| A Year at the Top | |
|---|---|
| Genre | |
| Created by | Heywood Kling | 
| Written by | Heywood Kling Sandy Veith | 
| Directed by | Marlene Laird Alan Rafkin | 
| Starring | Paul Shaffer Greg Evigan | 
| Theme music composer | Howard Greenfield Paul Shaffer | 
| Composer | Greg Evigan | 
| Country of origin | United States | 
| Original language | English | 
| No. of seasons | 1 | 
| No. of episodes | 5 | 
| Production | |
| Executive producers | Norman Lear Don Kirshner | 
| Producers | Patricia Fass Palmer Darryl Hickman | 
| Running time | 22–24 minutes | 
| Production companies | Don Kirshner Productions TAT Communications Company Tandem Productions | 
| Original release | |
| Network | CBS | 
| Release | August 5 – September 2, 1977 | 
A Year at the Top is an American sitcom that aired for five episodes on CBS from August 5 to September 2, 1977. Produced by T.A.T. Communications Company, the series was created by Heywood Kling and co-executive produced by Don Kirshner and Norman Lear.
Synopsis
Based on the Faust legend, the series stars Paul Shaffer and Greg Evigan as two struggling musicians who make a pact with the son of the devil for a year of success. A Year at the Top also stars Nedra Volz, Priscilla Morrill, Gabriel Dell, and Julie Cobb. Mickey Rooney guest-starred on the pilot episode.[1] The series aired for only five episodes before being canceled by CBS in September 1977.
Expecting the series to be a hit, a soundtrack LP titled Greg & Paul - A Year At The Top was released by Casablanca Records (#NBLP-7068). The album's executive producer was Don Kirshner.
Cast
- Greg Evigan as Greg
- Paul Shaffer as Paul
- Gabriel Dell as Frederick J. Hanover (aka "The Devil's Son")
- Julie Cobb as Trish
- Priscilla Morrill as Miss Worley
- Nedra Volz as Grandma Belle Durbin
Episodes
| Episode # | Episode title | Original airdate | 
|---|---|---|
| 1-1 | "Pilot" | August 5, 1977 | 
| 1-2 | "The Contracts" | August 12, 1977 | 
| 1-3 | "Tightrope" | August 20, 1977 | 
| 1-4 | "The Visits" | August 26, 1977 | 
| 1-5 | "Gray is Beautiful" | September 2, 1977 | 
References
External links