Brady Bunch Spin-Offs

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
(Redirected from The Bradys)
Who the hell gave those people an entire hour?
And the family changed, as all American Families do...children grow up, get married, host variety shows and turn into cartoons.
Narrator, Brady: An American Chronicle

Next to fellow Paramount Production Star Trek: The Original Series, The Brady Bunch most likely holds the title for Most Attempted Spin-Offs. Here then is (as TV Land once put it) ... The Wonder of Brady.

Spinoffs:

The Brady Kids

See The Brady Kids.

The Brady Bunch Hour

The Brady Bunch Variety Hour (also known as The Brady Bunch Hour) was an ABC show from 1976-1977 that had the family move to New York and produce their own Variety Show. It might be the most infamous spin off. It lasted nine episodes.

Tropes used in The Brady Bunch Hour include:
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Ann B. Davis, when it came to having to work with Rip Taylor. In a later memoir by Susan Olsen, it was contended that Davis absolutely did not like Taylor (due to the very adult content of his stand-up comedy act) and refused to even so much as acknowledge him other than what was needed for the show. Taylor, who was a fan of Davis beforehand, was puzzled at her attitude toward him and to this day, still is, since Davis has refused to talk about working on the show.
  • Canon Discontinuity: This series was never mentioned in later spin offs.
  • The Other Darrin: Eve Plumb declined to reprise her role as Jan, and was replaced by Geri Reischl, who received the Fan Nickname "Fake Jan".
  • Puppet Shows: Of the Sid & Marty Krofft variety.
  • Rearrange the Song: By playing it with kazoos.
  • Short Runner
  • So Bad It's Horrible: TV Guide ranked it #4 on its 2002 list of the 50 worst shows in TV history.

The Brady Brides

The series about what happened after Marcia and Jan became adults, which ran for 10 episodes. It began with a 1981 Made for TV Movie titled The Brady Girls Get Married. Jan falls in love with a college professor named Phillip Covington III, while Marcia falls for a toy salesman named Wally Logan.

The sitcom The Brady Brides picked up where The Brady Girls Get Married left off. Marcia and Jan have married their respective boyfriends, and the four of them must now share a house. The husbands don't get along.

Tropes used in The Brady Girls Get Married include:
  • Five Episode Pilot: The movie got divided up into the first three episodes of The Brady Brides.
  • Reunion Show: The only project to successfully reunite the whole "Bunch".
Tropes used in The Brady Brides include:

Marcia: "Have you ever met a man... who rinses off the garbage before he throws it away?"
Jan: "At least my husband throws it away. Yours keeps it around for old times' sake!"


A Very Brady Christmas

The 1988 Made for TV Movie A Very Brady Christmas saw the now-adult Brady Kids reunite with their parents, and stands out as one of the most somber Brady Bunch works.

Tropes used in A Very Brady Christmas include:


The Bradys

Capitalizing on the success of A Very Brady Christmas, the characters received another TV series, The Bradys, in 1990. It also stands out as one of their most somber works. It lasted nine episodes.

Tropes used in The Bradys include:
  • The Alcoholic: Marsha.
  • Cerebus Syndrome: The original show was a sitcom, this was a full-out melodrama. But when the melodrama didn't seem to be working, the network demanded it be changed back into a comedy -- which was accomplished by the dubious device of simply applying a Laugh Track over the still-melodramatic stories.
  • Follow the Leader: Many reviewers felt that the creators were trying to create a 1990s Eight Is Enough.
  • Hey, It's That Guy!: MTV VJ Martha Quinn as Bobby's wife, Tracy.
  • The Other Darrin: This time it was Maureen McCormick who declined to reprise her role, so Marcia was played by Leah Ayres.
  • Rearrange the Song: "Here's the story of the family Brady/A man and wife whose kids are all now grown."
    • Even with only nine episodes, the show managed to produce two versions of the theme ... one instrumental, the other sung by Florence Henderson.
  • Retroactive Recognition: Jonathan Taylor Thomas as Greg's son Kevin.
  • Screwed by the Network: The first episode was a two-hour, and gained a significantly larger audience in the second hour, winning the time slot. CBS decided to go keep the earlier start time.
  • Short Runner: It lasted nine episodes.

Brady: An American Chronicle

To help promote the 1995 movie, cable channel TV Land created this special in the style of Ken Burns' Baseball and The Civil War documentaries, complete with grainy black and white photos, white letter on black background title cards, and experts in the social importance of all things Brady. Featured cameos of Davy Jones and Susan Olsen in character.

Tropes used in Brady: An American Chronicle include:

Narrator: "Tonight TV Land presents this 18 part miniseries...each chapter condensed into the following half hour presentation."

Slash: Cindy...young Cindy. I wish she was that age now... (Laughs)

  • Narrator
  • Rearrange the Song: With a slow and reverent instrumental version.
  • Shout-Out: The last credit is a picture of Robert Reed with the caption "Dedicated to The Man Named Brady"
    • Also references to earlier spin-offs.

Narrator: "And the family changed, as all American Families do...children grow up, get married, host variety shows and turn into cartoons."


The Brady Bunch Movies

See The Brady Bunch (film)


Growing Up Brady

The Made for TV Movie Growing Up Brady aired on NBC in 2000, and depicts some backstage dramas experienced by the original cast and crew of The Brady Bunch.

Tropes used in Growing Up Brady include:
  • As Himself: Barry Williams and Brady Bunch creator/producer Sherwood Schwartz in the film's bookend sequences.
  • Based on a True Story: Barry Williams' book about the production of The Brady Bunch.


A Very Brady Renovation

In Fall 2018, HGTV bought the house used for the exterior shots of the Brady home (after a well-publicized "price is no object" bidding war with Lance Bass of *NSYNC). They completely renovated it (with some help from the actors who portrayed the Brady kids), documenting it every step of the way, by updating the house while still leaving it recognizable as the Brady home -- including the interior, which never looked like the set used to film the series.

A Very Brady Renovation had a September 2019 premiere.

Tropes used in A Very Brady Renovation include: