• Chris’s New Year’s Eve Party

    S1;E14 ~ December 31, 1962

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    Synopsis

    Chris
    doesn’t want her mother to chaperon her New Year’s Eve party, so
    Lucy, Viv and the boys go out for the night and leave the chaperoning
    to Harry. When Harry calls Lucy at the restaurant in a panic, Lucy
    rushes to save the party with a silent movie sketch.

    Regular
    Cast


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

    Although
    Dick Martin appears as the waiter in the silent movie sketch, he has
    no spoken lines in this episode.

    Guest
    Cast

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    Donald
    Briggs

    (Eddie Collins) makes the third of his seven appearances as Viv’s
    on-again off-again boyfriend.  

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    Tom
    Lowell
    (Alan
    Harper) makes his final appearance on the series as Chris’s prep-school boyfriend. 

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    James
    Gonzales

    (Waiter) makes his second of 23 appearance on the series, having
    already played Stan Williams in “Lucy Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2).
    He will also make two appearances on “Here’s Lucy.”

    The
    New Year’s Eve diners at the Elm Tree Inn are played by:

    • Paul
      Bradley
      makes
      the first of his six appearances on “The Lucy Show” in various
      roles.  He will also be seen in two episodes of “Here’s Lucy.”
    • Paul
      Cristo
      appeared
      in the audience of The
      Most Happy Fella
      during
      “Lucy’s
      Night in Town” (ILL S6;E22)
      .
      He did two episodes of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” and had
      already appeared in “Lucy is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7).
      Coming full circle, he was in the theatre audience of Lucy’s 1963
      film with Bob Hope, Critic’s
      Choice
      .
    • Bess
      Flowers

      was dubbed ‘Queen of the Extras’ in Hollywood and is credited
      with more than 700 film and TV appearances from 1923 to 1964. She
      was seen in
      the audience of Over
      the Teacups

      in
      “Ethel’s Birthday” (ILL S4;E8)
      and The
      Most Happy Fella
      during
      “Lucy’s
      Night in Town” (ILL S6;E22)
      .
      This is the first of her five uncredited appearances on “The Lucy
      Show.”  Not surprisingly, Flowers was a founding member of SEG,
      the Screen Extras Guild (now part of SAG) in 1945. Coincidentally,
      she did three films with Charlie Chaplin, who Lucy impersonates in
      this episode.
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    • Hazel Pierce was Lucille Ball’s camera and lighting stand-in throughout “I Love Lucy.”  She also made frequent appearances on the show, although only once did she speak, when she won the television auctioned off by Ladies Overseas Aid in “Ricky’s European Booking” (ILL S5;E10) and she shouted “I won!”. This is the second of her 21 un-credited on-camera appearances on “The Lucy Show.” In the opening of season two, “Lucy Plays Cleopatra” (S2;E1), she received screen credit as Mary Lou. She was also an uncredited extra in the film Forever Darling (1956). Pierce died in 1984 at the age of 90. 
    • Ed
      Haskett
      had appeared with Lucille Ball in The Fuller Brush
      Girl
      (1950). Like Paul Cristo, he was also in “Lucy is a
      Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7)
      .
    • Shep
      Houghton

      began
      working as an extra while still a teenager, taking background jobs
      on weekends and attending high school during the week.
      Between 1934 and 1947 he made three films with Lucille Ball,
      including Too Many Girls, the movie that brought together
      Lucy and Desi Arnaz. This is his only appearance on “The Lucy
      Show” although he also does one episode of “Here’s Lucy” in
      1971.  Houghton was one of the Winkie Guards in 1939’s The Wizard
      of Oz
      and a Southern Dandy in Gone With the Wind.  
    • Monty
      O’Grady
      was
      first seen with Lucille Ball in The
      Long, Long Trailer
      (1953),
      and played a passenger on the S.S. Constitution in “Second
      Honeymoon” (ILL S5;E14)
      .
      He was at the airport when “The
      Ricardos Go to Japan”
      (1959).
      With Paul Cristo, Ed Haskett, and Hazel Pierce, he was he was a
      restaurant patron in “Lucy is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7). He
      made a dozen more appearances on the series and a half dozen on
      “Here’s Lucy.”
    • Jean
      Vachon
      makes
      the first of her six appearances on “The Lucy Show,” all but one
      uncredited.  

    Eight uncredited young men and women play the party guests at Chris’s New Year’s Eve party. 

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    This is the second of three times a “Lucy” sitcom aired a new episode on New Year’s Eve, but the only time the episode has a New Year’s theme. The first was “The Adagio” (ILL S1;E12) in 1951.    

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    On New Year’s Eve 1973, “Here’s Lucy” first aired “Lucy Plays Cops and Robbers” (HL S6;E14). Not a New Year’s Eve themed show, but the final season of the series. 

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    On New Year’s Day 1968, “The Lucy Show” first aired “Lucy and Viv Reminisce” (S6;E16). This was primarily a clips show with new wrap-around material. This was a holiday treat for those fans of the show – and of Ball and Vance. 

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    On New Year’s Day 1973, “Here’s Lucy” first aired “Lucy Is Really In A Pickle” (HL S5;E15). This whimsical episode has no holiday theme – but it is fun. 

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    “Chris’s New Year’s Eve Party” aired opposite “Saints and Sinners” on NBC.  On this night, Charles Lane appeared on the series. His role of Lucy’s banker Mr. Barnsdahl had been written off “The Lucy Show” earlier in the month. 

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    Lucille Ball spent much of 1962 making Critic’s Choice with Bob Hope before the start of “The Lucy Show” during the summer of 1962. 

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    This newspaper article (dated 12/31/62), does a brief feature on Lucy with the listing for this episode adjacent to it. The article is incorrect in listing Critic’s Choice as Ball and Hope’s “second joint effort.” It was actually their fourth. Despite the suggestion that they might collaborate on a film adaptation of The Great Sebastians, this never came to pass. Lunt and Fontanne had already done a 1957 TV version of their 1955 stage hit.  


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    At the beginning of the episode, Lucy suggests that she and Viv go to Times Square or to a movie in the Village with a banana split afterwards. An unenthusiastic Viv shoots down both these suggestions.

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    Knowing that mentioning an actual year might ‘age’ the episode in syndication, no one mentions 1962 or 1963 during the New Year’s Eve celebrations.  It is also absent from party favors and banners.  

    A boy named Peter Newguard is mentioned. He is a apparently a friend of Jerry and Sherman.  

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    Lucy and Viv take their boys to the Elm Tree Inn which advertises $5.00 for dinner, a floor show, dancing, paper hats, and noise makers. Despite this terrific deal, Lucy, Viv and the boys are able to get a table with just a few hours notice. Waiting for midnight, the boys fall asleep!   

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    Jerry doesn’t know how to fox trot, but he knows the Twist and the Watusi. “The Wah-Watusi” was released by the Orlons in 1962. It reached #2 on the Billboard charts.  

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    Back at home, the grown-ups rescue Chris’s dull party with a silent movie sketch.

    Lucy claims that their silent movie sketch got more applause than Flora’s Peabody’s homemade divinity fudge at last year’s PTA carnival!  This
    was the first time Lucille Ball did her Charlie Chaplin imitation on
    television. A still of Lucy as Chaplin is included in the photo
    montage on the season 1 DVD release.  

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    The silent movie sketch is performed in the Carmichael living room and is
    underscored with ragtime piano music by Scott Joplin

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    When
    Chris is unsure her friends will know who Charlie Chaplin is, Lucy
    describes him as a stone-age Soupy
    Sales
    .
    Sales (born Milton Supman) was
    a comedian best known for his children’s
    television
    show,
    “Lunch with Soupy Sales” (1953-66), a series of comedy sketches
    frequently ending with Sales getting a pie in the face, which
    became his trademark.

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    Viv
    calls Lucy Captain Kangaroo because she wants to turn Chris’s New
    Year’s Eve gathering into a kids party. “Captain
    Kangaroo

    was
    a children’s
    television series
    that
    aired weekday mornings on CBS from
    October 1955 to December 1984.  The Captain (Bob Keeshan) would tell
    stories, meet guests, and indulge in silly stunts with regular
    characters, both humans and puppets. Lucy mentions getting a new net
    for the ping-pong table and ping-pong balls were often used as part
    of the humor in “Captain Kangaroo.” Lucy dressed in a kangaroo
    costume in “Lucy Is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7).  

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    Lucy and Viv canceled New Year’s dates
    with Eddie and Harry to be at Chris’s party. They all later turn up at
    the party anyway!  

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    LIFE Magazine featured a photo of Lucy as Chaplin in the issue of November 30, 1962, a month before the episode aired.  This photo was later part of a a special issue of LIFE called “Classic Faces” (above).

    FAST FORWARD!

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    Lucy repeated her Chaplin impersonation four years later in “Lucy Meets Mickey Rooney” (S4;E18).

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    In December 1967, Lucy broke into a bit of her Chaplin to entertain passengers when training to be a flight attendant in “Lucy and Carol Burnett: Part 1″ (S6;E14). 

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    In 1974, a still photo from this episode turns up in the dressing room of Miss Lucille Ball in “Lucy Carter Meets Lucille Ball” (HL S6;E22). 


    CALLBACKS!

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    Lucy
    says she and Viv previously did their silent movie sketch at the PTA
    carnival. When Lucy Ricardo moved to Westport, she was often part of
    PTA shows. “Lucy Does the Tango” (ILL S6;20) and “The
    Celebrity Next Door” (1957)
    both mention the PTA.  

