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・ All That (season 6)
・ All That (season 7)
・ All That (season 8)
・ All That (season 9)
・ All That (song)
・ All That Counts Is Love
・ All That Echoes
・ All That Echoes World Tour
・ All That Fall
・ All That Fall (album)
・ All That Falls Has Wings
・ All That for This
・ All That Funk
・ All That Glitters
・ All That Glitters (film)
All That Glitters (TV series)
・ All That Glitters Is a Mares Nest
・ All that glitters is not gold
・ All That Glitters... (module)
・ All That Heaven Allows
・ All That I Am
・ All That I Am (Joe album)
・ All That I Am (novel)
・ All That I Am (Santana album)
・ All That I Can Say
・ All That I Got
・ All That I Got Is You
・ All That I Love
・ All That I Need
・ All That I Need Is to Be Loved


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All That Glitters (TV series) : ウィキペディア英語版
All That Glitters (TV series)

''All That Glitters'' is an American sitcom by producer Norman Lear. It consisted of 65 episodes and aired between April 18 and July 15, 1977 in broadcast syndication. The show, a spoof of the soap opera format, depicted the trials and tribulations of a group of executives at the Globatron corporation. The twist of the series was that it was set within a world of complete role-reversal: Women were the "stronger sex," the executives and breadwinners, while the "weaker sex" – the men – were the secretaries or stay-at-home househusbands. Men were often treated as sex objects.
The series features Eileen Brennan, Greg Evigan, Lois Nettleton, Gary Sandy, Tim Thomerson and Jessica Walter. Comic actor and cartoon voice artist Chuck McCann was also a regular. Linda Gray played transgender fashion model Linda Murkland, the first transgender series regular on American television.〔Stein, p. 177〕
Before and after its premiere, ''All That Glitters'' was negatively received and the series lasted just 13 weeks.
==Production==
''All That Glitters'' was series creator Norman Lear's attempt to duplicate his success with the syndicated soap opera spoof ''Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman''. Lear described the premise simply: "God created Eve first, took out her rib and gave her a companion so she wouldn't be lonely."〔 Lear came up with the idea on a trip to Washington, D.C.:
"I had visited the Institute of Policy Studies, and I just loved the whole thing. And I thought there was a series in it—a five-times-a-week series: I went to bed thinking about that, and I woke up the next morning thinking what would happen if the male-female equation were changed? What would happen if the women had all the power and all the advantage, and the men had what the women normally would have?”〔

The world of ''All That Glitters'' had always been female-dominated but Lear also used the series to comment on changing sex roles in the United States in the 1970s.
Former Major League Baseball player Wes Parker almost literally walked into his role. He was doing play-by-play reporting for a Los Angeles television station owned by Lear's partner, Jerry Perenchio. "Lear casually asked if I'd be interested in the part. I said yes, but knew it was out of the question, because in real life things don't happen that way. Nobody walks in and gets on a Norman Lear show. I read for the part, got it and didn't sleep at all that night." Linda Gray was somewhat non-plussed upon being offered the role of transgender Linda Murkland. "I remember meeting Norman and him saying, 'You'll be perfect for the role.' I didn't know whether to take that as a compliment or what."〔 〕 To prepare for her role, Linda Gray asked Lear to arrange for her to meet with a transgender woman. Gray met with her for several hours prior to the beginning of filming and on a couple of occasions during production. Lois Nettleton reportedly based her characterization of Christina Stockwood on Clark Gable.〔 Production started in early March 1977 with director Herbert Kenwith.
In test screenings prior to its premiere, reaction to the show was sharply divided. According to executive producer Stephanie Sills, the strongest negative reaction came from male executives. "They didn't mind being portrayed by women. It was simply that they detest the way we depicted them."〔 Feminists were uncertain how to react to the series, with some being concerned that audiences would not perceive the show as satire but as an attempt to represent how a female-dominated society would actually operate.〔 Lear marketed the program through his company, TAT Syndication.〔Television/radio Age, p. 38〕 The series ran five nights a week.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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