• Happy birthday Desi Arnaz ~  born March 2, 1917

  • misstanwyck:

    Lucy in London, 1966

  • Today would have been MARY JANE CROFT’s 100th birthday! The perky character actress played three roles on “I Love Lucy”: Cynthia Harcourt (when Lucy plays a Martian woman); Evelyn Bigsby (who sits next to Lucy and her cheese on the plane); and Connecticut neighbor Betty Ramsey. She returned to play characters named Mary Jane in both “The Lucy Show” and “Here’s Lucy.”   

  • “Lucy Meets the Mustache”

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    (LDCH S3;E3 ~ April 1, 1960) Directed by Desi Arnaz. Written by Bob Schiller and Bob Weiskopf. Filmed March 2, 1960 at Desilu Studios, Hollywood. 

    Synopsis ~ Ricky is depressed because he has not been getting any TV offers lately, so Lucy, Fred, and Ethel try to get him a job on Ernie Kovacs’ show.

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    Originally, the script was titled “The Redhead Meets the Mustache.” The script copyright date is January 18, 1960. 

    This is the final episode of what was known in syndication as “The Lucy–Desi Comedy Hour,” part of “The Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse.” The anthology series continued until June 1960, presenting stand-alone teleplays and reruns of “Lucy-Desi Comedy Hours”:

    This is the last time viewers will ever see the Ricardos and Mertzes. This is also the only appearance of the characters in the decade of the 1960s. 

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    Ironically, the series ended with its 13th episode on April Fools Day. After this episode was filmed, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz filed for divorce, ending their 20-year marriage. It is said that the two did not speak to each other during the filming of this episode, except through their characters or other actors (”Tell Miss Ball to stand two feet to the left”). There was, however, no on-air mention of this being the final episode, which was filmed without a live audience. Although dates are disputed there is a suggestion that part or all of this episode could have been filmed as early as late 1959. March 2, 1960 may have been a date later arrived at because: 

    1. It was also Desi Arnaz’s 43rd birthday. 
    2. It was 9 years to the day that Lucille Ball first played Lucy in the “I Love Lucy” pilot.
    3. It made a better story that she filed for divorce the day after shooting finished. 
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    Following the “Comedy Hour” formula of having celebrity couples as guest stars, the “mustache” of the title is comedian Ernie Kovacs, who appears with his wife singer Edie Adams. Previous married guests include: 

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    There is no explanation of why the Kovacs’ are living in Westport, but since Little Ricky walks home from the Kovacs’ home, it must be nearby.

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    Ernie Kovacs (1919-62) was born and raised in Trenton, New Jersey. Coincidentally, as an infant, Lucille Ball also briefly lived in Trenton. A comedian, he was known for his uninhibited and visually experimental performance style. His television debut came in 1951, hosting his own show “It’s Time for Ernie” on NBC, although he quickly moved to CBS in 1952 for “The Ernie Kovacs Show.”

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    In February 1959 Kovacs had starred on “Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse” (the same umbrella program that presented “Lucy”) in “Symbol of Authority,” which was introduced by Desi Arnaz and also featured Elizabeth Patterson (Mrs. Trumbull). 

    Kovacs was nominated for several Emmy Awards but only won posthumously, after his 1962 death in a car accident. He was nicknamed "Mister Mustache” by other television stars, which explains the title of this episode. In addition to his trademark facial hair, he was also known as a devoted cigar smoker. His second wife was actor / singer Edie Adams.

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    Edie Adams (1927-2008) was born Edith Elizabeth Enke in Pennsylvania, although her family settled in Tenafly, New Jersey. She earned a vocal degree from Juilliard, then graduated from the Columbia School of Drama. She made her television debut with her future husband on 1951’s “Ernie in Kovacsland.” They were married in 1954. Adams Won Broadway’s 1957 Tony Award as Best Supporting Actress in a Musical as Daisy Mae in Li’l Abner. That same year she played the Fairy Godmother in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s TV musical “Cinderella” starring Julie Andrews. Adams died of cancer at the age of 81.

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    Edie Adams glibly says Ricky Ricardo is famously for playing “the bongo drums” and Kovacs says that they used to call him “the Cuban Krupa.”  Gene Krupa (1909-73) was a big band and jazz drummer known for his flamboyant style and showmanship.

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    Little Ricky is said to go to school with Kovacs’ daughter Kippie, his second daughter by his first wife. Although Kippie does not appear in the episode, she would have been 10 years old at the time. Kippie’s older sister Bette is also mentioned. After their father’s death, the girls were the subject of a bitter custody battle between Edie Adams and their mother, Bette Wilcox. This was all depicted in the 1984 TV movie Ernie Kovacs: Between the Laughter starring Jeff Goldblum as Kovacs.

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    Fred thinks Lucy is brewing some exceptionally strong coffee, but it turns out to be a ‘joke spoon’ Little Ricky bought at the local novelty shop!  Little Ricky’s sudden fascination with practical jokes and Big Ricky’s sudden obsession with smoking cigars lead to Kovacs smoking an exploding cigar offered to him by Lucy!  

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    LUCY: “Smile!  Be gay!”

    When Ricky feels ‘washed up’, Lucy reminds him that “there’s no business like show business.” The adage is also the title of a song from Irving Berlin’s Annie Get Your Gun (1948). The Mertzes burst into a chorus of the song in “Lucy Has Her Eyes Examined” (ILL S3;E11) and Lucy quotes the title again when interviewed by a journalist for a “Fan Magazine” (ILL S3;E17). Ethel Merman, who originated the song on Broadway, sang it with Lucy and Vivian on a 1964 episode of “The Lucy Show.”

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    Lucy says that Ricky is depressed due to a lack of job offers, not even being asked to stand from the audience on “The Ed Sullivan Show.” Sullivan traditionally acknowledged celebrities in his audience during his Sunday night variety show by asking them to stand for applause. This is one of several mentions of "The Ed Sullivan Show” on “Lucy."  Throughout their careers, Lucy and Desi were on the show (originally titled “Toast of the Town”) several times. 

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    Coincidentally, Lucille Ball’s personal chauffeur, Frank Gorey, started working for the star in October 1959 and was on the set for this filming. Gorey died in 2019. 

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    With Kovacs and Lucy sporting mustaches, Ricky is the only one to remain clean shaven!  

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    In 1952’s “The Mustache” (ILL S1;E23) Ricky grows a ‘cookie duster’ (with help from Lucy’s eyebrow pencil), despite Lucy’s objections. She retaliates by gluing on a full beard!  

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    Lucy wants to open a sealed letter
    Ricky has written to his Uncle Carlos in Cuba, so she tries a
    inserting a knitting needle under the flap, a method she saw in an
    Alfred Hitchcock movie. The scene is underscored with “Funeral
    March of a Marionette”
    by Charles Gounod.  The music was the theme
    song of Hitchcock’s anthology eponymous television program from 1955
    to 1965 and has since become synonymous with the famous director.  It
    was previously used to underscore the entrance of the gnomes during
    “Little Ricky’s School Pageant” (ILL S6;E10). Lucy also opened
    Ricky’s mail in “Drafted” (ILL S1;11) nine years earlier. Lucy
    says the knitting needle has replaced the old fashioned steam method,
    the one she used in 1951 to open what she thought was his draft
    notice.  

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    Watching Lucy open the letter without breaking the seal, Ethel says “I wonder if J. Edgar Hoover knows about this?” Lucy previously mentioned, J. Edgar Hoover, the director of the FBI, in 1955′s “The Great Train Robbery” (ILL S5;E5) and Lucille Ball even received a nice letter from him in return.  

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    The letter to Cuba reads:

    “My dear
    Uncle Carlos.  Forgive me for writing in English, but it has been so
    long since I have written in Spanish that it is much izzyer to write
    in English.  You were right, Uncle Carlos.  Anyone who goes into show
    business is loco de la cabeza.  If your offer to let me run the
    tobacco plantation is still open, I am ready to move back to Cuba.
    Your loving nephew, Enrique.”  

    This is the first time we hear about
    Uncle Carlos. We met Uncle Alberto (the head of the family) in “The
    Ricardos Visit Cuba” (ILL S6;E9)
    and also hear about uncles named
    Pedro, Rafael, Jorge, and  Guillermito Menendez. Perhaps not coincidentally, in the first draft of the script for the 1956 episode set in Havana, Uncle Alberto was originally known as Uncle Carlos!

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    The above screen capture reflects Director Arnaz’s penchant for unusual camera angles!  

