• The Loophole in the Lease

    S2;E12 ~ December 23, 1963

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    Synopsis

    When
    Sherman accidentally leaves the bathtub water running, the kitchen
    ceiling is damaged and needs re-plastering. Lucy insists that Viv pay
    for all the repairs as it was agreed upon in their lease. But a
    loophole in the lease would allow Viv to take possession of the home.
    Mr. Mooney suggests that they steal the lease from Viv before she
    acts on the clause.

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    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Ralph Hart
    (Sherman Bagley), Gale Gordon (Theodore J. Mooney), and Jimmy Garrett
    (Jerry Carmichael)

    Candy
    Moore
    (Chris Carmichael) does not appear in this episode.

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    This episode was directed by Jack Donohue. It was written by Bob Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Martin, Bob Weiskopf, and Bob Schiller. This was the 42nd episode to be filmed. It was filmed on September 12, 1963 in color, but initially aired on CBS TV in black and white.   

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    The
    episode was originally scheduled to air on
    November 25, 1963, but was preempted for news coverage of President
    Kennedy’s funeral
    .  

    This
    is the first scene set in the newly remodeled kitchen. A glimpse of
    it was seen through the service window in “Lucy Decides to
    Redecorate” (S2;E8).
     

    Handyman Mr.
    Peterson would have charged Lucy $40 to re-plaster the kitchen
    ceiling. This would be the equivalent of nearly $350 today.
    Lucille Ball’s step-father’s surname was Peterson.  

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    The
    boys go to the ‘Y’ to play with their toy submarine. The toy was made
    by Linemar
    Toys in Japan and was a tin Polaris Atomic Submarine.
    Danfield’s new YMCA was first seen in “Lucy Digs Up a Date”
    (S1;E2)
    and has been mentioned in several other episodes.  

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    The boys’
    enthusiasm for submarines was hinted at in “Vivian Sues Lucy”
    (S1;E10)
    , when one of the boys leaves their US Navy submarine
    lunchbox on the counter. 

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    In
    1966 Lucy Carmichael will wreak havoc underwater in “Lucy and the
    Submarine” (S5;E2)
    .

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    According
    to Lucy, she and Viv have been living together for almost five years.

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    This
    is the second time a portion of the kitchen ceiling is shown. An
    insert shot of the water-damaged plaster was also seen in “Lucy and
    Viv Put in a Shower” (S1;E18)
    .  

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    This
    is the third time we have seen Viv’s bedroom, and each time the
    layout has changed. In “Lucy Waits Up for Chris” (S1;E1) there
    was no roof below Viv’s bedroom window. In all three episodes,
    however, Viv has the same headboard. Before the remodeling in “Lucy
    Decides to Redecorate” (S2;E8)
    the painting above Viv’s bed was
    located on the living room wall.  

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    This
    is the second time we have seen the roof of the Carmichael home. Both times the outside of the house was a matte painting, a Hollywood technique frequently used in the days before computer effects. 

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    The
    first time was in “Lucy Puts Up a TV Antenna” (S1;E9, above). This
    time, however, the configuration of the rooftop is slightly
    different. 

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    Before
    casting his line into Viv’s bedroom window, Mr. Mooney says a little
    prayer to Izaac Walton for forgiveness. 

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    Izaak
    Walton

    (1594-1683) was an English writer known for The
    Compleat Angler
    (1653),
    a
    prose and poetry celebration of fishing.

    MR. MOONEY: Congratulations. You just caught the season’s first bifocals.

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    It is revealed that Viv talks in her sleep, a common comedy trope.  

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    In “The Gossip” (ILL S1;E24) Ricky pretended to talk in his sleep. In this episode they’d made a bet about whether or not Lucy and Ethel could go without gossiping, so he started to mutter “Grace Foster is running away with the milkman” so that she’d have something particularly juicy to tempt her.


    Callbacks!

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    Viv
    snidely accuses Lucy of being just a “landlord” and Lucy nastily
    accuses Viv of being just a “tenant”.  

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    This is the exact reverse
    of Ethel Mertz and Lucy Ricardo, who also had a couple of arguments
    over their lease, most notably in “Breaking the Lease” (ILL
    S1;E18)
    .  

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    Lucille
    Ball and Vivian Vance have done many episodes of “I Love Lucy”
    and “The Lucy Show” where they engage in DIY home improvement
    projects that go awry.  

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    Most memorably, they wallpapered Lucy’s
    bedroom in “Redecorating” (ILL S2;E8, above).  


    Blooper
    Alerts!

    The Sky Is Falling! After
    Lucy comes down the ladder a chunk of the wet plaster falls to the
    floor. Both Viv and Lucy look over to see what fell, but continue
    with the dialogue as written.  

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    Magnetic Viv! In
    a close-up of Viv in bed, you can see that small magnets have been
    glued to the top edge of her  eyeglasses so that Mr. Mooney’s magnetic fish line will hook them.  

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    “Loophole in the Lease” rates 3 Paper Hearts out of 5

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  • Lucy’s College Reunion

    S2;E11 ~ December 16, 1963

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    Synopsis

    When
    Lucy attends her college reunion, she and Viv get involved with the
    old college tradition of stealing the founder’s statue from the bell
    tower. It all good fun until she learns her antics may get some
    students expelled and her own daughter barred from ever enrolling!  

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Ralph Hart
    (Sherman Bagley), Candy Moore (Chris Carmichael)

    Gale
    Gordon
    (Theodore J. Mooney) and Jimmy Garrett (Jerry Carmichael) do
    not appear in this episode.

    Guest
    Cast

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    Roland
    Winters
    (Dean
    Bennett) was the
    sixth actor to play Charlie Chan and was the third non-Asian to play
    the role.
    He made his Broadway debut at age 20, eventually appearing in six
    shows, including the ill-fated musical Minnie’s
    Boys

    (1970). His screen debut was an uncredited role – a newspaper
    reporter at Trenton Town Hall in the landmark film Citizen
    Kane
    (1941).
    In 1966,
    he acted in the play John
    Loves Mary

    at the Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn, NJ.
    He died at the Actors’ Home in Englewood, NJ in 1986.  

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    Lyle
    Talbot
    (Howard
    Wilcox) was a ‘B’ movie actor who made several films for Ed Wood,
    including what is considered one of the worst films ever, Plan
    9 from Outer Space
    (1959).
    This is the second of his two appearances on the series, having
    previously played Mr. Sanford in “Kiddie Parties Inc.” (S2;E2).
    He returns for two episodes of “Here’s Lucy.”

    The
    character was named for a college friend of writer Madelyn Martin.
    As a child, Lucille Ball once lived at Wilcox Apartments in
    Jamestown.

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    Carole
    Cook

    (Betty Jo Hansen) usually plays the role of Thelma Green, although
    she will also play Mrs. Valance in three episodes, as well as a
    variety of other characters. Lucille Ball took Cook as a protégé
    during the Desilu Playhouse years. Although she was born as Mildred
    Cook, Ball suggested she take the name Carole, in honor of Lucy’s
    great friend, Carole Lombard. Cook also went on to appear in five
    episodes of “Here’s Lucy.”

    The
    character was named for a college friend of writer Madelyn Martin.

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    Florence
    MacMichael
    (1st Woman) was a Broadway performer who was a replacement for the role of
    Agnes Gooch in Auntie
    Mame
    ,
    a role she also did on tour.  The week prior to this episode’s
    initial airing, she appeared as Winnie Kirkwood on “Mr. Ed,” a
    role she would play until 1965.  

    In
    the reunion scene, MacMichael is the woman who asks Lucy is she still
    remembers how to play the ukulele.

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    Dorothy
    Konrad
    (2nd Woman aka “Cuddles” Konrad) played Dorothy Boyer in two previous
    episodes and then will play a variety of other characters in three
    more episodes.

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    Norman
    Leavitt

    (Art McQuillan) had
    appeared in three episodes of “The
    Lucy-Desi Comedy
    Hour.” He first co-starred with Lucille Ball in 1950’s
    A
    Woman of Distinction
    and
    1953’s The
    Long, Long Trailer.

    He was
    first seen in “Lucy
    is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7)
    and
    will also appear in “Lucy and the Countess Lose Weight” (S3;E21).

    Vicky
    Albright

    (College Girl, below right) made her screen debut at age two in the film The
    Snake Pit

    (1948). She’s
    the daughter of actors Hardie Albright and Arnita Wallace. She left
    acting in 1966 after playing Charlotte in The
    Trouble with Angels
    .
    She was a professional photographer for many years.

