The Ugliest Girl in Town (TV Series 1968–1969) Poster

(1968–1969)

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5/10
The Classic Hollywood Dogpile, in more ways than one
eschwartzkopf26 August 2008
Anyone who's made it this far on IMDb to The Ugliest Girl in Town likely knows that this is considered one of the worst American TV series of all time. This is a tag often given out by people who've never watched a minute of the show; it just sounds good to trash it, based on its iffy premise and the fact that, well, everyone else trashed it.

It's also unfair. TUGIT, to be sure, is a pretty mediocre entry in the spectrum of TV series – let along sitcoms – but it's time to quit the blind bashing. If anything, it offers fair warning that intercontinental transplants of shows and concepts can be risky business, and that part often isn't heeded. (Coupling, anyone?) The leads of Peter Kastner and Patricia Blake are an engaging couple, having more than a few giggles making the best of Kastner's cross-dressing antics as Timmy/Timmie. In a situation where he can't possibly take himself seriously, Kastner's portrayal of a Hollywood talent agency young-man-on-the-hustle (think Mike Ovitz with a goofy streak) who's sidetracked by love at first sight is just about believable, due to his self-deprecating style. The pilot even dips into an effective bit of pathos as he sees the new love of his life jet off from LAX to London forever, except that ….

The real problem comes with trying to merge the wittier (certainly compared to U.S. standards) British sitcom style with the hit-them-over-the-hammer joking of American sitcoms that derived from various Lucille Ball vehicles. It's balancing the subtle with the shtick, which really didn't work until five guys (at just about the same time) down at the BBC hit the solution by going absurd with Monty Python's Flying Circus.

It's not that Americans didn't stop trying, as the same kind of U.S./U.K. TV comedy merger went another round with From a Bird's Eye View, which tanked two years later in Britain and whiled away as one of those NBC import summer time-burners (unlike better series such as Strange Report).

The Ugliest Girl in Town wasn't the best execution of a concept, but it had its funny moments with likable leads romping through the last vestiges of Swinging London. There are hundreds of shows (and I swear I've seen most of them) that offered far worse and escaped the constant dead-horse beating this one gets.
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Something For All You Music Trivia Buffs
Brainy-218 July 1999
Although I can barely remember a thing about the plot or characters of this short-lived sitcom, for some reason, the melody and lyrics of the theme song are as vivid in my mind today as they were thirty years ago when I last heard them. Which just goes to show you, even the most forgettable of TV programs, can at least produce a memorable tune:

Who owns that fabulous face? The Ugliest Girl In Town........... Who's clothes are setting the pace? The Ugliest Girl In Town....

Since the day she made the scene................................ She's made the cover of every magazine.......................... She's got the whole world in a spin............................. She's so far out, she's in!.....................................

Guys are bustin' to date, The Ugliest Girl In Town.............. Girls are trying to imitate, The Ugliest Girl In Town...........

You Don't have to be a, Mia or Sophia,.......................... This is the year of the clown................................... Be the chickiest, kickiest, Ugliest Girl In Town................
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1/10
It Is Awful!
richard.fuller117 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Remembering things like Work It on ABC and apparently Ask Harriet from 1998, I had Ugliest Girl In Town presented to me, and quite honestly, nothing is there.

The idea the wig makes him look female is lost. Long hair like this on men, as was mentioned (in fact, that was supposed to be how it all began), long hair was common on men.

Second, he doesn't even attempt to dress as a woman. He constantly wears capes, ponchos and various other long robes, or he wears pants??? So how on earth does anyone mistake a man wearing a wig for a woman? it's not there at all.

Third, his name is Timmy and his 'female guise' is 'Timmie' as tho that is the feminine form, which it isn't. But in listening to a TV show, they sound the same, so again, no difference at all.

It's as tho someone wanted to comment on the upcoming long-hair look as being like a woman, but with an American in the guise. But of course, there's no dress, no high heels, no jewelry, no makeup, all the jokes that accompany such an impersonation.