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    After the Kovacs’ perform, Fred takes
    it as his cue to launch into a chorus of “Melancholy Baby,” which
    Ethel quickly shuts down. Little Ricky plays the drums instead.

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    William Frawley always claimed he was the first person to perform the
    song publicly in 1912. In “Lucy Goes to Sun Valley” (1958) he
    performed the song in its entirety. Coincidentally, the scene also
    included a drum solo by Little Ricky.  

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    Fred and Ethel are still claiming to
    have been married 25 years, just as they did in in “The Courtroom”
    (ILL S2;E7)
    in 1952, nearly 8 years earlier!  When Fred goes off to
    bed, Ethel says “Goodnight Bing,” a jab at his impromptu
    after-dinner crooning. Bing Crosby was probably one of the most
    famous singing actors of the 20th century. Frawley and Crosby did
    four films together between 1934 and 1944, including the classic Going My Way.   

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    Married life at the Kovacs home is no picnic either!  Ernie has turned their refrigerator into a humidor for his cigars!

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    At the country club hotel, the desk clerk tells Kovacs that Mr. Aldworth, the sponsor of his TV
    show, has been delayed. The name is a reference to Jack Aldworth,
    who was assistant director of this and other episodes of the “Comedy
    Hour” as well as many episodes of “I Love Lucy.”  

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    The car Lucy drives is a 1960 Lincoln Continental Landau four-door hardtop. 

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    Lucille Ball posed in front of the car for this rare publicity still. Earlier, Fred mentions the make of the car when he spies Little Ricky stepping out of it after getting a ride home from Kovacs’ chauffeur Crandall. 

    ETHEL: “A phone in a car!”
    LUCY: “That’s what I call luxury!” 

    Later in life, Lucille Ball had a car that spoke!  It would remind her driver if a “Door is ajar” in its staccato computerized tones. Lucy would wisecrack back in her croaky mezzo voice, “A door isn’t a jar, a jar is a jar!” 

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    Near the end of the episode, Ernie
    Kovacs tells Ricky to "take a good look” at Crandall (aka
    Lucy in disguise). 

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    “Take a Good Look” was the name of a TV quiz
    show Kovacs moderated at the time. It involved a panel guessing
    answers based on short skits.

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    After the episode’s conclusion, Desi
    stepped in front of the curtain to promote “The Man in the Funny
    Suit,”
    a behind-the-scenes drama starring Ed and Keenan Wynn that
    would air two weeks later. Lucy then drags Desi off to find Betty
    Furness for their very last Westinghouse commercial.

    Ethel’s talent as a pianist seemed
    to vary greatly throughout the series. In the first season of “I
    Love Lucy,” Ethel plays with great skill in “Breaking the
    Lease” (ILL S1;E18)
    and “The Ballet” (ILL S1;E19).  In
    “Ragtime Band” (ILL S6;E21), however, Ethel confesses that
    she’s not very good. In this episode, she plays like an accomplished
    jazz musician, but the accompaniment is actually being supplied by an
    off-stage musician. 

    “That’s All” was written in 1952 by Alan Brandt and Bob Haymes.  In 1957 the song was popularized by Nat King Cole. It was later heard in the films Tootsie (1982) and The Wedding Singer (1998). The lyrics of the song are eerily appropriate:  

    I can only give you love that lasts
    forever,
    And a promise to be near each time you call.
    And the
    only heart I own
    For you and you alone
    That’s all,
    That’s
    all.


    I can only give you country walks in
    springtime
    And a hand to hold when leaves begin to fall;
    And a
    love whose burning light
    Will warm the winter’s night
    That’s
    all,
    That’s all.

    There are those I am sure who have told
    you,
    They would give you the world for a toy.
    All I have are
    these arms to enfold you,
    And a love time can never destroy.

    If you’re wondering what I’m asking in
    return, dear,
    You’ll be glad to know that my demands are
    small.
    Say it’s me that you’ll adore,
    For now and
    evermore
    That’s all,
    That’s all.

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    LAST CAST! 

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    Paul Dubov (Crandall, Kovacs’ Chauffeur) had played Jerry, Ricky’s agent, in “The Handcuffs” (ILL S2;E4) after the original Jerry, Jerry Hausner, left the show.  Dubov was featured in Desilu’s “The Ann Sothern Show” and the 1959 pilot for “The Untouchables.”  

