The Lucy Show is a
television series that aired on
CBS from 1962 until 1968. It was
Lucille Ball's follow-up to
I Love Lucy. A significant change in cast
and premise for the 1965-66 season divides the program into two
distinct eras; aside from Ball, only
Gale
Gordon, who joined the program for its second season, remained.
For the first three seasons,
Vivian
Vance was the costar. The earliest scripts were entitled
The Lucille Ball Show, but all episodes
aired with the title
The Lucy Show.
Ball won two
Emmy Awards as Outstanding
Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for this show, for the years
1966-67 and 1967-68.
Premise
The show began with Lucille Ball as Lucy Carmichael, a
widow with two children, Chris (
Candy Moore), and Jerry (
Jimmy Garrett), living in Danfield,
Connecticut, sharing her home with
divorced
friend Vivian Bagley (Vance) and her son, Sherman (
Ralph Hart). Lucy had been left with a
substantial
trust fund by her late
husband, which was managed during the first season by local
banker Mr. Barnsdahl (
Charles Lane). Comedian
Dick Martin, working solo from his
long-time partner
Dan Rowan, appeared in
several episodes as Lucy's boyfriend, Harry Connors, during the
show's first season. It is a common agreement among fans of Lucille
Ball that the first black and white season of The Lucy Show was the
best not only because the show fully utilized the talents of Bob
Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Martin, Bob Schiller, and Bob Weiskopf (the
original writers of I Love Lucy) in creating several classic
episodes , but also because Desi Arnaz was executive producer - at
least for eight of the first season's shows.
At the beginning of the 1963-64 season, there were quite a few
changes made, the most significant being, Desi Arnaz' resigning as
head of Desilu, and as the executive producer of The Lucy Show.
Ball took over as president of the studio and Elliott Lewis
replaced Arnaz as executive producer of Ball's series. Then, Dick
Martin (as Harry) and Charles Lane (as Mr. Barnsdahl) were dropped
from the cast and the Barnsdahl character was replaced by
Theodore J. Mooney (Gordon, who would remain with the
series for the remainder of its run, despite the format change).
Gordon was to have joined the series at its premiere in 1962, but
he was still contractually obligated to his role as Mr. Wilson on
Dennis the
Menace. It was also later revealed that Ball wasn't too
happy with Charles Lane because of his difficulty remembering his
lines in front of the studio audience, and was very eager to have
Gordon join the cast. (The Lucy Book by Geoffrey Mark Fidelman
-Renaissance Books, published in 1999 - writer Bob Schiller talks
about Charles Lane on p.156) Lane then became a semi-regular on the
CBS-TV sitcom Petticoat Junction as Homer Bedloe. Even though Dick
Martin felt his character wasn't necessary, he stated that hiring
Gale Gordon was a mistake and that instead, there should have been
a steady boyfriend written for Lucy. Martin felt (The Lucy Book by
Geoffrey Mark Fidelman -Renaissance Books, published in 1999 -
actor/comedian Dick Martin talks about Gale Gordon on p.168) that
with Gordon's overbearing, unlikeable character that not only did
the writing suffer, but the Lucy character became scatter-brained
and stupid. As a result, the show became limited in terms of
creating fresh situations. Mrs. Carmichael spent so much of her
time and effort trying to get Mr. Mooney to allow her to invade the
principal of the trust fund for various ideas and projects, that it
finally seemed more reasonable for her to spend her time working
for Mooney directly as his secretary, which she eventually did a
few years later. At the end of the second season, a
misunderstanding erupted between Ball, Carroll and Martin regarding
a particular script Ball found inferior. As a result, Carroll and
Martin left the series with Weiskopf and Schiller right behind
them.
At the beginning of the 1964-65 season, The Lucy Show was really
beginning to change its original premise. Elliott Lewis left the
series and was replaced by Jack Donohue, who also served as
director. With the absence of Carroll, Martin, Weiskopf, and
Schiller, Ball hired veteran comedy writer Milt Josefsberg, who had
written for Jack Benny, as script consultant. As a result, under
Josefsberg's supervision, there were no permanent writers for the
series. From that point on, different writers were employed each
week (among them, Garry Marshall) to create episodes. Ball even
persuaded Weiskopf and Schiller to come back and write four
installments. However, more changes were beginning to take place.
Vance scaled back on the number of episodes in which she appeared
to spend more time on the east coast with her then-new husband,
literary editor John Dodds. Lucille Ball's friend
Ann Sothern made a number of appearances during
1964 and 1965 as the "Countess Framboise" (née Rosie Harrigan) to
substitute in Vance's absence. The Countess, who had been widowed
by the death of her husband, "who left her his noble title and all
of his noble debts," was always trying to get some money to pay off
said debts. So she also did battle with Mr. Mooney, whom she called
"Mr. Money." Knowing that Vance would be leaving the series,
Sothern was proposed as the new co-star, but it did not come to be.
Apparently, Sothern wanted to share top billing with Ball. She did
not want to be an under-billed co-star. (The Lucy Book by Geoffrey
Mark Fidelman -Renaissance Books, published in 1999 - director
Maury Thompson talks about Ann Sothern on p. 200).