The show is up on youtube. Go look for yourself. It isn't 'quirky' or anything else.

It's badly done and arranged.

At that time, there had been Milton Berle, Some Like It Hot, Max Baer as Jethrine Bodine on Beverly Hillbillies and even the men of Gilligan's Island dressing as women in the final episode.

All showed it takes more than just a wig.

Thumbs down all around to this deservedly so, horribly forgotten show.
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8/10
Long before there was "Tootsie"...there was "Timmie".
Little-Mikey31 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
The Ugliest Girl in Town predates Tootsie by more than a couple years.

I remember this hilarious sit-com, about Timothy Blair, a "nobody" who accidentally becomes a very hot actress. Offers come in and "she" is a hit. However, his dream is to become a successful ACTOR.

Finally, an offer comes in and his dream appears to finally come true. He can be finally free of his alter-ego, "Timmie". So he plots to have her "killed" in a helicopter mishap.

He puts his plan into action. Dressed as "Timmie", he falls to "her" death, swims to a secluded spot were his girlfriend is waiting with a change of clothes and a new life as an actor.

But there is one catch! He later discovers that the reason he is hired is because he looks so much like "Timmie". But with "Timmie" assumed dead, his big break dies as well.

So he is forced to dress up as "Timmie" and emerge with an alibi.

And like it or not, "Timmie" is here to stay.

With so much many gender-bending comedies out on DVD, like TOOTSIE and TO WONG FU, THANKS FOR EVERYTHING, LOVE JULIE NEWMAR along with so many other movies that have become hits, how nice it would be if this series would likewise come out on DVD, or at least in syndication.
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7/10
Would make a unique rerun for classic TV
jensen-117 November 2002
Airing this sitcom on any classic televison channel would throw a real "cog" to the average classic television buff. To them, a vague recall of the show might occur after hearing the theme song about 2 or 3 times (if they were around and watched tv during the fall of 1968). I was only 9 years of age back then and all that I can remember is the opening theme song and that I was in love with the main characters girl friend (who more than made up for his/her ugliness).
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7/10
It's not that bad
skylubber22 May 2023
Warning: Spoilers
"The Ugliest Girl in Town" as a sitcom would hold its own against any ABC sitcom from the 70s and 80s (well that is a low bar). The premise for each episode is set up in the first few minutes by one of the main characters who speaks to the audience, a la "Call me Kat". Tim and Julie fall in love in the USA, but Julie must return to UK. Through the accidental help of Tim's photographer brother Gene, Tim is offered a modeling job in London (as a girl!) and he takes it to be close to Julie. The three main characters spend most of the episodes in England doing photo shoots and working odd jobs. Tim works as "Timmie" and must hide his true identity. He also has to make money to pay off debts before signing off as the girl model so he and Julie can continue their relationship in public.

The theme song sounds like a mashup of Spanky and Our Gang's "Lazy Days" and "Georgie Girl".

The highpoints of the show are the settings and styles of 1968 which are shown like paging through a style magazine of the era. It's a very nostalgic view of young love in discotheques and on the streets of London and Paris. The camerawork is used to great advantage in these scenes. The other positive aspect is the character development of Tim/Timmie and Peter Kastner's ability to seamlessly exchange character identities when needed. The low points are the silly plots (what would our trans character do in this situation?), and the lack of any of the other characters development, except for the antagonist David Courtney. It might be considered that a show like this would work well with our 2020's focus on LGTBQ and DEI, but Tim makes it clear he is just playing a role to stay with his girl.