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    Lucy
    dancing the fox trot with her young son is reminiscent of when Lucy
    Ricardo danced with young Kenneth Hamilton while Ricky was working
    during their “Second Honeymoon” (ILL S5;E14) on the S.S.
    Constitution.


    Blooper
    Alerts!

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    Snagged! Lucy’s
    shirt tail momentarily gets snagged on one of the party hats when she
    gets up to go to the sideboard.

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    Gravity! During
    the silent movie sketch the napkin draped over Harry (the waiter’s)
    arm falls to the floor.  He then has trouble keeping it on his arm.  

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    “Chris’s New Year’s Eve Party” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5


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  • Together for Christmas

    S1;E13 ~ December 24, 1962

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    Executive Producer  Desi Arnaz
    Directed by  Jack Donohue
    Written by 

    Bob Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Martin, Bob Weiskopf, and Bob Schiller.

    Synopsis 

    The Carmichaels and Bagleys are spending their first Christmas together in Danfield and Lucy
    and Viv do nothing but argue over their family’s special traditions.
    In the end, however, the kids show Lucy and Viv the true meaning of
    Christmas.

    Regular
    Cast


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

    Dick
    Martin
    (Harry Connors) does not
    appear in this episode, although he is mentioned.

    Guest
    Cast

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    Tom
    Lowell

    (Alan Harper, right) makes his second of three appearances as Chris’s prep
    school boyfriend.  

    We
    learn that Alan Harper belongs to the country club. Although he sings
    with the carolers, he does not speak in this episode.  

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    Joe
    Mell

    (Ernie, the Butcher) makes the first of his five appearances as a
    background player on “The Lucy Show.”  He also appeared in a 1969
    episode of “Here’s Lucy.”  In 1964, he appeared in the TV special
    “Mr. and Mrs.” (aka “The Lucille Ball Comedy Hour”), which
    featured many of the Desilu regulars and was directed by Jack
    Donohue, who directed “Together for Christmas.”  In 1971, he was
    a Taxi Driver on “Lucy and the Lecher,” a cross-over episode of
    Danny Thomas’s “Make Room for Granddaddy” in which Lucille Ball
    played Lucy Carter, her character from “Here’s Lucy.”  

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    Bob
    Stephenson
    (Johnny, the Parcel Post Delivery Man) makes the second of his two appearances on the
    series, after playing the YMCA clerk (uncredited) in “Lucy Digs Up
    a Date” (S1;E2)
    .

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    The Mitchell Boys Choir (uncredited). Fourteen young boys from the troupe play the YMCA carolers. Unlike the real-life Mighty Mites
    boys football team in “Lucy is a Referee” (S1;E3), they do not
    get screen credit.  

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    Robert Mitchell was an organist at St. Brendan Church in Los Angeles in 1934 where he organized a boys’ choir that he directed for 66 years. In 1936, the Mitchell Singing Boys, as they were also known, were cast in their first film, The Girl from Paris. Other films in which the choir appeared included Going My Way with Bing Crosby in 1944, The Bishop’s Wife with Cary Grant in 1947, and Blondie in Society in 1941. The Mitchell’s Boy Choir soon became America’s most popular Boys Choir and appeared in over 100 movies.


    This is the first (but not the last) episode not to have Lucy’s name in the title. This episode was filmed before “Lucy and Her Electric Mattress” (S1;E12) and saved for broadcast on Christmas Eve. During the roll of the credits after the main title sequence, the theme music has jingle bells added to it. This is the second time this music was changed to fit the theme of the episode, an enhancement that was eventually dropped. The first was in “Lucy Is a Referee” (S1:E3) when it sounded like a marching band.

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    This
    is the first Christmas the Carmichael and Bagley families have
    celebrated at home together. We learn that Lucy usually takes her
    kids to visit her mother in Jamestown and Viv usually takes her kids
    to visit her uncle in Philadelphia. It is unclear if this is Uncle
    Ned, who was mentioned in the previous episode “Lucy and Her
    Electric Mattress” (S1;E12)
    . Both Lucy and Viv will be taking the
    train to their respective hometowns.  It has already been established
    that fictional Danfield is located on a rail line, not unlike New
    Rochelle, a real-life New York town also mentioned in the previous
    episode.  

    The
    main conflict of the episode comes from marrying differing holiday
    traditions:

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    When Lucy and Viv argue whether to buy a goose or a turkey for Christmas dinner, Ernie the butcher jokingly suggests stuffing the turkey with a goose!  As silly as it seemed in 1962, the practice would become popular in the 1980s with the ‘turducken’ or ‘gooducken’ – a three-bird roast consisting of a a turkey or goose stuffed with a de-boned duck and chicken.  

    About
    Viv’s propensity for mistletoe, Lucy remarks that the only way a man
    could get into their house un-kissed would be through the coal chute.
    Coal delivery, a common home heating method before the popularity of oil heat, played an integral part of the final moments of “Lucy
    Builds a Rumpus Room” (S1;E11)
    .  

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    In
    addition to buying gifts for the family and Harry next door, Jerry
    also plans to buy for Tommy and Amy Shaffer – all with $1.10. This
    is the first mention of Tommy and Amy.

    Talking on the phone to Tommy, Jerry says, 

    “I’ll bet we’re the only people in the world two have two Christmas trees. One is green and one is – you’ll pardon the expression – white.”  

    This is a momentary acknowledgment of the headlines of the year. In 1962, President Kennedy dispatched troops to force the University of Mississippi (a state institution) to admit James Meredith, a black student. At the same time, he forbade racial or religious discrimination in federally financed housing.

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    Chris asks her mother whether it would be appropriate to buy Alan Harper a bottle of after shave, but Lucy is suspicious when her daughter confirms that he does indeed have whiskers!  Although Alan stands next to Chris in the episode’s final moments, he doesn’t have any dialogue.  

    Sherman
    talks about Mr. Everett at the Y.  The YMCA was prominently featured
    in “Lucy Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2) and mentioned in a couple of
    other episodes. Jerry says he sang “White Christmas” for Mr.
    Everett and there wasn’t a dry eye in the house!  The sentimental
    holiday song was written by Irving Berlin in 1942. The version sung
    by Bing Crosby is said to be the best selling single of all time.
    Jerry says he doesn’t know “Good King Wenceslas,” a popular carol
    that dates back to 1852.

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    When their difference prove nearly irreconcilable, Lucy and Viv decide to give up on staying home for Christmas, and revert to traveling to see their families. Lucy says she left a note for the milkman. Until the end of the 1960s or so, most suburban homes had milk delivery, which involved leaving milk bottles on the porch (sometimes in a milk box).  If a customer did not wish to have milk (or other dairy products) delivered that day – or for a period of days – it was standard procedure to ‘leave a note for the milkman’. 

    In
    the final scene, the carolers (including Chris, Sherman, Jerry, and Alan) enter singing “Deck the Halls” and
    then switch to “O Come, All Ye Faithful.”  Lucy (or Lucille) brushes away a tear.

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    VIV: Merry Christmas, Lucy.
    LUCY: Merry Christmas, Viv.


    Callbacks!

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    Desilu
    started doing a Christmas tag at the end of “I Love Lucy” in
    1951.  In 1956 they fleshed out the tag to a full episode featuring
    clips. It did not enter syndication and wasn’t seen again until 1989
    when the wrap-around segments (but not the clips) were colorized.
    The fully colorized episode was seen in 1990 and has become a holiday
    staple for CBS, airing along with a newly colorized  “I Love
    Lucy” episode.  

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    Although this Christmas Eve “Lucy Show” would
    remain in black and white, the series did air another holiday episode
    in 1965
    when the series was in color. Like this episode, the ending also featured an established singing group, the St. Charles Boys Choir, although they were credited.  Like this episode, it also mentions Charles Dickens’ perennial favorite “A Christmas Carol.” 

    Like
    Lucille Ball and Lucy Ricardo, we learn that Lucy Carmichael is from
    Jamestown, New York, and has a living mother.  While Vivian Vance and
    Ethel Mertz were both raised in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Viv Bagley
    hales from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. This is likely to assure that
    she could convincingly travel home for Christmas within a reasonable
    time.  

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    Lucy
    and Viv sing “Jingle Bells” while decorating their trees.
    Although the song was sung in the “I Love Lucy” Christmas tag, in
    “Lucy Goes to Sun Valley,” a 1958 episode of “The Lucy-Desi
    Comedy Hour,” Lucy
    says that Ricky proposed to her at Christmastime, so their ‘song’
    is “Jingle Bells,” or – as Ricky pronounces it – “Yingle
    Bells.”

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    The
    literal “trimming” of the branches of the Christmas trees was
    also done by Fred Mertz in “The ‘I Love Lucy’ Christmas Show.”

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    When
    Lucy and Viv angrily take turns ripping the decorations off each
    others trees, it is reminiscent of when Lucy Ricardo and Ethel Mertz
    ripped pieces off each others dresses while singing “Friendship”
    in “Lucy and Ethel Buy the Same Dress” (ILL S3;E3).  


    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Who? Johnny
    the Parcel Post delivery man mistakenly calls Viv "Mrs. Bradley”
    instead of “Mrs. Bagley”. Then Lucy
    calls him Bob, the actor’s real name.
    This dialogue overlaps Viv calling him Johnny, so the mistake is
    partially obscured.

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    Murmurs! When
    Lucy goes to the pantry to get the axe, a studio audience member can
    be heard to say “She’s gonna chop
    it down!”  

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    Artificial! When
    Lucy and Viv are tying the two butchered trees together, you can tell
    that the trees are artificial. Viv must insert the severed top
    portion of her white tree into the ‘trunk.’  

    The two trees fastened together symbolizes that the two families have become one! 

