
1. | Mork & Mindy: Season 1 | 1978 |
2. | Mork & Mindy: Season 2 | 1979 |
3. | Mork & Mindy: Season 3 | 1980 |
4. | Mork & Mindy: Season 4 | 1981 |
Mork & Mindy
Mork & Mindy was a spin-off from an episode of Happy Days
seen in February 1978, in which an alien from the planet
Ork landed on Earth and attempted to kidnap Richie.
So popular was the nutty character that Robin Williams
was given his own series the following fall.
Mork was a misfit on his own planet because of his
sense of humor. So the humorless Orkans sent him off
to study Earthlings, whose "crazy" customs they had
never been able to understand. Mork landed, in a giant
eggshell, near Boulder, Colorado. There he was
befriended by pretty Mindy McConnell, a clerk at a
music store run by her father, Frederick. Mork looked
human, but his strange mixture of Orkan and Earthling
customs such as wearing a suit, but putting it on
backwards, or sitting in a chair, but upside down,
led most people to think of him as just some kind
of a nut. Mindy knew where he came from, and helped
him adjust to Earth's strange ways. She also let him
stay in the attic of her apartment house, which
scandalized her conservative father, but
not her swinging grandmother, Cora.
After taking cold medicine, Mork begins to shrink.
Mork winds up in a parallel universe where Exidor has become a tyrannical king.
Mork foolishly picks a fight with Mindy in order to "kiss and make up."
Kathy drags Mork home for an evening and later announces that she's pregnant with his child.
Mork instills human emotions in a robot.
Mork and Mindy compete to earn a job working for Nelson.
As Mindy prepares a formal party for Nelson, Mork discovers he's become allergic to Mindy.
When Mindy's childhood home is put up for sale, Mork discovers several of Mindy's deceased relatives still reside there.
Mindy goes to the hospital to have her tonsils removed, but a mix-up finds her being prepped for brain surgery.
Nelson gets threatening phone calls after he makes a stand against strip joints, so Mork and Mindy decide to sneak into one to investigate.
Three voluptuous aliens from Necroton capture Mork and attempt to find out what information he's learned about Earth.
Captain Nirvana kidnaps Mindy in order to coax Mork out of hiding.
Nelson tries to further his political career by getting Mork the opportunity to try out to be a Denver Broncos cheerleader.
Mindy's level of annoyance with Exidor hits an all-time high when he invites himself and his new girlfriend, Ambrosia, to dinner.
When Mork decides to join the air force, he unwittingly learns of the cover up of a radiation spill.
Mork finds Exidor's estranged mother who protests his forthcoming marriage to Ambrosia by chaining herself to Mindy's kitchen counter.
Mork is overjoyed when Fred returns and announces that he's remarried, but for Mindy, it dredges up painful memories of her mother's death.
Mork haplessly gets involved with a group of white supremacists.
When Mr. Bickley's blind son comes to town, he dumps him on Mork and Mindy.
When Mork takes a mental vacation, other strange, vacationing aliens take up residence in his body. Meanwhile Jean and Remo's mother visits Boulder.
Mindy takes a job writing the Miss Lonely Hearts newspaper column and unknowingly encourages Jean to pursue a romantic relationship with Mork.
When Mork is threatened with deportation, Exidor adopts him.
Nelson is given TV air time to plug his political views on a Saturday morning, so Mork uses the opportunity to put on a kiddie show.
Mork decides to become a priest.
Mork becomes so hopelessly addicted to advertisements that they invade his dreams.
Fred confesses that he's having marital difficulties, so Mork and Mindy relay stories of their troubled times.
![]() |
Robin Williams | Mork |
![]() |
Tom Poston | Mr. Bickley |
![]() |
Pam Dawber | Mindy McConnell |
![]() |
Ralph James | Orson |
![]() |
Jay Thomas | Remo DaVinci |
![]() |
Gina Hecht | Jean DaVinci |
![]() |
Jim Staahl | Nelson Flavor |
![]() |
Robert Donner | Exidor |
![]() |
Georgia Engel | Ambrosia Malspar |
![]() |
Raquel Welch | Captain Nirvana |
![]() |
Johnny Haymer | Danny St. Tommy |
![]() |
Ronnie Schell | Bob Faith |
![]() |
Conrad Janis | Fred McConnell |
![]() |
Anita Dangler | Princess Lusitania |
![]() |
Vicki Frederick | Sutra |
![]() |
Debra Jo Fondren | Kama |
![]() |
Tyler Horn | Soldier |
![]() |
Jeremy Vernon | Jerry Looney |
![]() |
Roddy McDowall | Chuck the Robot |
![]() |
Gregory Itzin | Man #2 |
![]() |
Charles Lane | Judge Baker |
![]() |
Carl Gottlieb | Justice Abbott |
![]() |
Paul Willson | Suicidal Confessor |
![]() |
Garry Goodrow | Father Denny |
![]() |
Wendy Cutler | Future Bride |
Director | Howard Storm |
![]() |
Harvey Medlinsky |
![]() |
|
Jeff Chambers |
![]() |
|
Joel Zwick |
![]() |
|
Writer | Dale McRaven, Tom Tenowich, Ed Scharlach, David Misch, Bruce Johnson, Garry Marshall, Joe Glauberg, Bruce Kalish, Philip John Taylor, April Kelly, Jim Parker, Alan Eisenstock, Larry Mintz, Steve Kreinberg, Andrew Guerdat | |
Producer | Bruce Johnson, Anthony W. Marshall, Garry Marshall, Dale McRaven, James O'Keefe | |
Musician | Perry Botkin Jr. | |
Photography | Meredith M. Nicholson |
Nr Discs | 1 |
---|---|
Layers | Single side, Single layer |
Watched | |
---|---|
Quantity | 1 |
Index | 2577 |
Added Date | Jul 11, 2019 10:02:19 |
Modified Date | Jul 16, 2024 09:17:51 |