5.9
/10
Ticket Seller is a fictional character portrayed by Curtis Andersen in the TV series 7th Heaven.
In the first episode they appeared in, titled It Happened One Night (season 3), they were 21 years old.
They appear in 3 episodes out of a total of 243 aired
Ticket Seller is also portrayed by Craig Woolson.

Ticket Seller

by Curtis Andersen

character

Episodes3

  • 6.7
    /10

    It Happened One Night

    episode S3.E15 february 1999
    The first weekend all seven siblings are home, Eric and Annie plan to extend their child-labor scheme to baby-sitting the noisy newborns. Matt starts his new job at the Dairy Shack, but can't stick it out with the owner's son as his hostile boss, but the evening holds one happy surprise for him. Mary slips away to meet Wilson and runs into Jordan, while Lucy does double chores. Happy is neglected and Ruthie feels neglected, and Eric ignores Simon's well-read parenting tips and steals his Dairy Shack order. Which family member restores heavenly peace to the household?
  • 6.6
    /10

    Broke

    episode S5.E6 november 2000
    Irresponsible 'adult' Mary fails to realize how deep she's sinking, but both parents and siblings piece together from various sources she's about to hit rock-bottom but have no idea how to help? Eric can barely keep Annie from intervening directly before they know everything. The kids decide to 'borrow' enough from the twins' full piggybanks to cover her debts, but creditors seeing cash convince her to 'refinance, which would mean even more interest.
  • 6.8
    /10

    Bye

    episode S5.E7 november 2000
    The monthly day when the twins' piggybacks are enriched with §10 is ahead, so the siblings fear the game is up unless Mary manages to repay the 'loan', but now her debt is reshuffled she idly spends her days in the movie theatre. So the Camden parents soon learn the dreadful truth they already dreaded. After pondering how to help her, a family intervention proving she's still in haughty denial, the last resort is packing her off to Buffalo, to be taken in hand by the Colonel.