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TV GUIDE: 50 BEST TV SERIES
May 4, 2002

On May 4, 2002, TV GUIDE (vol. 50, no. 18, issue #2562) celebrated its 50th Anniversary with a look back at the greatest shows of all time. Naturally, “I Love Lucy” made the cover! The title of the show is the first one ghosted in the upper left corner, and Lucille Ball is one of six images selected to represent the five decades past. The image was taken from “Lucy Tells the Truth” (ILL S3;E6) filmed on October 8, 1953, and first aired on November 9, 1953. Fittingly, 1953 was the national edition of TV Guide’s first year of publication and Lucille Ball (and Desi Jr.) were on the very first cover. The list of the top fifty (and their placement on the list) was decided by TV Guide editors.
The other images include:

“The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson” ~ Lucille Ball was often a guest on “The Tonight Show” and Carson also guest starred on “Here’s Lucy” in 1969.

“The Dick Van Dyke Show” starring Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore ~ was a series filmed at Desilu Studios! Lucille Ball made variety show appearances with both Dick and Mary.

“The Simpsons” ~ The animated Fox sensation has presented their version of Lucy on several occasions!

“The Cosby Show” starring Bill Cosby ~ In 1968, former Emmy-winner Bill Cosby presented Lucille Ball with an Emmy.

“Seinfeld” starring Jerry Seinfeld, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Jason Alexander ~ The sitcom about ‘nothing’ – and everything – also acknowledged their queen!
Inside the issue it was revealed that “Seinfeld” had beat out “Lucy” for the top spot! Still pretty good for a series that fifty years old!
Top 10
- Seinfeld (NBC, July 5, 1989 – May 14, 1998)
- I Love Lucy (CBS, October 15, 1951 – May 6, 1957)
- The Honeymooners (Dumont, October 1, 1955 – September 22, 1956)
- All in the Family (CBS, January 12, 1971 – April 8, 1979)
- The Sopranos (HBO, January 10, 1999 – June 10, 2007)
- 60 Minutes (CBS, September 24, 1968 – present)
- Late Show with David Letterman (CBS, August 30, 1993 – May 20, 2015)
- The Simpsons (Fox, December 17, 1989 – present)
- The Andy Griffith Show (CBS, October 3, 1960 – April 1, 1968)
- Saturday Night Live (NBC, October 11, 1975 – present)

On May 13, 2002, this special issue of TV Guide was made into an ABC television special. The covers here do not reflect the show’s actual content.
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LUCY
May 4, 2003


Directed by Glenn Jackson
Executive Producer Neil Meron, Craig Zadan
Written by Katie Ford, T.S. Cook
Aired on CBS TV (USA) on May 4, 2003The film was shot entirely on location in Auckland, New Zealand
Synopsis ~ “Lucy” covers 35 years of the comedienne’s life, from her time as a free-spirited teenager through to the last Lucy and Desi Comedy Hour in 1960. In the interim, Lucy tries acting classes and modelling, becomes a Goldwyn Girl, appears in a string of movies and falls in love with Desi Arnaz.
PRINCIPAL CAST


Rachel
York (Lucille Ball) is an award-winning Broadway performer, who was seen with Julie Andrews in Victor / Victoria, and the musical Kiss Me, Kate, also aired on PBS.“York is a revelation, with the voice down perfect and the physical comedy at least approximate.” ~ John Leonard, NY Magazine

Danny
Pino (Desi Arnaz) was born in Miami Beach, Florida, a place Desi Arnaz also called home. He has just been cast in the film version of the Tony-winning musical Dear Evan Hansen.
Rebecca Hobbs (Vivian Vance) is from Auckland, New Zealand. She has transitioned from acting to screenwriting.

