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Brooklyn Bridge Online

Brooklyn Bridge  Online
Original Title :
Brooklyn Bridge
Genre :
TV Series / Drama
Cast :
Marion Ross,Danny Gerard,Louis Zorich
Type :
TV Series
Time :
30min
Rating :
8.5/10
Brooklyn Bridge Online

In 1956, 14-year-old Alan Silver's life revolves around family, the synagogue and the Dodgers. Grandparents Jules and Sophie live in the same brownstone as Alan, his brother Nate, and their parents Phyllis and George.
Series cast summary:
Marion Ross Marion Ross - Sophie Berger 33 episodes, 1991-1993
Danny Gerard Danny Gerard - Alan Silver 33 episodes, 1991-1993
Louis Zorich Louis Zorich - Jules Berger 33 episodes, 1991-1993
Matthew Louis Siegel Matthew Louis Siegel - Nathaniel Silver 33 episodes, 1991-1993
Amy Aquino Amy Aquino - Phyllis Berger Silver 32 episodes, 1991-1993
Peter Friedman Peter Friedman - George Silver 32 episodes, 1991-1993
Adam LaVorgna Adam LaVorgna - Nicholas Scamperelli 24 episodes, 1991-1993

Louis Zorich and Olympia Dukakis (married in real-life) were offered the roles of Jules and Sophie Berger. While Zorich accepted his role, Dukakis declined the part.


User reviews

Lightwind

Lightwind

Kind of a "Jewish Wonder Years". I didn't catch Brooklyn Bridge during its initial run on CBS; probably a good thing, since it was cancelled. Bravo to the BRAVO network for picking it up! It only took one episodes for me to become hooked. I've never lived in NY, only visited- and Brooklyn has got to be the most colorful city in the whole US. Brooklyn Bridge represents REAL people with REAL feelings in REAL life. It's fast-moving and the writing is authentic. Love it!
Globus

Globus

The short-lived television series "Brooklyn Bridge" was one of the finest family programs ever. It was nostalgic... and funny... and sad... and entertaining... and educational... and worthy of many other superlative accolades, as well.

With a good marketing effort, "Brooklyn Bridge" on DVDs would, we believe, be the popular program it should have been when originally aired, but was prematurely canceled.

PLEASE... "BBBB"-- Bring Back "Brooklyn Bridge" for a new generation (as well as for those who remember it fondly).

--R. Howe / Erskine, Minnesota
Fenrikree

Fenrikree

'Brooklyn Bridge', although I was a little kid when it first aired on television, has always been one of my favorite TV shows. My family taped nearly every episode from the time the show began until its life was cut short by network executives who didn't think it was good enough to continue. Unfortunately, video tapes do not have the longest life and our tapes have begun to deteriorate from our constant use. Years have passed and I still watch these tapes. My family still has fun reciting the different characters lines. Dad is always Mr. Cavaretti-- making fun of Warren Butcher. They just don't make shows like this anymore. A show with such a wide variety of topics and issues would seemingly attract wide audiences but it did not. It's hard to describe the immense connection I felt I had to the characters as a little child. I thought they were real; I loved the thought of living in an apartment in Brooklyn, your grandmother always there to cook for you when you wanted anything. It was a life that I don't have; a life I think I would have liked. My dad recently took me to New York. On our last day there we walked across the Brooklyn Bridge. It was a long but beautiful walk. Along the way I hummed the theme song in my head. A world of its own/ the streets where we played/ the friends on ever corner were the best be ever made..... Whenever I think of yesterday/ I close my eyes and see/ that place just over the Brooklyn Bridge/ that'll always be home to me./ It'll always be home to me. I have read many of the other comments that people have written about this show, and the feeling seems to be mutual. Everyone who watched the show loved it. A DVD would be great, if only there were a way.

