unit.[thirty] They after re-released the start two seasons on June 24, 2014.[31]

On September 22, 2015, Mill Creek re-released Partridge Family – The Consummate Serial on DVD in Region 1 with the original Screen Gems logo reinstated at the end of the credits. No American DVD releases incorporate the epilogue to episode #25 (which does announced on Region 2 & 4 releases), the unaired 1969 pilot or whatever episodes of the spin-off series Getting Together.[32]

DVD name Ep. # Release date
The Complete 1st Flavor 25 May 3, 2005
June 24, 2014 (re-release)
The Complete 2nd Season 24 November 8, 2005
June 24, 2014 (re-release)
The Complete 3rd Season 25 October 14, 2008
The Complete 4th Season 22 February 3, 2009
The Complete Series 96 October 15, 2013
September 22, 2015 (re-release)

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ "FAQ". CmonGetHappy.com.
  2. ^ a b c d e f one thousand Cassidy, David; Deffaa, Fleck (1994). C'mon, Become Happy: Fear and Loathing on the Partridge Family unit Bus. DBC Enterprises, Warner Books Inc. ISBN9780446395311.
  3. ^ "An Interview with Bob Claver, part ii". CmonGetHappy.com . Retrieved March 31, 2012.
  4. ^ "The Partridge Family – The Airplane pilot". David Cassidy: Official Website . Retrieved May 16, 2016.
  5. ^ Green, Robin (May 11, 1972). "Naked Lunch Box". Rolling Stone.
  6. ^ Appelton, Jerry (April 21, 1978). "TVQ". The Toronto Star. p. D3.
  7. ^ Barnes, Mike (October 13, 2016). "Gary Dubin, Child Actor on 'The Partridge Family' and 'The AristoCats,' Dies at 57". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved January 31, 2022.
  8. ^ "Robin Ward". Billboard . Retrieved Oct 27, 2017.
  9. ^ "Search Results - BBC Genome". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk.
  10. ^ a b "The TV Ratings Guide: 1973-74". Thetvratingsguide.com . Retrieved Oct 3, 2021.
  11. ^ "ClassicTVHits.com: TV Ratings > 1970's". Classictvhits.com . Retrieved October iii, 2021.
  12. ^ "Partridge Family | Antenna Boob tube – Antenna Idiot box". AntennaTV.tv. Archived from the original on March 26, 2012. Retrieved March 31, 2012.
  13. ^ "Antenna TV's Fall Schedule". Dtvusaforum.com . Retrieved March 31, 2012.
  14. ^ Pavan (July 25, 2011). "Antenna Tv set Fall 2011 Schedule; OWN and TLC Acquires Surreptitious Boss Repeats for Autumn 2012". sitcomsonline.com . Retrieved March 31, 2012.
  15. ^ "Antenna Television receiver: Classic Television set and Movies on KTLA's Antenna TV 5.2". KTLA.com. Archived from the original on March eighteen, 2012. Retrieved March 31, 2012.
  16. ^ "Of Partridges and Kings" The Savvy Screener November 25, 2020
  17. ^ "Elite of the Record Industry Wait the Grammy Awards". The Palm Embankment Mail service-Times. March 14, 1971. p. B16.
  18. ^ a b Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Book of Gilded Discs (2nd ed.). London: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. p. 284. ISBN0-214-20512-6.
  19. ^ "TSORT Song Artist 592 – The Partridge Family unit". TSORT.info . Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  20. ^ "TSORT Album Creative person 994 – The Partridge Family". TSORT.info . Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  21. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Christmas in the Charts (1920–2004). Wisconsin: Tape Inquiry Inc. p. 179. ISBN0-89820-161-half dozen.
  22. ^ "Dreamland (Danny Bonaduce)". 45cat.com. Lion Records. January 1973.
  23. ^ "Huckleberry You/Dreamland (Danny Bonaduce)". Discogs. Lion Records. 1972.
  24. ^ Parry, Wayne (April 10, 2011). David Cassidy, Danny Bonaduce play Partridge song. Associated Printing. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  25. ^ Coopee, Todd. "The Partridge Family Game". ToyTales.ca.
  26. ^ Shirley, Ian (2005). Can Stone & Ringlet Salve the World?: An Illustrated History of Music and Comics. SAF Publishing Ltd. pp. 88–89. ISBN0946719802.
  27. ^ "Partridge Family (1971) comic books". MyComicShop.com . Retrieved December 28, 2016.
  28. ^ "Don Sherwood: (2 September 1930 – 6 March 2010, The states)". Lambiek Encyclopedia . Retrieved December 28, 2016.
  29. ^ "The Partridge Family unit DVD news: Announcement for The Partridge Family – The Consummate Series". Tv Shows On DVD. July 15, 2013. Archived from the original on September 16, 2015. Retrieved August 25, 2015.
  30. ^ "Site News DVD news: Mill Creek Licenses 52 Tv set Shows from Sony for Low-Cost DVD Release". Television receiver Shows On DVD. August 27, 2013. Archived from the original on Oct 6, 2014. Retrieved August 25, 2015.
  31. ^ "The Partridge Family DVD news: Release Appointment for The Partridge Family – Seasons 1 & two". Television set Shows On DVD. April 18, 2014. Archived from the original on March iv, 2016. Retrieved Baronial 25, 2015.
  32. ^ "The Partridge Family DVD news: Proclamation for The Partridge Family unit – The Complete Series". Television set Shows On DVD. August seven, 2015. Archived from the original on August 12, 2015. Retrieved Baronial 25, 2015.

References [edit]

  1. "The Partridge Family Album" by Joey Light-green, 1994 HarperCollins Publisher
  2. Sonypictures.com
  3. Vhi.com

Farther reading [edit]

  • Miller, Johnny Ray (2016). When Nosotros're Singin' - The Partridge Family & Their Music. When Nosotros're Singin' LLC. ISBN9780692750759.

External links [edit]

  • The Partridge Family at IMDb
  • Whatever happened to the Partridge Family unit?
  • Get happy! 'The Partridge Family' stars reunite from Today Evidence (March 2, 2010)

spannproce1950.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Partridge_Family

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