    Crandall is married with six children!

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    Dick Kallman (Bellboy) was a member of Lucille Ball’s Desilu acting workshop. He had just appeared in a “Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse” Christmas show called “The Desilu Revue,” which featured performances by talent currently working for the Arnazes. In 1966, Kallman replaced Tommy Steele on Broadway in Half a Sixpence. The actor was killed during a robbery in 1980.  

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    Norman Leavitt (Chauffeur at the Train Station) had appeared in

    two previous “Comedy Hours.” He first co-starred with Lucille Ball in 1950’s A Woman of Distinction and 1953’s The Long, Long Trailer. He went on two be seen in two episodes of “The Lucy Show.”  

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    Louis A. Nicoletti (Desk Clerk) was an integral member of the “I Love Lucy” family, appearing in more than 20 episodes and going on to assistant direct “The Lucy Show.” Nicoletti also played a hotel desk clerk in “Lucy Goes to Sun Valley” (S1;E5) and loaned his name to the hotel desk clerk in “Lucy Gets Homesick in Italy” (ILL S5;E22).  

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    Desi Arnaz’s stand-in and long-time “I Love Lucy” extra Bennett Green makes a final appearance as the room service waiter.  

    FAST FORWARD! 

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    In 1968, Edie Adams appeared on an episode of “The Lucy Show” as an old flame of Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) looking to take him away from his wife. To scare her off, Lucy pretends to be “Mooney’s Other Wife” (TLS S6;E18). 

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    In 2005, Lucy’s driver Frank Gorey gave ‘chauffeur-driven tours’ of Jamestown as part of Lucille Ball’s Birthday Celebration.

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    In a interview later in her life, Edie Adams told a story that when she arrived on set, she was approached by Lucy’s hairstylist who insisted that she needed her hair done. Adams told her that she had just had it down that morning and the stylist confided that “Lucy doesn’t like it”.  Adams’ hair was then washed, set, and styled. Lucy took one look at it and realized it was too much like her own and told them to change it back.  So Adams’ hair was again washed, set, and styled.  All for a half-day shoot!  Desi apologized on behalf of his wife, explaining that Lucy was in a bad mood that day. 

  • Lucie Arnaz posted this on Facebook! 

  • CHARLES LANE

     January 26, 1905 

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    Charles Lane was born Charles Gerstle Levison in San Francisco, California. He went on to become one of the most familiar faces in America in more than 350 films and TV shows, specializing in character roles, usually officious businessmen and authority figures. 

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    He appeared in some of Hollywood’s most-loved films, You Can’t Take it With You (1938), Mr. Smith Goes To Washington (1939), It’s A Wonderful Life (1946), and The Music Man (1962). 

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    He appeared in 7 films with Lucille Ball between 1933 and 1949: 

    • The Bowery (1933)
    • Broadway Through a Keyhole (1933)
    • Broadway Bill (1934)
    • Joy of Living (1938)
    • You Can’t Fool Your Wife (1940)
    • Look Who’s Laughing (1941)
    • Miss Grant Takes Richmond (1949)
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    Between 1938 and 1941, Lane appeared in four films with William Frawley (Fred Mertz): 

    • Professor Beware (1938)
    • Rose of Washington Square (1939)
    • Rhythm on the River (1940)
    • Dancing on a Dime (1940)
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    He appeared on four episodes of “I Love Lucy” from 1953 to 1956, all as different characters: 

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    In “Lucy Goes to the Hospital” (ILL S2;E16) he played expectant father Mr. Stanley (”Nine girls!”).  This was the only time he did not play an authority figure on the series! This was also one of the most-watched television programs in history! 

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    In “Lucy Tells the Truth” (ILL S3;E6), Lane is a Casting Agent, who suspects that Lucy may be embroidering her resume!   

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    When Lucy’s household budget gets out of control, Ricky hires Mr. Hickox“The Business Manager” (ILL S4;E1), to put her in ‘the black.’ His character was named after the Arnaz’s business manager, Andrew Hickox. 

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    When Lucy takes too many seasickness pills to help Fred navigate the “Staten Island Ferry” (ILL S5;E12), Lane’s by-the-book Passport Clerk (”When the five o’clock whistle blows, so do I.”) nearly doesn’t let drowsy Lucy get her passport! 