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    Tina
    Cole

    (College Girl, above left) is probably best known as Katie on the long-running
    series “My Three Sons” (1966-72). Her mother was Yvonne King of
    the King Sisters singing group who appeared with Desi Arnaz in the
    1946 film Cuban
    Pete

    Sid
    Gould
    (Bass
    Singer in the Alma Mater) was first seen in “Lucy
    is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7)
    .
    He made 46 appearances on “The Lucy Show,” all as background
    characters. He also did 40 episodes of “Here’s Lucy.” Gould
    (born Sydney Greenfader) was Lucille Ball’s cousin by marriage to
    Gary Morton. Gould was married to Vanda Barra, who also appeared on
    “The Lucy Show” starting in 1967, as well as on “Here’s
    Lucy.”

    Curiously,
    the actor who plays Bill
    Lancet

    in the reunion scene has a couple of lines but is not given screen
    credit or listed on IMDB.  

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    A
    dozen uncredited middle-aged men and women play the rest of the
    alumni.  

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    This episode was filmed on October 3, 1963.

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    The
    action is set a fictitious Milroy University, named after Zachary
    Milroy, its founder. Viv compares him to Leland Stanford, the founder
    of Stanford University in California. 

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    His life-size statue, however,
    more resembles Abraham Lincoln or Ulysses S. Grant. 

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    Chris
    says she will be attending Milroy in two years time. When Candy
    Moore is written off the series (in just one year’s time), her
    absence will be explained by the fact that she went away to college.

    For
    this episode, regular writers Bob Carroll Jr. and Madelyn Martin are
    joined by newcomer Ted Koch, in his only “Lucy Show” credit. 

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    Sherman
    mentions that he and Jerry will be staying at Uncle Ned’s while Lucy
    and Chris attend the reunion. Originally, Viv was not going along,
    so it is unclear why the boys would need to stay with Uncle Ned.  The
    off-screen character of Uncle Ned was first mentioned in “Lucy and
    Her Electric Mattress” (S1;E12)
    .  It was never determined if it is
    Viv’s Uncle or Sherman’s.  

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    Viv
    says she went to Kansas State, which garners a smattering of
    applause from the studio audience. In real-life, Vivian Vance was a
    native Kansan, but went to drama school in New York City. Lucille
    Ball dropped out of high school to go to New York City and pursue
    acting work.  

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    Viv’s
    fear of heights kicks in again. It first came up in the first season
    episode “Lucy
    Puts Up a TV Antenna” (S1;E9)
    .

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    This
    episode uses matte paintings to depict the Milroy campus and the bell
    tower with the statue of Zacharay Milroy. Matte paintings were first
    used on the series in “Lucy Puts Up a TV Antenna” (S1;E9) to show
    the exterior of the Carmichael home.  

    Callbacks!

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    At
    the reunion, Lucy plays “Has
    Anybody Seen My Gal?”
    on
    the ukulele. The 1920s hit was also heard as part of the Flapper
    Follies in “Ricky
    Loses His Voice” (ILL S2;E9)

    and
    “Little Ricky Gets Stage Fright” (ILL S6;E4). In both episodes
    Lucy also played the song on the ukulele.  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

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    Sky Seam! In
    a medium shot of Viv wrestling with the statue atop the tower, you
    can clearly see the vertical join in the sky drop.

    Diploma Dilemma! This
    episode has Lucy as a college graduate, but in “Lucy the
    Babysitter”
    (S5;E16) Lucy will say she only has two years of
    business college.  Her education status will be
    forgotten again in “Lucy Gets
    Her Diploma”
    (S6;E5), where she claims to be a high
    school dropout.  

    A McGillicuddy Ain’t Here! Lucy
    says her maiden name is Taylor, but in “Lucy and John Wayne”
    (S5;E10) she will say it is McGillicuddy, just as it always was on “I
    Love Lucy.”  Taylor is also the surname of the young couple who move into the Ricardo’s NYC apartment when they move to the country. 

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    “Lucy’s College Reunion” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5

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  • Lucy and the Military Academy

    S2;E10 ~ December 9, 1963

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    Synopsis

    Fearing
    he is lacking male role models, Lucy enrolls Jerry in military
    academy. She immediately misses him and goes to great lengths to
    visit him, despite the academy’s rules.  

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Jimmy Garrett
    (Jerry Carmichael), Candy Moore (Chris Carmichael)

    Gale
    Gordon
    (Theodore J. Mooney) and Ralph Hart (Sherman Bagley) do not
    appear in this episode.

    Guest
    Cast

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    Leon
    Ames

    (Colonel Anderson) was a veteran of a dozen Broadway plays between
    1933 and 1958. On TV he is probably best remembered as Gordon
    Kirkwood on “Mr. Ed” (1963-65), including an episode aired the
    day before this episode of “The Lucy Show.” During the 1960s and
    ‘70s he
    also owned a Ford Dealership in San Rafael, California.
    This is his only appearance with Lucille Ball.  

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    Jackie
    Coogan
    (Lt.
    Ruggles) was a child actor. In “Ricky’s Screen Test” (ILL S4;E6)
    Lucy Ricardo hopes Little Ricky will be “the next Jackie Coogan.”
    Coogan was once married to Flower Parry, who was a frequent extra on
    “I Love Lucy.”  He is, of course, best remembered as Uncle Fester
    on TV’s “The Addams Family” (1964-66).  He makes one more
    appearance on “The Lucy Show” as well as a 1973 episode of
    “Here’s Lucy.”   His final appearance with Ball was in the 1975 TV film “Lucy Gets Lucky.” He died in 1984 at age 69.

    The
    name Ruggles may be a tribute to Fancy
    Pants

    (1950) starring Lucille Ball and Bob Hope, a remake of the 1935
    Charles Laughton film Ruggles
    of Red Gap
    .
    Coogan is never addressed by name in the episode.  

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    Stephen
    Talbot

    (Cadet Clark) was the real-life son of Lyle Talbot, a B-movie actor
    who recently appeared on the series in “Kiddie Parties Inc.”
    (S2;E2)
    and will appear in the next episode “Lucy’s College Reunion”
    (S2;E11).  This is Stephen’s final acting credit before taking a
    break from show business.  He returned to become an Emmy-winning news
    producer for PBS.  

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    Lee
    Aaker
    (Cadet
    Blake, right) was best known as Rusty on “The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin”
    (1954-1959).  This episode marks his final screen acting credit.

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    Sid
    Gould
    (Mailman)
    was first seen in “Lucy
    is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7)
    .
    He made 46 appearances on “The Lucy Show,” all as background
    characters. He also did 40 episodes of “Here’s Lucy.” Gould
    (born Sydney Greenfader) was Lucille Ball’s cousin by marriage to
    Gary Morton. Gould was married to Vanda Barra, who also appeared on
    “The Lucy Show” starting in 1967, as well as on “Here’s
    Lucy.”

    A
    dozen cadets from Page Military Academy play
    Jerry’s classmates.  A half dozen older actors play the cadets in
    training.  

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    Amy
    bought Jerry a farewell soda at the drug store.  Amy, who’s last name
    is Shaffer, was first mentioned by Jerry in “Together for
    Christmas” (S1;E13)
    .  

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    Lucy
    is sending Jerry to military academy so he’ll have male
    companionship, but no one mentions Sherman (Ralph Hart), Jerry’s
    roommate and Viv’s son. Oddly, Sherman is absent and unmentioned when
    Jerry goes off to military school.  In the final scene, however,
    Jerry says that he misses Sherman.  

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    On
    the telephone to the Academy, Lucy pretends to be the operator
    (pinching her nose) with a long-distance call from Jerry’s 99
    year-old great grandmother in Long Beach, California.  

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    Jerry
    is staying in Wellington Hall at Longridge Academy.
    The extras and the uniforms are courtesy of the Page Military
    Academy
    in Los Angeles.  It was founded in 1908 by Robert and Della
    Page Gibbs.  It is still in existence today under the name Page
    Academy.  

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    Lucy
    brings out Jerry’s bronzed baby shoes, which Viv says were in the
    attic. In a previous episode, they were on the bookcase leading into
    the kitchen.  

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    When
    disguised in fatigues, Lucy adopts the name Cosgrove. Cosgrove was Ruth Berle’s maiden name before she married Milton. 