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    “Together for Christmas” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5

  • Lucy and Her Electric Mattress

    S1;E12
    ~ December 17, 1962

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    Synopsis

    Viv
    complains about the state of her mattress before taking a short trip
    out of town. While she is away, Lucy treats her to a newly decorated
    room and vibrating bed. The bed doesn’t work properly and Lucy
    returns it. When Viv comes home unexpectedly with no place to sleep,
    the girls use their sons’ bunk beds.

    Regular
    Cast


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

    Dick
    Martin
    (Harry Connors) does not
    appear in this episode

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    On
    the day of filming (November 18, 1962), Desi Arnaz resigned as
    president of Desilu Productions.

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    In
    some time zones this episode was aired opposite an hour-long
    conversation with President John F. Kennedy. 

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    A scene from this episode was later included in “Lucy and Viv Reminisce” (S5;E16), a clips show retrospective aired during the second half of the final season.

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    Although
    electrically controlled adjustable beds are still popular, in the
    early 1960s home electronic beds were generally limited to vibrating.
    There were also often coin-operated versions found in low to
    mid-priced hotels and motels. The Magic Fingers Bed perfected the
    technology in 1958, although vibrating beds existed before then. At
    their peak of popularity in the 1960s, there were 250,000 Magic
    Fingers units installed nationwide, each unit averaging eight
    quarters per week, bringing in $2 million in monthly gross revenue.

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    Chris
    is getting a ride to school with Cynthia’s mother. Although
    frequently mentioned, we will not meet Cynthia until episode #23 when
    she is played by Lucie Arnaz.

    Viv
    and Sherman are headed to Uncle Ned’s for the weekend. It
    is not stated whether he is Viv’s uncle, or Sherman’s.

    The
    transmission on Viv’s old car failed just 75 miles outside of
    Danfield in New York state. In “Lucy and Viv are Volunteer Firemen” (S1;E16) we learn that Lucy does not own a car.  In “Lucy Buys a Sheep” (S1;E5) we see
    that she drives a 1949 Packard.  

    Lucy
    says Viv’s mattress was the same one she slept on when she was
    Chris’s age. Going by Lucille Ball’s real age at the time, the
    mattress would be about 36 years old!  

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    Lucy
    says she bought Viv’s new electric mattress at Marshalls. Marshalls
    Department Stores began in Massachusetts in 1956 before becoming a
    nationwide chain. It is still in existence today. 

    Lucy
    mentions Mr. McClay at the hardware store. Howard McClay was the
    name of Lucille Ball’s longtime publicist.

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    Lucille
    Ball will use her stilt-walking skills again in “Lucy Bags a
    Bargain”
    (S4;E17).  

    A
    clip of Lucy walking on stilts was part of the season three opening
    credits. Although the series was in color at the time, the clip was
    still in black and white. A still of Lucy on stilts is part of the
    photo collage on the most recent season one DVD release.

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    This
    is our first look at Jerry and Sherman’s bedroom. It’s most striking
    feature is the wallpaper with large clouds and fighter jets. We will
    see it again in “Lucy and Viv Put In a Shower” (S1;E18).

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    About
    the runaway electric bed, Lucy says “If
    Aunt Viv ever fell asleep and left the motor running she’d wake up
    halfway to New Rochelle.”  
    New
    Rochelle

    is a
    city
    in
    Westchester
    County,
    in the southeastern portion of New York state.
    It is a popular bedroom community of Manhattan because of it has easy
    access to Routes 95 and the New Haven railroad line. References to
    New Rochelle can be found in the musicals Give My Regards to
    Broadway, Guys and Dolls, Ragtime,
    and How To Succeed in Business
    Without Really Trying
    . On “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” which aired
    on CBS concurrently with “The Lucy Show,” Rob and Laura Petrie
    lived in New Rochelle but the show was filmed on the Desilu lot.

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    When
    Viv rolls over without helping Lucy into the upper bunk, Lucy say:
    “I am not Peter Pan!”

    This is the second mention of a character from the J.M. Barrie
    story. In “Vivian Sues Lucy” (S1;E10), Lucy mentioned Tinkerbell, Peter Pan’s fairy friend, in reference to Viv’s propensity for ringing her bedside bell.  

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    The
    upper bunk makes Viv feel claustrophobic. Viv also complained of
    this in “Lucy Becomes an Astronaut” (S1;E6). In real-life it was
    Lucille Ball who was claustrophobic.

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    A
    sturdy metal handle was screwed to the inside wall of the top bunk
    and painted white to match the crown molding. This handle gave Lucy
    and Vivian something to grab on to during the physical stunts. The above image was incorporated into the season two opening credits. 

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    The
    title of this episode probably should be “Lucy and the Bunk Bed”
    since the scene with the electric mattress gets only a bit more than
    four minutes total screen time, whereas the scene with the bunk bed
    goes on more than 12 minutes and includes the memorable scene of Lucy
    on stilts.

    Callbacks!

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    Viv
    is reluctant to share a bed with Lucy based on a bad memory of a
    previous attempt.  

    VIV:
    Oh,
    no! The last time we did you ate crackers in bed and hogged all the
    covers. I woke up feeling like a breaded Popsicle!”

    Lucy
    Ricardo ate crackers in bed to annoy Ricky in “Ricky Loses His
    Temper” (ILL S3;E19)
    . In “Lucy and Her Vibrating Mattress” she
    eats potato chips in the top bunk.  

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    The
    boys room features a small pennant that reads TAIT.  This is a
    reference to the fictional Tait University in the musical Good
    News
    ,
    which was seen on Broadway in 1927 and on screen in 1947. It
    featured the song “Varsity Drag,” which Vivian Vance performed in
    “Lucy Has Her Eyes Examined” (ILL S3;E11). The film version
    interpolated the song “Pass That Peace Pipe,” which Vance sang in
    “The Indian Show” (ILL S2;E24). It
    was nominated for the 1948 Academy Award for Best Song.

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    There
    is also an Indian Guides pennant.  Indian
    Guides

    was a father-son program of the YMCA.  It was was parodied in the
    1960 Bob
    Hope /
    Lucille
    Ball comedy
    The
    Facts of Life
    .
    In “Lucy Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2) we learned that Danfield has a
    new YMCA and several scenes were set there.  

    LUCY:
    “I
    can’t afford it!  I’m not made of money you know.”  
    VIV:
    “I
    hate to say this but do you know what you’re turning into?  A
    penny-pinching landlord.”

    Lucy’s line could well have been spoken by Ricky Ricardo. Viv’s line perfectly describes Fred Mertz.

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    Viv describes her ex-husband Ralph as having a mustache and a deep voice. In previous episodes viewers might have pictured William Frawley (Fred Mertz) as Viv’s ex, but while Frawley had a deep, gruff voice, he never sported a mustache. She might well be describing another Ralph with a mustache and a deep voice – Ralph Ramsey on “I Love Lucy” played by Frank Nelson. 

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    The
    last time Lucy’s bed moved across the floor, pinning her to the wall,
    was during the Ricardo’s and Mertzes “First Stop” (ILL S4;E13) at
    One Oak Cabins outside Cincinnati en route to Hollywood.  In that
    instance, it was cause by the vibrations from a nearby railroad
    train. That episode also featured bunk beds and a sagging mattress.

    Blooper
    Alerts!

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    Floor Plan Forgetfulness!  This
    is the third time we have seen Viv’s bedroom and once again it has a
    completely different layout. Viv’s bed frame, however, remains the
    same.

    Tipsy Uke! After
    Viv wakes up due to Lucy’s eating potato chips in bed, a ukulele that
    was leaning against the bookcase in the foot-board tips over.

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    “Lucy and Her Electric Mattress” rates 5 Paper Hearts out of 5

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  • Lucy Builds a Rumpus Room

    S1;E11
    ~ December 10, 1962

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    Synopsis

    Lucy
    and Viv both have plans to entertain their dates at home on the very
    same night. When the conflict can’t be resolved, Harry suggests they
    build a rumpus room in the basement to solve the problem. When they
    can’t afford to have it professionally done, they resort to a DIY kit
    that comes with some very sticky glue.  

    Regular
    Cast


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

    Guest
    Cast

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    Don
    Briggs

    (Eddie Collins) makes the second of his seven appearances on the
    series as Viv’s on-again, off-again boyfriend. The last time we saw
    the character was in “Lucy Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2).  

    Eddie
    Collins apparently travels a lot as part of his job.

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    Chris
    Warfield

    (Dr. Rudy Warren) started his acting career in 1953. This is
    his only series appearance. In the 1970s, he began working as a
    producer / director / writer of hardcore porn under the name Billy
    Thornberg. He died in 1996.  

    Dr.
    Warren is a dentist.  He is a gourmet and his favorite dish is trout
    almondine. This is the second doctor Lucy has dated.  The first was Dr. Sam Eastman (Frank Aletter), an ear, eyes, nose and throat man in “Lucy the Music Lover” (S1;E8)

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    Jim
    Boles
    (Delivery
    Man for Barney’s Catering Service) was a character actor who began
    acting on television in 1949. He will make one more appearance on
    the series in “Lucy and the Runaway Butterfly”
    (S1;E29).

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    LOST EPISODE! 

    Episode #11 was originally intended to be a show titled “Lucy and
    Viv Fight Over Harry,”
    but it was shut down during rehearsal. Jimmy
    Garrett (Jerry) remembers that the audience wasn’t laughing. The
    main reason, however, is that it would have firmly established Lucy and Harry
    as having deep feelings for one another. Dick Martin (Harry)
    was not available every week and Lucille Ball did not want her
    character to have a steady boyfriend. It had already been decided to
    phase out Harry, so this storyline would have been at cross-purposes
    with Lucille Ball’s long-range plans for the show and her character.
    As executive producer, Desi Arnaz was consulted, and agreed to
    abandoning the episode before filming. This
    was the only episode of the series to be shut down while in production.

