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- An aspiring actress moves from her hometown of Brewster, New York, to try to make it big in New York City, having to take several offbeat "temp" jobs to support herself in between her various auditions and bit parts.
- In the spirit of "It's a Wonderful Life" (1946), a young woman must give up her dream and remain in her small hometown as head of her family's Building and Loan business.
- A funny anthology featuring various sketches about people having trouble with love and sex.
- 1972–19741h5.7 (27)TV EpisodeAnnie Marie imagines herself in the stories "Alice in Wonderland", "Goldilocks and the Three Bears", "The Wizard of Oz" and "Cinderella".
- 1966–197130mTV-G7.3 (62)TV EpisodeAfter buying tickets for her neighbors from a scalper, Donald mentions that sometimes people are robbed while they are at the show. Ann and Donald remove their Christmas presents from their apartment and get caught by the police.
- When Ann goes to LA with Donald, her father is sure that hanky panky is going on between them.
- Donald disapproves of Ann promoting a soft drink in a TV commercial.
- When Ann injures herself Donald goes overboard taking care of her.
- Uncle Herbert drops in on Ann and Donald with a bunch of get rich quick schemes.
- Donald's secretary is trying to steal Donald from Ann. Ann returns everything he ever gave to her, but changes her mind and has minutes to correct the situation before Donald returns.
- Donald writes a bit for Ann's audition, but his jokes aren't really funny.
- Ann's friend, Sandy, lands a role in a Broadway show, and asks Ann to be her understudy. While Sandy is staying with her, Ann is such a safety hazard, it is becoming even more likely that she'll have to take Sandy's place on stage.
- When Ann gets a soap commercial, the director says that she has a face that no housewife would resent for her looks. Now Ann thinks that she has no sex appeal.
- Almost immediately after Ann and Donald see Ann's parents off on an oft postponed and much deserved vacation, they learn that Harry, Lew's maitre d' and official head at the restaurant during Lew's absence, has gone home sick. Being a Thursday, Frankie, Lew's longest term employee, can handle managing the restaurant without Harry, but will be unable to do so for the busy Friday and Saturday evening service. Rather than ruin her parent's vacation by calling them back early, Ann decides to take over the administrative duties while she co-opts a reluctant Donald to act as front of house maitre d', which includes to Donald's chagrin table side preparation of Caesar salads, which he doesn't know how to make. Things take a turn for the worse when they learn that Harry will be off for all three night, and that most of the kitchen staff, including the head chef Pierre, come down with the same bug that sidelined Harry. After their attempt to act as combined head chef fail, Ann and Donald call in Lew's old chef Andre, the reason for him being let go which becomes quickly obvious to them and which will prohibit him coming back even temporarily. As such, Donald comes up with what he believes the only solution to get them through the dinner rush while preserving the fine dining reputation of La Parisienne.
- Donald Hollinger finally asks Ann Marie to marry him.
- Ann gets too much advice on what to do with the windfall in her latest paycheck.
- Ann Marie is working at a newsstand in an office building. She meets Donald Hollinger, a magazine writer who works there. Ann has just gotten an acting job for a television commercial filming in the lobby of the office building.
- After Donald hurts his back at Ann's, she goes to get his interviewee and brings him to her place - followed by her father.
- Ann is the one holdout on a jury case about a man who hits his wife with an ashtray.
- Ann is surprised to see that Bobby Miller, an old boyfriend, is now her new landlord. As the other tenants can see that Bobby is still attracted to Ann, they feel their best offense in getting Bobby to make all the necessary repairs and upgrades the previous landlord promised is to have Ann act as the chairperson of their grievance committee. What they see is correct as Bobby does profess his continued love for Ann, which is why she feels she shouldn't be the spokesperson for the tenants so as not to lead Bobby on. But Ann relents to the tenants' request if only to show them that Bobby really means nothing to her. This role makes Ann a nervous wreck in having to deal with Bobby, who is aware of Donald in Ann's life but doesn't care. Ann has to figure out how to act like a sane person in Bobby's presence so that she can truly be coherent in expressing to him how she feels about both him and Donald.
- When flying up to her father's cabin in Vermont, their private plane runs out of gas and makes an emergency landing.
- When Ann accompanies Don to a party for the wealthy jet set, a gigolo mistakes Ann for a wealthy heiress because she is wearing an expensive chinchilla stole borrowed from her latest modeling job.
- Pete, a friend of Ann's, asks the man of her dreams to marry her.
- Ann receives a marriage proposal from the amorous photographer that used her as a model in California.
- Ann messes up a commercial job because her cold has temporarily ruined her hearing.