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{{About|the sitcom|the shopping center|stripStrip mall}}
{{NorefsUse mdy dates|date=April 20102016}}
{{Infobox television |
| image = [[Image:JulieBrown-StripMall.jpg]]|
show_name = Strip Mall|
| caption = [[Julie Brown]] as Tammi Tyler
image = [[Image:JulieBrown-StripMall.jpg]]|
| captionruntime = [[Julie22 Brown]] as Tammi Tyler|minutes
| creator(s) = [[Julie Brown]]<br />[[Charlie Coffey (writer)|Charlie Coffey]]|
format = [[Situation comedy|Sitcom]]|
| starring = [[Julie Brown]]<br />[[Victoria Jackson]]<br />[[Jim O'Heir]]<br />[[Bob Koherr]]<br />[[Juan Vidal]]<br />[[Amy Hill]]<br />Loretta Fox<br />[[Tim Bagley]]<br />[[Jonathan Mangum]]<br />[[Chris Wylde]]<br/>[[Allison Dunbar]]|
runtime = 22 minutes|
| country = United States
creator(s) = [[Julie Brown]]<br />[[Charlie Coffey]]|
| language = English
starring = [[Julie Brown]]<br />[[Victoria Jackson]]<br />[[Jim O'Heir]]<br />[[Bob Koherr]]<br />[[Juan Vidal]]<br />[[Amy Hill]]<br />Loretta Fox<br />[[Tim Bagley]]<br />[[Jonathan Mangum]]<br />[[Chris Wylde]]<br/>[[Allison Dunbar]]|
| countrynetwork = USA|[[Comedy Central]]
| first_aired = June 18,{{start date|2000|6|18}}
network = [[Comedy Central]]|
| last_aired = March 11,{{end date|2001|3|11}}
first_aired = June 18, 2000|
| num_seasons = 2|
last_aired = March 11, 2001|
| num_episodes = 20|
num_seasons = 2|
num_episodes = 20|
}}
'''''Strip Mall''''' is a [[situation comedy]] that aired on [[Comedy Central]] from [[June 2000|June]] [[2000 in television|2000]] until [[March 2001|March]] [[2001 in television|2001]].
 
'''''Strip Mall''''' is a [[situation comedysitcom]] that aired on [[Comedy Central]] from [[June 2000|June]] [[2000 in television|2000]] until [[March 2001|March]] .<ref>[[2001http://tv.nytimes.com/show/160211/Strip-Mall/overview inThe television|2001New York Times]].</ref>
The series, a spoof of [[prime time]] [[soap operas]], was set in [[Van Nuys, California]] which is series star/creator/executive producer [[Julie Brown]]'s hometown. The titular "Strip Mall" was the fictional Plaza del Toro. Brown starred as Tammi Tyler, an ex-child actress who at 12 had stabbed her adult costar to death after eating a cupcake laced with [[Phencyclidine|PCP]]. Now, as an adult,Tammi worked as a waitress at the Funky Fox, a bar located in the Plaza del Toro. One of her fellow employees was Patti the barmaid ([[Victoria Jackson]]). In the series premiere Tammi married the owner of Starbrite Cleaners, Harvey Krudup ([[Jim O'Heir]]), who she thought was worth millions, but realized that Starbrite's lone location was at the Plaza. For the rest of the show's run Tammi would try (unsuccessfully) to end her marriage.
 
The series, a spoof of [[prime time]] [[soap operas]], was set in [[Van Nuys, California]], which is series star/creator/executive producer [[Julie Brown]]'s hometown. The titular "Strip Mall" was the fictional Plaza del Toro. Brown starred as Tammi Tyler, an ex-child actress who at 12 had stabbed her adult costarco-star to death after eating a cupcake laced with [[Phencyclidine|PCP]]. Now, as an adult, Tammi worked as a waitress at the Funky Fox, a bar located in the Plaza del Toro. One of her fellow employees was Patti the barmaid ([[Victoria Jackson]]). In the series premiere, Tammi married the owner of Starbrite Cleaners, Harvey Krudup ([[Jim O'Heir]]), who she thought was worth millions, but realized that Starbrite's lone location was at the Plaza. For the rest of the show's run, Tammi would try (unsuccessfully) to end her marriage.
 
==Other businesses and main characters==
Other businesses at the ''Plaza del Toro'' included a Chinese restaurant, ''Wok Don't Run'', owned by Fanny Sue Chang ([[Amy Hill]]) and Althea (Loretta Fox), both of whom were lesbians; the ''Good Things'' gift shop, owned by Rafe ([[Maxwell Caulfield]]) and Bettina BarrettBellingham ([[Eliza Coyle]]); and ''We Shoot You Video'', which employed two college film graduates Barry ([[Chris Wylde]]) and Josh Macintosh ([[Jonathan Mangum]]), as well as a pornographyporn actress named Hedda Hummer ([[Allison Dunbar]]). There was also an insurance agency near the plaza, run by an agent named Dwight ([[Tim Bagley]]).
 
[[Bob Koherr]], who had directed Brown in the [[1997 in film|1997]] movie ''[[Plump Fiction]]'', played a biker named Blank and his identical brothers Blair and Blunt. [[Juan Vidal]] played Tammi's Latin lover, Fernando, in Season 2. Former [[Miss Alabama]] [[Kim Wimmer]] played Elyce Cantwell.
 
==On the set==
All twenty episodes of this series were written by the same writers. In addition to Brown and Koherr, episodes of the series were directed by [[Alan Cohn]]; [[Sam Irvin]] (who also directed Brown in ''[[Out There (film)|Out There]]'' and ''[[Fat Rose and Squeaky]]''); and [[Bobcat Goldthwait]] (the latter previously worked with Brown in ''[[Medusa: Dare to Be Truthful]]'' and ''[[Shakes the Clown]]''). Frequent guest stars on the series included [[Stella Stevens]], one of several actresses to play Harvey's mom, and [[Cindy Williams]]--like—like Brown, a Van Nuys native—who played herself in several episodes. Many of the behind-the-scenes crew came from Brown's previous series, ''[[Clueless (TV series)|Clueless]],'' which was also set in the [[Los Angeles, California]] area.
 
Every episode of this series ended with a cliffhanger. The final episode ended with Tammi being thrown from an airplane by Dwight, who yelled, "Goodbye, Tammi Tyler!" Brown, who along with [[Charlie Coffey (writer)|Charlie Coffey]] produced ''Strip Mall'', was about to plan the series' third season when Comedy Central decided to cancel the series because, given the recession at the time, it was too expensive to continue. ''Strip Mall'' was one of two Comedy Central sitcoms cancelled in June 2001 due to cost reasons; the other was ''[[That's My Bush!]]''
 
==References==
In a fate similar to other projects starring and/or produced by Julie Brown, Amy Hill's voice eventually became better known for the children's cartoon series ''[[Jackie Chan Adventures]].''
{{reflist}}
 
==External links==
* {{imdbIMDb title|0227956}}
{{Comedy Central programming}}
 
[[Category:Comedy Central showssitcoms]]
[[Category:2000s American satirical television sitcomsseries]]
[[Category:2000s American televisionsingle-camera seriessitcoms]]
[[Category:Television shows set in Los Angeles, California]]
[[Category:2000 American television series debuts]]
[[Category:2001 American television series endings]]
[[Category:American English-language television shows]]
[[Category:American television soap operas]]
[[Category:Television soap opera parodies]]
[[Category:Television series created by Julie Brown]]
[[Category:Television series created by Charlie Coffey (writer)]]