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Not to be confused with Two Girls and a Guy.
Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place (retitled Two Guys and a Girl in its third season) is a sitcom created by Kenny Schwartz and Danny Jacobson. It ran on ABC for four seasons from 1998–2001. The series starred Ryan Reynolds, Traylor Howard and Richard Ruccolo as the primary characters. Season 2 saw the arrival of two recurring characters, Johnny Donnelly (Nathan Fillion) and Ashley Walker (Suzanne Cryer). Even though the show has had renewed popularity on both TV.com and the imdb, 20th Century Fox and ABC have yet to release the show onto DVD. ABC bounced the sitcom from midweek to Friday night, leading to a steep drop in ratings. After the show moved back to Wednesday to try to revive the show's flagging support for a two-week trial, the plug was pulled. The show ended on May 16, 2001. The series finale was titled "The Internet Show," an hour-long episode in which the fans of the show voted on the outcome online. In the end, they chose to have Ashley become pregnant with Pete's child, as opposed to either of the other two female characters, or nobody, becoming pregnant.
[edit] Plot[edit] Plot SummaryThe lives and loves of three close friends - Pete, a neurotic architeture student, Berg, the laid-back pre-med, and Sharon, a tough girl with a soft center. Pete and Berg are roommates and students at a local Boston university, while Sharon struggles with her work and relationships. [edit] Plot Synopsis[edit] Seasons 1 and 2The series starred Ryan Reynolds as Michael Leslie "Berg" Bergen, and Richard Ruccolo as Peter "Pete" Dunville. The titular Two Guys were joined by Traylor Howard, who played Sharon Carter (later Carter-Donnelly). For the first two seasons, the series centered around the lives of Berg, an aimless graduate student, who was working at a Boston pizza parlor, Beacon Street Pizza, with Pete. They both attended graduate school together at Tufts University, unlike their college roommate, Sharon, who worked as the spokesperson (or apologist) for Immaculate Chemicals. The format of the initial season varied considerably from that of subsequent seasons. The first season featured Jennifer Westfeldt, appearing as Melissa, Pete's girlfriend, and David Ogden Stiers as Mr. Bauer, an insane old man who frequented the pizza place, pretending that experiences from films were his own. The second season abandoned these two characters, and focused more on the interplay between Pete and Berg, and their relationship with Sharon, who lived in the apartment above them. Berg eventually decided to attend medical school and become a doctor, while Pete dropped out of architecture classes to become a career counselor. The second season also introduced Johnny (Nathan Fillion), a jukebox repairman who started dating Sharon, and Ashley (Suzanne Cryer), a medical school classmate of Berg's who competed with him to be at the top of the class. [edit] Seasons 3 and 4By season three, the pizza place had been abandoned entirely (hence the change in the show's title at this time), and Berg began his medical residency. Pete became a Vice President of a cosmetics company, and then a firefighter. Johnny and Sharon married and became the superintendents of the apartment building they lived in. Berg would go on to date Irene (Jillian Bach), the insane roommate across the hall, and Pete began dating a fellow firefighter named Marti (Tiffani Thiessen). [edit] Series Finale[edit] The Internet ShowThe series finale was titled "The Internet Show," an hour-long episode in which the fans of the show voted on the outcome online. In the end, they chose to have Ashley become pregnant with Pete's child, as opposed to either of the other two female characters, or nobody, becoming pregnant. The episodes aired on May 16, 2001. It was written by Donald Beck & Vince Calandra and directed by Michael Lembeck. For the 2000-01 season finale, four different endings were filmed for viewers to vote online and decide which of the central female characters (Sharon, Ashley, or Irene) should become pregnant, while a fourth possible ending had no pregnancies at all. The plan was to have the pregnant one (which ultimately ended up being Ashley) give birth at the end of the proposed fifth season. However, a fifth season of the show never materialized; by the time the fourth season finale aired in May of 2001, the show had just been canceled because of low ratings. [edit] Plot SummarySharon thinks she may be pregnant and Ashley realises she could be too. She goes into denial, despite showing the symptoms but agrees to take a pregnancy test with Sharon. When Berg finds out from a news report that a glow in the dark condom he used was defective he thinks Irene could be pregnant. Not wanting to worry her, he tries to get a urine sample from her without telling her. Pete is still annoyed at Ashley for giving up on their relationship to go to Stanford. [edit] Awards and NominationsThe show had 2 wins and 1 nomination during its four year run. Teen Choice Award