Russell Newman (Bill Frawley) is an Australian actor who has been seen on television in the US and Australia.
Ann
Dowd (Dede) is now best known as Aunt Lydia on Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale.”Zoe Carides (Lolita De Acha) is from Sydney, Australia. She is the sister of Gia Carides.
LaChanze (Harriett) is a Tony-winning actress best known for originating roles in the musicals Once On This Island, and The Color Purple.
Madeline
Zima (Teen Lucy) is a Connecticut-born actress discovered by Woody Allen for his movie, Alice (1990). Zima was chosen for the role of Teen Lucy after a worldwide search.Merv
Smith (Grandpa Fred) was for many years New Zealand’s highest rated radio broadcaster, presenting ae breakfast show on Auckland-based Radio 1ZB from 1961 until 1986.- Christopher
Brougham (Adult Freddy) - Ray
Woolf (Ed Sedgwick) - Peter
Mochrie (Don Sharpe) - Andrew
Robertt (Bob Carroll Jr.) - Lauchlin
MacDonald (Jess Oppenheimer) - Theresa
Healey (Madelyn Pugh) - Mark
Clare (Red Skelton) - Vanessa
Gray (Carole Lombard) - Ian
Mune (Buster Keaton) - Bartholomew
John (Hubbell Robinson) - Owen
Black (Johnny) - Laurie Dee (Congressman Jackson)
- Alex
Ewan (Intern) - Liddy
Holloway (Mildred) - Paula
Keenan (Sylvia Hahlo) - Charles
Pierard (Alex Hall) - Peter
Rowley (Mark Daniels) - Joy
Watson (Grandmother)
UNCREDITED CAST
- Priscilla
Bonnet (Young Bette Davis) - David
Britz (Dancer) - Lori
Dungey (Italian Grape Crusher) - Gregor
McLennan (George Mandicos) - Daniel
Pujol (Doorman) - Angela
Shirley (Deborah) - Olivia
Tennet (Lucie Arnaz) - Charles
Unwin (Clark Gable)
“If you’re a fan, you may watch in frustration, demanding, ‘Tell me something or more things I don’t know.’” ~ Barbara Vancheri, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Clips courtesy of Dimitri Bitu and The Biopic Story
~GOOFS~
Frank Tuttle directed Roman Scandals, not Eddie Cantor.
Buster Keaton (Ian Mune) is depicted as being considerably older than his long-time collaborator Ed Sedgwick (Ray Woolf). Buster was six years younger than Ed.

During a discussion about Lucy appearing before the HUAC, Desi mentions RKO is up for sale. These two events were separated by four years.
The final episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” was not filmed in front of a live studio audience, as is depicted.
Harriett (LaChanze) is a composite character based on several maids Lucy had.

- Christopher
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NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH
May 3, 1943

The Screen Guild Theater presents Nothing But The Truth, which was a 1941 Paramount Pictures release.
- Produced by: Arthur Hornblow Jr.
- Directed by: Elliott Nugent
- Written by: Ken Englund, John Hartman
Synopsis ~
Gwen Saunders teams up with her uncle’s employee, Steve Bennett, in an attempt to double her $10,000 investment in the family firm. If she can reach the $20,000 mark, her uncle T.T. Ralston will match the figure. Steve bets that if he can spend an entire day without telling a lie, Ralston and his business partners must double Gwen’s money. Bennett then earns the enmity of everyone involved in his attempt to win the bet.

The Screen Guild Theater (aka The Screen Guild Players), was one of the most popular drama anthology series during the Golden Age of Radio. At this point it is being sponsored by Gulf Oil. From its first broadcast in 1939, up to its farewell in 1952, it showcased radio adaptations of popular Hollywood films. Many Hollywood names became part of the show, including Bette Davis, Bing Crosby, Clark Gable, Judy Garland, Frank Sinatra, and many more. The actors’ fees were all donated to the Motion Picture Relief Fund, an organization that provides aid to retired actors. Screen Guild Theater was heard on different radio networks, beginning with CBS from 1939 to 1948, NBC from 1948 to 1950, ABC from 1950 to 1951, and back to CBS until its last episode on June 29, 1952. Throughout its run, a total of 527 episodes were produced.
The radio show brought movies to radio for thirty minutes each Monday evening on CBS. The show aired for 242 programs beginning with “Yankee Doodle Dandy” starring James Cagney and ending with “My Reputation.” In between were all time classics such as “Casablanca” with Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, “Sergeant York” with Gary Cooper and “Holiday Inn” with Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, and Dinah Shore.
At this point in its history, the series is sponsored by Lady Esther Cosmetics.

