Several
spin-offs, and
sequels, and reality series to the original series have been made, featuring all or most of the original cast. These include another sitcom, an animated series, a variety show, television films, a dramatic series, a stage play, theatrical films, and a reality series.
''Kelly's Kids/Together We Stand/Nothing Is Easy'' A final-season
Brady Bunch episode, "
Kelly's Kids", was intended as a pilot for a prospective spin-off series of the same name.
Ken Berry starred as Ken Kelly, a friend and neighbor of the Bradys, who with his wife Kathy (
Brooke Bundy) adopted three orphaned boys of different racial backgrounds. One of the adopted sons was played by Todd Lookinland, the younger brother of Mike Lookinland. While ''Kelly's Kids
was not subsequently picked up as a full series, producer Sherwood Schwartz reworked the basic premise for the short-lived 1980s sitcom Together We Stand'' starring
Elliott Gould and
Dee Wallace.
The Brady Kids A 22-episode animated
Saturday morning cartoon series, produced by
Filmation and airing on ABC from September 1972 to August 1974, is about the Brady kids having various adventures. The family's adults were never seen or mentioned, and the "home" scenes were in a very large, well-appointed tree house. Several animals were regular characters, including two non-English-speaking pandas (Ping and Pong), a talking bird (Merlin) which could do magic, and an ordinary pet dog (Mop Top). The first 17 episodes featured the voices of all six of the original child actors from the show, but Barry Williams and Maureen McCormick were replaced for the last five episodes due to a contract dispute.
The Brady Bunch Variety Hour On November 28, 1976, a one-hour
television special entitled
The Brady Bunch Variety Hour aired on ABC.
Eve Plumb was the only regular cast member from the original show who declined to be in the series and the role of Jan was recast with
Geri Reischl. Produced by
Sid and Marty Krofft, the sibling team behind
H.R. Pufnstuf,
Donny and Marie, and other variety shows and children's series of the era, the show was intended to air every fifth week in the same slot as
The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, but ended up being scheduled sporadically throughout the season, leading to inconsistent ratings and its inevitable cancellation. In 2009,
Brady Bunch cast member Susan Olsen, with Lisa Sutton, published a book,
Love to Love You Bradys, which dissects and celebrates the
Variety Hour as a cult classic.
The Brady Girls Get Married/The Brady Brides A TV reunion film called
The Brady Girls Get Married was produced in 1981. Although scheduled to be shown in its original full-length film format, NBC decided at the last minute to divide it into half-hour segments and show one part a week for three weeks. The fourth week debuted a spin-off sitcom titled
The Brady Brides, which carried on from where the reunion film left off. The film featured the entire original cast; this proved to be the only time the entire cast worked together on a single project following the cancellation of the original series (the complete surviving cast also appeared in these official projects together:
Brady Bunch Home Movies from 1995,
The Brady Bunch 35th Anniversary Reunion Special: Still Brady After All These Years from 2004, as well as various reunion programs in 2019 for the 50th anniversary). The film's opening credits featured the season-one "Grid" and theme song, with the addition of
The Brady Girls Get Married title. The film shows what the characters had been doing since the original series ended: Mike is still an architect, Carol is a real-estate agent, Greg is a doctor, Marcia is a fashion designer, Peter is in the Air Force, Jan is also an architect, Bobby and Cindy are in college, and Alice has married Sam. Eventually, they all reunite for Marcia and Jan's double wedding.
The Brady Brides features
Maureen McCormick and
Eve Plumb reprising their respective roles as Marcia and Jan Brady. The series begins with Marcia and Jan and their new husbands buying a house and living together. The clashes between Jan's uptight and conservative husband, Phillip Covington III (a college professor in science who is several years older than Jan, played by Ron Kuhlman) and Marcia's tousled and more
bohemian husband, Wally Logan (a fun-loving salesman for a large toy company, played by
Jerry Houser), were the pivot on which many of the stories were based, not unlike
The Odd Couple.
Florence Henderson and
Ann B. Davis also appeared regularly. Ten episodes were aired before the sitcom was cancelled. This was the only Brady show in sitcom form to be filmed in front of a live studio audience.
Bob Eubanks guest-starred as himself in an episode where the two couples appear on
The Newlywed Game. Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s,
The Brady Girls Get Married was rerun on various networks in its original full-length film format. In 2019, the series was released on DVD for the first time as a part of
The Brady-est Brady Bunch TV & Movie Collection.
Episodes (1981) A Very Brady Christmas A second TV reunion film,
A Very Brady Christmas, aired in December 1988 on CBS and features most of the regular cast (except
Susan Olsen, who was on her honeymoon at the time of filming; the role of Cindy was played by
Jennifer Runyon), as well as three grandchildren, Peter's girlfriend, Valerie, and the spouses of Greg, Marcia, and Jan (Nora, Wally, and Phillip, respectively). The
Nielsen ratings for
A Very Brady Christmas were the highest of any television film that season for CBS.
