Three's Company (1977)

TV show · 1977 · Comedy · English

Curator score: 7.0/10 (19.4K ratings)

Come and knock on our door

Overview

When two single girls, Janet and Chrissy, need a roommate to share their Santa Monica apartment, they decide to offer a room to Jack, a man they find passed out in the bathtub after the going-away party for their last roommate. However, hijinks ensure when Jack must pretend to be gay in order to throw off the scent of the trio's conservative landlady.

Ratings

Production

ABC

Cast

John Ritter, Joyce DeWitt, Priscilla Barnes, Don Knotts, Richard Kline

Where to watch

Peacock Premium, Philo, Peacock Premium Plus, Pluto TV

Curator Review

Verdict

A fast, very broad farce built around misunderstandings, double entendres, and John Ritter’s elastic physical comedy. It’s still an easy watch if you want classic network sitcom energy, but much of the humor is rooted in dated gender and sexuality panic, so mileage varies a lot today.

Best for

  • fans of classic 1970s-80s network sitcoms
  • viewers who like broad farce and door-slamming misunderstandings
  • people who enjoy star-driven physical comedy
  • nostalgia viewing and light background watching

Skip if

  • you want character depth or serialized storytelling
  • you’re sensitive to outdated sexual politics and stereotypes
  • you prefer subtle, modern comedy
  • you dislike repetitive premise-driven sitcoms

Overview

Three’s Company is one of the defining multi-camera sitcoms of its era: bright, breezy, and built almost entirely on timing. John Ritter is the engine, turning even the most flimsy setup into a bit of choreography, and the show’s best episodes still move with a kind of comic precision that makes the format feel effortless.

Worth noting

Its reputation rests on how well it weaponizes confusion, eavesdropping, and escalating lies. When it works, it’s pure farce; when it doesn’t, the jokes can feel stretched thin and heavily dependent on misunderstandings that repeat from week to week. The ensemble shifts over time, but the basic formula remains the same, which is part of the appeal and part of the limitation.

Bottom line

Viewed now, the series is also very much a product of its time. The premise leans hard on sexual panic and old-school sitcom assumptions, so it’s best approached as a historical comedy artifact rather than a model of modern taste. If you want a landmark network sitcom with genuine physical-comedy chops, it’s still worth sampling; if you want something more nuanced, it will likely feel dated fast.

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Topics

classic sitcom, farce, misunderstanding, ensemble comedy, 1970s television, physical comedy, network TV, lighthearted, dated humor, apartment setting

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