The Dictator (lost footage from unfinished CBS sitcom TV series; 1988): Difference between revisions
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{{InfoboxLost | |||
'''''The Dictator''''' was a 1988 American sitcom scheduled to begin airing on CBS on March | |title=<center>The Dictator</center> | ||
|image=TheDictatorCBS-TVGuidePromo1.jpg | |||
|imagecaption=Vintage TV Guide page advertising the show. | |||
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | |||
}} | |||
'''''The Dictator''''' was a 1988 American sitcom scheduled to begin airing on CBS on March 15th. The program would star Christopher Lloyd as Joseph Paul Domingo, a dictator from a small Caribbean island who is deposed and exiled to Queens, New York. There, he sets up a laundromat with his wife Isabel (played by Deborah Rush) and their children, Reggie and Andrew (Robyn Lively and John David Cullum), as well as Domingo's former general, Vesuvio (Joe Grifasi). The pilot also featured David Allen Grier and Peter Crombi as guest stars. Bob Elliott also appeared. | |||
The show was scheduled to air on Tuesday nights at 9:30. However, on March 7th, The Writer's Guild went on strike just as the series was set to tape its third episode. The network didn't want to premiere a series with so few episodes and ultimately cancelled it without airing the two episodes produced. <ref>[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iHsjAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA75&lpg=PA75&dq=christopher+lloyd+the+dictator&source=bl&ots=NqOmqoclZo&sig=eMpomyaFpNNarWxiL95DPRsYzbc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi1jLbIyOLYAhVKKsAKHYVJAwkQ6AEwEnoECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=christopher%20lloyd%20the%20dictator&f=false Encyclopedia of Television Pilots, 1937-2012 Page 75.] Retrieved 18 Jan '18</ref> One of the produced episodes was written by John Swartzwelder, later of The Simpsons. <ref>[https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-new-yorker-interview/john-swartzwelder-sage-of-the-simpsons John Swartzwelder Interview.] Retrieved 3 May '21</ref> | |||
[[Category:Lost TV|Dictator (lost sitcom | The series has since faded into obscurity, and aside from magazine ads and promotional images, it hasn't been seen or been made available to the public. | ||
In 2012, a similar concept would have been recycled by Sacha Baron Cohen in a feature comedy film also titled ''The Dictator''. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
<gallery mode=packed heights=175px> | |||
TheDictatorCBS-TVGuideSynopsis.jpg|A synopsis listing/ad specifically for the Chicago affiliate WBBM. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-TVGuidePromo2.JPG|Another newspaper ad. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-ChristopherLloydStill.jpg|A still of Christopher Lloyd as the Dictator. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-CBSPromoStill1.jpg|Isabel, Vesuvio, and the Dictator. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-CBSPromoStill2.jpeg|Isabel and the Dictator. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-CBSPromoStill3.jpeg|The Dictator and Vesuvio. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-CBSPromoStill4.jpeg|Andrew, the Dictator, and Isabel. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-CBSPromoStill5.jpeg|Isabel and the Dictator. | |||
TheDictatorCBS-CBSPromoStill6.jpg|The Dictator and an old man (Bob Elliott). | |||
TheDictatorCBS-CBSPromoStill7.jpg|The Dictator and Andrew. | |||
ChristopherLloydTheDictator1988.jpeg|A still of Christopher Lloyd as the Dictator. | |||
ChristopherLloydDictatorPost.jpg|Christopher Lloyd as the Dictator. | |||
</gallery> | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
[[Category:Lost TV|Dictator (lost Christopher Lloyd sitcom TV series; 1988)]] | |||
[[Category:Completely lost media|Dictator (lost Christopher Lloyd sitcom TV series; 1988)]] |
Latest revision as of 17:47, 4 May 2021
The Dictator was a 1988 American sitcom scheduled to begin airing on CBS on March 15th. The program would star Christopher Lloyd as Joseph Paul Domingo, a dictator from a small Caribbean island who is deposed and exiled to Queens, New York. There, he sets up a laundromat with his wife Isabel (played by Deborah Rush) and their children, Reggie and Andrew (Robyn Lively and John David Cullum), as well as Domingo's former general, Vesuvio (Joe Grifasi). The pilot also featured David Allen Grier and Peter Crombi as guest stars. Bob Elliott also appeared.
The show was scheduled to air on Tuesday nights at 9:30. However, on March 7th, The Writer's Guild went on strike just as the series was set to tape its third episode. The network didn't want to premiere a series with so few episodes and ultimately cancelled it without airing the two episodes produced. [1] One of the produced episodes was written by John Swartzwelder, later of The Simpsons. [2]
The series has since faded into obscurity, and aside from magazine ads and promotional images, it hasn't been seen or been made available to the public.
In 2012, a similar concept would have been recycled by Sacha Baron Cohen in a feature comedy film also titled The Dictator.
Gallery
References
- ↑ Encyclopedia of Television Pilots, 1937-2012 Page 75. Retrieved 18 Jan '18
- ↑ John Swartzwelder Interview. Retrieved 3 May '21