Nothing But The Truth was a 1941 comedy starring Bob Hope and Paulette Goddard, their third movie together in three years. The premise of the film, that the protagonist must tell the truth for the next 24 hours, is based on a play of the same name written by James Montgomery, itself loosely adapted from the novel by Frederic S. Isham. The book and play had previously formed the basis of an earlier movie, also called Nothing But the Truth, starring Richard Dix and Wynne Gibson. The 1941 film follows the plot of the play much more closely than the 1929 version. The same premise was used for a 1997 Jim Carrey movie, Liar Liar. In 1952, television adaptations were aired in both the US and Canada, and in 1958 in the UK.
Nothing But The Truth was also presented on radio’s “Old Gold Comedy Theatre” on January 14, 1945 starring Anne Baxter and Alan Young.

CAST
Lucille Ball
(Gwenn Ralston) was just finished filming of
Best Foot Forward,
her 58th film, which would be released later in 1943.
Ball plays the role originated by Paulette Goddard.

Frank Morgan (Steve Bennett, a stock broker / Frank Morgan) is probably best remembered as Professor Marvel and The Wizard in The Wizard of Oz (1939). He had just finished filming Thousands Cheer with Lucille Ball, and the two had also done The Affairs of Cellini in 1934.
Morgan plays the role originated by Bob Hope.
Hanley Stafford (T.T. Ralston, Gwenn’s Brother) was born Alfred Austin in 1899 and changed his name to Hanley Stafford to honor his birthplace, Hanley, Staffordshire in England. He was a radio actor famous for playing Baby Snooks’ father. A 1962 episode of “The Lucy Show” was his final screen credit.
Stafford plays the role originated by Edward Arnold.
Herb Vigran (Muscles) was a character actor from the 1930s to the 1980s. Over his 50-year career, he made over 350 television and film appearances, many with Lucille Ball or for Desilu. Vigran occasionally turned up on Lucille Ball’s radio show, “My Favorite Husband” (1948-50) and on “I Love Lucy” in various roles.
Truman Bradley (Announcer)
Cynthia Ralston, Linda Graham, Iron Man, are played by uncredited performers.
“TRUTH” TRIVIA

In addition to Bob Hope, one of Lucille Ball’s frequent on screen collaborators, the film also featured Will Wright in an uncredited role. On “I Love Lucy” Wright played the Yonkers locksmith and Sheriff of Ben Fork, Tennessee.

The film also features Leon Belasco as Dr. Zarak. On “I Love Lucy” he played the art store clerk in “Lucy Becomes a Sculptress” (ILL S2;E15), first aired on January 15, 1953. He has done two other movies with Lucille Ball between 1939 and 1944. He also appeared in three episodes of “The Lucy Show”, all playing the violin.

In this radio version Hanley Stafford plays T.T. Ralston. His final screen credit was as Kenneth Westcott, Principal of Danfield High School, in “Lucy is a Chaperone” (TLS S1;E27) on April 8, 1963.

From late 1942 to July 1947 Lady Esther Cosmetics sponsored the show which had been previously sponsored by Gulf Oil. It was first known as the “Lady Esther Presents the Screen Guild Players” and then became “The Lady Esther Screen Guild Theater.”

A wager whether someone can keep from lying for 24 hours is also the premise of “Lucy Tells the Truth” (ILL S3;E6) aired on November 9, 1953. Like Steve Bennett, Lucy is put to the test, resulting in some brutal honesty that hurts people’s feelings.

The commercials are delivered by ‘Lady Esther,’ the spokeswoman for the Lady Esther Cosmetics company. Both commercial breaks pitch anti-aging Lady Esther Face Powder.

