The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly) - The Hollywood Reporter Awards Special

Fred Savage Charmed on The Wonder Years

- — SETH ABRAMOVITC­H

The Wonder Years — which returns to ABC on Sept. 22 in a version that follows a Black family in the late 1960s living in Montgomery, Alabama — was nominated for 28 Emmy Awards during its 1988-92 run. Among them was one for star Fred Savage, who at 13 became the youngest male actor ever nominated for outstandin­g lead in a comedy series (a record that still stands). The show won four Emmys, including outstandin­g comedy series in 1988. One of a wave of shows that capitalize­d on aging Baby Boomer audiences’ fascinatio­n with themselves (NBC’s Family Ties and ABC’s thirtysome­thing among them), Wonder Years was a less-jaded take on the theme. Each season was set exactly 20 years before its air date and followed the all-American Arnold family as the events of the era (the Vietnam War, the Civil Rights movement, the Space Race) played out around them. Savage — who portrayed Kevin Arnold (his adult musings were provided in voiceover by Daniel Stern) — was recommende­d to creators Neal Marlens and Carol Black by five separate casting directors on the strength of his work as the grandson in 1987’s The Princess Bride and the 1988 body-swap comedy Vice Versa. “I remember coming into Los Angeles from Chicago with my dad to meet Neal and Carol,” recalls Savage, now 45 and serving as executive producer on the reboot. “We stayed at the Century Park Hotel in Century City. They told me that’s where

President Reagan stayed when he came to Los Angeles. I was very excited about that.” After the meeting, which went very well, Savage and his father celebrated with a seafood lunch at Killer Shrimp. Then came the network test: “I remember standing in this stone and marble conference room doing my scenes in front of a conference table that was a mile long.” Savage learned of his Emmy nomination during a sleepover, from a note left by his friend’s mother on the dishwasher: “Good morning, guys,” it read. “There’s breakfast in the fridge. And congratula­tions, Fred. You were nominated for an Emmy.”

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