All in all, an average sitcom with some positive unique nostalgic aspects of 1968. At least, the pilot and some of the available episodes online are worth viewing if only for the nostalgic potential.
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I LOVED THIS SHOW !
Tridan21 September 1999
I was only 7 years old when it originally aired on ABC but also the song has been stuck in my mind for all of these years. I

keep hoping that TV Land will play this series. I remember that the title character was named Timmy and the series was set in London. Timmy had a screen in his apartment that he would step behind and then transform himself into a girl, with wig, skirt, make-up and all of the accessories. I wish I could see this series again. I loved it.
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Who even remembers this show from the late-1960's,that lasted one season and the show that replaced Batman on ABC
rcj53651 March 2011
I can't really rate about a lost and forgotten sitcom from the late-1960's that I never got the chance to watch unless it showed up somewhere on some cable channel that caters to old television shows that people really don't want to know or watch them for that manner. But this I do know about this show titled THE UGLIEST GIRL IN TOWN that lasted no more than four months on the air. For anyone who has seen it has to relate that this was one of the worst sitcoms of all time,and I have seen far off worse than THE UGLIEST GIRL IN TOWN.

For one,this was the show that actually replaced the wildly popular and almost successful BATMAN which became the surprise hit of the mid-1960's after ABC-TV canceled it after more than two and a half seasons on the air in March of 1968 due to terrible ratings. Secondly,this show was produced by the same people who brought you "Bewitched",and "The Flying Nun",which were two major hits on ABC(under executive producer Harry Ackerman and producer Jerry Davis). The series lasted no more than four months on the air from the premiere episode on September 26,1968 until the final curtain of the series on January 30,1969. A total of 17 episodes were produced in color which some scenes were filmed on location in Hollywood(on the studio lot of Screen Gems/Columbia Pictures which produced the series),and on location in England. The overall plot of the series was that the hero "Timothy Blair"(Peter Kastner) had to dress up in drag(as a woman)to remain in England to be near the woman he loves(Patricia Blake). He is mistaken for a female model by a big-time advertising agent,and soon becomes the toast of the advertising world. Some of the antics involving Kastner's cross-dressing antics as Timmy/Timmie came in some various predicaments but it didn't help in the ratings neither.

ABC put THE UGLIEST GIRL IN TOWN on its Thursday night schedule where it was opposite NBC's Daniel Boone that really killed it in the Nielsens. And it was opposite the short-lived series Blondie on CBS. TUGIT wasn't the best execution of a concept,but it was first sitcom of it's day to have a leading male hero dressed in drag....long before Peter Scolari and Tom Hanks did it for television on Bosom Buddies,and long before Dustin Hoffman pulled off the unthinkable in the film Tootsie. And to think that this show was the worst sitcom of the 1960's? I can think of some that were far off worst that were stinkers in their own right....think the worst of the worst TV-sitcoms of the 1960's.... "Mister Ed", "It's About Time", "F-Troop", "My Mother The Car",and even "Gilligan's Island" to name a few.
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Before Peter Scolari and Tom Hanks did their drag act in the 1980s
theowinthrop26 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I can't really rate THE UGLIEST GIRL IN TOWN - I never watched it. The plot was possibly (someone may correct me on this) the first sitcom to deal with a leading male hero in drag much of the time. This was about fifteen years before Peter Scolari and Tom Hanks were on BOSOM BUDDIES.

The plot of this series was that the hero "Timothy Blair" (Peter Kastner) had to go drag to remain in England to be near the woman he loved. He is mistaken for a female model by an advertising agent, and soon becomes the toast of the advertising world. The show was a flop in the ratings, lasting only four months.

So why comment on this show that I really never saw? Because of one small aspect to it not touched on: why did somebody create such a show? It's because of the phenomenon of the model "Twiggy". The British model became the best know model of her day because of her small, thin frame, and delicate features. Not a bad looking woman, but not the typical gorgeous model that was seen then or since. Although I feel Twiggy was good looking then (and still is when she appears) many people were amazed at her success. Al Capp, for example, made fun of her in several issues of L'IL ABNER. Kastner's physical frame was (and is) far bigger than Twiggy's, but the joke was the success of "Timmie" the model he pretended to be was due to her being so rottenly ugly looking. Hence the title of the program: this successful model of "Carnaby Street" fashions in London is really quite bad looking when one analyzes "her" appearance.
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