First Time Out

For the Clare Fischer album, see First Time Out (album).
First Time Out
Created by Shelley Jensen
Starring Jackie Guerra
Leah Remini
Craig Anton
Tracy Vilar
Roxanne Beckford
Mia Cottet
Harry van Gorkum
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 16 (4 uniared)
Production
Executive producer(s) Marc Sotkin
Jon Spector
Producer(s) Gail Parent
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) Columbia Pictures Television
Release
Original network The WB
Original release September 10, 1995 (1995-09-10) – December 17, 1995 (1995-12-17)

First Time Out is an American situation comedy that aired on The WB. Originally holding the working title Girlfriends and described as a "Latino Living Single".[1] The series premiered on September 10, 1995, and last aired an original episode on December 17, 1995 after which time it was put on hiatus by The WB,[2] leaving four episodes unaired.

Plot

The sitcom followed energetic, ambitious, chubby Jackie (Jackie Guerra), a Yale University graduate who now has a trendy hair salon in Los Angeles, California, attends law-school classes at night, and longs to find a man. She shares an apartment with her friends Dominique (Leah Remini), a cynical assistant at Ventura Records, and Susan (Mia Cottet), who's aboaut to get her psychotherapist license and is neurotic herself. She's good friends with her co-workers at the salon, Rosa (Tracy Vilar) and Freddy (Harry van Gorkum), an obnoxious, womanizing English hairstylist. Rounding out the cast are Madeline (Roxanne Beckford), a yuppie executive who lives across the hall, and Nathan (Craig Anton), Jackie's klutzy, sex-obsessed childhood friend.

The WB network called Jackie, "the first Latina to star in her own series".

Cast

Episodes

Season 1

Only 12 episodes of First Time Out aired on The WB Television Network. 4 episodes were still unaired.

References

  1. Greg Braxton (May 25, 1995). "WB Lines Up Second Season". The Columbian (Vancouver, Washington). Retrieved 2016-02-27 via HighBeam Research.
  2. "WB Net Revamps Sunday Slate". Variety. December 17, 1995. Retrieved 2016-02-27.

External links

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