Posts tagged "wayans brothers"

The most important question celebrities get asked on award show red carpets is, “What are you wearing?” And TV Land’s 10th Anniversary event was no different! Take a look at the top 10 looks from the amazing night.

Tune in Sunday, April 29 at 9PM/8C!

 
1-Kelly Ripa. This bright blue dress caused a commotion when it sailed down the carpet. In person Kelly is prettier and much smaller than when you see her on TV. She was rehearsing minutes before hitting the carpet, but even with such little time to get ready she looked perfect.
 
2-Only musicians could pull of this bright look. Cindy Wilson, Keith Strickland, Kate Pierson and Fred Schneider of The B-52’s walked the carpet as one group showing that us New Yorkers don’t just wear black.
 
3-The Queen of soul Aretha Franklin dazzled in this very detailed dress. When the lights from the flashes hit the silver you knew why Miss Franklin chose to wear sunglasses. Wink.
 
4- Come on admit it, had Actor Paul Reubens ‘Pee-wee Herman’ worn anything else you would have been disappointed too. Everyone on the carpet loved Pee Wee!

 
5-Real Housewife of New York, Sonja Morgan, had everyone seeing green when she hit the carpet in this stunning evening gown. Telling me she loves to dress up and go to the best events Sonja was certainly in the right place.
 
6-Mackenzie Phillips kept it simple in a dark tailored jacket and simple black top. Proving that black on black never goes out of style just like Mackenzie herself!

 
7-Kelly Ripa’s BFF Faith Ford chose a fun little cocktail dress to wear to the party. The simple spots around the top made sure this retro styled frock showed a little flesh but kept things classy.
 
8-Tommy Davidson stood out from all those black suits in this fun blue number with a great green tie that really popped. And just to prove he still is the coolest guy in the world they are white sneakers he is wearing!
 
9-Carrie Ann Inaba almost stole the entire show when she turned in popping in bright orange. That amazing dancers body this simply draped dressed hung carefully from a gold chain around her neck. And although she assured me there would be no wardrobe malfunctions that evening you couldn’t help but worry. Wink.
 
10-Saving the best for last the Wayans brothers won the evening. Marlon Wayans, Keenen Ivory Wayans and Shawn Wayans all in black showed every man in the room (including me) how superstars roll. You could her the ladies gasp when these three walked the red carpet together as only they could.

If there’s one thing 2012’s TV Land Awards winners have in common, it’s a willingness to buck convention. This year we honor not one, not two, but three shows featuring strong female characters in “One Day at a Time,” “Murphy Brown” and “Laverne & Shirley.” Then there’s “In Living Color,” which shattered stereotypes with its cast of irreverent black comedians (plus Jim Carrey), and “Pee-Wee’s Playhouse,” which doesn’t resemble any other show before or since. Add Queen of Soul Aretha Franklin into the mix as winner of the Icon Award, and you’ve got an lineup of amazing shows and people that truly broke the mold.


Innovator Award: “One Day at a Time”

When “One Day at a Time” debuted in 1975, the families on most TV shows were “traditional,” with two married parents and a couple of adorable, rosy-cheeked kids. A sitcom about a divorcée (Bonnie Franklin) raising two rebellious teenage daughters (Mackenzie Phillips and Valerie Bertinelli) on her own wasn’t just rare for the time — it was practically subversive. “One Day at a Time” was ahead of the curve in addressing weighty topics such as birth control, suicide and teenage runaways; but it ran for nine successful seasons because it was funny, helped in no small part by the frequent drop-ins and double entendres of toolbelt-clad super Schneider (Pat Harrington).


Impact Award: “Murphy Brown”

At first, “Murphy Brown” seemed like another version of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”: a female-led sitcom set in a broadcast newsroom. But acerbic, recovering alcoholic, fortysomething news anchor Murphy Brown (Candice Bergen) became a powerhouse icon for the modern working woman, tackling work, current events and life issues — even unwed motherhood, once a TV taboo — with humor, toughness and grace … and of course, a little help from her news team and house painter Eldin. The show, which ran from 1988-1998, won two Emmys for Best Comedy and a record-setting five Emmys for Bergen.