    Cadet
    Thornton demonstrates the obstacle course. Ruggles then rattles
    off the order of cadets up next:  Blake, Kelly, Cosgrove, Steiner and
    Altman. The obstacle course consists of a tire step, rope swing,
    fence climb and a tunnel crawl.  Naturally, Lucy has trouble with
    every one of them.

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    At
    the end of the episode, Jerry returns home, but in
    the first episode of season four Lucy will enroll Jerry in military
    school again upon their arrival in California.

    Callbacks!

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    Colonel
    Anderson sits on Jerry’s suitcase in order to close it.  Ricky
    Ricardo did this in “Lucy Makes Room for Danny” a 1958 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour.”

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    When
    Lucy pretends to be the operator she pinches her nose closed to
    create a more nasal, remote voice. Lucy Ricardo did this in “The
    Publicity Agent”
    (ILL S1;E31)
    .

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Pulling Rank! Jackie
    Coogan  plays
    an instructor who is listed in the credits as Lieutenant Ruggles even
    though he wore the stripes of a Master Sergeant, the appropriate rank
    for an instructor at a military academy.

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    Uniformity! Despite
    attending Longridge Academy, Jerry’s uniform clearly says ‘Page’ on
    his collar and hat.

    Familiar Territory! When
    Lt. Ruggles marches his troops from the rifle range to the obstacle
    course, the background landscape is exactly the same as the previous
    scene.

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    “Lucy and the Military Academy” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5

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  • Lucy Puts Out a Fire at the Bank

    S2;E9 ~ December 2, 1963

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    Synopsis

    When
    the town council refuses to fund the Danfield Volunteer Fire
    Department, Lucy takes her brigade for some training to impress Mr.
    Mooney, then sets a small fire at the bank to demonstrate their
    worth!

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Gale Gordon
    (Theodore J. Mooney)

    Jimmy
    Garrett
    (Jerry Carmichael), Candy Moore (Chris Carmichael), and Ralph
    Hart
    (Sherman Bagley) do not appear in this episode.

    Guest
    Cast

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    Alan
    Hale Jr.
    (Captain Burke) is best
    remembered as the Skipper on the iconic TV series “Gilligan’s
    Island” (1964-92).  He made one more appearance opposite Lucille
    Ball, in a 1970 episode of “Here’s Lucy.”  His father was also a
    screen actor. Hale junior made his film debut at age 12.  

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    Irwin
    Charone
    (Albert, Policeman) makes
    the first of his five appearances on “The Lucy Show.”  The
    expressive character actor also did an equal number of “Here’s
    Lucy” episodes. He died in January 2016 in Maplewood, New Jersey,
    at the age of 93.  

    Mary
    Jane Croft
    (Audrey
    Simmons) played Betty Ramsey during season six of “I Love Lucy.”
    She also played Cynthia Harcourt in “Lucy
    is Envious” (ILL S3;E23)
    and
    Evelyn Bigsby in“Return
    Home from Europe” (ILL S5;E26)
    .
    She played Audrey Simmons for eight episodes. When Lucy moves to
    California, she will play Mary Jane Lewis (the actor’s married
    name) until the series finale. Her husband Elliott Lewis was a
    producer of “The Lucy Show” from 1962 to 1964. She also played a
    character named Mary Jane Lewis on “Here’s Lucy” from 1969 to
    1974.

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    Mary
    Wickes
    (Fran)
    was one of Lucille Ball’s closest friends and at one time, a
    neighbor. She made a memorable appearances on “I Love Lucy” as
    ballet mistress Madame Lamond in “The
    Ballet” (ILL S1;E19).
    She
    also appeared as Fran in “Lucy
    and the Runaway Butterfly” (S1;E29)
    and “Lucy Plays Cleopatra”
    (S2;E1). This marks her third and
    final appearance as firefighter Fran, but then makes four more as a
    variety of characters. Wickes then appeared in nine episodes of
    “Here’s Lucy.” Their final collaboration on screen was “Lucy
    Calls the President”
    in 1977.

    Hazel
    Pierce
    (Firefighter)
    was
    Lucille Ball’s camera and lighting stand-in throughout “I Love
    Lucy.” She also made frequent appearances on the show. Of her many
    on-camera appearances on “The Lucy Show” only once was she given
    a character name and credited, in “Lucy
    Plays Cleopatra” (S1;E1)
    .
    She was also an uncredited extra in the film Forever
    Darling
    (1956).

    James
    Gonzales
    (Teller
    who yells “Fire!”)
    was
    a popular Hollywood extra who first acted with Lucille Ball in the
    1953 film The
    Long, Long Trailer
    .
    He was previously seen on the series as Stan Williams in Lucy
    Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2)
    .
    He was seen in more than 20 episodes of “The Lucy Show” and 3
    episodes of “Here’s Lucy.”

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    Sid
    Gould
    (Thompson)
    was first seen in “Lucy
    is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7)
    .
    He made 46 appearances on “The Lucy Show,” all as background
    characters. He also did 40 episodes of “Here’s Lucy.” Gould
    (born Sydney Greenfader) was Lucille Ball’s cousin by marriage to
    Gary Morton. Gould was married to Vanda Barra, who also appeared on
    “The Lucy Show” starting in 1967, as well as on “Here’s
    Lucy.”

    Gould
    tells Lucy “The
    town council will see you now.”

    He is not addressed by the name Thompson in the dialogue.  

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    Three
    uncredited men play the members of the Danfield Town Council.  Five
    uncredited women play the other members of the Volunteer Fire
    Department.

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    This
    episode was originally scheduled to air on November 25, 1963, but was
    pre-empted for coverage of President Kennedy’s funeral.

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    To
    appear in front of the town council, Lucy and Viv wear their dress
    uniforms. Paying for these outfits was the subject of “Lucy Drives
    a Dump Truck” (S1;E24)
    . Bear in mind that viewers watching this
    episode in its original airing still did not know that they were
    bright red because CBS declined to air the series in color.  

    Viv
    says the Volunteer Firefighters have been in existence for a year and
    two months.  The episode that introduced the brigade was “Lucy and
    Viv Are Volunteer Firemen” (S1;E16)
    aired on January 14, 1963, just
    short of eleven months ago.

    The
    Danfield Volunteer Fire Department has a service record of:

    • 43
      cat rescues; 12 of them of the same cat. This was likely Grandma
      Sutton’s cat, a reference that has been made several times
      throughout the series and the reason for the Fire Department’s first
      alarm.
    • 8
      clogged up chimney flues unclogged.  
    • 16
      piles of burning leaves were extinguished.
    • 1
      lawsuit against the city for water damage at the Armenian restaurant
      for an incident surrounding flaming shish-kabob on a sword.

    The
    Volunteer Fire Department also provides Danfield with:

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    Mr.
    Mooney says they will have to get by with Broadway, the Metropolitan
    Opera, and the New York Yankees. He wants Danfield to be served by
    New Rochelle’s Fire Department. In previous episodes they were
    served by Ridgebury.  

    Mary
    Jane mentions her husband Harvey again. He plays poker with the boys
    on Tuesday nights.

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    In
    this episode, Viv says that Lucy doesn’t smoke. In real life Lucille
    Ball was a regular smoker although she does a terrific job of playing
    a non-smoker lighting up for the first time in this episode. Lucy
    and Viv have ashtrays and cigarettes in their home as seen in “Kiddie
    Parties Inc.” (S2;E2)
    and cigar and cigarette burns on their coffee table
    in “Lucy Decides to Redecorate” (S2;E8). Mr. Mooney and Albert
    both have cigarette lighters handy in their pockets. In
    1963, smoking inside public spaces like a bank was not illegal. This
    storyline would not be possible today.  

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    Usually
    it is Lucy who cannot control the flow of water from hoses or spouts,
    but in this case Viv is the clumsy one.

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    Lucy
    and Viv apparently live in the vicinity of a glove factory that
    sounds a daily noon whistle.  

    Viv
    mentions that she is going to use the smoke bombs for the cub scouts
    to send up smoke signals. Lucy and Viv are den mothers of Pack 57, a
    fact established in “Lucy Visits the White House” (S1;E25).  

    Callbacks!

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    On
    “I Love Lucy” Ricky and Fred set a fake fire to trick Lucy in
    “Fred and Ethel Fight” (ILL S1;E22).

