- Source: High School USA!
- Source: High School U.S.A.
- High School Musical
- Daftar episode Mahōka Kōkō no Rettōsei
- The Irregular at Magic High School The Movie: The Girl Who Summons the Stars
- Wongravee Nateetorn
- High School DxD Hero
- Elon Musk
- Zac Efron
- Vanessa Hudgens
- Boyz II Men
- Jillian Bell
- High School USA!
- High School U.S.A.
- USA High
- High School USA (disambiguation)
- USA Today All-USA High School Football Team
- USA Today High School Football Player of the Year
- USA Today All-USA High School Basketball Team
- USA Today All-USA High School Football Team (1982–1989)
- USA Today All-USA High School Football Team (1990–1999)
- USA Today All-USA High School Baseball Team
High School USA! is an American adult animated television series produced by Friends Night and Animation Domination High-Def Studios. The series was created and written by Dino Stamatopoulos. Nick Weidenfeld, Hend Baghdady and Stamatopoulos executive produced the series.
Plot
The show is about the millennial high-school experience, following a clique of sunny, well-meaning students consisting of Marsh Merriwether, Amber Lamber, Cassandra Barren, Brad Slovee, and Lamort Blackstein.
The art style and basic character setup are a parody of Archie Comics.
Cast
Episodes
References
External links
High School USA! at IMDb
High School U.S.A. is a 1983 American made-for-television comedy film starring Michael J. Fox, Nancy McKeon, Anthony Edwards, and Crispin Glover, directed by Rod Amateau. The film originally aired on NBC on October 16, 1983.
Several of the main actors appeared in sitcoms that were popular at that time. These include Todd Bridges and Dana Plato from Diff'rent Strokes, Nancy McKeon from The Facts of Life, Lauri Hendler from Gimme a Break!, Crystal Bernard and Cathy Silvers from Happy Days, and Michael J. Fox from Family Ties, as well as a number of former 1950s and 1960s sitcom stars, including Angela Cartwright from The Danny Thomas Show and Lost in Space, Tony Dow, Frank Bank, and Ken Osmond from Leave It to Beaver, Elinor Donahue from Father Knows Best, and Dawn Wells and Bob Denver from Gilligan's Island.
Plot
The film focuses on the intrigue inside Excelsior Union High School. J.J. Manners, becomes enamored with Beth Franklin, the girlfriend of Beau Middleton, who somehow manages to be the class president despite alienating most of the school; he is also their football team's quarterback. Middleton is also the richest student, a spoiled young man who drives around in a Porsche 911 convertible.
The core story involves Manners and Middleton competing for the affections of Beth. Ultimately this rivalry culminates in a drag race between the two. The result of the race tips the balance and changes the dynamics within the school irrevocably. In the end, J.J. ends up winning Beth's affections.
Other storylines include a genius, Otto, who has created a robot that he believes to be capable of traveling into space (the robot also humiliates Beau Middleton at the end of the film by pulling down his trousers before the entire student body). Archie Feld is a socially impaired boy who stands out as nervous about interacting with the opposite sex, all while surrounded by friends who all struggle with the intricacies of intergender relationships. Also, Beau Middleton's father has created an incentive for the teachers by offering a sizable reward for the best teacher. Subsequently, the teachers focus extra effort on impressing Beau with their worthiness of the reward.
Cast
Michael Fox – J.J. Manners
Nancy McKeon – Beth Franklin
Todd Bridges – Otto Lipton
Angela Cartwright – Miss D'Angelo
Bob Denver – Milton Feld
Dwayne Hickman – Mr. Plaza
Lauri Hendler – Nadine
Dana Plato – Cara Ames
Crystal Bernard – Anne-Marie Conklin
Anthony Edwards – Beau Middleton
Frank Bank – Mr. Gerardi
Elinor Donahue – Mrs. Franklin
Tony Dow – Principal Pete Kinney
Steve Franken – Dr. Fritz Hauptmann
David Nelson – Mr. Krinsky, janitor
Ken Osmond – Baxter Franklin
Dawn Wells – Miss Lorilee Lee
Jon Caliri – Jerry
David Packer – Danny
Crispin Glover – Archie Feld
Cathy Silvers – Peggy
Kelly Ann Conn – Swoozie
Jonathan Gries – Dirty Curt
Barry Livingston – Mr. Sirota
Jerry Maren – Robot
Tom Villard – Crazy Leo Bandini
Kaley Ward – Chris
Michael Zorek – Chuckie Dipple
Melody Anderson – Cindy Franklin
Production
= Casting
=According to stand-up comedian and future Mystery Science Theater 3000 star Joel Hodgson, he was asked to be one of the stars of the proposed series. Hodgson turned the offer down after telling the network he did not think the material was good. The network raised their offer, thinking his refusal was a bargaining ploy. Because of this experience, Hodgson decided Hollywood was too shallow to work with and quit the industry until 1987, when he created MST3K.
Fox and Glover would go on the following year to work together again in Back to the Future.
= Filming
=Fox met McKeon on set and the two of them dated for a while, and starred in another TV movie, Poison Ivy.
Pilot
A one-hour pilot was created due to the success of the original movie, but no longer featuring the star teen actors. It was not picked up by the network, and was aired on May 26, 1984 (the Saturday evening of Memorial Day weekend).
Crystal Bernard, Crispin Glover, Jonathan Gries, Ken Osmond, and Michael Zorek were the only cast members to return for the pilot (with Osmond playing a teacher instead of a parent).
Barbara Billingsley and Jerry Mathers, the only two Leave It to Beaver cast members who weren't in the film, joined the pilot while Dow and Bank did not return. Similarly, David Nelson did not return while his mother and brother (and Ozzie and Harriet co-stars), Harriet Nelson and Ricky Nelson, joined the cast. Other classic TV stars to join included Dick York (from Bewitched), Burt Ward and Julie Newmar (both from Batman).
The pilot marked the last acting roles of Ricky Nelson and Dick York.
References
External links
High School U.S.A. at IMDb
High School U.S.A. at AllMovie