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    The rumpus room first appeared during the 1950s and 1960s of the baby boom generation and was usually built in the basement where kids or teenagers and friends could play or hang out (make a rumpus) away from the other rooms (adults) in the house.  

    Lucy says it costs $2,000 to convert the basement into a rumpus room so Harry suggests a DIY paneling kit that costs only $69.50. In today’s money, that $2,000 is equal to more than $17,250!   

    Viv
    reminds Lucy that when they moved in together it was under ‘girl’s
    rules’: if either of them had a date, all other plans were
    automatically canceled.  Lucy says it’s been so long since she’s had
    a real date, she’d forgotten.  Actually, dating was the subject of
    “Lucy Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2) just two months earlier.  This part of the script may be leftover from the abandoned episode’s script. 

    Lucy’s
    home is heated by coal but she is behind in the bills.  The coal is
    provided by someone named Mr. Turner.

    Lucy
    remarks that her check from the bank is gone and Viv’s alimony hasn’t
    arrived so they are in the “Twilight Zone” again. “The
    Twilight Zone”
    was an anthology suspense TV series that aired from
    1959 to 1964 on CBS.  Jim Boles (Delivery Man) was seen in two
    episodes of “The Twilight Zone,” one just two months after this
    appearance on “The Lucy Show.”  The show was inspired by an episode of “The Westinghouse-Desilu Playhouse” titled “The Time Element” produced by Desi Arnaz, who also hosted the episode. 

    Lucy
    met her date at the Simmons’ dinner party, a reference to Lucy and
    Viv’s friend Audrey Simmons played by Mary Jane Croft.

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    This
    is our first look at the home’s basement, although Lucy mentions that
    there was a sofa down there in “Lucy is a Referee” (S1;E3).  

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    For
    the scene where coal fell on Lucy and Viv, the actors wore quilted suits under their overalls to provide protection from the falling ‘coal’. 

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    When
    they mistakenly glue the brush and a glove to the wall, Viv
    suggests framing it and passing it off as a 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.

    Callbacks!

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    Preparing to cook for Dr. Warren behind Viv’s back, Lucy
    hides food all over the house, just like Lucy Ricardo did when she
    faked a hunger strike in “Lucy Gets a Paris Gown” (ILL S5;E20) in 1956.  

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    The gag is repeated when
    Lucy Carter discovers cleverly hidden food in a 1968 episode of
    “Here’s Lucy” starring Shelley Winters.

    Lucy
    says she can’t afford to have the basement professionally remolded
    into a rumpus room. On “I Love Lucy,” it was Ricky’s who
    constantly told Lucy “I can’t afford it.”  In this series, Lucy Carmichael is a
    woman in charge of making ends meet and raising two children. Off
    screen, Lucille Ball was just as budget-conscious trying to keep
    Desilu Studios out of the red and raise her two children. 

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    The
    DIY solution to decorating is also the subject of “Redecorating”
    (ILL S2;E8)
    where Lucy and Ethel wreak havoc with wallpaper instead of
    paneling.  

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    Lucy
    Ricardo and Ethel Mertz had many fights and reconciliations over the
    years. In this episode, however, Viv packs to leave, but immediately
    returns. This fight gets less than two minutes of screen time.  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Toaster Malfunction! During
    the breakfast scene, Lucy pulls down the lever on the toaster and
    walks away, but the audience can hear that it has popped up again. When she walks
    back to the toaster, she pushes the lever down again, a
    bit more firmly. Lucy stands near the toaster for a bit, then goes to
    sit down at the table with Viv. The moment she sits down, you can hear
    the toast pop up. This snafu is ironic, since one of Lucille Ball’s
    favorite props on “I Love Lucy” was the toaster.

    Table for Two! Viv should have known that Lucy was planning to double-cross her and cook for her date: there are only two chairs at the dining room table!  

    Wardrobe Malfunction! When Dr. Warren rings the doorbell, Lucy’s shoe isn’t completely on and she nearly trips on it.

    Clatter Matter! When
    Lucy passes Viv carrying a long a plank, Viv moves back against the
    furnace and noisily knocks over a shovel.  Viv picks it up and Lucy’s
    dialogue goes on uninterrupted.

    Cooking Chaos! Lucy’s
    trout almandine burns to a crisp after only six minutes in the oven! When Lucy rushes to the
    smoking oven, she nearly slips on some of the food on the floor from
    Viv’s catering delivery. In the chaos, Vivian Vance opens her mouth
    to say a line that she never gets out. She is interrupted by Eddie
    Collins shouting from the living room. 

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    The Stopped Clock! The kitchen clock reads 8:10 throughout the episode. That time works for the breakfast scene but later Lucy hurries Viv so she won’t “miss the 7:04.”  We can assume that is the time Eddie’s train arrives.  Three minutes later, Viv returns with Eddie. It is still 8:10 in the kitchen! 

    Continuity! After
    Lucy and Viv glue on the first piece of wall paneling, the camera
    angle changes and there is a second piece of paneling glued next to
    it.

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    Watch Your Step! Harry
    momentarily loses his footing when he is walking on the mountain of coal
    in the final scene. This is an extraordinary amount of coal for a two-story home.  

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    “Lucy Builds a Rumpus Room” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5 

  • Vivian Sues Lucy

    S1;E10 ~ December 3, 1962

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    Synopsis

    Viv trips over one of Jerry’s toys and suffers a minor ankle injury. Upset that Lucy thinks she’d sue over this little mishap, she decides to teach the Lucy a lesson. Exaggerating her injury and threatening to call her lawyer, Viv lounges in bed for a week, running Lucy ragged with petty demands.

    Regular Cast

    Lucille Ball (Lucy Carmichael),

    Vivian Vance (Vivian Bagley),

    Jimmy Garrett (Jerry Carmichael), Ralph Hart (Sherman Bagley), Candy Moore (Chris Carmichael)

    Dick Martin (Harry Connors) does not appear in this episode.  

    Guest Cast

    Charles Lane (Mr. Barnsdahl) makes the last of his four appearances for the character. This is the last time Lane will work with Lucille Ball, giving credence to the theory that he was fired to make way for Gale Gordon as Lucy’s banker.

    In the entire series, this is the only episode that uses Viv’s full name in a title. It is also the first title of the series to include her at all. Most episode titles begin with “Lucy.” This may be Ball’s way of thanking her friend and co-star for returning to weekly television.  After “I Love Lucy,” Vivian was adamant that she was no longer interested in the format.  The script was dated September 24, 1962. 

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    The bicycle Lucy worked so hard to buy Jerry’s for his birthday in “Lucy is a Kangaroo for a Day” (S1;E7) is turned upside down in the corner.

    We hear about Viv’s physician, Dr. Parker, who apparently makes house calls. According to the previous episode, a doctor’s house call costs $7.50.  We also hear Viv talking on the phone to her lawyer, Mr. Bender, who is in charge of her alimony.  When Viv says mean things about her ex-husband, viewers (having never seen Ralph Bagley) are likely to picture Fred Mertz (William Frawley), which greatly helps the comedy.

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    Lucy reminds Viv how they met while serving in the WAVES. This backstory was introduced in “Lucy Becomes an Astronaut” (S1;E6).  She sings a verse of “Don’t Give Up the Ship,” a song from the 1935 film Shipmates Forever written by Harry Warren, Al Dubin, and Navy Lt. William Gordon Beecher Jr.

    “Shipmates, stand together
    Don’t give up the ship
    Fair or stormy weather
    We won’t give up
    We won’t give up
    We won’t give up the ship!”

    Caring for Viv’s every need, Lucy compares herself to Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), an English woman considered the founder of modern nursing.  A season two episode will be titled “Lucy Plays Florence Nightingale” (S2;E14).

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    Lucy has a scene of comic business that involves her navigating the stairs with a lunch tray, a newspaper, a typewriter in a case, a knitting bag, a telephone, and a bowl of fruit – adding one item each time Viv yells down the stairs.  

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    Sherman has left his lunchbox on the dining room table. It is a 1960 metal lunchbox by American Thermos Products Co. featuring navy submarines including the USS Seawolf, the USS George Washington, and the USS Skipjack. This is a perfect tie-in to Lucy and Viv being in the WAVES, although it may just be coincidental. In 1966, Lucy Carmichael will wreak havoc underwater in “Lucy and the Submarine” (S5;E2).  

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    This episode involves the old TV trope of women being afraid of a mice!  So far, the series has worked with a dog, sheep, and now mice. So much for the old show business axiom “Never work with children or animals!”

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    Another familiar TV trope is kids leaving their roller skate underfoot.

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    While Lucy is upstairs, Charles Lane removes his glasses anticipating the physical comedy that is to come in the next scene.  This is the only time he is seen without his glasses.  

    The plot of this episode is similar to the Kaufman and Hart play (and subsequent film) The Man Who Came to Dinner, where a famous man is faking the extent of his injuries while making his humble hosts run circles accommodating his every whim. The play and this episode also have similar endings, with things coming full circle.  Lucille Ball’s friend Mary Wickes was seen as Nurse Preen in the Broadway, TV, and film versions and will play Lucy and Viv’s friend Francis in season 2 of “The Lucy Show.” 

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    During this episode, Vivian Vance and Candy Moore did an in-character commercial for Jell-O Pie Filling. In it, Chris remarks that Viv is supposed to stay off her feet.  Jell-O was also a sponsor of Lucille Ball’s radio show “My Favorite Husband.” 