Meta Morgan! At one point in the narrative, Gwenn tries to convince someone that they didn’t hear Steve (who is hiding under her bed), but heard Frank Morgan on the radio!


After the story ends, Lucille Ball does a pitch for student nurses. “War work with a future – as a nurse.”

CREDITS

Announcer Truman Bradley verbally thanks Paramount Pictures, and says that their latest film is China, starring Loretta Young and Alan Ladd.

Henry Morgan can currently be seen in MGM’s The Human Comedy.

Lucille Ball will soon be seen in MGM’s Du Barry Was A Lady.
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ORSON WELLES ALMANAC
May 3, 1944

“Orson Welles Almanac” aka “The Orson Welles Wonder Show” (1944) is a CBS Radio series directed and hosted by Orson Welles. Broadcast live in California and Arizona via CBS West Coast studios, the 30-minute program was heard Wednesdays at 9:30pm beginning January 26, 1944. Its last broadcast was July 19, 1944. Orson Welles Almanac presented readings from classic works, drama, music, sketch comedy, magic, mindreading, and personal commentary by Welles. Many of the shows originated from US Army camps where Welles entertained the troops. Welles had an ongoing battle with the program’s sponsor, Mobil Oil, which shortened the life of the series. Twenty six broadcasts were produced; all but four shows have survived.
This is the 15th episode of the series, aired on May 3, 1944. Previous guests were Groucho Marx, Lionel Barrymore, Ann Sothern, Robert Benchley, Hedda Hopper, and Victor Moore. Lucille Ball previously guest-starred on the series on March 3, 1944.
CAST
Lucille Ball (Guest Star) was then filming Ziegfeld Follies for release in 1945. Her films Best Foot Forward and Thousands Cheer (both released in 1943) were still in local cinemas. Ball was in her fourth year of a rocky marriage to Desi Arnaz, who she would divorce in September 1944, although the papers were never officially filed. Two days earlier, she had be heard in “A Night To Remember” for radio’s “Screen Guild Players.”

Orson Welles (aka ‘Wonder Boy’) arrived in Hollywood in 1939 when Ball was a contract player at RKO Studios. To squelch rumors that he was a homosexual, the studio sent Lucy to escort him to a premiere to be photographed. He later recalled,
“We went to see the opening of some movie or other—I simply picked her up at her house and we went to the movie and got photographed and came home and I said ‘Good night,’ and that was the end of that. That was the end of that romance, but it was the beginning of a long friendship.”

A veteran of the theatre, in 1941 the actor / director completed his magnum opus film Citizen Kane. In the 1950s he was under contract to Desilu to film a pilot for an anthology series called “The Fountain of Youth,” which wasn’t aired until 1958 and did not result in a series. Despite that, it won a Peabody Award, the only pilot to ever do so.

On February 5, 1956 Lucy and Desi appeared with Welles on Ed Sullivan’s “Toast of the Town.” They were there to promote their film Forever Darling. Welles was there to promote his revival of his King Lear at New York’s City Center, which he initially performed in a wheelchair due to injuries to both ankles. By the time he performed it on “Toast of the Town” (aka “The Ed Sullivan Show”) Welles was using a crutch.

When the Oscar-winning actor and director was down on his luck he was invited to stay in the Arnaz guest cottage. Notorious for his drinking and rude behavior, Lucy had to find a way to politely get rid of her guest so she decided to have an episode of “I Love Lucy” written for him so she could pay him a salary. With that in mind, Desilu paid him the exorbitant sum of $15,000! Ball’s memories of Welles were mixed. “I had a real love-hate relationship with Orson,” she said towards the end of her life. “His mind was awesome…but he was also a pain in the ass.”

At the time of this broadcast (March 8, 1944) Welles’ film Jane Eyre was playing in cinemas.

Aurora Miranda (Musical Guest) was a Brazilian singer and actress. She began her career at the age of 18 in 1933. Miranda appeared in several films, including The Three Caballeros, where she danced with Donald Duck and José Carioca, singing the song, “Os Quindins de Yayá”. Her sisters were Carmen Miranda and Cecilia Miranda.