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    When “Lucy Hunts Uranium” (LDCH S1;E3) in a 1958 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour,” Lane is the Claims Officer who must verify her discovery!  

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    When “Lucy Goes to Mexico” (LDCH S2;E1) nine months later, she is stopped by an extremely thorough Border Guard, who insists on looking through her trunk!  

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    Before Mr. Mooney, Lucy Carmichael’s finances were in the hands of Banker Barnsdahl on four episodes of “The Lucy Show.”  

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    This was the last time the two shared the screen.  

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    Lane died at the ripe old age of 102.  

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  • Be contrary – it’s National Opposite Day!

    • In a 1956 episode of I LOVE LUCY, Lucille Ball donned kilts in a musical scene co-starring Vivian Vance.
    • In a 1964 episode of THE LUCY SHOW, Lucille Ball donned kilts in a musical scene co-starring Vivian Vance. 
  • Funday Papers

    From 1951 to 1959 newspapers were the catalyst for many “I Love Lucy” plots.  Here are just a few of the times that ‘papes’ played a part!

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    Ricky traditionally starts his day by reading the morning paper during breakfast. In “Be a Pal” (S1;E2) Lucy tries everything and anything to get his attention! 

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    One of the series’ most famous gags involved a toaster.  In the same episode Ricky catches the toast without looking up from his newspaper!  

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    In “Job Switching” (S2;E1) the roles are reversed…

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    …even down to catching the toast!  

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    In “Men Are Messy” (S1;E9), even from underneath his sport jacket Ricky doesn’t have to look far for the ‘spor’ session’ – the New York Times headline is about college football with mentions of Navy, Columbia, Cornell, and Harvard. 

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    Ethel points out an item in the Daily Mirror in “Lucy is Jealous of Girl Singer” (S1;E10) that causes Lucy to imagine life without Ricky!

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    In one shot the newspaper has small print and in the very next shot of Ethel, it is a headline page with the word HERE clearly visible. 

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    When Lucy flips open the paper to read the inside item, the headline reads: “CHURCHILL, HST [Harry S. Truman] TO CONFER HERE”.  Early in 1952, the newly reinstalled British Prime Minister Winston Churchill once again crossed the Atlantic to confer with a US President.

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    An article is conspicuously missing from Variety in “Lucy Fakes Illness” (S1;E16).  Although this is the premise of the episode, the scene is often cut in syndication!

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    While checking Ricky’s horoscope in “The Seance” (S1;E7), viewers get a glimpse of a giant ad for SUITS $28!

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    The newspaper Ethel holds in “Ricky asks for A Raise” (S1;E35) has ads for the Ringling Brothers Barnum & Bailey Circus and the musical Call Me Madam

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    Lucy Ricardo’s blessed event was
    mentioned in Walter
    Winchell
    ’s
    column in “Ricky Has Labor Pains” (S2;E14)

    . In real life, Winchell announced Lucy’s 1950 pregnancy on the radio even before the doctor had time to
    call them. Sadly, Lucy miscarried.  

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    In order to spend more time with her husband, Lucy and Ricky read the sports pages together in “The Camping Trip” (S2;E29).  Lucy mistakenly thinks sportswriter Grantland Rice is a food!  The reference was cut out in syndication. 

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    The
    headline of the New York Gazette reads “Bond Issue Defeated” in
    “Ricky’s Old Girlfriend”  (S3;E12)
    .  The newspaper that
    reports that “Carlotta Romero is playing the Opal Room” is The
    New York Gazette – a fictional newspaper – although the back page
    (the arts section) calls it The Daily Record!

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    A New York newspaper runs a “Bonus Bucks” (S3;E21) contest that makes Lucy go to extreme lengths to win $100.  Such contests were common in the 1950s, but were usually named Lucky Bucks.  The word “Lucky” was forbidden on “I Love Lucy” because sponsor Phillip Morris didn’t want viewers to think of their competitor, Lucky Strike cigarettes.  

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    “Lucy is Envious” (S3;E23) opens with Lucy and Ricky reading the papers in bed.  

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    When Lucy and Ethel need to fulfill their pledges to Cynthia Harcourt’s charity, they find a job ad in Billboard for “Two Women With Courage” and end up dressed like women from Mars atop the Empire State Building!  