    Callbacks!

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    When Lucy sees the mess in the living room, she says it would make a great cover for Better Homes and Dumps, a joke about Better Homes and Gardens magazine. Lucy made a similar joke in “Men Are Messy” (ILL S1;E8) when she called her messy apartment suitable for Better Homes and Garbage.  In “Redecorating the Mertzes’ Apartment” (ILL S3;E8) Lucy seriously says she got the idea for a painting party from Better Homes and Gardens.

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    The part of the episode where Lucy pretends to be assaulted by a prowler is similar in part to “Lucy Cries Wolf” (ILL S4;E3). Just as Viv is faking her injury here, Lucy did the same in “Lucy Fakes Illness” (ILL S1;E16) to get Ricky’s attention.  

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    Once again we see Vivian Vance eating a banana!  She also ate one in the series opener, “Lucy Waits up for Chris” (S1;E1) and in at least three episodes of “I Love Lucy.”  

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    Blooper Alerts!

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    Sitcom Logic Alerts! When Lucy tries to trick Viv to discover if she is really bedridden or not, she stomps down the stairs, slamming the front door to make Viv think she’s gone out.  She then sneaks upstairs again hoping to find Viv walking around, but Viv is on to her trick, so she is still in bed when Lucy throws open the door and shouts “Aha!” However, when Lucy left she did not close the bedroom door, so she should have known that Viv was faking when she returned and the door was shut. Instead, Lucy just pretends to be looking for the telephone book. Why was the telephone book in Viv’s room when Lucy only just brought her up the telephone?  Also, it is an exceptionally long telephone cord to reach from the living room, up a flight of stairs, into Viv’s bedroom. It is also a very thick telephone book for Danfield; more the size of a phone book for a major city like New York or Los Angeles.

    Floor Plan Foul-Up! This is the second time we have seen Viv’s bedroom, the first being in “Lucy Waits Up for Chris” (S1;E1).  Although she has the same bed, the layout of the room is completely different.

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    Time Stands Still! The kitchen clock reads 8:10 throughout the episode, even when Lucy is preparing Viv’s lunch.  

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    “Vivian Sues Lucy” rates 3 Paper Hearts out of 5

  • Lucy Puts Up a TV Antenna

    S1;E9 ~ November 26, 1962

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    Synopsis

    When Lucy’s TV set doesn’t work, she discovers that the antenna has blown off the roof. Refusing to spend extra money to have one professionally installed, she talks Viv into helping her replace it.

    Regular Cast

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

    Dick Martin (Harry Connors) does not appear in this episode.  

    Guest Cast

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    Del Moore (Herb, of Herb’s TV Repair) was a comedian, actor, and a popular radio announcer. He was a friend of Jerry Lewis, and appeared in many of his films.

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    Lloyd Corrigan (Mr. Holly, the cleaners) was a portly character actor, who played bit parts in silent movies, before switching his attention to writing and directing.  He returned to acting in the 1940s, appearing in two films with Lucille Ball. He will appear in two more episodes of “The Lucy Show.”    

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    Chuck Roberson (Fireman #1, left) was a stuntman who played minor roles in many films.  He was a stunt double for John Wayne, and was seen (but not credited) in “Lucy and John Wayne” (S5;E10).  Hubie Kerns (Fireman #2) was also a stuntman who played minor roles in films, three of which were also with fellow fireman Chuck Roberson.  

    In “Lucy and Viv Are Volunteer Firemen” (S1;E16) we discover that Danfield does not have its own fire department, but is served by a nearby town called Ridgebury.  

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    Sherman and Jerry are excited that the All-American Football Team is going to be on TV. The team was composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers. This continues Sherman and Jerry’s enthusiasm for football, established in “Lucy is a Referee” (S1;E3). Later, when trapped on the roof, Lucy mentions that Chris is having her music lesson and the boys are playing football.  This is the first mention of Chris having music lessons.

    When Lucy mentions the idea of a sing-along, Jerry thinks she is referring to Mitch Miller (1911– 2010) who had an immensely popular television series, “Sing Along with Mitch” (1961-1964) on NBC.  Miller was involved in almost all aspects of the music industry, particularly as a conductor. He was one of the most influential people in American popular music during the 1950s and early ‘60s. When the home sing-along doesn’t pan out, Lucy says “So much for ‘Sing Along with Mom’.”  

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    Lucy engages in the old practice of fixing the reception by banging on the side of the set, something she claims she learned from her late husband. Lucy says “What did we do before television?” Viv replies “We used to hit the radio.”

    TV repairman Herb charges $8 for house calls and $40 to install a TV antenna. Lucy notes that doctors only charge $7.50 for a house call. Herb quips “That’s why I dropped out of medical school.”  Today Herb would regret that decision. Although doctors no longer make house calls, TV repairmen are non-existent and antennas are nearly obsolete.

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    The rooftop of Lucy’s home was really only three feet off the studio floor. A special effect called a matte painting gave it the appearance of being a two-story home for two long shots, one of which with Lucy and Viv in it. This is the second time we have seen the exterior of the house.  

    The ladder Lucy and Viv use to get access to the roof was borrowed from Harry. The character must be off on a long flight (he is a pilot) because Lucy and Viv never think of asking him to put up the aerial.  The character (played by Dick Martin) hasn’t been seen since episode 6. They also never think of asking Viv’s sometimes boyfriend, Eddie Collins, who hasn’t been seen since episode 2. 

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    Viv yells up the chimney, “I got carried away watching Art Linkletter.  Come on down Lucy.  He’s about to go through a lady’s purse.”  “The Linkletter Show” (also known as “Art Linkletter’s House Party”) was seen on CBS from 1952 to 1970.  Art Linkletter played himself on a season 4 episode of “The Lucy Show” and then did so again on “Here’s Lucy” in 1970 (above).  

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    When the TV breaks, Lucy suggests they sing songs around the piano. The kids don’t know their parents’ selections:

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    • There’s a Long, Long Trail” is a popular song of World War I. The lyrics were by Stoddard King (1889–1933) and the music by Alonzo Elliott. It was published in London in 1914.
    • Wait ‘Till the Sun Shines, Nellie” is a 1905 popular song with music by Harry Von Tilzer and lyrics by Andrew B. Sterling. Bing Crosby and Mary Martin sang it in the 1941 film Birth of the Blues. Harry James recorded a version in 1941.  There was also a 1952 film by that name.
    • Down By the Old Mill Stream” is a song written by Tell Taylor in 1908. It was one of the most popular songs of the early 20th century. The sheet music sold 4 million copies.

    Conversely, the Lucy and Viv don’t know their kids’ favorites:

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    • “Ahab the Arab” is a novelty song written and recorded by Ray Stevens in 1962. It was so successful that it was covered three times in 1962 alone. This is the only song in the sing along that isn’t actually performed by the cast.
    • “Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow” is a 1962 novelty doo-wop song by the Rivingtons. It peaked at #48 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #35 on the Cashbox charts. The band released two similar follow-up songs: “Mama-Oom-Mow-Mow (The Bird)” and “The Bird’s the Word.”
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    The scene in the TV repair shop is was much longer when filmed so was edited for time. In it, Lucy contorts her face behind a cardboard TV screen so the repairman can get an idea of what her TV’s reception looks like.

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    A color still from this moment will be used as part of the show’s opening credits for season two. Not only was the image not originally seen in color, it was never seen on screen at all!  

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    This show features an exceptionally long stunt sequence with more than half of the episode’s screen time is spent on the roof.  

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    At the time, Lucille Ball was 51 years old and Vivian Vance was 53.  

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    Lucy gets uncharacteristically nasty with Viv when she’s trapped in the chimney, even calling Viv an elephant!  

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    This June 1963 comic book used a photo from the episode but the story had nothing to do with Lucy installing an antenna. The inset photo is from “Lucy Becomes an Astronaut” (S1;E6).  All images were originally in black and white but hand colorized.

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    This episode also made the cover of the most recent DVD release of Season 1. 

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    A scene from this episode was included in “Lucy and Viv Reminisce” (S6;E16), the series’ only clips episode.

    Callbacks!

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    “Down By the Old Mill Stream” was performed by the Ricardos and the Mertzes as Western Bell Ringers in “Lucy Goes to the Rodeo” (ILL S6;E8).

    “There’s a Long, Long Trail” was undoubtedly the song that inspired the naming of the Lucy-Desi film The Long, Long Trailer (1953).

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    The idea of the group not knowing how to spend their evening without television due to poor reception is identical to the start of “Lucy Gets Ricky on the Radio” (ILL S1;E32).  

    Lucy says it would be cheaper to have the Mayo Brothers make a house call than Herb, the TV repairman. The Mayos were the most famous group of physicians in the United States. The world-renowned Mayo Clinic in Minnesota was founded in 1889 and is dedicated to diagnosing and treating nearly every known illness. When the Ricardos and the Mertzes are “Getting Ready” (ILL S4;E10) for their cross-country trip to California, Ethel mentions going to the Mayo Brothers Clinic in Minnesota to have her gallstones removed.

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    The scene in the TV repair shop is reminiscent of Feldman’s Appliance Store (above), where Lucy and Ethel auction off a TV set for Ladies Overseas Aid in “Ricky’s European Booking” (ILL S5;E10).  The gang tried to repair a television on their own in “The Courtroom” (ILL S2;E7).  Lucy also disembowels their TV set in order to get inside it when “Lucy Does a TV Commercial” (ILL S1;E30). Lots of TV aerials are seen on the rooftop of 623 East 68th Street when “Ricky and Fred are TV Fans” (ILL S2;E30).  