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Name Game! When
    Lucy and fellow firefighters go to rookie training school, Lucy calls
    Fran by the actresses real name, when she says “Get
    back in line, Mary! Just stay back there.”

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    Floor Plan! In
    the opening scene Lucy and Viv wait outside the conference room at
    the bank to see the town council. In “Lucy and the Safe Cracker”
    (S2;E5)
    this same area featured a pay phone. In the final scene, the
    second chair has been replaced by a metal waste basket for Lucy’s
    smoke bomb gag.

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    Where The Sky Starts! When
    Lucy is atop the fire ladder, the camera catches a glimpse of where
    the sky drop meets the studio ceiling.

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    “Lucy Puts Out a Fire at the Bank” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5 

  • Lucy Decides To Redecorate

    S2;E8
    ~ November 18, 1963

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    Synopsis

    Lucy
    decides she would like some remodeling done in her home, but Mr.
    Mooney will only allow enough money for a few small jobs. Lucy and
    Viv figure they can do the big repairs themselves.

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Gale Gordon
    (Theodore J. Mooney), Jimmy Garrett (Jerry Carmichael), Candy Moore
    (Chris Carmichael), Ralph Hart (Sherman Bagley)

    This is just the second episode in the series to only feature only the regular cast.  The last time this happened was in “Lucy Buys a Boat” (S1;E30).

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    To
    give the series a face lift and maintain viewer interest, changing the
    look of the scenery was an easy solution. The first 22 minutes were
    filmed before “The Lucy Show” went on summer hiatus after season 1. The last
    scene showing the Carmichael home’s new look was filmed after
    production resumed in September.

    Lucy
    refers to President John F. Kennedy’s fitness program. President
    Kennedy

    was assassinated four days after this show first aired. Next
    week’s episode will be pre-empted for news coverage of his funeral. Lucy Carmichael met Kennedy in “Lucy Visits The White House” (S1;E25).

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    Lucy
    wants a new lampshade, upholstery for the chair and ottoman, fixing
    the springs in the sofa, and refinishing the coffee table – all of
    which she estimates will cost $200. She plans on asking Mr. Mooney
    for $500 for new wall-to-wall carpeting, but she knows she’ll need to
    compromise. In today’s money, $200 would be like asking for $1,700.  

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    Viv
    compares their painting to that of Picasso. Pablo
    Picasso
    (1881-1973)
    is regarded as one of the greatest and most influential artists of
    the 20th century. He is known for co-founding the cubist movement and
    the invention of constructed sculpture.
    Viv
    previously mentioned Picasso in “Lucy Builds a Rumpus Room”
    (S1;E11)
    .  

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    Viv
    remarks that the living room would get the ‘Bad Housekeeping Seal of
    Approval’ a joke about the Good
    Housekeeping Seal of Approval
    .
    In
    1909, the magazine established the it  to indicate that products
    advertised in the magazine were tested by their research institute
    and backed by a two-year limited warranty.

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    The
    coffee table is full of cigarette burns, all of which have suddenly
    appeared for this episode.  Viv mentions her boyfriend Eddie Collins,
    who was last seen in “Lucy Goes Duck Hunting (S2;E6). Viv mentions
    that he is a cigar smoker. The character was played by Don Briggs,
    who made his seventh and final appearance on that episode.  The only
    time smoking was featured on “The Lucy Show” was briefly in
    “Kiddie Parties Inc.” (S2;E2) when a client lit up, not Lucy or Viv.  

    Seeing
    the burn marks on the coffee table, Mr. Mooney asks if “Smokey
    the Bear knows about you people?”

    Smokey
    Bear
     is
    an advertising mascot
    created
    in 1944 to educate the public about the dangers of
    forest
    fires.

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    Lucy
    says she got the idea to spray paint the sofa from Young Moderns
    Magazine. This appears to be a fictional publication, named in order
    to make an age joke at Lucy’s expense.  There actually was a Young
    Modern Magazine in the 1960s, but it was only published in Australia,
    and was unlikely to be seen by Lucy or Viv.  

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    Viv’s
    car is a 1953 Ford Crestline Sunliner convertible. The vehicle will
    turn up again in “Lucy, the Meter Maid” (S3;E7).  The last time
    we saw Viv’s car was in “Lucy Buys a Sheep” (S1;E5) where she
    owned a 1949 Packard Super Deluxe Eight convertible.  This is the
    first time we have seen inside the Carmichael’s garage.  

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    Callbacks!

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    Desilu
    had used redecorating as the theme of several episodes of “I Love
    Lucy.”  “Redecorating” (ILL S2;E8) also finds Lucille Ball and
    Vivian Vance doing DIY home redecorating with dubious results.  

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    Later
    that season, Lucy and Ethel undertook “Redecorating the Mertzes
    Apartment” (ILL S3;E8)
    .  

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    Trouble
    with a paint sprayer was a comedic highlight of “The Celebrity Next
    Door,”
    a 1957 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” where
    guest star Tallulah Bankhead was the victim.  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Memory Lapse! When
    Lucy and Viv can’t access their bedrooms because the stairs are wet
    with paint, they forget that they rebuilt the basement as a rumpus
    room in “Lucy Builds a Rumpus Room” (S1;E11).

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    Stumble! When
    Jerry comes running down the stairs after the car crash, he falls to the
    floor on the last step, but quickly gets up and joins the other kids.

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    Logistics!  Backing through the living room wall imply that the
    garage is free-standing and that it would be accessed from a driveway
    with a turn in it. Not impossible, but unlikely.  

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    Pantry Plot!  The
    final remodeling of the living room incorporates a shuttered service
    window to the kitchen, very similar to the one the Ricardos had on “I
    Love Lucy.”  In the past however, those going through the doorway
    to the kitchen had to pass through the pantry, which now looks to
    have been eliminated.

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    “Lucy Decides to Redecorate” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5  

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  • Lucy and the Bank Scandal

    S2;E7
    ~ November 11, 1963

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    Synopsis

    When
    Lucy suspects Mr. Mooney may be embezzling from the bank, she digs up
    his back yard to find the money, only to puncture his new oil tank in
    the process.

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Gale Gordon
    (Theodore J. Mooney), Jimmy Garrett (Jerry Carmichael), Candy Moore
    (Chris Carmichael)

    Ralph
    Hart
    (Sherman Bagley) does not appear in this episode

    Guest
    Cast

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    Eddie
    Applegate

    (Bob Mooney) is probably best remembered for playing Richard Harrison
    on “The Patty Duke Show” on ABC, a series that aired concurrently
    with “The Lucy Show.”  The same week this episode first aired he
    was seen on that show. He died in 2016 at the age of 81.  

    This
    is the second of Mr. Mooney’s sons introduced on the series.  In
    “Lucy Gets Locked in the Vault” (S2;E4) we met Arnold Mooney (Stanley
    Livingston), a classmate of Jerry’s.  

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    James
    Flavin

    (Sgt. Wilcox) played the role of Sgt.
    Wilcox two episodes earlier in “Lucy and the Safe Cracker”
    (S2;E5)
    . He appeared in four films with Lucille Ball, including
    playing a police sergeant in Without
    Love

    (1945).
    During his long career he played so many officers of the law that his
    IMDB photo is of him in a police uniform!

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    Jack
    Donohue
    (Man
    at the Bank) was the director of this episode and 106 others. He
    also directed 35 episodes of “Here’s Lucy.” He will also be seen
    as the Conductor in “Lucy Conducts the Symphony” (S2;E13).  

    In
    the scene, Donohue approaches Viv to make a donation to the Hospital
    Helpers but is told to “Go
    away!”  

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    When
    Lucy asks Jerry to donate to the Hospital Helpers Fund, her voice
    sounds as if it was over-dubbed. Jerry replies that he already gave
    to the Volunteer Firemen’s Fund but coughs up a nickel anyway.  In
    “Lucy the Music Lover” (S1;E8) Viv was chairman of a benefit to
    raise funds for a new children’s hospital.

    Bob
    says his father paid $300 for a convertible and bought Mrs. Mooney a
    fur stole. That $300 is the equivalent to nearly $2,550 in 2020.
    Chris theorizes that Mr. Mooney may have won the Irish Sweepstakes.
    The Irish
    Sweepstakes

    was a lottery based in Ireland to benefit their hospitals. The first
    ‘legal’ lottery in the United States was in New Hampshire in 1964.  

