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Pinkadelica (talk | contribs) Updating infobox, general clean up, adding episode/cast sections, additional category |
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{{
| genre
| creator = Lila Garrett<br>Mort Lachman
| writer = Chet Dowling<br>[[David Garber]]<br>Lila Garrett<br>George Geiger<br>Kevin Hartigan<br>[[April Kelly]]<br>Sandy Krinski<br>Mort Lachman<br>Martin Rips<br>Joseph Staretski
| director = Dick Harwood<br>Nick Havinga<br>Mark Warren
| opentheme =
| composer = Jeff Barry
| country = United States
| first_aired = January 30, 1978▼
| language = {{English}}
| num_seasons = 1
}}▼
| list_episodes =
| executive_producer = [[Charles Fries]]
| producer = Chet Dowling
| editor = Jim McElroy
| cinematography = Jim Kilgore
| camera = [[Multi-camera setup|Multi-camera]]
| runtime = 22–24 minutes
| company = Charles Fries Productions
| distributor =
| channel = [[CBS]]
| first_aired = {{Start date|1978|01|30}}
| last_aired = {{End date|1978|04|24}}
| status = Ended
'''''Baby, I'm Back''''' is an American [[sitcom]] that
==Synopsis==
When Raymond Ellis (Wilson) and Olivia Ellis (Nichols) separate after seven years of marriage, Ray abandons the family (his wife, 7-year-old son Jordan, and 5-year-old daughter Angie) and heads to [[California]]. While in California, Ray finds out that his wife plans to remarry to Colonel Wallace Dickey, and that he has been declared legally dead. This prompts him to move back to [[Washington, D.C.]], where he tries to win back Olivia by proving he is a better husband, and a better father to his kids, and to prove that he is still legally alive. However, he now has to contend with his troublesome mother-in-law Luzelle (Helen Martin) and Olivia's soon to be husband
''Baby, I'm Back'' was abruptly cancelled on April 17, 1978 midway through its first season, due to poor ratings.
==Cast==
The series was short lived but [[BET]] showed reruns in the late 1980s and early-'90s. It has not been rerun since.▼
* [[Demond Wilson]] as Raymond Ellis
* [[Denise Nicholas]] as Olivia Ellis
* Tony Holmes as Jordan Ellis
* [[Kim Fields]] as Angie Ellis
* [[Helen Martin]] as Luzelle Carter Wilson
* Ed Hall as Colonel Wallace Dickey
==Episodes==
{| style="border-collapse: collapse;" border="1" cellpadding="3" width="500"
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
! '''Episode #''' !! '''Episode title''' !! '''Original airdate'''
|-
|-
| 1-2 || "Beat By a Drum" || February 6, 1978
|-
| 1-3 || "The Loneliest Night of the Week" || February 13, 1978
|-
| 1-4 || "The Confessions of Col. Wallace Dickey" || February 20, 1978
|-
| 1-5 || "A Day at the Races" || February 27, 1978
|-
| 1-6 || "Survival of the Fittest" || March 6, 1978
|-
| 1-7 || "Like Father, Unlike Son (a.k.a.) The Odd Couple" || March 13, 1978
|-
| 1-8 || "You Bet Your Wife" || March 20, 1978
|-
| 1-9 || "Baby, I'm Back" || March 27, 1978
|-
| 1-10 || "Pay or Die" || April 3, 1978
|-
| 1-11 || "Farewell to Boyish Charm" || April 10, 1978
|-
| 1-12 || "The Gospel According to Angie" || April 17, 1978
|-
| 1-13 || "Olivia's Job Offer" || April 24, 1978
|}
==Syndication==
▲The series was
==External links==
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*{{tv.com show|4077}}
[[Category:1970s American television series]]▼
[[Category:1978 television series debuts]]
[[Category:1978 television series endings]]
▲[[Category:1970s American television series]]
[[Category:American television sitcoms]]
[[Category:CBS network shows]]
[[Category:Black sitcoms]]
[[Category:
[[Category:Television shows set in Washington, D.C.]]
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