The Partridge Family was loosely based on a real-life musical family called “The Cowsills.” The TV show was inspired by these troubadours whose hit song “The Rain, the Park & Other Things” made waves when it was released in 1967.
At first, the show planned to cast the family as the Partridges, but after ABC decided to go with Shirley Jones, the kids of the Cowsill family backed out.
Shirley’s Husband Couldn't Handle Her Fame
In 1974, The Partridge Family went off the air for good while Shirley’s marriage to David Cassidy’s father Jack Cassidy went off the tracks. The years she played TV’s most popular mom on that Seventies show were rough on her husband. He was jealous and angry.
Shirley said, “His overriding sense of inferiority in the face of my success drove him into the arms of other women even more often than before.” Even David Cassidy admitted that his father had alcohol and anger issues due to the family’s sudden rise to fame.
A Grammy Nomination for the Family
The Partridge Family, as a musical group, topped the Billboard Hot 100 with the hit single “I Think I Love You,” selling over 5 million copies and outselling the Beatles’ “Let it Be.” With lead singer Cassidy a verifiable teen idol, the album hit No. 4 on the Billboard Top 200.
Selling millions of records domestically and internationally, the group produced eight studio albums. In 1971, the TV show was nominated for the Best New Artist Grammy. In total, The Partridge Family group released 11 singles.
Why Didn’t Shirley Jones Want to Play Carol Brady?
First of all, Shirley Jones chose Shirley Partridge instead of Carol Brady because she liked the idea of playing a single, working mom during the days when stay-at-home moms ruled. She said, “While the idea of playing the mother in The Brady Bunch was initially attractive to me, I turned it down because I didn’t want to be the mother taking the roast out of the oven and not doing much else.”
She was drawn to the role of the Partridge family’s mom, “First, because she was destined to become the first working mother on TV, and I loved the script. Second, because working on the series would let me be an almost full-time mom and raise my kids.”
And Then There Was Ricky
In season four, Ricky showed up. Ratings were in a slump, and adding an adorable little boy seemed as if it would bring just the bounce the show needed. The little guy, an actor named Ricky Segall, was only four years old.
He played neighbor Ricky Stevens, a boy who liked to sing. With zero results, the boy was dismissed mid-season.