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    This
    is the first mention of Mr. Mooney’s wife, whose name, we learn, is
    Irma. She will remain off-screen for the entire series.  The name was taken from the series “My Friend Irma” in which Gale Gordon’s mother was featured. We also
    learn that they have a dog, although we don’t learn its name.    

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    The bathrobe worn by Gale Gordon in this scene was later worn by Richard Deacon in the failed pilot for “The Carol Channing Show” (1966), produced by Desi Arnaz and written by Madelyn Davis and Bob Carroll Jr. 

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    Conversion
    from coal heating to oil heat began shortly after the Great
    Depression but was slow to catch on, especially in the Northeast,
    which heavily relied on coal.  As the technology progressed, costs
    for conversion decreased and many more homes moved away from coal to
    oil heat. Coal features heavily in the comic finale of “Lucy Builds
    a Rumpus Room” (S1;E11)
    .

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    Mr.
    Mooney talks on the telephone with Mr. Alan about his new oil burner.
    It is guaranteed for one year and will use an estimated 10,000
    gallons of oil over five years.  The oil tank is buried in the back
    yard.  When Mr. Mooney hastily scribbles notes about the conversation
    on a pad, Lucy mistakenly thinks that he has buried $10,000 in the
    back yard!

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    Mr.
    Mooney goes across the street to see Mr. Fox.  Della Fox was a
    wardrobe mistress on the series.  

    Lucy
    wonders aloud what Perry Mason would do in a case like this. “Perry
    Mason”
    (1957-1966) was a long-running TV series about a defense
    attorney (Raymond Burr) that aired concurrently with “The Lucy Show”
    on CBS.  

    Callbacks!

    This
    episode is full of clever callbacks to previous “Lucy Show”
    episodes.  Viv mentions hearing gossip from Flo
    the Manicurist
    .
    This was an off-screen character last mentioned in the series’ very
    first episode “Lucy Waits Up for Chris” (S1;E1).  The name Flo
    may be a tribute to Lucy’s childhood friend Flo Pauline Lopus.  

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    The
    gossip concerns Miss
    Tanner
    ,
    Mr. Mooney’s secretary, a character we met in “Lucy Gets Locked in the Vault” (S2;E5) where she was played by Ellen Corby (above). In this
    episode she is mentioned as “not being at her desk.”

    Viv
    says that Flo once started a rumor that Grandma
    Sutton
    had
    run off with a 22 year-old cat food salesman!  Grandma Sutton’s cat
    got stuck up a tree in “Lucy and Viv are Volunteer Firemen”
    (S1;E16)
    .  She was mentioned again in “Lucy Drives a Dump Truck”
    (S1;E24)
    and “Kiddie Parties Inc.” (S2;E2).  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Knotty Problem! When
    Lucy unwinds a rope to hoist Viv out of the hole it becomes knotted.
    Lucille Ball still manages to get it untangled without much delay.  

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    Oily Words! When
    Lucy’s pick ax causes a gusher from puncturing the oil tank buried in Mr.
    Mooney’s back yard, everyone complains that she damaged his oil
    heater
    , when in fact it was his oil tank, not the heater.  

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    “Lucy and the Bank Scandal” rates 3 Paper Hearts out of 5 

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  • Lucy Goes Duck Hunting

    S2;E6 ~ November 4, 1963

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    Synopsis

    Lucy
    lies to her handsome new boyfriend that she is an experienced duck
    hunter, so off they go to shoot ducks. It doesn’t take long for Lucy
    to mess everything up, but in the process they learn she does the
    world’s best duck call.

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Jimmy Garrett
    (Jerry Carmichael), Ralph Hart (Sherman Bagley), Candy Moore (Chris
    Carmichael)

    Gale
    Gordon
    (Theodore J. Mooney) does not appear in this episode

    Guest
    Cast

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    Keith
    Andes

    (Bill King) was born John Charles Andes in Ocean City, New Jersey, in
    1920. He appeared
    opposite Lucille
    Ball
    in
    her only Broadway musical Wildcat
    in 1960.
    Andes played Bill King in one more episode of the series “Lucy and
    the Winter Sports”
    (S3;E3) and played Brad Collins in “Lucy and
    Joan”
    (S4;E4) co-starring Joan Blondell.  Andes took his own life
    in 2005 after being diagnosed with terminal cancer. 

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    Donald
    Briggs
    (Eddie
    Collins) makes his seventh and final appearance as Viv’s on-again
    off-again boyfriend.
    He appeared
    on the 1930s radio program “Welcome Valley” and played the title
    role in “Frank Merriwell,” which led to his first film, playing
    the character in the 1936 Universal serial The
    Adventures of Frank Merriwell
    .
    He also starred with Lucille Ball in the 1939 film Panama
    Lady
    .
    He later turned up on a 1970 episode of “Here’s Lucy.” Briggs
    died in 1986 at the age of 75.

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    Gordon
    Jones

    (Charlie Van Tassel) appears posthumously.  He died on June 20, 1963,
    shortly after filming this episode.  One week later his final screen
    credit McLintock
    starring John Wayne opened in cinemas. He is best known as Brit
    Reid / The Green Hornet in Universal’s Green
    Hornet

    film serials and Mike the Cop,
    Lou
    Costello’s
    nemesis, on “The
    Abbott and Costello Show”
    (1952).
    He did two films with Lucille Ball: There
    Goes My Girl

    (1937) and Easy
    Living

    (1949). 

    Charlie Van Tassel is named after writer Madelyn Pugh Martin’s childhood friend Marge and her husband Charlie. Their names also turned up in scripts for Lucy’s radio show “My Favorite Husband.”

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    Sid
    Gould
    (Hunter
    #2) was
    first seen in “Lucy
    is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7)
    .
    He made 46 appearances on “The Lucy Show,” all as background
    characters. He also did 40 episodes of “Here’s Lucy.” Gould
    (born Sydney Greenfader) was Lucille Ball’s cousin by marriage to
    Gary Morton. Gould was married to Vanda Barra, who also appeared on
    “The Lucy Show” starting in 1967, as well as on “Here’s
    Lucy.” 

    Alan
    Ray
    (Hunter
    #1) was
    seen on “I Love Lucy” as the clapstick boy at “Ricky’s
    Screen Test” (ILL S4;E6)
    ,
    a Brown Derby waiter in “Hollywood
    at Last” (ILL S4;E16)
    ,
    and a male nurse in “Nursery
    School” (ILL S5;E9)
    .
    This is his fourth and final appearance on “The Lucy Show.” He
    also played a hotel doorman in the 1963 Lucille Ball / Bob Hope film
    Critic’s
    Choice
    .
    In 1950 Ray and Gale Gordon were in the film A
    Woman of Distinction
    in
    which Lucille Ball played herself in a cameo.

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    Six other uncredited actors play the rest of the duck hunters.

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    Although most all of the country saw this episode on Monday, November 4, 1963, local state elections the next day may have led to pre-ememption in some areas. The episode was probably then aired on Thursday, November 7, 1963. 

    This
    episode was actually the first one shot for season 2 but aired out of
    sequence.  It is also the first one ever filmed in color.  

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    Chris
    once again mentions her friend Cynthia and Jerry mentions his friend
    Billy Simmons.  In previous episodes

    The characters were played by Lucie Arnaz and Desi
    Arnaz Jr.  

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    Once
    again, Lucy’s TV is broken. Television sets were also the subject of
    “Lucy Puts Up a TV Antenna” (S1;E9).  

    Viv
    imagines that they’ll go to 21 for dinner, take in a Broadway show,
    and then go dancing at the Waldorf.  The Four Seasons, The
    Colony, and The Stork Club are also mentioned as possible destinations. These were all real-life night spots. 

