Like any good piece of television history, you can find Archie and Edith’s chairs propped up in the Smithsonian for generations and generations of All in the Family fans to enjoy. The induction of the Bunker’s chairs was more than just a tip of the hat to series creator Norman Lear, it was an acknowledgment of the impact that a series like All in the Family had on the world and a celebration of the series as a whole.
But as priceless as those chairs may be today, they certainly started out much less expensive than you might think. In a LIFE retrospective of All in the Family, crew members were able to take a walk down memory lane to the beginnings of the series. One of the main goals of Norman Lears was to use All in the Family to portray a typical American family, warts and all. This was a mission that extended past the cast of characters and episodes, but to the show’s environment as well, which took on a life of its own.
While we know it’s just a film set, the Bunker’s home looks worn and lived in, as though the family has actually been living there for the past decades. As one of the primary locations in nearly every episode, it was important that in order to bring the Bunker family to life and make them into a family that viewers could recognize, they would need to make their home appear realistic. Rita Riggs, who assisted in developing the Bunker’s home, a mainstay setting of the series, said of the set, “The concept was to open everybody’s family album and recognize some of those characters.”
Like any good piece of television history, you can find Archie and Edith’s chairs propped up in the Smithsonian for generations and generations of All in the Family fans to enjoy. The induction of the Bunker’s chairs was more than just a tip of the hat to series creator Norman Lear, it was an acknowledgment of the impact that a series like All in the Family had on the world and a celebration of the series as a whole.
But as priceless as those chairs may be today, they certainly started out much less expensive than you might think. In a LIFE retrospective of All in the Family, crew members were able to take a walk down memory lane to the beginnings of the series. One of the main goals of Norman Lears was to use All in the Family to portray a typical American family, warts and all. This was a mission that extended past the cast of characters and episodes, but to the show’s environment as well, which took on a life of its own.
While we know it’s just a film set, the Bunker’s home looks worn and lived in, as though the family has actually been living there for the past decades. As one of the primary locations in nearly every episode, it was important that in order to bring the Bunker family to life and make them into a family that viewers could recognize, they would need to make their home appear realistic. Rita Riggs, who assisted in developing the Bunker’s home, a mainstay setting of the series, said of the set, “The concept was to open everybody’s family album and recognize some of those characters.”