Thank you 'Brooklyn Bridge', you'll always be home to me.
Nilador

Nilador

Goldberg's "Brooklyn Bridge" is one of the best television series ever made. But viewers ignored it, as did so-called watchdogs who whine about there not being high-quality programs for families. The cast, led by Gerard as the oldest son, was excellent. The stories about growing up and trying to get along with an extended family were down-to-earth and sometimes poignant. If it comes back to cable, watch it. Every episode was solid, with most rising to a level untouched by TV. "Brooklyn Bridge" should be considered classic television.
grand star

grand star

This is a great television show that can teach you a lot of lessons.Too bad it is not on television anymore,not even on reruns.I use to watch in Bravo.I think Mr.Grier and Grandma were the best characters.Usually,you don't get that many television shows these days that are so entertaining.A television show doesn't have to be laugh-out-loud funny,though it doesn't have to be a crappy police drama either.If this show is on video,I am buying it.
Kit

Kit

I enjoyed this series from the first moment it started. With an outstanding cast and story lines, it is by far in my personal Top 5. My Mother grew up in Brooklyn and adored the Dodgers. Being 100% Irish, she can attest to the Irish family. She can remember the Knot Hole Gang and seeing the Bums at Ebbets Field all the time. The show hits on many of the traditions of various faiths and how they interacted with others. I just hope that sooner rather than later, this series can be found on DVD. It would be a shame if this did not happen. It truly is a wonderful show! Also, it is surprising that more of the younger actors and actresses didn't go on to other projects. The older cast members, have already had some great bodies of work. Marion Ross for one. Happy Days was a fantastic show and Mrs. Cunningham was one of TVs most popular mothers.
Ishnsius

Ishnsius

This show was absolutely brilliant. I first saw it when they played it on bravo a few years back. My Mum and I would sit and watch it together. I was 13 or 14, and I remember really enjoying it. I really wish they would bring it out on DVD! I cant believe it only lasted two seasons. Every episode I enjoyed and loved. It was so very well written. I truly loved the different characters! They were so real and you could totally connect with them. They encountered real life problems and when the show ended you felt you learned something too. I think the show really gave a true color of how life was back in those days. I certainly hope they bring it out on DVD! PLEASE BRING IT OUT ON DVD!! -Fiona
Fenrinos

Fenrinos

I was very sad when Brooklyn Bridge was discontinued. It was a funny and charming and gentle portrayal of a Jewish family living in Brooklyn about half a century ago. I was among the lucky ones who discovered this program while it was being aired, and therefore had the opportunity to see television at its greatest.
GYBYXOH

GYBYXOH

I grew up Methodist,not Jewish. I lived in Oklahoma, not New York. Yet this series felt like family, with some delightful cultural differences. It could be warm without becoming cloying. The people were fully developed, not stereotypes or "characters." The episode in which the Jewish and Irish Catholic families went to a Chinese restaurant is one of the best racial and cultural commentaries I've ever seen in any medium. I wish it could have run forever.
Hanelynai

Hanelynai

This was an amazing show that frankly was too good for television. Most of the time, TV hooks you because it's loud and brash and appeals to the lowest common denominators and that is the main reason why this wonderful show failed. That, and CBS kept moving it around so often that fans had a hard time finding it! Describing the genre isn't easy. It wasn't exactly a comedy, though there were some wonderfully funny moments (such as when Grandpa meets the ball player Gil Hodges after he'd been telling his grandson that they were teammates back in Russia). It wasn't exactly just a period show, though it bore some similarity to THE WONDER YEARS. It wasn't exactly a drama, but the Holocaust episodes which guest-starred Joel Grey brought me to tears. Instead, it felt like you were magically transported from your home to the home of a very decent and normal Jewish-American family who lived in 1950s Brooklyn. And, despite having Marion Ross as the grandma (she was WONDERFUL), it was not a phony HAPPY DAYS type of 1950s--it was like you were really there.