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    • The
      Waldorf

      refers to the five-star Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on Park Avenue in New
      York City.  It first opened in 1893 and has become synonymous with
      luxury in accommodations and dining. The
      Starlight Roof, located on the 19th floor, is where Lucy and Viv would have gone for after supper
      dancing.  Lucy Ricardo stayed at the Waldorf as the Maharincess of
      Franistan in “The
      Publicity Agent” (S1;E31)

      and
      Lucy’s school chum Cynthia Harcourt will set up digs there while
      canvassing for funds in “Lucy
      is Envious” (S3;E23)
      .
    • The
      Four Seasons i
      s
      a restaurant in New
      York City
      located
      on East 52nd
      Street in the Seagram
      Building.
      Opening in 1959, the Four Seasons is associated with a number of ‘firsts’ in the hospitality
      industry.
      In the summer of 2016 the restaurant closed and announced it would
      be relocating to Park Avenue.  
    • The
      21 Club

      was first opened in 1922 and is still in business today. It is a
      restaurant and former prohibition-era speakeasy located at 21 West
      52nd Street (hence the name) in New York City. Perhaps the most famous feature
      of 21 is the collection lawn jockeys adorning the balcony above the
      entrance. In “Vacation From Marriage” (ILL S2;E6) Lucy and Ethel tell their
      husbands they have been to 21 four times (“That’s 84!”)  In
      “Mr.
      and Mrs. TV Show” (ILL S4;E24)
      ,
      Lucy tells Ricky she met a TV producer while having lunch at 21 with
      Carolyn Appleby.
    • The
      Colony

      Restaurant was home to the rich and the famous like the Vanderbilts,
      Whitneys,
      and Astors.
      It opened in 1920 and served its last meal in 1971.  
    • The
      Stork
      Club

      was a nightclub
      on
      58th Street in New
      York City,
      which during its existence from 1929 to 1965 was one of the most
      prestigious clubs in the world. A symbol of café
      society,
      the wealthy elite, including movie stars, celebrities, showgirls,
      and aristocrats all mixed in the VIP Room of the Club.
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    Lucy
    calls Bill King a combination of “Cary Grant, Bob Hope and J. Paul
    Getty.”
    Movie star Cary
    Grant

    (1904-1986) was mentioned four times on “I Love Lucy” all during
    the gang’s season 4 stay in Hollywood.  Bob
    Hope

    (1903-2003) co-starred with Lucille Ball in four feature films. He
    played himself in an episode of “I Love Lucy” and will appear in
    a cameo on “The Lucy Show.”  J. Paul Getty (1892-1972) was an oil
    tycoon who founded Getty Oil. In 1957, Fortune Magazine named him the
    richest living American.  

    Callbacks!

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    To
    be closer to her husband, Lucy Ricardo went duck hunting in “The
    Camping Trip”
    (ILL S2;E29)
    .

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    In
    “The Amateur Hour” (ILL S1;E14), a frog jumps down Lucy Ricardo’s
    shirt, causing her to squirm just as it does here when a frog finds its way into her
    waders.  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

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    Half On / Half Off! Eddie
    and Bill are helping Lucy on with their coats even as they announce
    they’ve already planned to eat at home.  

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    “Lucy Goes Duck Hunting” rates 3 Paper Hearts out of 5 

  • Lucy and the Safe Cracker

    S2;E5 ~ October 28, 1963

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    Synopsis

    Demonstrating
    how she got locked in the vault for the press, Lucy accidentally
    locks Mr. Mooney back in the bank vault.  To help break him out Lucy
    recruits Mr. Bundy, a reformed safe-cracker, now a candy store owner. The experience of opening the safe rekindles Mr.
    Bundy’s criminal desires so he grabs a bag of loot and takes Lucy
    and Viv hostage at his candy shop.

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Gale Gordon
    (Theodore J. Mooney)

    Jimmy
    Garrett
    (Jerry Carmichael), Ralph Hart (Sherman Bagley), and Candy
    Moore
    (Chris Carmichael) do not appear in this episode, although
    Sherman is mentioned.

    Guest
    Cast

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    Jay
    Novello
    (Mr.
    Bundy) was
    born Michael Romano in Chicago in 1904 to Italian parents and was
    fluent in the language before learning English. He played Mr.
    Merriweather in “The Seance” (ILL S1;E7) and returned to the
    series to play the nervous Mr. Beecher in The
    Sublease” (ILL S3;E31)

    and Mario Orsatti, the Visitor
    from Italy” (ILL S6;E5)
    .
    This is the first of Novello’s two appearances on “The Lucy Show.”
    Coincidentally, Novello’s second wife went by the nickname ‘Lucy’.
    In 1965 he played the recurring character Mayor Mario Lugatto on
    “McHale’s Navy.”

    Mr.
    Bundy is an ex-con who bought Grandma’s Dandy Candy Shop.

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    William
    Woodson
    (Larry
    McAdoo, Reporter for Danfield TV) makes the first of his two
    appearances on “The Lucy Show.”  TV viewers might recognize his
    voice as the narrator on the opening credits of “The Odd Couple”
    (1970-1972): “Can
    two divorced men share an apartment without driving each other
    crazy?”

    He returns to “The Lucy Show” as the Emcee in “Lucy and Carol
    in Palm Springs”
    (S5;E8).  

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    James
    Flavin
    (Sgt.
    Wilcox) coincidentally appeared as the Immigration Officer searching
    for Mario Orsatti (Jay Novello) in
    Visitor
    from Italy” (ILL S6;E5)
    .
    He will return to “The Lucy Show” two episodes later to play
    Sgt. Wilcox again in another bank-themed episode, “Lucy and the
    Bank Scandal”
    (S2;E7).  He appeared in four films with Lucille
    Ball, including playing a police sergeant in Without
    Love

    (1945).  During his long career he played so many officers of the law
    that his IMDB photo is of him in a police uniform!  

    The bank employees are played by: 

    • Hazel
      Pierce
       was
      Lucille Ball’s camera and lighting stand-in throughout “I Love
      Lucy.” She also made frequent appearances on the show. Of her many
      on-camera appearances on “The Lucy Show” only once was she given
      a character name and credited, in “Lucy Plays Cleopatra” (S1;E1).
      She was also an uncredited extra in the film Forever
      Darling 
      (1956).
    • William
      Meader
       had appeared as an airport extra in The
      Ricardos Go to Japan,”

      a
      1959 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour.” He made more than 15
      appearances on “The Lucy Show,” mostly as a clerk or a customer
      in Mr. Mooney’s bank.
    • James
      Gonzales

      was a popular Hollywood extra who first acted with Lucille
      Ball in the 1953 film The
      Long, Long Trailer
      .
      He was previously seen on the series as Stan Williams in Lucy
      Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2)
      .
      He will be seen in more than 20 future episodes of “The Lucy Show”
      and 3 episodes of “Here’s Lucy.”
    • Bert
      Stevens

      makes
      his third appearances on the series. In many episodes he appears
      opposite his wife, Caryl Lincoln, one of Lucy’s friends from her
      Goldwyn Girl days. Stevens was the brother of actress Barbara
      Stanwyck, whose given name was Ruby Stevens. He was seen in the
      Tropicana audience for the Flapper Follies when Ricky
      Loses His Voice” (ILL S2;E9)

      but
      along with Lincoln, probably appeared on other episodes as well. He
      appeared alongside Lucille Ball in five films.
    • Judith
      Woodbury
       makes the first of her eight (mostly) uncredited
      appearances on “The Lucy Show.”  She also appeared in one episode
      of “Here’s Lucy.”  
    • Several
      other background actors play the rest of the bank’s staff.  
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    This episode was filmed on May 23, 1963. It continues the storyline of “Lucy Gets Locked in the Vault”
    (S2;E4)
    , although each episode stands on its own. This was also done
    on “I Love Lucy” with the episodes “Lucy Visits Grauman’s”
    (ILL S5;E1)
    and “Lucy and John Wayne” (ILL S5;E2).

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    Just
    as in “Lucy Gets Locked in the Vault” (S2;E4), Lucy’s grocery
    bag contains a package of paper napkins, a bottle brush, a can of
    baked beans. Lucy left the vault clutching the box of uncooked
    macaroni and Lucy and Mr. Mooney used the deck of children’s
    playing cards to play poker.  

    Lucy
    asks Viv to run next door to Dr. Jacoby and get a stethoscope.  In
    “Lucy and the Little League” (S1;E28) Dr. Jacoby was played by
    Herb Vigran.  He was, however, an eye doctor.

    Because of their experience in the Navy WAVES established in “Lucy Becomes an Astronaut” (S1;E6), Lucy and Viv both know Morse Code.  

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    Mr. Mooney’s telephone number is (311) 555-4568.  Although phone numbers in this
    time period were often identified with letter prefixes (ie: Klondike
    5-4568) the joke of the number being confused with the combination to
    the vault depends upon it consisting solely of digits. 555 was the common prefix for all film and television phone numbers. 