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    The episode ends with Lucy and Viv congratulating each other for meeting men. This was also the fade out of “Lucy Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2).

    Blooper Alerts!

    Set Change! The television set has been moved into the center of the room.  It usually sits against the wall where the piano is now located.  The TV was integral to a scene in “Lucy is a Referee” (S1;E3).

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    Shocking! Lucy touches an electrical power line with the antenna but gets no shock. She acts as a conductor, however, when holding both the wire from the television and the one from the antenna. In the opening credits for season two, a visible shock wave was added to this moment, one that is not present in the original.

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    Ladder Matter! Harry’s wooden ladder would not be tall enough to reach the roof of the two story house.

    Edge of the Sky! The sky in the background has several seams in it, and in one shot the camera pans too high and you can see studio lights. This was ‘fixed’ for the DVD release.

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    Architectural Anomaly! At the end of this episode, Viv lights a fire that billows smoke up to Lucy, who is stuck in the chimney.  However, we have never seen a fireplace in the house, especially not one near the television set.

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    Home Consistency! The exterior of the house outside Viv’s window is not the same as the one we saw in “Lucy Waits Up for Chris” (S1;E1).  Not only is there a lot more ivy, but the window configuration is different.  

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    “Lucy Puts Up a TV Antenna” rates 5 Paper Hearts out of 5

  • Lucy the Music Lover

    S1;E8
    ~ November 19, 1962

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    Synopsis

    Lucy
    goes overboard to make the doctor she’s dating believe she’s as big a
    classical music lover as he is. When she invites her date over, he
    ends up making beautiful music with Viv. He’s even planning to play
    violin in Viv’s benefit recital – until Lucy crushes his hand with
    the piano lid.

    Regular
    Cast


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

    Dick
    Martin
    (Harry Connors) does not
    appear in this episode.  

    Guest
    Cast

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    Mary
    Jane Croft

    (Audrey Simmons). This is the first series appearance for Croft, who
    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
    will play 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.  Her final acting credit was playing Midge Bowser
    on “Lucy Calls the President” (1977).  She died in 1999 at the
    age of 83.  

    We
    learn that Audrey’s husband Harvey sells medical supplies.

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    Frank
    Aletter
    (Dr.
    Sam Eastman) appeared on Broadway during the 1950s in such shows as
    Wish
    You Were Here, Bells Are Ringing,

    and Mr.
    Roberts
    ,
    the film version of which brought him to Hollywood where he was a
    frequent guest star on television until his death in 2009.  

    We
    learn that Dr. Eastman is an ear eyes nose and throat specialist.

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    Susan
    Oakes
    (Grace,
    the record store clerk) is best known as Anybodys, the only girl in
    the Jets in the 1961 film West
    Side Story
    .
    This is one of her three TV credits before leaving show business in
    1964.  

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    Richard
    Gittings
    (Emcee)
    is credited with 27 episodes of “The Adventures of Ozzie and
    Harriet” between 1957 and 1966, eleven of which also starred Mary
    Jane Croft as Clara Randolph.  

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    Bert
    Stevens
    and
    Caryl
    Lincoln
    (Concert
    Spectators) were a real-life husband and wife who made many
    appearances as background players on the series. Lincoln was 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.

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    We
    learn Viv is the new chairman of the fundraising committee of her
    Women’s Club. They are raising money for a children’s hospital. Lucy would prefer their charity concert would feature Frank Sinatra or Bennie
    Goodman. Francis
    Albert Sinatra

    (1915-1998)
    was an American singer, actor, and producer who was one of the most
    popular and influential musical artists of the 20th century. He is
    one of the best-selling
    music artists of all time,
    having sold more than 150 million records worldwide.
    He inadvertently appeared on “I Love Lucy” when a clip from his
    new film Guys
    and Dolls
    was
    inserted into the episode “Lucy and the Dummy” (ILL S5;E3).
    Sinatra later sent Lucille Ball a letter expressing his concern over
    the depiction of the mafia in “The Untouchables,” a Desilu
    series. Benjamin
    David Goodman

    (1909-86)
    was an American jazz
    and
    swing
    musician,
    clarinetist
    and
    bandleader.
    He was known
    as the “King of Swing.”

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    After smashing all of his records when he got married, Chris is once again a Bobby Darin fan. Darin wed actress Sandra Dee on December 1, 1960. Chris mentions
    talking on the phone about this to her friend Cynthia, a character that has been mentioned, but won’t be seen until episode 23.

    In
    the original script both Lucy and Viv were in the scene in the record
    shop. Viv was not included in the filmed scene.

    Record
    stores of the time offered sound proof booths where customers might
    preview records before purchasing. This gives Lucille Ball an
    opportunity to use her skill at pantomime.

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    In
    the record shop, there is a chalkboard sign that  lists the ‘Top Ten
    Tunes,’ all of which are made-up, nonsensical titles:

    1. Flairing
      Blue
    2. Da-A-Lone
    3. Sy-Howie
    4. Lo-Ho
    5. Sippen-Sid
    6. Cling-Cling
    7. Adel-Stomp
    8. Bop-De-Bop
    9. Rain-Gee
    10. Woolen-Shoes
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    Dr.
    Eastman asks Lucy if she’s heard Reiner conducting Rubenstein in
    Rachmaninoff’s
    Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini
    . While this may sound like a made-up
    tongue-twister,
    it is a real classical musical piece for piano
    and
    symphony
    orchestra written in 1934.
    In 1956 it was recorded with conductor Fritz Reiner conducting the
    Chicago Symphony Orchestra and pianist Arthur Rubinstein.  

    Lucy’s
    first date with the doctor is going to be at Carnegie Hall, New York
    City’s legendary concert venue.  

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    Viv
    worries that Sam will find out that Lucy’s idea of a classic is “You
    Ain’t Nothin’ But a Hound Dog.”
    The blues song was written by
    Jerry
    Leiber and Mike Stoller and originally recorded
    by Willie
    Mae ‘Big Mama’ Thornton in
    August 1952. Although it has
    been covered more than 250 times, the best-known version is the July
    1956 recording by Elvis
    Presley,
    which is ranked #19 on Rolling
    Stone’s
    list of the 500
    Greatest Songs of All Time.

    Lucy
    compares her sleeping through classical concerts to the “Sleeping
    Beauty Ballet.”
    The
    ballet music was composed by Pyotr
    Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    in 1889.

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    Lucy
    and Viv play a pre-rehearsed game of living room ‘Name That Tune’
    for Dr. Sam’s benefit. The first selection Viv plays is Brahms,
    First Piano Concerto, Second Movement, measures 15, 16 and 17.  The
    second selection is Beethoven, Appasionata Sonata, First Movement.  

    When
    Sam takes over the keyboard, Lucy utters the iconic phrase “Play it
    again, Sam”
    often incorrectly attributed to the 1942 movie Casablanca.
    Curiously, the quote does not get a reaction from the studio
    audience.  Even the ‘sweetened’ laugh track does not respond!

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    To
    impress Sam, Lucy displays busts of classical composers, with the
    largest one of Ludwig von Beethoven.  Lifting it onto a pedestal,
    Viv remarks that it is “no
    wonder he wrote such heavy music.”

    She even dresses Jerry in a Beethoven sweatshirt.  Lucy remarks his
    favorite is Tchaikovsky – but he’s in the wash!

    Callbacks!

    Viv
    plays piano, just as Ethel did on “I
    Love Lucy.”
    In “Lucy Buys a Sheep” (S1;E5), we learned that Sherman takes piano lessons after school. Like mother, like son!

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    Lucy has Jerry find her old violin in the attic, saying she used to play it in school. She
    manages a squeaky rendition of “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.”
    Lucille Ball really learned the song on the violin for this episode.
    Writer Madelyn Martin once said, 

    No
    matter what we asked her to do – ride a lawnmower, jump on a
    trampoline, walk on stilts – she never said ‘No,’ just ‘Give
    me a few days to learn it.’"
     

    In “The Saxophone” (ILL S2;E22), Lucy Ricardo finds her old saxophone in the attic.  Like Lucy Carmichael, she only knew one song: “Sweet Sue.” In some episodes that one song was “Glow Worm.” Lucille
    Ball was also adept at the ukulele.  

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    During
    the classical concert, Lucy does her best to stay awake, giving
    Lucille Ball a chance to repeat much of the comic business she
    developed when she sleepy from too much Dramamine in “The
    Passports” (ILL S5;E11)
    and when she was exhausted from her
    commuter lifestyle in “Lucy Wants a Career”, a 1959 episode of
    “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour.” In
    a 1971 episode of “Here’s Lucy,”
    Lucy Carter has severe jet lag and has trouble staying
    awake on an English chat show with David Frost.  

    At
    the classical music concert, Lucy and Sam have box seats, sharing with
    another couple. This was also the case when the Ricardos and Mertzes
    went to see The
    Most Happy Fella

    in “Lucy’s Night in Town” (ILL S6;E22).

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    To
    impress her music-savvy date, Lucy has Chris dance through the living
    room dressed like Carmen, the heroine of the Bizet opera of the same name, banging a tambourine
    and singing “The Habanera” with a rose in her teeth. Similarly,
    Ethel
    showed up as a Spanish dancer singing “The
    Habanera”
    to impress Hollywood talent scout Ben Benjamin in “Ricky’s Movie
    Offer” (ILL S4;E5)
    .  