Amazing writing, superb direction and nice and believable characters you could care about and love--this was one of the sweetest and best family shows ever made. If it ever comes out on DVD, I guarantee you I'll be one of the first to get a copy.
Ttyr

Ttyr

I lived 2 blocks from the producer and went to Seth Low Jrhs with him. this was warm and moving because it was based on true stories, I was there so I know, names, places, people, (gary Zaner) were real people. Phillis, was real. Mr. Web was real.......I love this show.......put in on DVD. The show where the kids is going to Bronx High schools of science, he is trying to make up his mind. The train ride, my friends aren't going there, and so on......His mother says "Gary Zaner got accepted as well and his mother Gerty will be driving him. It was moving because they are real and years ago Gary died very suddenly.

What a nice tribute Gary Goldberg paid his friend.

a graduate of Jack and Irv's Luncheonette

Bensonhurst at the time this story took place was a very different place then when a black guy was killed looking at a used car,many years before that unfortunate situation.......
Āłł_Ÿøūrš

Āłł_Ÿøūrš

This is what weekly, family television series should strive to become. This is a warm view of a close knit family, intensely involved with family values. Everyone should see how family problems are handled in the context of the extended family with respect and consideration for everyone and everything. The series ended entirely too soon, we need these lessons!
Bynelad

Bynelad

This is one of the best series on television - especially for someone growing up in the NYC area in the 1950's. So unfortunate that it never picked up an audience during its original run. Kudos to BRAVO for airing it now.
Kabei

Kabei

I, too loved this show. It was like being back in South Bronx in the 50's (has it been that long?) and running all around my apartment building where relatives lived on different floors.

We played in those halls and the neighborhood was our world .. Everyone knew each other and the building was made up of all races and nationalities.

Marion Ross was excellent as Sophie Berger. Her personality was one I recognized. The constant urge to have people eat her food and listen to her opinion was very typical of the grandmas I remember. Thank you Harry David Goldberg!

The opening song was wonderful. I'm so glad I finally found this series on DVD.

I have searched forever to find this show on DVD. AND I FOUND IT! Go to tvdvdplanet.com. It is pricey but I couldn't find it anywhere else.
Wymefw

Wymefw

How predictable and unfortunate that CBS took "Brooklyn Bridge" off the air-an "oasis" in the desert of television-one of the very best television series that ever existed. How fortunate that Bravo (on cable) has picked it up. What a treat to watch something as alive and vital as this series is-something not "canned" and contrived as most television is today.
Ucantia

Ucantia

This show needs to be on television again. Each new generation needs to see how a family can function. Parents are "together" in marriage and love each other and are treated with respect. The grandparents are also respected and teach their culture quietly and effectively. I loved the morals and humor the show presented. The entire family and friends were of the same down to earth real people character. We need shows today that not only show two parents but also show Mom and Dad are not idiots who have to have their child or the "hip" friend explain life to them. This show needs to be on DVD. Don't miss this show if some network finally steps away from cookie cutter sitcoms. Brooklyn Bridge is MUST SEE TV.
Kalrajas

Kalrajas

What a poignant, lovely, well done show of real people in a real neighborhood, in an era when children grew up with an innocence that somehow has disappeared. I feel sorry for everyone who did not and those who will never experience life as it was then. I was lucky enough to do so in a similar setting in late 1950's Baltimore, but I did not appreciate it until adulthood. I thought the series was expertly cast, especially the grandparents and the father.

Most of the episodes were of situations that most of us raised in that time could identify with. But in typical fashion, CBS could not see beyond the end of their noses, and summarily killed this high quality, critically praised series. Too bad for us, and too bad for them.

I am going on a quest to find the series on DVD.
Winenama

Winenama

Agree with all prior comments- the show was well written & well acted. The kids were not stereotyped, sappy types -just real kids, as were the Parents/Grandparents. No canned laughter, no dopey, imbecilic unfunny lines. Shows like Seinfeld,The Honeymooners, The Wonder Years, MASH, All in the Family, NYPD Blue, West Wing & #1- The Sopranos are "quality" products. Programmers like to appeal to the lowest common denominator (Jerry Springer mentality)with Reality crap shows & unfunny cheesy comedies. TOO BAD for those of us who enjoy QUALITY- I guess that we are in the minority.There are so few TV shows worth watching- thank goodness for the History Channel, A&E & CNN.
Fenritaur