The All-Star Jazz Group: Mutt Carey (trumpet), Kid Ory (trombone), Barney Bigard (clarinet), Buster Wilson (piano), Bud Scott (guitar), Ed Garland (bass), and Zutty Singleton (drums).
John McIntire (Announcer)
EPISODE

This episode was broadcast from the Naval Air Station at Terminal Island, San Pedro, California, at the time, the fastest ship-building station in the world.
ORSON: “All the way out I had to sit on Lucille Ball’s lap!”
The sailors in the audience respond very vocally to Lucille.
Orson and Ball enact a scenario depicting Lucille Ball pulling over to pick up a prudish sailor who is hitchhiking. The sailor says he’s headed to the Museum of Natural History, and maybe the Aquarium. They drive off, the sailor uncharacteristically staving off Lucille’s advances. He admires her car – a 1941 Cadillac.
ORSON: “You get much pick-up?”
LUCILLE: “You’re the third today!”She takes him on a ‘short-cut’ and they run out of gas. She wants to stay and cuddle…but he is afraid. Afraid that the museum will be closed!
Welles introduces Aurora Miranda to Lucille Ball. He has to ‘translate’ her heavy accent. She sings “No Tabuleiro da Baiana”, with Welles joining her briefly in duet.
Lucille asks Orson if she can do a love scene with one of the sailors. He recruits someone from the audience – George. Although he claims no acting experience, he knows he can kiss! Orson sets the scene: a boy comes home from college to meet his sweetheart for the first time in a long while. Orson acts as a director.
ORSON: “Woah! Slow down! What’s the rush?”
GEORGE: “I’m expecting a transfer any minute.”Although the scene calls for hand-holding the sailor puts his arm around her. Lucy senses that Orson is deliberately intervening to prevent him from kissing her, but finally he does.
ORSON: “Cut! That’s it! This isn’t commando tactics! She’s an actress, not an obstacle course!”

Orson introduces the All-Star Jazz Band playing “Savoy Blues.” The piece was first recorded by Louis Armstrong in 1927 and was composed by Kid Ory, who plays trombone here.

Orson Welles reads the honor speech from Shakespeare’s Henry V on the subject of honor.

In 1965, Welles made a film called Chimes at Midnight (aka Falstaff) which incorporated monologues from several of Shakespeare’s “Henry” plays, including Henry V.
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THE BOB HOPE SHOW
May 3, 1949

“The Bob Hope Show” ~ After a dozen years as “The Pepsodent Show”, Pepsodent pulled its sponsorship in June 1948. Despite cancellation, Hope still continued on radio. Lever Brothers’ Swan soap began sponsoring the show, which premiered on September 14, 1948 on NBC. Doris Day was the only one of Hope’s former co-stars to continued to perform on the new show. Airing Tuesdays at 9, the program was at direct competition with the new sitcom “Life with Luigi”, which aired at the same time on CBS. “Life with Luigi” proved to be the season’s new hit, crushing “The Bob Hope Show” in the ratings. Like Pepsodent before, due to the poor ratings, Swan pulled its sponsorship in 1950. The last Swan-sponsored episode of the program aired on June 13. On October 3, 1950 “The Bob Hope Show” premiered under the sponsorship of Chesterfield cigarettes. Over the next five years, it aired under various sponsors, including Jell-O and General Foods, in various timeslots until its final episode aired on April 21, 1955.
CAST

Bob Hope made his radio debut on NBC in May 1937. He became a top-rated fixture on Tuesday nights with his theme song, “Thanks for the Memories”. His legendary broadcasts from military bases around the world helped boost American morale during the dark days of World War II. Over the years, his radio regulars included Jerry Colonna, Brenda and Cobina, Vera Vague, Wendall Niles, and orchestras led by Skinnay Ennis and Les Brown. Featured singers on the show included Judy Garland, Frances Langford, Doris Day, and Gloria Jean. Hope’s radio career lasted well into the mid-1950s. By then, he had become a major movie and television star doing four films, and numerous television programs with Lucille Ball. He died on July 29, 2003, at the age of 100.
Lucille Ball was then a film star with her own weekly radio show, “My Favorite Husband”, which had just aired “Vacation Time” on April 29, 1949. Her new film with Bob Hope, Sorrowful Jones, would premiere in June 1949. In February 1949 she had made her first national TV appearance on “Perry Como’s Kraft Music Hall”, quickly followed by an episode of “The Milton Berle Show.”

