MovieChat Forums > Happy Days (1974) Discussion > Was Happy Days a realistic portrayal of ...

Was Happy Days a realistic portrayal of American life in the 1950s?


https://www.quora.com/Was-Happy-Days-a-realistic-portrayal-of-American-life-in-the-1950s/answer/Jon-Mixon-1

After the third season, any attempt to maintain 1950s hairstyles (on men especially) was largely ended.

None of the major characters smoked. This definitely was not the norm as more than 50% of the American public smoked in that era.

Drinking was uncommon among the major characters. This was also not the norm

Women were treated as equals in the later seasons ( this rarely occurred in the 1950s and certainly wouldn't have occurred in a smaller Midwestern city like Milwaukee.)

Church-going is rarely mentioned even though the show was set in the Upper Midwest at a time when going to church at least weekly was almost mandatory.

Few of the characters used mass transit although it was rare for families to have more than a single car at the time.

"The Fonz" had far too many willing sexual partners who could spend all night with him. Almost no high school aged girls and few college women could be gone from home or campus overnight without some form of excuse.

"The Fonz's" Italian heritage would have been the subject of much more discussion that it was. The same goes for Al, Chaci, as well as Pinkie and Leather Tuscadero. Ethnic Whites were treated slightly better than racial minorities in that time period. Slightly.

Arnold, the Japanese owner of the protagonists hangout, would have experienced significant racial prejudice as both World War II and the Korean Conflict were fresh in the minds of people living in the area.

An episode portrayed a Black friend of Howard Cunningham being married at the Cunningham home. Even though Wisconsin was more tolerant than many areas of the Midwest at that time, Milwaukee has never been known to be a hotbed of racial integration and remains one of America's most segregated cities. This is unlikely to have occurred in real life.

Both racial and ethnic slurs were bandied about quite frequently in the 1950s (in fact, up until the mid to late 1970s in many areas). This never occurs during the show.

The threat of Communism was an ever-present fear at the time. It is never discussed during the show.

Milwaukee was a heavily unionized city in the 1950s. Unions were part of the daily life. This is never mentioned during the run of the series.

It is likely that either Marion or Howard (the protagonist Ritchie Cunningham’s mother and father) would have one of their parents or elder relatives living with them. The show did not portray this occurring.

After the third season or so, neither Potsie Webber nor Ralph Malph are shown having steady girlfriends and, in fact, were shown spending inordinate amounts of time in each other's company. Homosexuality was definitely frowned upon at the time and their "relationship" would have required "clarification" unless they wanted to be ostracized.

reply

LOL...it should be noted that the 1st almost Fonzie less season with Chuck the brother (who disappeared) was drastically different from the rest.

reply

Happy Days was a parody of American life in the 1950s

reply

No, HD was moralizing using a period of American History as a sort of artistic canvas. Not that the effort was any good. As the OP said sexual activity was greatly out of line for what really was outside of the major cities. In my little corner of the NE during the 1970's there was little in the way of sexual activity for those under the age of 21. HD simply amounted to justifying most of the liberal agenda of the day. As I have read before most kids liked Mrs Cunningham as she was clueless as to what was going on around her and in a lot of episodes Howard was not much better.

reply

Yes, the first 3 seasons were in the early '70s, less than 2 decades away from the actual '50s. It was coming off the realistic American Graffiti. As for no smoking/drinking actually there were a few episodes that featured both; maybe you missed them. It had an authentic feel to it. But yes, after it jumped the shark (long before Fonz actually did) in the 4th season any sense of authenticity went out the window in favor of hamming it up for the audience. Hence '70s hair, electronic watches, etc.
I think all OP bullet points has to do with how he may have experienced the '50s. This show depicted middle class Milwaukee life, probably a step above the lifestyle he's talking about.

reply

I don't think that Milwaukee was much different than any other place during the 1950's. A lot of the observations that the OP makes held true in the Northeast during the 1970's which reflects my youth. One step further on religion there was elitism in terms of the various Christian denominations.
Yes, HD was an idealized account of the 1950's but too much to an extreme. The show after the first couple of seasons bore no resemblance to the 1950's other than automobiles.

reply

The first two seasons had more realism to them, but after that they might as well had done it in present day. The hairstyles and how everyone acted was just so wrong. Season one and two are great. Season 3 changed the show by filming it in front of a live audience. Even with that, it was sort of tolerable. Season 4 and from then on were just god awful. I hated the show so much as a kid. Fonzi was an annoying character that I just couldn't stand.

reply

Excellent analysis. The show was unwatchable after the 3rd season.

reply

Absolutely. Those first two seasons made an actual effort to recreate the 1950s, or at least a somewhat recognizable version as far as TV standards at the time would allow. It didn't go into the more troubled aspects of the 1950s & often settled for easy cliches, but at least it was aware that those aspects were present.

But after they went to the live studio audience, the actors played to that audience, and the writers wrote to it. In one of the first 3rd season episodes, Richie makes fun of how his father acts when he's drunk, mockingly so. The Richie of the first 2 seasons would never have done that.

reply

It was a very popular show but dont ask me WHY people want to watch this, but they do.

reply

Unions - since.Howard had his own business and none of the others seem to have worked in factories..

reply

Pretty accurate overall. Except for the part where they totally forget about their first-born son.

reply