THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH

“Lady in Limbo” (S1;E13)
~ December 10, 1963

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Synopsis

Circus boss Johnny
Slate (Jack Palance) is trying to decide which of his acts to send to Russia
for a cultural exchange program with the Moscow Circus. Horse trainer
Kate Reynolds (Lucille Ball) wants the coveted spot. When menagerie feeder
Charles is mauled by one of Kirov’s trained bears and dies, it leaves his young son Jeff (Billy Mumy) alone. Coldly ambitious Kate takes
care of the boy until Slate locates his spinster Aunt Agatha (Irene Tedrow). Jeff wants to stay with Kate and their
separation is surprisingly difficult for her. Unhappy, Jeff runs away from his Aunt and returns
to the circus and hides with the help of Kirov (Roger C. Carmel). In the end, Kate and Agatha agree
that Jeff belongs with the circus and Kate will be his guardian. 

Directed
by Paul
Wendkos

Written
by Tom
Waldman
and Frank Waldman

Cast

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Jack
Palance

(Johnny Slate) was a TV and film ‘heavy’ who won an Oscar in 1991
for the comedy City
Slickers
.
It was his third
Academy Award nomination. Palance
made his stage debut in The
Big Two

in 1947 and immediately followed it understudying Marlon
Brando
as Stanley Kowalski in the Broadway classic A
Streetcar Named Desire
,
a role he eventually took over. This is his only acting appearance
with Lucille Ball.  

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Lucille
Ball

plays hard-boiled circus performer and horse trainer Kate Reynolds.
The show is a drama and Ball plays it straight and serious. This
episode was filmed while she was doing the second season of “The
Lucy Show.”  

Kate reveals that she was a 17 year-old widow with a child on the way, but that she lost the baby.

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Roger
C. Carmel

(Kirov) would famously work for Desi Arnaz as Roger Buell in “The
Mothers-In-Law” until he was replaced by Richard Deacon for the
show’s second season. He died at age 54. This is his only
appearances opposite Lucille Ball.

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Billy
Mumy
(Jeff)
is perhaps one of Hollywood’s most famous child actors, making his
mark as young Will Robinson in “Lost in Space” (1965-68). He was
nine years old at the time of this episode. His “Lost in Space”
co-star Marta Kristen would also guest star on the “The Greatest
Show On Earth” four months later.

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Irene
Tedrow

(Agatha Potter, Jeff’s Aunt) was
first known as Mrs.
Janet Archer in the popular radio serial “Meet
Corliss Archer”
(1943-52) which she transferred to TV for one season in 1951. She was
twice nominated for an Emmy Award and appeared in hundreds of
episodic guest appearances for nearly 35 years. Never a series regular, she is probably best remembered as the kindly Mrs.
Elkins who appeared occasionally on “Dennis
the Menace”
(1959-63) opposite Lucy’s Gale Gordon.

Robert F. Simon (Mr. Greenwalt, Attorney) appeared on a 1966 episode of “The Lucy Show” and with Hope and Ball in the 1960 film The Facts of Life.

Dabbs
Greer

(Charles, Jeff’s Father) was a familiar character man who made
appearances on television from 1950 to 2003.  

Ralph
Manza

(Acrobat) was
a popular character actor who made
guest appearances on both the 1959 and the 1985 versions of “The
Twilight Zone.”

David
Bond

(Hotel Desk Clerk) is probably best remembered as Tremblay in “The
Many Loves of Dobie Gillis” (1959-63).

Bill
Erwin

(Johnny, Food Truck Cook) worked with Lucille Ball in the 1949 film
Easy
Living
.
He played a Brooklyn hobo in “Lucy and the Loving Cup” (ILL
S6;E12).  

Stanley
Farrar

(Circus Manager) was previously seen in two episodes of “I Love
Lucy” and subsequently appeared in two episodes of “The Lucy
Show.” He was also seen in the 1964 special “Mr. and Mrs.”
with Lucille Ball and Bob
Hope.

Tura
Santana

(Showgirl Modeling Costume) started
exotic dancing when she was only 13 years old. She integrated
acrobatics, humor, and sensual beauty to her dancing art form.

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Sahara, the Wonder Horse

Ivan
the
Magnificent

(Black Bear)

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Desilu
Production Team who also worked on “I Love Lucy”

  • Jerry
    Thorpe
    (Production Executive); Assistant Director of “I Love Lucy”
  • Jack
    Aldworth
    (Assistant Producer); Assistant Director of “I Love
    Lucy”
  • Wilbur Hatch (Music Supervisor); Musical Director /
    Conductor of “I Love Lucy”
  • Hal King (Make-Up); Make-Up on “I
    Love Lucy”
  • Irma Kusely (Hair Stylist); Hairstylist on “I Love
    Lucy”
  • Glen
    Glenn Sound Co
    .; Sound Company on “I Love Lucy”

Aired
on ABC TV, “The
Greatest Show on Earth”

faced
competition from two comedy programs on CBS: “Petticoat
Junction”
and the long-running “The
Jack Benny Program.”
NBC aired “The
Richard Boone Show”
during the
same 9pm Tuesday slot.
The
series was canceled after one season and 30 hour-long episodes.
Although filmed in color, it was aired in black and white.

This is widely considered to be Lucille Ball’s first dramatic appearance on television. 

