A, My Name is Alex

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"A, My Name is Alex"
Family Ties episodes
Episode nos.Season 5
Episodes 23 & 24
Directed byWill Mackenzie
Written byGary David Goldberg & Alan Uger
Produced byGary David Goldberg
Original air dateMarch 12, 1987 (1987-03-12)
Running time60 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"A, My Name Is Alex" is a two-part hour-long

television series Family Ties
. The episodes aired on March 12, 1987, as an hour-long episode, with the second half-hour broadcast without commercials.

The episode won numerous awards, including a

DGA Award. In 1997, TV Guide named this episode on their list of 100 Greatest Episodes.[1]

Plot

Part 1

While the rest of the Keaton family grieves over the sudden death of Alex's childhood friend Greg McCormick, Alex himself is acting strange, gradually being overcome by a volatile mixture of emotions that he futilely tries to hide. We learn that Greg was killed in a car crash while running an errand that Alex had declined to help him with.

After Greg's funeral, Alex begins showing symptoms of survivor guilt, admitting to Mallory that, "My life was saved out of smallness, out of lack of generosity to a friend"; he then says that he should have been in the car with Greg, and then angrily asks himself "Why am I alive??" Steven and Elyse attempt to comfort Alex, and help him deal with his emotion by getting him professional help.

Part 2

Alex is talking with an unseen therapist, who helps him to confront the issues he must now deal with resulting from Greg's untimely death. Through play-acting, Alex revisits his grade school days and situations with his family and attempts to reassess his own life.

When the therapist asks if he believes in God, Alex's analytical side tells him no, but when he expounds on "miraculous things", "phenomena of nature", Alex tells the therapist that he does indeed believe in God, even though he doesn't understand His logic behind allowing Greg to die. Alex begins to accept Greg's death and realizes that he can keep Greg's memory alive by being more like him.

The staging of the entire second part is similar to the classic American play Our Town.

Cast

Guest cast

Production

The episode "My Name Is Alex" originally aired on NBC as a special one part episode and was promoted heavily by the network as "Commercial-free".

Reception

Ratings

Critical reception

Awards

The episode won the

. In addition it won an Outstanding Technical Direction/Electronic Camerawork/Video Control for a Series Emmy for Parker Roe (technical director), Paul Basta (cameraperson), Tom Dasbach (cameraperson), Richard Price (cameraperson), John Repczynski (cameraperson), and Eric Clay (senior video control).

References

  1. ^ "The Writers Guild Foundation Library Catalog". Writers Guild of America. Archived from the original on February 26, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  2. ^ "Winner and Nominee Search". Directors Guild of America. Retrieved March 17, 2012.

External links