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    Lucy
    and Viv sing the Grandma’s Dandy Candy Shop jingle to the tune of
    “I’ve Been Workin’ on the Railroad.”  The traditional folk song
    was
    first published as “Levee Song” in 1894.
    The
    earliest known recording is by the Sandhills Sixteen in 1927.

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    Viv
    makes a bad joke while the audience is laughing at Lucy’s face full
    of chocolate. When hearing that Mr. Bundy the candy seller has turned
    himself in out of guilt, Viv says “I
    always knew he had a soft center.”  

    In “Job Switching” (ILL S2;E4) Ethel Mertz (Vivian Vance) was
    thrown out of the boxing department of Kramer’s Candy Kitchen for
    pinching the chocolates to see what kind they were.’

    Callbacks!

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    The
    sponsor of the TV coverage is ‘Friendly Al, Used Car Dealer.’
    In “Getting Ready” (ILL S4;E10) Al
    Hergersheimer is the name of the used car salesman who sells Fred a
    dilapidated 1923 blue Cadillac.

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    Lucy
    having a face full of chocolate is a callback to Lucy Ricardo’s
    experience chocolate dipping at Kramer’s Candy Kitchen in “Job
    Switching” (ILL S2;E4)
    .

    Fast Forward!

    On the first season of “Here’s Lucy” Wally Cox plays a nervous safe cracker in “Lucy and the Ex-Con” (HL S1;E15).   

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Price Check! When
    the man on the phone asks the cost of butter cream, Lucy, reading the
    signs, tells Viv the light chocolate is $1.40 a pound, and the dark
    chocolate is $1.35. When Viv repeats the information into the phone,
    she accidentally reverses the prices.

    Chamber of Commerce! Although
    Mr. Bundy owns the candy store in Danfield, he is not mentioned in
    “Lucy and Viv Become Tycoons” (S1;E20) when Lucy and Viv are
    looking to sell their confections. In that episode Old Man Armstrong
    is mentioned as owning the candy shop.

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    Recipe Receipts! When
    Lucy is jamming candy into the mouth of Mr. McAdoo while singing the
    jingle on camera, his mouth is covered with white cream, yet Mr.
    Bundy gave Lucy a bag of chocolate covered cherries, a confection
    that does not include cream.    

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    “Lucy and the Safe Cracker” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5 

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  • Lucy Gets Locked in the Vault

    S2;E4 ~ October 21, 1963

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    Synopsis

    Lucy
    makes a bad impression on new bank president Mr. Mooney after he
    refuses to advance her money, she tests her home hair cutting kit on
    his son, Arnold. Going to the bank to apologize for the mohawk, she
    locks Mooney and herself in the vault.

    Regular
    Cast


    Lucille
    Ball
    (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Jimmy Garrett
    (Jerry Carmichael), Ralph Hart (Sherman Bagley), Candy Moore (Chris
    Carmichael)

    Although
    Ralph Hart and Candy Moore appear in the final scene, they don’t have
    any dialogue.  

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    This
    is the first appearance of Gale
    Gordon

    (Theodore J. Mooney).  He was
    said to be the highest paid radio artist of the 1930’s and was in
    such demand that he often did two or more radio shows a day. His
    professional collaboration with Lucille Ball started in 1938 as the
    announcer of Jack Haley’s “The Wonder Show” (Wonder Bread was
    their sponsor). He played Mr. Atterbury on Lucy’s “My Favorite
    Husband” and was a front-runner for the part of Fred Mertz on “I
    Love Lucy.”  When scheduling prevented his participation, he
    appeared as Mr. Littlefield, the Tropicana’s owner in two episodes of
    the show.  In addition to Mr. Littlefield, he played a Judge in “Lucy
    Makes Room for Danny,”

    a
    1958 episode of “The Lucy–Desi Comedy Hour.”  “The Lucy Show”
    solidified his partnership with Lucille Ball for the rest of their
    careers.  He went on to play Harrison Otis Carter in “Here’s
    Lucy,” Omar Whittaker in “Lucy Calls The President,” and Curtis
    McGibbon in “Life with Lucy.” He died in 1995 at the age of 89.

    Mr.
    Mooney’s son Arnold is in the same class with Lucy’s son Jerry.

    Guest
    Cast

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    Ellen
    Corby

    (Miss Tanner) made
    a memorable appearance on “I Love Lucy” as Miss Hannah, Lucy
    Ricardo’s High School drama teacher in “Lucy
    Meets Orson Welles” (ILL S6;E3)
    .
    This is her second appearance on “The Lucy Show” after appearing
    in “Lucy and the Runaway Butterfly” (S1;E29).  She went on to
    fame as the kindly grandmother on the long-running series “The
    Waltons,” playing the role from 1971 till 1997, two years before
    her death.

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    Barry
    Livingston

    (Arnold Mooney) is probably best remembered as Ernie, the adopted son on “My Three Sons.”  His first appearance on that series was
    just one week after he played Arnold Mooney, a role he would return
    to in “Lucy and the Scout Trip” (S2;E26).  Unlike most child
    stars of the era, Livingston is still acting today.  

    This is the second time one of “My Three Sons” appeared on “The Lucy Show.”  Don Grady (Robbie Douglas) was featured in “Lucy is a Chaperone” (S1;E27).  

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    Sid
    Gould

    (Reporter) was
    first seen in “Lucy
    is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7)
    .
    This is his third of 46 appearances on “The Lucy Show,” all as
    background characters. He also did 40 episodes of “Here’s Lucy.”
    Gould (born Sydney Greenfader) was Lucille Ball’s cousin by
    marriage to Gary Morton. Gould was married to Vanda Barra, who also
    appeared on “The Lucy Show” starting in 1967, as well as on
    “Here’s Lucy.”

    Hazel
    Pierce

    (Bank Customer) was
    Lucille Ball’s camera and lighting stand-in throughout “I Love
    Lucy.” She also made frequent appearances on the show. Of her many
    on-camera appearances on “The Lucy Show” only once was she given
    a character name and credited in “Lucy Plays Cleopatra” (S1;E1).
    She was also an uncredited extra in the film Forever
    Darling 
    (1956).

    Several
    other background actors play the bank staff and customers.

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    This episode was filmed on May 16, 1963.

    This
    is the first episode that actually has a plot continued into the next
    episode “Lucy and the Safe Cracker” (S2;E5), although each
    episodes stands on its own.  This was also done on “I Love Lucy”
    with the episodes “Lucy Visits Grauman’s” (ILL S5;E1) and “Lucy
    and John Wayne” (ILL S5;E2)
    .

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    The
    episode discusses Mr. Mooney’s predecessor, Mr. Barndsdahl, a
    character who last appeared in “Vivian Sues Lucy” (S1;E10).  The
    character was written out when actor Charles Lane could not memorize
    his lines. It is also theorized that Lucille Ball was looking to
    bring Gale Gordon on the show as the banker as soon as his contract
    was up on “Dennis the Menace.”  

    Mr. Mooney reads from Mr. Barnsdahl’s 27-page memo about Mrs. Carmichael: “To  get money from the bank, she will threaten, wheedle, cajole, cry, implore, jolly and stage tantrums.”  In “Lucy is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7) Mr. Barnsdahl reads from Lucy’s late husband’s will which says she will: “One – wheedle. Two – lose her temper. And three – cry.”  Lucy Ricardo made similar attempts to get money from her husband throughout “I Love Lucy.”

    Viv
    and Lucy’s car is nicknamed Grover.
    The only time we saw the car was in “Lucy Buys a Sheep” (S1:E5)
    where it was a 1949 Packard. The car broke down on Viv and Sherman
    in “Lucy and Her Electric Mattress” (S1;E12). It will cost $50
    for the repairs, which Lucy has to pay as per her agreement with Viv.

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    When
    Lucy cuts Arnold’s hair, Stanley Livingston is actually wearing a
    wig.

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    Lucy reads the cover of the home hair cutting booklet: “Anyone who can comb hair, can cut hair.” The Desilu prop people mocked up the reverse to read “Save Up To $50 a Year” which is the exact amount Lucy needs to pay the car repair bill.  

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    Lucy’s
    grocery bag contains a package of napkins, a bottle brush, a can of
    baked beans, a box of uncooked macaroni, and a deck of children’s
    playing cards (’Who’s in the Barnyard’).
    Adapting the cards for poker, Lucy wins with four little lambs and a
    wild billy goat!  

    Callbacks!

