Alf
Long before 3rd Rock From the
Sun (but long after My
Favorite Martian) there was ALF.
Not your average Alien Life Form, ALF - a wisecracking,
229-year-old furball - became part of the Tanner family when he
accidentally crashed his spaceship into their garage.
Stranded on Earth after his home planet of Melmac - where he was
known as Gordon Shumway - exploded, Alf lived in Los Angeles with
Willie, Kate and their kids, Lynn and Brian.
The comedy in the show came primarily from five elements: ALF's
inquisitiveness with Earthly things; his interaction with the
Tanner's; the struggle to keep ALF hidden from other Earthlings
(especially the nosy neighbours, The Ochmonek's); his quest to eat
Lucky the family cat and his way with words (see examples below).
"You can pick your friends, and you can pick your nose,
but you can't find a word to rhyme with "orange"
"Never stick Your face in a bag full of angry
Squirrels"
"Why are all of the agricultural TV shows on at 5:30 in
the morning when the farmers are already outside working?"
"Why do Earth cars have so many different gears? On Melmac
we only had three: fast, really fast, and ''yikes, we're going to
die!''
"What do you get if you cross a fungle with a cat?
Eeeeughw! How could you even consider that?"
Alf, though abrasive and crass (and cat-hungry), loved the
Tanners and they loved him. Willie, a mild-mannered social worker,
was often frustrated by his visitor but continually bailed him out
of trouble like he was an extra-terrestrial Steve Urkel.
The
kids were the most sympathetic, with youngster Brian seeing Alf as
the galaxy's best playmate and teenage Lynn seeing Alf as a cute
little orange furry guy (Alf kind of had the hots for her, but you
know humans and their alienist prejudices).
Explaining that your tenant is from another planet can be tricky,
so the Tanners chose to hide Alf from all visitors, including
next-door neighbours Trevor and Raquel Ochmonek.
But if TV and movies have taught us anything, it's that nobody
can hide a wisecracking orange alien from an inquisitive
prepubescent boy, and the Ochmonek's twelve-year-old nephew Jake
proved that theory on ALF. The only other semi-regular was Willie's
brother Neal, who occasionally appeared in ALF's last season.
The producers had wished to keep the mechanics of ALF's movement
a secret, but it was eventually disclosed that a puppet was used in
stationary scenes and diminutive actor Micah Maestros suited up as
the alien for walking scenes. Series co-creator Paul Fusco provided
ALF's voice.
ALF merchandising took off in a big way in the late 1980s,
grossing more than $200m a year at its peak, and the sitcom spawned
a Saturday-morning cartoon series which was a form of ''prequel'',
looking at the alien's life on Melmac before he ended up on Earth.
The cartoon series screened in the USA from 12 September 1987.
This in turn led to a further animated production, ALF Tales,
aired from 16 September 1989. Paul Fusco voiced the character in
both series.

As
often happens with series' whose fates are unknown, the last episode
of ALF was not intended as a series-ender, and it left the title
character's fate in question.
ALF, who was on his way to colonise another planet with fellow
Melmackians Skip and Rhonda (the latter his ex-girlfriend), was
captured by a federal military investigative unit.
The orange guy's fate remained in doubt for several years, but a
1996 TV-movie, Project: ALF, tied up the loose ends and put
fans' minds at rest.
The character of ALF was created by Paul Fusco in 1984. When
Fusco failed to interest Disney Studios and Muppet-man Jim Henson,
he took his idea to NBC's Brandon Tartikoff. NBC agreed to produce
the show, and reaped the rewards.
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