[an error occurred while processing this directive]



MONDAY
Time of Your Life
Law & Order: SVU
Complete Lineup

TUESDAY
Once and Again
Complete Lineup

WEDNESDAY
Roswell
The West Wing
Complete Lineup

THURSDAY
Action
WWF Smackdown!
Complete Lineup

FRIDAY
Harsh Realm
Now and Again
Complete Lineup

SATURDAY
Freaks and Geeks
Complete Lineup

SUNDAY
Snoops
Complete Lineup

Introduction


Entertainment Weekly Cover

Try 2 issues FREE of Entertainment Weekly
Click here

Monday



Time of Your Life
Fox, 8-9 p.m, Debuts Oct. 25
'TIME' TO HIT THE ROAD
Hewitt leaves the ''Party,'' hitching up her own wagon

''Party of Five'' producers Chris Keyser and Amy Lippman weren't initially kicking up their heels at the concept -- a suggestion from their agents. A spin-off? For ''Party of Five''? Thanks, but no angst.

Not only were they worried about damaging the franchise by removing one of the key Salinger family members... but for godsakes, how much more self-examination and terminal diagnoses can one group of orphans go through?!? Yet right after waving off the idea, the two producers suddenly turned to each other and uttered the same word: ''Love?''

No question, a Jennifer Love Hewitt-helmed series looked like a can't-hardly-lose proposition. Her popularity was soaring. Her departure would open up the storytelling on ''PO5'' without disrupting the family unit. Better still, the groundwork for a spin-off had already been laid in the second season, when Sarah discovered that she'd been adopted. Indeed, all the pieces were falling into place.

But the already high-profile series developed Is this show in trouble? syndrome after word leaked out that the pilot -- an overearnest fable with scant secondary-character development -- would need to be reshot. The net's new thinking was that a punchier-paced version of the series would make the perfect companion piece for that other ultrasensitive-babe-against-the-big-city series, ''Ally McBeal.'' ''We wanted to make [the show] a little more relevant, a little less whimsical and Dickens-like,'' says Fox Entertainment prez Doug Herzog.

So Keyser and Lippman started rewriting (un)like the Dickens, spinning a more grounded tale about a ready-for-anything Sarah who waits tables at a karaoke bar, rooms with a wannabe actress (Jennifer Garner of Fox's short-lived 1998 Keyser/Lippman drama, ''Significant Others''), and finds romantic potential in a struggling musician -- ''That Thing You Do!'''s Johnathon Schaech.

While the jury remains out on the new incarnation (the pilot was still being reshot at press time), Love is making one bold guarantee: ''It's NOT just going to be a chick show -- I won't let it be,'' insists Hewitt. ''And it won't be sappy because New York is not a sappy place. I think the show is going to have a certain urban toughness to it. AND we have a lot of really hot girls on the show. We'll make sure we show bellies and things like that, so the guys should be okay.''

More Monday


Talk about the TV shows you're looking forward to watching in the message boards

Read about the best new movies in the fall movie preview.

Get today's entertainment news.


Related Stories:

Which ''West Wing'' character is played by a lead's relative?
- Daily Quiz (October 4, 2000)

Fall TV Preview
Get the buzz on new and returning shows with Yasmine Bleeth, Sarah Michelle Gellar, and many others - Feature (September 22, 2000)

Which ''West Wing'' star has had the most Emmy nominations?
- Daily Quiz (September 13, 2000)

Why Sunday night's was the best Emmy show in memory
Ken Tucker offers a golden trophy to the Academy for its superb choices - Hot Topic (September 11, 2000)

More Related Stories -->


Copyright © 2001 Time Inc. & Entertainment Weekly | Privacy Policy


Photo credit: Guy Aroch