Doris Day began her career as a big band singer in 1939, achieving commercial success in 1945 with two No. 1 recordings, “Sentimental Journey” and “My Dreams Are Getting Better All the Time” with Les Brown & His Band of Renown. She left Brown to embark on a solo career and recorded more than 650 songs from 1947 to 1967. Day was one of the biggest film stars in the 1950s and ‘60s. Surprisingly, Lucille Ball never acted opposite Doris Day in films or television, but she did interview her for her CBS radio show “Let’s Talk To Lucy” #144 on March 22, 1965. She died in 2019 at age 97.
Irene Ryan is the least remembered of Bob Hope’s female stooges. Her mousy Miss Ryan character told Hope week after week that she was, “Feeling about as well as could be expected,” before launching into a string of hypochondriac jokes. Irene Noblette and husband Tim Ryan went into radio in 1933 after a vaudeville and minor movie career. They kept busy in radio for ten years, four of them as stars of their own shows, including 1937’s Royal Crown Revue. After their divorce in 1943, Irene kept the Ryan name and worked in some 20 low budget movie comedies and shorts plus occasional radio roles. While with Hope’s troupe she continued her screen work and drifted into occasional television roles in the 1950’s. In 1962, at age 60 and ready to retire as a relative unknown, Irene Ryan was cast as “Granny” Daisy Mae Moses in a new television sitcom, “The Beverly Hillbillies”. The show was an immediate hit that endured for nine seasons on CBS-TV. In 1972, when she was 70, she co-starred on Broadway in the musical hit Pippin. She collapsed on stage a year later and died of a stroke, leaving a million dollars to the Irene Ryan Foundation which provides scholarships to collegiate acting students.
Bill Farrell was first spotted by Bob Hope in a night club in Buffalo, New York in 1947. Hope was impressed with Farrell’s powerful baritone voice and smooth delivery and he invited Farrell to Hollywood. Hope featured him on his weekly radio show. In 1949
Farrell enjoyed a minor hit with his recording of “Circus” which reached #26 in the Billboard charts.
The Four Hits and A Miss consisted of four male singers and one female (thus the word “miss” in their name has a double meaning). They were variously known as Three Hits and A Miss, and even Six Hits and a Miss, as members came and went, mainly due to wartime service. They performed musical numbers in several Hollywood films of the 1940s.
The New Les Brown Band performed with Bob Hope on radio, stage and television for almost fifty years. They did 18 USO Tours, and entertained over three million people. The first film that Brown and the band appeared in was Seven Days’ Leave (1942) starring Victor Mature and Lucille Ball.
Hy Averback (Announcer) played Charlie Appleby on “I Love Lucy” in “Baby Pictures” (ILL S3;E5), although the character would be re-cast with George O’Hanlon in season six. He played another Charlie, Charlie Pomerantz, in “The Hedda Hopper Story” (ILL S4;E21) on March 14, 1955. Averback transitioned from acting to directing, becoming Emmy nominated for “M*A*S*H.”
EPISODE
Bob Hope’s opening monologue includes top news of the day, including:
- Russia starting to advertise on billboards.
- Bob Hope’s return from his whirlwind tour.

Hope and Averback promote the “Swan CARE Campaign” delivering Swan Soap to needy children in Europe.

Doris Day sings “Havin’ a Wonderful Wish” from Sorrowful Jones.