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    When
    a jealous Lucy slams down the piano cover on Sam’s hand before the
    charity concert, Lucy gets an idea: he will perform by fingering
    the violin with his good hand while she does the bowing with her
    right hand – her arm inserted into his jacket sleeve while hiding behind the curtain. The gag was first seen in “The
    Handcuffs” (ILL S2;E4)
    but used again on “Here’s Lucy” when
    Lucy Carter got Elizabeth Taylor’s expensive ring stuck on her finger just
    before a public event. In all three instances, Lucy’s hand has a
    life of its own!  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    Going Blank! None
    of the albums in the record store have anything printed on the back
    of their sleeves.

    Fact Check! Viv
    makes small talk with Sam, asking him what he thinks about Fritz
    Reiner conducting the Cleveland Symphony.  The conductor of the
    Cleveland Orchestra in 1962 was George Szell. 

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    “Lucy the Music Lover” rates 5 Paper Hearts out of 5

  • William Clement Frawley (February 26, 1887 – March 3, 1966)

  • Lucy is a Kangaroo for a Day

    S1;E7
    ~ November 12, 1962

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    Synopsis

    Lucy
    takes a secretarial temp job in order to afford a bicycle for Jerry’s
    birthday. Lost in a modern office, she has disastrous contact with
    the electric pencil sharpener, the water cooler, and the electric
    typewriter. Her exasperated employer sends on out on an errand when
    her knit dress gets caught in an elevator and unravels. Not wanting
    to deliver the contracts in her unmentionables, Lucy borrows a kangaroo
    costume to finish the job.

    Regular
    Cast


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

    Ralph
    Hart
    (Sherman Bagley), Candy Moore (Chris Carmichael), and Dick
    Martin
    (Harry Connors) do not
    appear in this episode.  

    Guest
    Cast

    Charles
    Lane
    (Mr. Barnsdahl) makes the third
    of his four appearances on the series as Lucy’s banker.

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    Sid
    Gould

    (Maitre D’) makes the first of his 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.”  

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    Majel
    Barrett
    (Miss Massey) was part of
    the Desilu family long before she became known as ‘The First Lady of
    Star Trek.’  She was seen in “The Desilu Revue,” a 1959 variety
    show presentation of “The Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse.”  Four years later she was cast as Nurse Chapel on Desilu’s new space
    adventure series, “Star Trek.”  During this time she had a
    relationship with the show’s creator Gene Roddenberry, marrying him in
    1969, the same year the series was canceled. She was part of most all
    iterations of “Star Trek” until her death in 2008.  

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    John McGiver (Mr. Irwin) is a recognizable character actor who appeared in such hit films as Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961), The Manchurian Candidate (1962), and Midnight Cowboy (1969).  He did one more episode of “The Lucy Show” playing a Judge in “Lucy Is Her Own Lawyer” (S2;E23) before appearing opposite Lucille Ball as Mr. Babcock in the movie musical Mame (1974).

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    Norman
    Leavitt
    (Clerk) appeared with
    Lucille Ball in the 1950 film A Woman
    of Distinction
    as well as The
    Long, Long Trailer
    (1953).  The
    character actor also appeared on three episodes of “The Lucy-Desi
    Comedy Hour.”  He appeared in one more episode of “The Lucy Show”
    in 1965.  

    William
    Meader
    (Waiter) had appeared as an
    airport extra in “The Ricardos Go to Japan,” a 1959 episode of
    “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour.”  He made 15 more appearances on “The
    Lucy Show,” mostly as a clerk in Mr. Mooney’s bank.  

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    The Cavalier
    Restaurant patrons are played by:

    • Herschel
      Graham
      was reported to be the
      highest earning male extra of 1937!  Ten years later he appeared in
      the film Lured
      with Lucille Ball.  He played a passenger on the S.S. Constitution
      in “Bon Voyage” (ILL S5:E13) and as a bullfight spectator when
      “Lucy Goes to Mexico,” a 1958 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy
      Hour.”  He was an extra in Lucy’s 1960 film The
      Facts of Life
      and did one more
      episode of “The Lucy Show,” “No More Double Dates” (S1;E21).
    • Caryl
      Lincoln
      was one of the Goldwyn
      Girls with Lucille Ball (and Barbara Pepper) in the 1934 Eddie
      Cantor film Kid Millions.
      She was an extra in five more episodes of “The Lucy Show,” most
      of those with her husband, extra Bert Stevens.
    • Hazel
      Pierce
      was
      Lucille Ball’s camera and lighting stand-in throughout “I Love
      Lucy.”  She also made frequent appearances on the show, although
      only once did she speak, when she won the television auctioned off
      by Ladies Overseas Aid in “Ricky’s European Booking” (ILL
      S5;E10)
      and she shouted “I won!”.  This is the first of her 21
      un-credited on-camera appearances on “The Lucy Show.”  In the
      opening of season two, “Lucy Plays Cleopatra” (S2;E1), she
      received screen credit as Mary Lou. She was also an un-credited
      extra in the film Forever
      Darling

      (1956). Pierce died in 1984 at the age of 90.
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    Lucy says the new bicycle will cost $75.00. Adjusting for inflation, this would be equivalent to $650 today.  

    The
    entire bit where Lucy’s knitted suit unravels was taken from the
    script outline for “Lucy Goes to Broadway,” an
    un-produced teleplay from 1961.

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    Lucy
    mentions the Rockefellers, an
    American industrial,
    political,
    and banking
    family
    that
    made one of the world’s
    largest fortunes
    in
    the oil
    business
    during
    the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The
    name Rockefeller is synonymous with money.

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    The
    New York law office Lucy works in is recycled for
    Mr. Mooney’s bank later in the series. Here the office is decorated with Hans Holbein etchings. 

    Hans Holbein the Younger (1497-1543) was a German and Swiss artist and print maker who worked in a Northern Renaissance style. He is considered one of the greatest portrait artists of the 16th century.

    A startling intercom was also the source of comedy in the previous
    episode, “Lucy Becomes an Astronaut” (S1;E6).

    When
    Mr. Barnsdahl is reading from the late Mr. Carmichael’s last will and testament he says “It’s
    all here in glorious black and white.”  
    During the transition from black and white to color films in Hollywood, movies were often billed as being in “glorious
    technicolor.” Much of television was still in black and white in
    1962, although color broadcasts were not uncommon.  Unfortunately,
    most of America still had black and white TV sets. “The Lucy Show”
    would be filmed and broadcast in “glorious” color starting in
    season two but not aired in color until season 4. 

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    Lucy
    breaks off the water cooler spigot and cannot control the flow of
    water. Throughout the series Lucy seems to be comically incapable of
    controlling open faucets, hoses, and devices that spout fluids.  It
    already briefly happened with the bathtub shower in “Lucy is a
    Referee” (S1;E3)
    .

    Mrs. Carmichael is to meet Mr. Irwin and his client Mr. Madison at the Cavalier
    Restaurant on New York City’s Park Avenue.  The posh location was no
    doubt chosen to contrast with Lucy’s silly kangaroo costume. In “Lucy Wants a Career,” a 1959 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour,” Lucy Ricardo also took a job in New York City, commuting from Westport. 

    Instead
    of ending on a comic note, the episode ends sentimentally with mothers Lucy
    and Viv pleased they’ve made Jerry happy on his birthday.

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    Lucy’s kangaroo suit later turned up in an episode of the Desi Arnaz series “The Mothers-in-Law” (1967-69). The calf area had to be widened for Jerry Fogel. In the above photo there is a slight difference in the color of the fabric in the inner leg. 


    Callbacks!

    At
    the start of the episode Lucy is rooting through the sofa cushions to
    find extra money, something Lucy Ricardo did when she wanted to go to
    Europe in 1955′s “Ricky’s European Booking” (ILL S5;E10).  Back then she found $9.73
    in between the sofa cushions, $29.95 in the sugar bowl, and $28.16 in
    Little Ricky’s piggy bank. 

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    Lucy also fiound $15.36 from GTHP –
    Going Through Husband’s Pants.  Here
    Lucy Carmichael rhetorically asks “Whatever
    happened to money falling out of men’s pants.”

    Viv knowingly adds “Whatever
    happened to men?”
    [That remark might also be seen as an observation of the series itself!]  Lucy even says she raided Chris’s piggy bank – which only leaves
    the sugar bowls unexplored.

    Mr.
    Barnsdahl reads from Lucy’s late husband’s will (section 6, paragraph
    3), which says that he should not jeopardize Lucy’s financial security
    by giving her small loans even though she will: “One – wheedle.
    Two – lose her temper.  And three – cry.”  

    From
    “Lucy and Ethel Buy the Same Dress” (ILL S3;E3):

    Ethel:
    What
    are you going to do, wheedle him?”


    Lucy
    :
    “No,
    I’ve done that so much my wheedle is all worn out. And I’m not going
    to be lovey dovey or cry or pout either.”

    And
    from “Lucy’s Club Dance” (ILL S3;E25):


    Fred
    :
    Now,
    listen, kids. I’ve known both of you for 13 years and I’ve seen and
    listened to a lot of discussions. Now you’re going to harangue about
    this, aren’t you, Lucy?”

    Lucy:
    “Yes,
    I am.”

    Fred:
    And
    you’re going to nag him.”

    Lucy:
    Well,
    yes.”

    Fred:
    And
    if that don’t work, you’re going to wheedle.” 

    Lucy:
    Probably.”

    Fred:
    You
    might even cry. If all else fails. And eventually, Ricky, you’re
    going to give in. Now why don’t you save the wear and tear on your
    nerves, to say nothing of my nerves. Why don’t you do what she
    wants?”

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    Lucy
    getting a job hearkens back to “The Amateur Hour” (ILL S1;E14) and
    “Job Switching” (ILL S2;E1). In both episodes one of the first
    occupation on a list of positions available is stenographer. Here Lucy Carmichael dismisses
    shorthand as just “squiggly squiggly.”  

