Jennifer Slept Here


Jennifer Slept Here is an American fantasy sitcom television series that ran for one season on NBC from October 21, 1983, to September 5, 1984. The series was a Larry Larry production in association with Columbia Pictures Television.

Overview

In the series, Ann Jillian plays Jennifer Farrell: a once-popular movie actress who in 1963 made the unfortunate mistake of chasing an ice cream truck near her Los Angeles, California home. When the ice cream truck accidentally backed up, it ran her over, killing her. About twenty years later, the Elliot family moved from New York City into Jennifer's home. In the series, this story conflicts with the assertion that her death occurred "six years ago". Father George was a lawyer who had handled Jennifer's posthumous affairs, including the house. George's wife, Susan, was a concerned and understanding figure. Daughter Marilyn was a typical 8-year-old.
The driving story behind the series was that Jennifer haunted the Elliot house—ostensibly to mentor and befriend the family's teenage son, Joey, who was the only person to whom she made herself visible. During the series, however, she does make herself visible in at least one episode. Naturally, Joey had a hard time convincing his family and friends of Jennifer's ghostly existence. They not only refused to believe Joey's claim, but often concluded Joey needed psychiatric or other help. In one episode, they hired a phony exorcist to rid the house of Jennifer's spirit by capturing it in a jar.

Cast

The series theme song, also titled "Jennifer Slept Here", was written by Joey Murcia, Bill Payne, Clint Holmes, and series star Ann Jillian, and was performed by recording artist Joey Scarbury.

Episodes

Reception

Critical response

Although the show had mixed reviews and a tough Friday night time-slot, it attracted somewhat decent ratings. Repeats which were shown on Wednesday nights during the summer of 1984 often managed to make the Top 30, but that was not enough to guarantee a second season. Tom Ensign of The Toledo Blade, reviewing Jennifer Slept Here, stated that the show "isn't funny, it isn't witty and it doesn't stand the ghost of a chance". Baird Searles dismissed the series as "a shameless re-echo of Topper".

Ratings

SeasonEpisodesStart DateEnd DateNielsen RankNielsen Rating
1983–8413October 21, 1983May 12, 19848910.3

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryRecipientResult
1984Primetime Emmy AwardOutstanding Technical Direction/Camerawork/Video for a SeriesFor episode "Life with Grandfather"
1984Young Artist AwardsBest New Television SeriesJennifer Slept Here
1984Young Artist AwardsBest Young Actor in a New Television SeriesJohn P. Navin, Jr.
1984Young Artist AwardsBest Young Actor in a New Television SeriesGlenn Scarpelli