Doris Day and Hope reminisce about a party at Bob’s house, given for the crew of the flight that shuttled Hope on his whirlwind tour. They talk about the food and Hope’s serving small portions. Miss Ryan interrupts their chat. She was also at the party, briefly. She had to leave early due to her bad back. She talks about the fundraising efforts of her club and why she has remained single for so long.
Averback and Hope make another pitch for the “Swan CARE Campaign”.

Bill Farrell sings “Careless Hands”.

Hope introduces “his favorite redhead” – Lucille Ball – and they discuss their new movie, Sorrowful Jones. He admires her hair.
BOB: “If you get together with ‘The Boy with Green Hair’ you’d make a terrific traffic signal!”
He thanks her for not making a crack about his nose. She says she appreciated it.
LUCY: “It was such an easy place to hang my coat every morning.”
Lucy says she loved working at Paramount and hopes that they make another picture together soon. He asks her about “My Favorite Husband” on ‘that other network’. She says that her show has great ratings. She tells him the premise of the show.

He compares her domestic situation on radio with the couples he he has seen in films, like Kentucky (1938), a Romeo and Juliet story set amidst horse racing in Kentucky. They launch into a sketch playing Ma and Pa.
PA: “A-Okay, Ma. Get the children in the house and we’ll eat.”
MA: “Alright, I’ll get Elam, Rufus, Walter, Albert, Effie Mae, Janie, Betty Lou, Charles, Si, Jack, Fred, George, Ellie, Billy, Clarence, Hiram, Helen, and Jean.”
PA: “And I’ll get John, Harvey, Cletus, Zeke, Daniel Boone, Judy, Joan, Nancy, Carolyn, Birdie, Eleanor, Little Daisy, Sam, Kate, Tom, Abner, and Teddy.”
MA: “Well, that takes care of the twins. Who’ll get the single ones?”Hope says another interesting husband and wife is a Brooklyn cab driver and his wife. The band plays “The Sidewalks of New York”. Hope and Ball do Brooklyn accents for their characters.

In closing, as usual, Hope sings “Thank for the Memory” with special lyrics about the episode, including the Swan Soap CARE Campaign.
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CHICAGO TRIB TV WEEK
May 2, 1970

Lucille Ball appeared on the cover of Chicago Tribune’s TV Week on Saturday, May 2, 1970. The caption implies an inside story about “Lucy’s special talent” but no inside story was included. This is one of Lucille Ball’s stock glamour shots.



Saturday night, May 2, 1970, CBS aired a re-run of “The Carol Burnett Show” (S3;E9) first aired on November 24, 1969, Lucille Ball’s third of four appearances on the hit variety hour.


On Monday, May 4, 1970, CBS aired a re-run of “Here’s Lucy” titled “Lucy Protects Her Job” (HL S2;E14), first aired on December 22, 1969.

The headline of the Chicago Tribune the day this TV Week was published.
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PHILIP BRUNS
May 2, 1931

Philip Bruns was born on May 2, 1931 in Pipestone, Minnesota.
He graduated from Augustana College in South Dakota and earned a Master’s Degree from the Yale School of Drama. He also studied at the Old Vic Theatre School in London, England.

Off-Broadway, he received the 1964 Obie Award for his performance in the play, Mr. Simian. He also appeared on Broadway. He made is TV debut in a 1964 episode of “Car 54, Where Are You?”

On “December 30, 1968, he played a grizzled old prospector named J.C.C. Tompkins on “Here’s Lucy” in “Lucy and the Gold Rush” (HL S1;E13). To turn him into the stereotypical old prospector, he wore a beard and old age make-up.

This was his only time acting with Lucille Ball.

He is probably best remembered for his role as Mary Hartman’s father George Shumway on the Norman Lear satire “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman” from 1976 to 1977.

He appeared as Morty Seinfeld in the sitcom “Seinfeld”, in a first-season episode entitled “The Stake Out”, but was replaced in the role by Barney Martin after Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld decided they wanted the character to be harsher, as they thought Bruns was too laid-back for the role.