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    Lucy
    says he was tops in her class when she went to secretarial school 15
    years earlier but later admits that there were only two in the class.
    In “Lucy Takes a Cruise to Havana,” the first episode of “The
    Lucy Desi Comedy Hour,” Lucy Ricardo tells Hedda Hopper that
    before marrying Ricky, she was a secretary in New York in the same
    office as her friend Susie MacNamara (Ann Sothern, above).
    Sothern had just finished playing the same character on a CBS sitcom
    titled “Private Secretary.”
    The cruise takes place in 1940, whereas Lucy Carmichael says she was
    in secretarial school 15 years earlier, which would be around 1947.  

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    Lucy Carmichael made her own knit dress to wear on her first day at work.
    Lucy Ricardo made her own dress in “Lucy Wants New Furniture”
    (ILL S2;E28)
    . Both dresses didn’t work out too well for Lucy.

    Mr.
    Irwin repeatedly tries to dictate a letter to “Whitfield, Hammond
    and Warwick.”  Hammond was also the name of the New York City real
    estate agent in “The Sublease” (ILL S3;E31).  

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    When
    the bowl of onion soup falls in Lucy’s kangaroo pouch, her comic
    discomfort is similar to when “Lucy Does the Tango” (ILL S6;E20)
    with pockets full of raw eggs.

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    When
    Lucy rapidly drinks Dixie cup after Dixie cup of water to try to keep up with the
    broken cooler spigot, it is comically similar to Lucy Ricardo eating
    chocolate after chocolate to keep up with the speeding assembly line
    in “Job Switching” (ILL S2;E1).

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    Bicycles
    were an integral part of the plot in “Lucy’s Bicycle Trip” (ILL
    S5;24)
    .  In that episode, Schwinn provided all the bicycles in return for screen credit.  A bicycle was also involved when Lucy lost her
    dress on the dock before sailing on the S.S. Constitution in “Bon
    Voyage” (ILL S5;E13)
    .  

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    “Lucy is a Kangaroo for a Day” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5

  • Lucy Becomes an Astronaut

    S1;E6 ~ November 5, 1962

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    Synopsis 

    Lucy
    and Viv successfully spend 24 hours in a simulated space ship as part
    of a “Women in Space” experiment. Lucy’s ego swells
    from the publicity so Viv and Harry decide to deflate it by convincing Lucy
    that she’s been chosen to be the first woman astronaut.

    Regular
    Cast


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

    Guest
    Cast

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    Nancy
    Kulp
    (Jane
    Corey) played
    the cockney hotel maid who teaches Lucy how to curtsy in “Lucy
    Meets the Queen” (ILL S5;E15)
    . Born in Harrisburg, PA, Kulp will
    always be remembered as Miss Jane Hathaway, the upright secretary of
    banker Drysdale on “The Beverly Hillbillies” (1962-1971) which
    premiered just five days before “The Lucy Show.”  The role of
    Miss Hathaway earned Kulp an Emmy nomination in 1967.
    She
    made
    an unsuccessful run for Pennsylvania congress in 1984, after which
    she retired and taught acting.  Kulp died of cancer in 1991.

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    The
    episode also employs a dozen middle-aged women as extras in the
    “Women in Space” program luncheon. Several sources claim Alix
    Talton

    was among them. A former Miss Georgia, Talton acted
    in a handful of films and TV shows in a career that spanned several
    decades, including seven episodes of “My Favorite Husband,” which
    was the television version of Lucille Ball’s radio show of the same
    name.  

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    Lucy
    and Viv were ensigns in the WAVES
    (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service)
    ,
    which was the World
    War II
    women’s
    branch of the U.S.
    Naval Reserve.
    It was established in 1942 in order to release officers and men for
    sea duty and replace them with women in shore establishments. By
    September 1946, the last of the WAVES had been discharged. The
    WAVE sponsored “Women in Space” program depicted in the episode
    is fictional.  

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    Lucy jokingly says that she served with Admiral Dewey at
    Manilla. George
    Dewey (1837–1917) was Admiral
    of the U.S. Navy.
    He was best known for his victory at the Battle
    of Manila Bay
    during
    the Spanish–American
    War in May 1898.

    Lucy
    just calls it “the space program,” but Chris knows that it is
    actually called NASA
    – the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
    . President
    Eisenhower
    established
    NASA in 1958. Alan Shepard became the first American in space in May
    1961. In February 1962 U.S. Colonel John
    Glenn made
    three orbits around the Earth. In this episode, Viv sarcastically
    calls Lucy ‘Colonel
    Glenn’ Carmichael.  

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    There
    is a reference to a long distance call from Cape Canaveral, Florida,
    the home of NASA and a location that has became synonymous with the
    U.S. space program.  After John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963,
    the name was changed to Cape Kennedy.  It reverted to Cape Canaveral
    a decade later, although the NASA facilities are still known as the
    Kennedy Space Center.

    Just
    eight months after this episode aired, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina
    Tereshkova became the first woman in space in June 1963.  It would
    take the U.S. twenty more years to equal that achievement when Sally
    Ride went into space in June 1983.

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    During
    the isolation experiment, Viv gets claustrophobic. In real life it
    was Lucille Ball who suffered from claustrophobia, not Vivian Vance.

    An
    unenthusiastic Viv says that by participating in the isolation
    experiment she is missing a big party with lots of Broadway
    celebrities that Eddie invited her to. Eddie Collins, Viv’s sometimes
    boyfriend, hasn’t been seen since “Lucy Digs Up a Date” (S1;E2).

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    On
    the telephone with what she thinks is NASA, Lucy nervously says: “Off
    in the ‘wild blue’ what sir?”  
    This
    is a reference to the “Air Force Song,” the first line of which
    is “Off we go, into the wild blue
    yonder.”

    Lucy
    quotes John F. Kennedy’s iconic inauguration speech of January 20,
    1961: 

    “Ask not what your country
    can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.”
     

    Later, fearing the dangers of space travel, Lucy tearfully regrets
    her enthusiasm: 

    “I collect for the
    Red Cross. I buy savings bonds. I was with the WAVES.  How much does
    that man in the White House want from me?”

    When
    hearing about a splash down, Lucy says she can’t swim.

    We see that the local newspaper is The Danfield Tribune.

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    “The
    Lucy Show” wasn’t the only TV show to use the space program as the
    basis for storylines.  Three months later “Dennis the Menace”
    aired “Junior Astronaut,” where Dennis
    and his classmates  participate in the ‘Junior Astronaut’ savings-stamp
    program. The one who buys the most stamps wins a trip to Cape
    Canaveral to meet an astronaut.  This episode starred Gale Godon, who
    would join “The Lucy Show” cast in season two.  It also boasted
    John ‘Shorty’ Powers, who was a real-life NASA officer at the time.
    Star Jay North did a short promotional film for the real-life
    savings-stamp program to support NASA.  

    Also
    in January 1963, “McKeever & the Colonel,” a one-season
    sitcom that premiered on NBC a week before “The Lucy Show”,
    explored the topic in “McKeever’s
    Astronaut,” where a visiting astronaut turns out to be a chimp.
    Although not in the cast of this particular episode, Charles Lane
    (Lucy Carmichael’s banker Mr. Barnsdahl) was featured on the series in November
    1962. Shirley Mitchell (Lucy Ricardo’s friend Marion Strong) was in
    the series premiere.  

    The most famous example of the space program on television is the sitcom
    “I Dream of Jeannie,” which premiered in 1965.  It not only
    featured astronauts as the central characters, it was set in Cape
    Canaveral, Florida.  Jeannie was played by Barbara Eden, who made her
    sitcom debut on a 1957 episode of “I Love Lucy.”  

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    “Here’s
    Lucy” also featured a NASA-themed episode titled “Lucy and the
    Astronauts”
    (HL S4;E5) in 1971.  The episode also features an ‘isolation’
    element when space
    nut Lucy must go through decontamination with astronauts when she accidentally makes physical contact with them just after landing.
    This episode was commercially released on View-Master slides!  

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    In
    June 1963 Gold Key published their first issue of “The Lucy Show”
    comic books.  Although the main photo was from “Lucy Puts Up an
    Antenna”
    (S1;E9), there was a small colorized inset photo from this
    episode of Lucy, Viv and the kids looking at the newspapers reporting about Lucy and Viv’s experiment.

    Callbacks!

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    In
    “Lucy’s Club Dance” (ILL S3;E25) the
    headline of the New York Gazette reads “Bond Issue Defeated.” The
    same exact prop newspaper was used in “Ricky’s
    Old Girlfriend” (ILL S3;E12)
    .
    Here, eight years later, a headline in The Danfield Tribune  is “City Bond Issue Approved”!  

    image

    The
    paper also has a smaller headline: “Plane
    Lost a Year Ago in Andes Still Untraced.“
    This article actually appeared in The
    New York Times on
    July
    20, 1933.
    It reported the continuing mystery of the 1932
    disappearance
    of a Pan American Airlines flight from Santiago, Chile to Buenos
    Aires, Argentina. Eight months after the article, the plane was found
    four miles south of Puente
    Del Inca,
    Argentina.  Coincidentally, the very same side headline appeared on a
    newspaper used on a January 1961 episode of CBS’s “Perry
    Mason.”  

    Blooper
    Alerts!

    image

    Cut the Cord! After
    Lucy hangs up the phone while in the space suit, one of the cords
    dangling from the suit get’s snagged on the telephone cord.  Lucy quickly
    untangles it without missing a beat.

    image

    “Lucy Becomes an Astronaut” rates 4 Paper Hearts out of 5