BMI TV Music Award
American Choreography Award
[edit] Theme Song and opening sequencesThe title sequence for the first two years consisted of a short collection of images of the three, a few cartoon images of them drinking and then the title. The music is often mistaken to be a sample from the Violent Femmes' "Blister in the Sun,"[1] but it is actually an original composition. For the third season, the music and titles were changed to a more refined opening of the three in suits and dresses, dancing around a more generic piece of theme music. The first two seasons involved cartoons of the main characters a long with the cast eating pizza at the pizza palce. This was alternated with a logo saying 'Two Guys, A Girl And A Pizza Place'. Seasons 3 and 4 showed Pete, Berg and Sharon dancing around infront of a plain, white backdrop. They are seen wearnig suits and dresses and dancing a long to a more modern piece of music. The newly adapted logo, due to the show's name being changed, is seen overlaying the footage as the three dance and laugh infront of the backdrop. [edit] Show BackgroundBased on the lives of Pete Dunville, Michael Bergen and Sharon Carter, the show was originally based on the life of its creator. The fictional "Beacon Street Pizza" is based on a real pizza restaurant named Theo's Pizza in Teele Square, Somerville, Massachusetts. It was where show creator Kenny Schwartz worked delivering pizzas while attending nearby Tufts University. The show was based in Boston and filmed at CBS Studio Center - 4024 Radford Avenue, Studio City, Los Angeles, California, USA. [edit] ProductionThese are the crew behind all the production of Two Guys, A Girl And A Pizza Place. [2]
[edit] Cast and Characters[edit] Main Characters
[edit] Recurring and minor Characters
[edit] Guest Appearances
[edit] EpisodesMain article: List of Two Guys and a Girl episodes
[edit] Syndication
[edit] ReceptionTwo Guys, A Girl And A Pizza Place was very successful during its run on ABC. The first series premiere entitled "The Pilot" was watched by 17.94 million viewers once preceeding the second highest rated show of The Drew Carrey Show [3]. The episode was given a 12.04 Nielsen rating and won its 18-49 adult demographic. This was ABC's biggest opening since Spin City. The show continued to have success during the first few seasons but never reached the high rating of "The Pilot". On May 28th, an episode known as 'Two Guys, A Girl And How They Met' was given a 6.7 Nielsen rating [4], a big drop from the series premiere. The estimated number of viewers was roughly 9.98 million. The show had strong ratings success during its run. he show peaked in season 2, averaging an impressive 12.7 million viewers. Its key adult 18-49 audience was prevalently female (55%). It was Ranked #1 in its time period with Total Viewers, outperforming Beverly Hills 90210, The Nanny and Dawson’s Creek. It was also #1 in its time period with key Adults 18-49 and all male demos. Finally, it was the #3 sitcom on ABC with key Adults 18-34. This is a huge achievement for the show that was originally rejected by 20th Century Fox. [5]. [edit] The Friday Night CurseIn the fall of 2000, ABC tried to reverse the curse of Friday Nights by putting some of its top-rated shows into a programming block aimed at older viewers. So network execs took Wednesday night ratings winners "Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place" (retitled "Two Guys and a Girl" because they didn't hang at the Pizza Place anymore) and "The Norm Show" (starring "SNL" alum Norm MacDonald), and paired them with "Madigan Men" and "The Trouble with Normal." All four shows would be gone before the end of the season. "Two Guys" held on the longest, even moving back to Wednesdays on television life support for a two-week trial to see if it could be revived. The season finale, "The Internet Show," was filmed with four different endings, with fans voting online to decide which female character would get pregnant. But the fifth season baby was never born. The show was canceled before the online vote was tabulated. [6]. [edit] References
[edit] External links
Categories: American television sitcoms | 1990s American television series | 2000s American television series | American Broadcasting Company network shows | Television series by Fox Television Studios | Television shows set in Massachusetts | 1998 television series debuts | 2001 American television series endings | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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