His final role was on a February 1999 episode of “Just Shoot Me”. He died on February 12, 2012, at age 80. He was survived by his wife Broadway actress Laurie Franks.
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GORDON B. CLARKE
May 2, 1906

Gordon B. Clarke was born in St. Paul, Minnesota. He made his screen debut in an uncredited role in Zorro’s Fighting Legion (1939) for Republic Pictures. He started doing television in 1951 with an episode of “Lights Out”.

Clarke was a stand-in for Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and shared the screen with him in four films from 1939 to 1947.

His first work for Desilu was also his only time acting with Lucille Ball. He played a gambler in “Lucy Goes to Monte Carlo” (ILL S5;E25) filmed on March 29, 1956, and first aired on May 7, 1956.
CLARKE (French Accent): “You have won again! What is your system, madam?”
LUCY: “System? I don’t have any system!”
The very next year he returned to Desilu to appear in a 1957 episode of their western “The Sherriff of Cochise” as well as the Desilu
Studios-filmed, “The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp.”His final screen role was playing (uncredited) a hotel manager in the 1971 film Plaza Suite.
Clarke died on January 11, 1972 at age 65.
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EVE ARDEN
April 30, 1908

Eunice Mary Quedens (aka Eve Arden) was born in Mill Valley, California, near San Francisco. She was interested in show business from an early age. At 16, she made her stage debut after quitting school to joined a stock company.

She made her screen debut (using her given name) in Columbia’s Song of Love in 1929.

In 1938 she appeared with Lucille Ball in Stage Door along with Ginger Rogers. It was this film that earned Ball and Arden the nickname “the drop gag girls” for their skill at bringing comedy into a scene with just a short appearance.

Eve, Lucy and Ginger also appeared together in Having Wonderful Time (1938).

In 1946, she earned a supporting actress Oscar nomination for her appearance in Mildred Pierce starring Joan Crawford.

In 1948, she landed the role that would make her famous – Connie Brooks in “Our Miss Brooks” – first on radio, then on television. Arden was actually third choice for the role. CBS’s Harry Ackerman wanted Shirley Booth for the part.
Lucille Ball was believed to have been the next choice, but she was committed to “My Favorite Husband” and did not audition. Brooks’ co-stars included Gale Gordon, Mary Jane Croft, and Richard Crenna, all of who also teamed with Lucille Ball on radio and television. When the show moved to television in 1952, most of the original radio cast went along with Brooks. It started a years after “I Love Lucy” and ended the same year, 1956. It was also filmed at Desilu Studios, making it convenient to share cast and crew members including, for one episode in 1955, Desi Arnaz as himself. In 1956 there was also a screen version of Our Miss Brooks starring Arden and Gale Gordon, released by Warner Brothers.

In November 1952, Lucille Ball, Eve Arden, and the casts of both their shows (as well as many other CBS programs) all appeared on “Stars in the Eye” to celebrate the opening of CBS Television City in Hollywood.

When Lucy Ricardo arrived in Hollywood in “Hollywood at Last!” aka “L.A. at Last!” (ILL S4;E16), Eve Arden became the very first celebrity to make a cameo – speaking just a few words – the epitome of her ‘drop gag girl’ reputation.

The appearance was filmed December 2, 1954 and aired on February 7, 1955.

In March 1962, Arden played Marissa Montaine on an episode of “My Three Sons”, filmed at Desilu Studios. The episode also featured Wiliam Frawley, Reta Shaw, and a dog named Tramp!

Those unfamiliar with Miss Brooks, may also remember Arden as Eve Hubbard on the Desi Arnaz sitcom “The Mothers-in-Law” alongside Kaye Ballard. The series lasted two seasons, and included appearances by its producer, Desi Arnaz.

As CBS icons, both Ball and Arden were included in “CBS On The Air" on Sunday March 26, 1978.

That same year she made another memorable appearance, as the Principal of the High School in the film version of Grease.

Her final screen appearance was on a November 1987 episode of “Falcon Crest” (above left with Jane Wyman and Eddie Albert).

She died on November 12, 1990 at age 82. She was married twice and had three children.