The Bradys Due to the success of
A Very Brady Christmas, CBS asked
Brady Bunch creator Sherwood Schwartz and son Lloyd to create a new series for the network. According to Lloyd Schwartz, he and his father initially balked at the idea because they felt a new series would harm the Brady franchise. They finally relented because CBS was "desperate for programming". A new series featuring the Brady clan was created entitled
The Bradys. All original
Brady Bunch cast members returned for the series, except for
Maureen McCormick (Marcia), who was replaced with
Leah Ayres. As with
A Very Brady Christmas,
The Bradys also balanced elements of comedy and drama and featured storylines of a more serious nature than the original series and subsequent spin-offs. Lloyd Schwartz later said he compared
The Bradys to another dramedy of the time,
thirtysomething. The two-hour series premiere episode aired on February 9, 1990, at 9 pm on CBS and initially drew respectable ratings. Subsequent episodes were moved to 8 pm, where ratings quickly declined. Due to the decline, CBS cancelled the series after six episodes.
Day by Day: "A Very Brady Episode" The
Day by Day episode titled "A Very Brady Episode" (February 5, 1989), on NBC, reunited six of the original
Brady Bunch cast members:
Robert Reed,
Florence Henderson,
Ann B. Davis,
Christopher Knight,
Mike Lookinland and
Maureen McCormick.
Bradymania: A Very Brady Special A one-hour TV special
retrospective of
The Brady Bunch hosted by
Florence Henderson who introduces a montage of various episodes of the original series, and also examines the show's phenomenal after-life, illustrated by clips from spin-offs and other incarnations of the series. Also, cast members
Christopher Knight,
Susan Olsen,
Mike Lookinland,
Barry Williams,
Ann B. Davis, and creator
Sherwood Schwartz reflect on the impact of the show on their lives. Directed by
Malcolm Leo, the special was originally broadcast on
ABC on May 19, 1993.
A Very Brady Renovation Christopher Knight,
Mike Lookinland,
Maureen McCormick,
Susan Olsen,
Eve Plumb, and
Barry Williams reunited for the 2019
HGTV series
A Very Brady Renovation, which follows a full renovation (interior mostly) of the real house, used for the sitcom's exterior shots, into the fictional Brady house.
Chopped In conjunction with the Renovation series, in the autumn of 2019,
The Food Network aired two episodes of their program
Chopped with the siblings as guest judges. Season 43, episode 3 - "Brady Bunch Bash" features Williams, Plumb, and Lookinland judging meals made from Hawaiian ingredients. Season 43, episode 4 - "A Very Brady Chopped" features McCormick, Knight, and Olsen judging meals from "groovy" ingredients of the '70s.
A Very Brady Musical In October 2020, during the global
COVID-19 virus pandemic,
Ogunquit Playhouse did a live stream broadcast of
A Very Brady Musical, a brand-new musical adventure for the stage created by
Lloyd J. Schwartz (son of Brady Bunch creator
Sherwood Schwartz), Hope Juber (book/lyrics), and
Laurence Juber (music/lyrics) and directed by Richard Israel. It was co-produced by Ogunquit Playhouse, Purple Mountain Productions, and Broadway and Beyond Theatricals. More in the vein of the Brady films, this PG-13 story follows the Brady kids' misadventures when they come to the mistaken conclusion that Mike and Carol are headed for divorce. After consulting Alice, the kids raise money to pay for marriage counseling, learning valuable lessons along the way, as their respective well-intentioned ideas land them in outrageous trouble.
Barry Williams and
Christopher Knight were on hand for a post-show question and answer session on all things Brady.
Dragging the Classics: The Brady Bunch On June 30, 2021, streaming service
Paramount+ celebrated Pride Month with the premiere of a
crossover special combining
The Brady Bunch and the reality television series ''
RuPaul's Drag Race. In the crossover event, original Brady
cast members and former Drag Race
competitors come together to recreate a Brady Bunch
episode. Christopher Knight and Mike Lookinland reprise their roles of Peter and Bobby Brady, respectively, while the original Greg Brady, Barry Williams, switches parts to play family patriarch Mike; Greg Brady is portrayed by Drag Race
Season 6 and All Stars 3
competitor BenDeLaCreme. Season 6 winner Bianca Del Rio fills the role of mother Carol Brady, and daughters Marcia, Jan, and Cindy are portrayed by All Stars 5
winner Shea Couleé, season 2 and All Stars 6'' competitor
Kylie Sonique Love, and
season 13 runner-up
Kandy Muse, respectively.
Season 11 Miss Congeniality
Nina West appears as housekeeper Alice Nelson. The special, which recreates the season two episode "Will the Real Jan Brady Please Stand Up?", also contains cameos by
Drag Race judges
RuPaul and
Michelle Visage, who appear as employees of a wig shop that Jan patronizes. The original Jan and Cindy Brady,
Eve Plumb and
Susan Olsen, also appear as children who are guests at the birthday party. Olsen alleged that Lloyd J. Schwartz questioned her about her political views, and due to her behavior, the project died in early stages and it was unclear whether even a script had been written. Reportedly, in the series, Cindy was going to be a libertarian podcaster. According to Olsen, the project was "dead in the water". ==Film adaptations==