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    When a publicity article about Ricky forming an all-girl band with her club members hits the papers before Lucy has time to broach the subject with him, she has to go to extreme lengths to prevent Ricky from seeing the newspaper in “Lucy’s Club Dance” (S3;E25).  

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    The “Bond Issue Defeated” headline turns up again!  

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    Lucy even tries to intercept all the papers at a corner newsstand!

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    In “Hollywood
    Anniversary” (S4;E23)
    Lucy reads a list of celebrities
    supposedly coming to her anniversary party.  She later
    learns that the article was just publicity, and that “none of those
    peoples are coming.”  

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    When looking for a movie to see in “In Palm Springs” (S4;E26), the back page of the newspaper has an ad for the new film Hit The Deck (1955). 

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    Variety turns up again in “Lucy
    Has Her Eyes Examined” (S3;E30)
    .  The headline “Parker
    Preps Prod for Pitts Preem”
     is translated as
    “Parker Prepares Production for Pittsburgh Premiere.”  Variety began
    publishing in 1905 and is still around today. It has long been known
    for its industry jargon.

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    In “Lucy Cries Wolf” (S4;E3) Lucy feels ignored when Ricky gets engrossed in the New York Bulletin.  She later gets his attention by pretending to be abducted! 

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    In “Ethel’s Hometown” (S4;E15) the Albuquerque local paper does an article on Ethel Mae Potter (”We Never Forgot Her”). 

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    Ethel’s old beau Billy Hackett is a reporter for the paper, and takes a photo of Ethel that crops out her friends and family!  Note that the insert shot of Vivian Vance has her hands in a different position than the actual episode!  

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    Before Lucy gets embroiled in “The Fashion Show” (S4;E19), Ricky hides from her request for a Don Loper dress by burying his head in Variety.  

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    When not ignoring Lucy by pretending to read Variety, he tries The Hollywood Reporter in “The Bullfight Dance” (S4;E22).  

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    A jewel thief (Harry Bartell) finds a newspaper is the perfect way to hide in plain sight during “The Great Train Robbery” (S5;E5).  

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    In England, Lucy reads about film producer Sir Clive Richardson in the venerable Times of London in “The Fox Hunt” (S5;E16).  

    When “Little Ricky Learns to Play the Drums” (S6;E2), Fred’s copy of the New York Herald Tribune (a real newspaper) was  five months old at the time of the filming!  

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    In Connecticut, “Lucy Misses the Mertzes” (S6;E17) while back in New York, Fred reads The Sporting News.  A back page ad for L&M Cigarettes indicates the episode was filmed around the holidays.  Note that Phillip Morris was no longer a sponsor, so there was no need to cover up the ad.  

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    A Las Vegas novelty shop prints souvenir newspapers in “Lucy Hunts Uranium” (a 1958 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour”).  Fred gets one made for Little Ricky. 

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    This gives Lucy the idea of how to encourage big Ricky to allow her to go Uranium hunting!  

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    But when the bellboy (Bobby Jellison) and maid (Maxine Semon) find the discarded newspaper, a city-wide Uranium panic is created!  

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    In “Lucy Wants a Career” (1958) Ricky
    reads in Variety that
    Danny Kaye is returning to London to give another command performance
    for Queen Elizabeth.  

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    Later in the same episode, guest star Paul Douglas encounters a newspaper-reading ‘kibitzer’ (Sam Hearn) at a Grand Central Station newsstand.  Hearn previously played Lucy’s childhood doctor in “The Passports” (S5;E11).  

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    Before “Lucy Goes to Japan” (a 1959 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour”), she reads about their upcoming trip in Variety.   

  • Lucy’s Guide to Getting Through a Blizzard

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    Being stuck indoors during a blizzard can cause cabin fever. 

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    Being shut in can drive you a little crazy sometimes!  

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    Best to get outside and enjoy the wonderful winter weather! 

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    1. Build a snowman with friends and neighbors! 

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    2. Toss a friendly snowball or two!   

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    3. Frolic in the snow with pets!

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    4. Climb a hill and take in the view!  

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    5. Get your skates on and visit the rink! 

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    6. Call your best friend and go skiing…  

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    …or grab a lift with a new friend!

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    But don’t be tempted to get behind the wheel – that could be problematic.

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    You’ll soon discover that snow can be cold…

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    …and can lead to frost bite!  

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    And you’ll end up back in the house, thawing out under the electric blanket. 

    Waaaa!