Fenritaur

Three generations in my family watched this show together every week. I would love to have a copy of the series, in DVD or video, or taped from Bravo, which I didn't have access to when it aired Brooklyn Bridge. The show is a gem, and I would love to be able to watch it again, with friends who have never had the pleasure of seeing it.
Celace

Celace

I have been around long enough to have looked at t.v. from its earliest years and "Brooklyn Bridge" was by far the best series I have watched to date. I can remember when this series came out in 1991 that I was hoping for a long run but evidently the mind set of most people out there can't accept extraordinary television.
Nirn

Nirn

Goldberg's 'Brooklyn Bridge' was definitely one of the best TV Series ever made....next would be 'Mad About You'....both high quality TV. Loving, poignant and filled with family values that enriched family lives. Oh, how I wish my own grandchildren had grown up with shows like Brooklyn Bridge. Thank God Mr. Goldberg put this TV show on DVD for sale. My family bought it for me for the holidays--and I have watched it and cried...cried with joy!

God Bless Mr. Goldberg and his wonderful cast!!!

Sincerely--one of his many, many devoted fans C. Townshend Halkovich 1401 Rockville Pike, HFM-115/RKWL I/Suite 6150 Rockville, MD 20852
Larosa

Larosa

I too am not Jewish or from New York, but I would catch this show, accurately described in another post as Jewish Wonder Years (if for nothing else to give you a direction to go in), and be stunned by the grandmother. I could not place where I recognized the blue eyed woman from, but she was astonishingly familiar.

Had I seen her in a soap opera? She wasn't from a movie. Then I finally realized it was Marion Ross, who had played Mrs. Cunningham on Happy Days for nearly a decade. Sadly the show was not centered around her as she was the only shining grace.

Much like Fox's Family Guy, Brooklyn Bridge seemed to be misdirected. It wanted to thrive on nostalgia (which it must have assumed all of America would be having, whether they were Jewish and from New York or not) and be full of "remember when?"

But the show was off kilter. Ross was stunning, a virtual dynamo to observe and listen to. She had to audition for the role three times, by the way.

Rarely does a performer who is so typecast get a chance to be effective and shine in a different area, and Ross got hers and she made it work.

Yet the rest of the cast was dreadful stereotypes, especially Amy Aquino as the mother. No one else sparkled or showed life like Ross did.

Then there would be episodes dealing with Danny Gerard's dating an Irish girl with James Naughton and Constance McCashlin as her parents. The song "Tonight" from West Side Story would play, the moment before the rumble, when the parents were all going to meet over dinner (turned out this little bit with the song was really not necessary).

Each family was defensive about its own stereotypes (Naughton would say if the kids grew up and married, he wanted them to have a dozen kids. He would tell the waiter to bring the wine and leave the bottle. Irish stereotypes).

Blessing was also funny.

But the ending was a true gem in television; While listening to Danny Boy, we see Naughton trying to understand Jewish scripture, then we see Marion Ross clutching the album cover listening to Danny Boy and her eyes were filled with tears.

Naughton would return, separated from his wife. Little things like a street vending scene worked brilliantly, because Ross's character and even Naughton's had a focus and direction.

But the rest of the group spent their time at the kitchen tables, going over to see Morty and Ida, marveling over this new thing called television. Fifties stereotypes.

the worst by far was when the boy began singing doo whop in the boys restroom.

Joel Grey would show up as a cousin who survived the holocaust. If Carol Kane had been given more airtime, she would have been outstanding as well. Why wasn't Kane the daughter of Ross?

Grand show, but it was distorted.

I never did forget that the show took place in Bensonhurst, which was where just five years earlier in the mid-eighties, a black youth was shot and killed for trying to find out about an automobile for sale.

I recall thinking there was no way a show would have been placed in Selma Alabama or Philadelphia Mississippi during the sixties and expect nostalgia to work there as well.

Ah, Hollywood.