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Each
episode told a self-contained story with Jack Palance’s character of
Tommy Slate the only one to appear in all 30 shows. The minor
character of Bill King (not seen in this episode, but played by
Stuart Erwin) was seen in seven episodes. In addition to Lucy,
celebrity guest appearances were made by Don Ameche, Joe E. Brown,
Hugh O’Brien, Harry Guardino, Spring Byington, Buster Keaton, Joan
Blondell, Sheree North, Eddie Albert, Bradford Dilman, Fabian, John
Astin, Nina Foch, Anthony Fanciosa, Dennis Hopper, Sal Mineo, Ricardo
Montalban, Martha Scott, Brenda Vaccaro, Tuesday Weld, Edgar Bergen,
Ellen Burstyn, Rory Calhoun, William Demarest, Bruce Dern, Annette
Funicello, Dwayne Hickman, Arte Johnson, Russell Johnson, Louis
Jourdan, Ruby Keeler, Agnes Moorehead, Yvonne De Carlo, Julie Newmar,
Barry Nelson, Tony Dow, Cornel Wilde, Larry Storch,
and Lucy’s old
friend and “I Love Lucy” day player, Barbara Pepper as the Fat
Lady.

Cornel Wilde and Betty Hutton were in both the film and the series, although in different roles.

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Jeff (writing): “I’ve got the Pentagon and the White House. What’s another important building in Washington DC?”

Kate (rattling it off): “The Uline Arena. We play there the last week in March. You make an entrance from under the bandstand. You’d better bring your own pink gelatins or you work in a white light. There’s a Chinese restaurant about a block away and they send out.”

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The Uline Arena (aka The Washington Coliseum)

has been described as a “triumph of concrete” when it first opened in 1939 and was later the sight of the first American concert by the Beatles

on February 11th 1964. It had a capacity of 7 to 9 thousand people. The building closed in 1986, but was listed as a historic structure and has been renovated and houses offices and a REI store.

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The episode incorporates stock footage of the Ringling Brothers Circus in action into the studio shot film. 

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The title of both the film and the series were inspired by the trademarked description of the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey circus. John Ringling North made a cameo appearance as himself in the film as did their premiere clown, Emmett Kelly.


Lucy’s Complex History with ‘The Greatest Show on Earth’

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In
1949, Lucille Ball agreed to make the film The
Magic Carpet

in a power play with Harry Cohn of Columbia Studios. She desperately
wanted to do Cecil B. DeMille’s upcoming film The
Greatest Show on Earth
,
but when she asked Cohn to loan her out, he sadistically cast her in
The
Magic Carpet,

thinking that it was such an awful script that Ball would refuse to do
it, then he could suspend her, and refuse to loan her out. Instead,
Lucille called his bluff and cheerfully accepted the film, knowing
that it was a quickie that would be wrapped by the time The
Greatest Show on Earth
started
filming. Fate intervened and Lucille got pregnant with her daughter
Lucie and never got to make the film, but if she had, perhaps she
never would have made her greatest show on earth, “I Love Lucy.”

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It
was her husband Desi Arnaz who went into business mode and told Lucy
to “grab her $85,000 fee and run.” Lucy told Harry Cohn she
was pregnant only after the The
Magic Carpet

had been completed. Cohn reportedly called her a ‘bitch’ and was
incensed at having to pay her contracted fee. Cecil DeMille is quoted
as saying, 

“Congratulations
Mr. Arnaz, You are the only man to ever screw his wife, Cecil B.
DeMille, Paramount Pictures, and Harry Cohn, all at the same time.”

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Lucille
Ball was supposed to play Angel the Elephant Girl. Her role in the
film was assumed by Gloria Grahame (above), who went on to play Ado Annie in
the 1955 film version of the musical Oklahoma!

The role Lucy plays in the television version (horse trainer and equestrian Kate Reynolds)
is a new role written for the series, which was produced by Desilu. Lucy’s involvement in the DeMille film was big news:

“I’m
so anxious to be in [
The
Greatest Show on Earth
],
I’d practically stick my head in one of the elephants’ mouths.”
~
Lucille
Ball to
Hedda Hopper, November 27, 1950

Lucille
Ball
last
week joined the parade of stars Cecil B. DeMille is lining up for his
circus picture, ’
The
Greatest Show on Earth
.’
The red-haired beauty gets a choice spot in the film, that of Angel,
the elephant girl.” ~

‘In Hollywood’, December 10, 1950

Lucille
Ball
has
informed Cecil B. DeMille that imminent motherhood will prevent her
from appearing in his movie about the Ringling Bros.
circus…Paulette
Goddard will
replace Miss Ball in the film.” ~
Leonard Lyons, December 29, 1950

Although
Goddard had campaigned for the role, DeMille still held a grudge
against the actress from their previous collaboration Unconquered
(1947) and refused to cast her.  So…

Gloria
Grahame

was
signed recently to complete the bracket of seven stars for Cecil B.
DeMille’s The
Greatest Show on Earth’
...Miss
Grahame will portray the role of the elephant girl from which Lucille
Ball recently
withdrew because of impending motherhood.“ ~ ‘In
Hollywood,’ February 4, 1951

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By 1963 Lucille
Ball had considerable experience with horses, clowns, and elephants filming “I
Love Lucy.”  She worked with Pepito the Clown on routines for in
“The Audition”
(ILL S1;E6) and “The Ballet” (ILL S1;E19).
She pretended to steal a baby elephant from the Clyde Beatty Circus
in “The Kleptomaniac” (ILL S1;E27, above). Ball had worked with horses
in the Annabel
movies and in “The Fox Hunt” (ILL S5;E16). She took part in a
circus routine with Ricky as the Ringmaster in “Lucy Meets the
Queen”
(ILL S5;E15).  

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The day before this episode first aired, CBS presented “Lucy and the Military Academy” (TLS S2;E10) guest starring Jackie Coogan.    


This
Date in Lucy History
~
December 10  

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"The
Fur Coat”

(ILL S1;E9) ~ December 10, 1951

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