Movie
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Best Supporting Performance by a Male in a Feature Length Drama | 2006 | David
Best TV Movie | 2006
Best TV Movie or Miniseries | 2006
TV Movie or Miniseries | 2006 | Jim
Best Lead Performance by a Female in a Feature Length Drama | 2006 | Michelle
Best MakeUp in a Feature Length Drama | 2006 | Joanne
Best Production Design in a Feature Length Drama | 2006 | Phil
Performance in a TV Movie or Miniseries | 2006 | Chris
Best Production Design or Art Direction in a Dramatic Program or Series | 2005 | Phil
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Dramatic Program or MiniSeries | 2005 | Chris
In Marley Brant's 2006 book "Happier Days: Paramount Television's Classic Sitcoms 1974-1984," Robin Williams revealed that he didn't watch the movie, joking, "If they're going to make a bad movie about your life, you should wait for the Cartoon Network version."
Resident "Mork & Mindy" director Howard Storm was critical of the production but heavily praised Chris Diamantopoulos for his portrayal of Robin Williams.
In the scene at the club, where an NBC talent exec is there to see Jay Leno but finds Robin Williams instead, a quick shot is shown of someone 'playing' Jay Leno in his younger days. The actor is actually the winner of a "Jay Leno Look-alike" contest run in 2004 on The Tonight Show.
In the movie, they sold the show to ABC without a pilot by cobbling together footage of Robin Williams in Happy Days: My Favorite Orkan (1978) with Pam Dawber from a shampoo commercial. This did happen, but in reality they used footage of Dawber from the unsold pilot Sister Terri (1978).
Since they couldn't precisely replicate scenes from "Mork & Mindy," writer David Misch utilized rejected dialogue and gags that he'd penned for the series decades earlier.
"Robin Williams: I have to go now, my drugs are wearing off. Anyone wants to sue me, please call my law firms: Sleepy, Dopey, Grumpy, and Shapiro."
"John Byner: [just before storming off set] I can't do this. This is a career killer."