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    Getting
    trapped inside the vault with no food is similar to when the the
    Ricardos and Mertzes were trapped in a Swiss Alps cabin by an avalanche.
    Just like her dry macaroni in the vault, Lucy saved her food and
    wouldn’t share with her hungry companion(s).  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Follicle Faux Pas! Lucy
    starts cutting Arnold’s hair while he is still wearing his
    eyeglasses.  

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    “Lucy Gets Locked in the Vault” rates 3 Paper Hearts out of 5

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  • Lucy and Viv Play Softball

    S2;E3 ~ October 14, 1963

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    Synopsis

    Lucy
    and Viv are usually bench warmers when the Danfield Volunteer Fire
    Department plays softball, but when one of their players is expecting a baby and Frances passes out, Lucy and Viv take the field.  Lucy’s
    ill-fitting trousers help her ‘catch’ the game-winning fly ball and
    save the day!  

    Regular
    Cast

    Lucille
    Ball (Lucy Carmichael), Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley), Jimmy Garrett
    (Jerry Carmichael), Ralph Hart (Sherman Bagley), Candy Moore (Chris
    Carmichael)

    Guest
    Cast

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    William
    Schallert
    (Mr.
    Cresant) is probably best remembered as the father on “The Patty
    Duke Show” (1963-1966) and was also a series regular on “The Many
    Loves of Dobie Gillis” (1959-1962). In between, he found time to
    play Mr. Cresant in this episode and also a baseball-themed episode
    in season one.

    Mr.
    Cresant runs the hardware store.

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    Herb
    Vigran
    (Umpire)
    played Jule, Ricky Ricardo’s music agent on two episodes of “I
    Love Lucy” in addition to playing movie publicist Hal Sparks in
    “Lucy
    is Envious” (ILL S3;23)
    .
    He was seen in the Lucy-Desi film The
    Long, Long Trailer
    .
    Like William Schallert, the recognizable character actor also played
    this role in the baseball-themed episode in season one. He went on to
    play other characters in four more episodes.

    In
    the the first episode that Herb Vigran played umpire, his character name was Dr. Jacoby, an eye
    doctor.  The evening this episode first aired, Herb Vigran also
    appeared on “Make Room for Daddy,” which followed “The Lucy
    Show” on CBS!

    Mary
    Jane Croft
    (Audrey
    Simmons) played Betty Ramsey during season six of “I Love Lucy.”
    She also played Cynthia Harcourt in “Lucy
    is Envious” (ILL S3;E23)
    and
    Evelyn Bigsby in“Return
    Home from Europe” (ILL S5;E26)
    .
    She played Audrey Simmons for eight episodes but when Lucy moves to
    California, she will play Mary Jane Lewis (the actor’s married
    name) until the series finale. Her husband Elliott Lewis was a
    producer of “The Lucy Show” from 1962 to 1964. She also played a
    character named Mary Jane Lewis on “Here’s Lucy” from 1969 to
    1974.

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    Mary
    Wickes
    (Frances)
    was one of Lucille Ball’s closest friends and at one time, a
    neighbor. She made a memorable appearances on “I Love Lucy” as
    ballet mistress Madame Lamond in “The
    Ballet” (ILL S1;E19).
      She also appeared as Frances in the penultimate episode of season
    one of “The Lucy Show” “Lucy and the Runaway Butterfly”
    (S1;E29)
    . She will make one more appearance as Frances, but then
    makes four more as a variety of characters. Wickes appeared in nine
    episodes of “Here’s Lucy.” Their final collaboration on screen
    was “Lucy Calls the President” in 1977.

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    Karen
    Norris
    (Babette
    Edwards) previously appeared as Della Fox (aka Student #2 with a head
    cold) in “Lucy
    and Viv Take Up Chemistry” (S1;E26
    and Ella, a maid, in “Lucy
    and the Runaway Butterfly (S1;E29)
    .
    She will makes three more background appearances on “The Lucy
    Show.” She also did one episode of “Here’s Lucy” in 1968.  

    Babette
    is expecting her sixth child.

    Hazel
    Pierce
    (Hazel)
    was Lucille Ball’s camera and lighting stand-in throughout “I
    Love Lucy.” She also made frequent appearances on the show. Of her
    many on-camera appearances on “The Lucy Show” only once was she
    given a character name and credited in “Lucy Plays Cleopatra”
    (S1;E1). She was also an uncredited extra in the film Forever
    Darling

    (1956).

    Four
    more uncredited women play the other volunteer fire fighters / ball
    players. 

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    In April 1961 Lucille
    Ball played softball in Central Park for the Broadway Show League
    when she was appearing in Wildcat.
    Julie Andrews (starring in Camelot)
    was the catcher!  

    Stefan
    Kanfer’s biography Ball
    of Fire: The Tumultuous Life and Comic Art of Lucille Ball
    says
    that Lucille made Vivian cry on set when she couldn’t catch the
    baseball bat. Lucy stormed off the set but returned a short while
    later as if nothing had happened.  

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    Lucy
    and Viv play for the Danfield Fire Belles. The team is comprised of
    the women’s volunteer fire fighters. In a season one episode, their barbershop quartet was named the Four Alarms. 

    Sherman
    talks about Billy Simmons, whose mother is Audrey Simmons. When last
    seen, Billy was played by Desi Arnaz Jr.

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    Thanks
    to Audrey’s cousin Elliott, the ladies
    borrow uniforms from the Danfield High School’s baseball team. Lucy’s
    pants are so over-sized, he has to use the rope from her bathrobe to
    keep keep them up. In real-life, Elliott is the first name of the
    show’s producer who is also Mary Jane Croft’s husband!  

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    Viv
    is wearing #12, Tommy Finley’s uniform, the home-run king of Danfield
    High. Lucy is wearing #13, which belonged to Art ‘Moose’ Thompson, the star pitcher. Art Thompson is the birth name of Tommy
    Thompson, who was a producer on “The Lucy Show.”  He is also
    mentioned in “Lucy, the Camp Cook” (S3;E6).  

    The
    Danfield Chamber of Commerce is giving every member of the winning
    team “a shiny new axe.”

    Here
    Jerry gives Lucy some pointers about baseball, but in “Lucy and the
    Little League” (S1;E28)
    it was Lucy doing the coaching.

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    Sherman,
    about his mother’s pitching: “Sandy
    Koufax doesn’t have a thing to worry about.”  
    Sanford
    “Sandy” Koufax
      pitched
    12 seasons for the Brooklyn
    / Los Angeles Dodgers
    from 1955 to 1966. At age 36 he became the youngest player ever
    elected to
    the Baseball
    Hall of Fame. Two
    weeks before this episode aired (but months after it was written and
    filmed), Koufax was MVP at the 1963 World Series. As an actor, he
    played himself on a 1962 episode of “Dennis the Menace” and a
    1963 episode of “Mr. Ed” which aired just two weeks prior to this
    mention on “The Lucy Show.”  

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    Lucy
    owes $86.72 at Mr. Cresant’s Hardware Store. That is the equivalent
    of $730 in today’s economy.  [2020]

    When
    Mr. Cresant asks Babette why she can’t play in the big game, she
    replies
    “Well, I’m—”

    but is cut off by Viv before she can say the word “pregnant”.
    This is similar to “I Love Lucy” where the word was not allowed
    to be spoken aloud.  

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    Mr.
    Cresant sends Lucy and Viv to the batting machine at the amusement
    park to determine who will play in the big game.  

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    The
    stadium wall has advertising for Cresant’s Hardware, Herb’s TV, and
    Hoffstedder’s Drug Store. Herb’s TV was seen in “Lucy Puts Up an
    Antenna” (S1;E9)
    where Herb was played by Del Moore. Mr.
    Hoffstedder was mentioned in “Lucy and the Runaway Butterfly”
    (S1;E29)
    and “Lucy and Viv Become Tycoons” (S1;E20) where he was
    called Dr. Hoffstedder. We have yet to meet Mr. Hoffstedder himself
    or “visit” his drug store.  

    Callbacks!

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    Lucille
    Ball wearing an over-sized baseball uniform is visually similar to
    “Lucy and Bob Hope” (ILL S6;E1) where she disguised herself as
    one of the players. 

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    In
    the scene at the ballpark, with Lucy in the outfield, her hair is
    darker and much longer. That is because it is her own hair.

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    “Lucy and Viv Play Softball” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5