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Happy Days season 11
Season 11 of the television series Happy Days From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The eleventh and final season of Happy Days, an American television sitcom, originally aired on ABC in the United States between September 27, 1983, and July 19, 1984. The show was created by Garry Marshall, under the production company Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions and Henderson Production Company, Inc., in association with Paramount Television.
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Like the three previous seasons, this season also consists of 22 episodes, all of which were directed by Jerry Paris. When its spin-off Joanie Loves Chachi was canceled in 1982, Scott Baio and Erin Moran returned to Happy Days, after being special guest stars during its tenth season, which also marked the departure of Cathy Silvers, who returned for the two-part series finale in 1984. Meanwhile, other regulars from season ten (Linda Purl, Crystal Bernard, Billy Warlock and Heather O'Rourke) did not return for this season.
This season also marked the return of former regulars Ron Howard and Don Most, after their departures in the seventh season's finale in 1980. Anson Williams, despite still being credited on the opening credits for this season, only appeared in five episodes. Williams and Most did not appear in the finale. Pat Morita, who played Arnold, made his final appearance in the first episode of the season. Al Molinaro, who played Al, returned for the series finale. The season began filming in May 1983 and ended in November of that year. Also, the title theme song was re-recorded in a more modern style. It features Bobby Arvon on lead vocals, along with several backup vocalists. To accompany this version, new opening and closing credits were filmed, and the flashing Happy Days logo was redesigned.
After ten consecutive seasons leading ABC Tuesday night at 8:00 PM, the network was forced to regroup after its most-successful spin-off, Laverne & Shirley, ended its run in May 1983. More importantly, a new show, The A-Team, debuted on NBC in January of that year and began airing on the same night and timeslot as Happy Days. Viewership for Happy Days declined throughout the 1982-83 television season, with the show ending at number 28 on the Nielsen ratings, while The A-Team ended at number ten. For the 1983-84 season, the show left its popular 8:00 PM timeslot and was moved half an hour to 8:30 PM. A new series, the ultimately short-lived show Just Our Luck, took its place. It stayed in that timeslot until the series finale, which aired on May 8, 1984. However, there were five "leftover" episodes that ABC didn't have time to air during the regular season due to the Winter Olympics and the spring run of a.k.a. Pablo. Four of these aired on Thursday nights during the summer of 1984; the fifth ("Fonzie's Spots") first aired in syndication on September 24, 1984. Due to its timeslot change and the rising popularity of The A-Team, ratings fell even further, ending at number 63, the show's lowest-watched season.
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Broadcast history
The season aired Tuesdays at 8:30-9:00 pm (EST)[1][2] and Thursdays at 8:00-8:30 pm (EST).[3]
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