Pop Culture Award: “Pee-Wee’s Playhouse” 

One of those rare children’s shows that could be enjoyed by kids and adults — but in different ways — “Pee-Wee’s Playhouse” introduced us to bow-tied man-child Pee-Wee Herman, played by the man once known as Paul Reubens. With his squeaky voice, cheery catchphrases, zany enthusiasm and assortment of friends both human (Cowboy Curtis, Miss Yvonne) and non-human (Chairy, Jambi the genie, Globey), Pee-Wee never lost his sense of childlike wonder, making his “Playhouse” a one-of-a-kind show that talked to kids, but never talked down to them. “I know you are, but what am I?”


Fan Favorite Award: “Laverne & Shirley”

They were gonna do it their way, yes their way … The irrepressible Laverne De Fazio and Shirley Feeney (Penny Marshall and Cindy Williams) debuted as Fonzie’s friends on “Happy Days,” but the roommates and Shotz Brewery co-workers made their dreams come true on their own show, which ran from 1976 to 1983. Though they were both (on and off again) single, Laverne and Shirley’s romantic lives never mattered so much as their quirks (Shirley loved her Boo Boo Kitty, Laverne loved her Pepsi and milk), their friends and neighbors (goofballs Lenny and Squiggy) and their sunny determination to “make it after all,” no matter how many comic misunderstandings or pratfalls it took.


Groundbreaking Award: “In Living Color” - The Cast

“In Living Color,” on the air from 1990 to 1994, was unlike any other show on TV. The sketch series was crass, hilarious and unafraid to offend, no matter who it lampooned — gays, the homeless, disabled people, African-Americans or fire marshals — and oh yeah, it featured an almost all-black cast busting stereotypes upside down and sideways. The launching pad for Keenen Ivory Wayan, Damon Wayans, David Alan Grier, Jamie Foxx and “token white guy” Jim Carrey, “In Living Color” brought a wild, off-color brand of humor (as well as cutting-edge hip-hop acts) to mainstream America, and it won the 1990 Emmy for Best Variety, Music or Comedy Series.


Groundbreaking Award: “In Living Color” - The Fly Girls

Some people watched “In Living Color” for its gut-bustingly funny sketches … but some people just watched it for the Fly Girls. Choreographed by Rosie Perez (herself a former “Soul Train” dancer), the Fly Girls punched up the show with their razor-sharp dance routines and eye-catching outfits, sometimes even appearing in skits. They weren’t too tough on the eyes, either. Winning the title of Most Famous Former Fly Girl would be a then-unknown singer and dancer named Jennifer Lopez, whose bodacious booty joined the show in its third season.


Host: Kelly Ripa

She got her big break on the ABC soap opera “All My Children,” playing Adam Chandler’s daughter Hayley Vaughan for 12 years (from 1990 to 2002). But since then, she’s left Pine Valley far behind. After an on-air audition process, she won the job of co-hosting “Live with Regis and Kelly” alongside Regis Philbin in 2001, and then took over sole hosting duties for the show (now called “Live! With Kelly”) when Philbin retired in 2011. With her girl-next-door appeal and ability to put guests at ease, it’s no wonder so many viewers love waking up to coffee and Kelly every morning.


Icon Award: Aretha Franklin

She isn’t just music royalty — she’s the Queen of Soul. In her 52-year career, Franklin has 18 Grammys, 20 No. 1 singles on Billboard’s R&B chart and 45 Top 40 hits on Billboard’s Hot 100. She was the first female artist inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (in 1987). And despite some recent health issues, the 70-year-old is still going strong, releasing new albums and going out on tour. Is there any question she’s a cultural icon? Aretha, we have one word for you: respect.


House Band: The B-52s

“We were at a party,” the B-52s sang in their first hit, “Rock Lobster,” and they’re still at that same party an amazing 34 years later. Fronted by Fred Schneider, Cindy Wilson and Kate Pierson, the band (whose name derives from the bouffant hairdos Pierson and Wilson used to favor) knows how to have a good time, and there are few better ways to fill a dance floor than to put their unbelievably catchy song “Love Shack” on and turn the volume way, way up. Tiiiin roof! Rusted.


Presenters: Katie Couric and Fran Drescher

Couric is a renowned American journalist, a special correspondent for “ABC News” and former anchor for “CBS Evening News” and NBC’s “Today”; she’ll soon host the syndicated talk show “Katie.” Drescher, who had early memorable roles in “Saturday Night Fever” and “This Is Spinal Tap,” shot to fame as “The Nanny” and now stars on TV Land’s “Happily Divorced.” Who better to present at the 2012 TV Land Awards than these two leading women of the small screen?

Tune in to the 10th Anniversary TV Land Awards on April 29 at 9PM/8C!