|
|
Movie
DVDs
|
|
The Mary Tyler Moore
Show -
DVDs

Buy now! |
The Mary Tyler Moore Show - Season 1
She finally made it after all... to DVD! Created by
James L. Brooks and Allan Burns, The Mary Tyler
Moore Show is the very model of a tailor-made star
vehicle. It transformed Moore from Dick Van Dyke's
wacky housewife to empowered thirtysomething single
woman determined to make it on her own. Moore was
the anchor of a peerless ensemble who brought to
life characters so indelible that three of them, Ed
Asner's Lou Grant, Valerie Harper's Rhoda, and
Cloris Leachman's Phyllis, would each get their own
series. The 24 episodes that comprise the
Emmy-winning first season (1970) hilariously set the
stage for what would become one of television's most
beloved sitcoms, ranked by TV Guide in 2002 as the
11th greatest of all time (it should have been
higher!). The classic pilot episode is a master
class of character-based comedy writing, as Mary
meets her future "family" at the WJM newsroom, as
well as upstairs neighbor Rhoda, with whom she would
form perhaps TV's greatest female buddy team. |

Buy now! |
The Mary Tyler Moore Show - Season 2
The Emmy-winning first season was an auspicious
beginning. By its second season, the classic theme
song "Love is All Around" has been revamped with an
even more optimistic outlook: "You're gonna make it
after all." In the sophomore season of this instant
gold-standard sitcom, the ace writing staff and
peerless ensemble begin to flesh out the iconic
characters. Gruff Lou Grant (Ed Asner, enjoying his
second Emmy-winning season) reveals his more
loveable side when he discovers his son-in-law out
with another woman in "The Six-and-a-Half-Year
Itch." |

Buy now! |
The Mary Tyler Moore Show - Season 3
In this third season, Mary Richards (Mary Tyler
Moore), she of the "bright smile and infectious
vivacity," got to display some of that celebrated
"spunk" of hers. In the season-opener, "The
Good-Time News," she demands to be paid the same
amount of money as her predecessor. In "The
Georgette Story," she defies her boss, Lou Grant (Ed
Asner), and vainglorious anchorperson Ted Baxter
(Ted Knight) by counseling Ted's new girlfriend,
whom he takes for granted. And in "Romeo and Mary,"
she finally stands up to an overzealous suitor
(guest star Stuart Margolin), which hilariously
backfires on her.
|

Buy now! |
The Mary Tyler Moore Show
- Season 4 The multi-Emmy-winning fourth
season of The Mary Tyler Moore Show showed us the
sassy side of Betty White and the softer side of Ed
Asner's Lou Grant. Cast against type, White makes a
memorable first impression in the season-opener as
steely "Happy Homemaker" Sue Ann Nivens, who makes
Martha Stewart look like June Cleaver. The episode
"The Lars Affair" earned an Emmy for Cloris Leachman,
and it is arguably her finest half-hour, as the
ill-equipped Phyllis tries to domesticate herself
after her husband has an affair with Sue Ann.
Consider the bee, a dejected Phyllis tells Mary and
Rhoda (Valerie Harper). "Once the male bee has...
serviced the queen, the male dies. |

Buy Now! |
The Mary Tyler Moore Show
- Season 5 |
|
|