Beginning in the 1965-66 season, Vance left the series. It was
explained that her character had gotten married, although she would
return for a few guest appearances towards the end of the series'
run.
Lucy
and Jerry Carmichael and Mr. Mooney hence moved to California
, where Lucy began working for Mr. Mooney at the
bank, first part-time, and then full-time. Lucy's daughter
Chris was said to have gone away to college and was never mentioned
again.
Almost immediately, Jerry was shipped off to a military academy and
his character was rarely referred to again. He made one more
appearance, in a Christmas-themed episode, near the conclusion of
the series. Sothern made three more guest appearances as The
Countess (a.k.a Rosie) and Joan Blondell guest-starred in two
episodes as Lucy's new friend Joan Brenner. With Sothern no longer
considered as a regular, Blondell became the new contender for the
role of Lucy's sidekick. However, Ball and Blondell did not get
along. Finally, Lucy gained a new best friend in Mary Jane Lewis
(
Mary Jane Croft, who occasionally
worked with Lucy over the years and was the wife of former producer
Elliott Lewis). Even though Croft's
main purpose was to replace Vance, she did not get co-star billing,
and like Roy Roberts, who played Mooney's boss (Mr. Cheever) at the
bank, she became a de facto regular cast member and only received
featured billing. At this point the premise changed primarily to
one where famous guest stars made appearances (usually playing
themselves in storylines involving their encountering Lucy while
conducting bank business), including
Dean
Martin,
Jack Benny,
George Burns,
Joan
Crawford,
Carol Burnett,
Ethel Merman,
Danny
Thomas,
Robert Goulet,
Phil Silvers, and
Milton Berle, in effect turning the show into a
"skit-com" as opposed to a traditional sitcom.
During the 1967-68 season, Ball's second husband, Gary Morton
became executive producer of The Lucy Show. Lucille Ball sold
Desilu Productions (which owned
and produced
The Lucy Show) to
Gulf and Western Industries,
which meant that she no longer owned the series. Rather than
continue to star in a show she no longer owned, Ball opted to
create a new series,
Here's
Lucy, which employed herself, Gordon and Croft (and Vance
in occasional guest appearances), playing "new" characters (though
they were all similar to their characters on former series).
Here's Lucy ran on CBS for an additional six
seasons.
Though CBS would broadcast
The Lucy Show in black and
white until the beginning of the 1965-66 season, episodes were
actually filmed in color starting with the 1963-64 season, as Ball
realized that the episodes would eventually be widely shown in
syndication, and that color episodes would command more money when
sold to syndication.
The credits list the show's basis as the
novel
Life Without George, by
Irene Kampen. This book was a
collection of humorous pieces about two divorced women and their
children living together. A next door airline pilot neighbor, Harry
Connors, became a character in the series played by
Dick Martin. The character of Chris,
Lucy's daughter in the series, had the same name in the book. In a
later volume of essays,
Nobody Calls At This
Hour Just To Say Hello, Kampen wrote a piece entitled "How
Not to Meet Lucille Ball," which detailed her efforts to meet Lucy
when she visited Los Angeles. Ms. Kampen and Ms. Ball never
met.
Notable guest stars
From the 1965-66 season onward, with the change in format, a number
of famous celebrities guest starred on
The Lucy Show,
usually playing themselves (under the premise that the Lucy
Carmichael character, now living in Hollywood, crossed paths with
them, either in her day-to-day life, or through her job at the
bank). Famous guest stars included
Jack
Benny,
Carol Burnett,
George Burns,
Joan
Crawford,
Tennessee Ernie
Ford,
Dean Martin,
Wayne Newton,
Mel
Tormé,
John Vivyan,
Jack Cassidy and
John
Wayne. Many lesser-known actors also guest starred, such as
Patrick McVey.
The episode featuring
Joan Crawford,
"Lucy and the Lost Star", caused much celebrity fodder given Ball
and Crawford's very public feud during the filming. According to
Ball, Crawford was often drunk on the set and could not remember
her lines. Ball was said to have requested several times to replace
Crawford with
Gloria Swanson, who was
supposed to have filled the role originally but bowed out due to
health reasons.

Lucille Ball and Vivian Vance in a
1967 episode of
The Lucy Show
The 1966 episode featuring Dean Martin (in which Lucy Carmichael
accepted a blind date with Dean Martin's lookalike
stunt double, but when he could not make it,
sent the
real Dean Martin on the date with Lucy in his
place) was described by Ball as her favorite episode of the
series.
Lucie Arnaz, Ball’s daughter, appeared
in several episodes of the show during its run: she was an extra in
the first season’s third episode, "Lucy Is a Referee," the teenage
best friend of Chris in "Lucy Is a Soda Jerk" and "Lucy Is a
Chaperone" (though she was only 11 at the time), and later as one
of her mother’s friends in the 1967 "Lucy and Robert Goulet"
(although she was only 16).
Opening credits
Throughout the series, four openings were used.
- During the first season (1962-63), animated stick figures of
Ball and Vance were used (similar to the ones used in the original
opening sequences of I Love Lucy and of the subsequent 13
hour-long specials later syndicated in reruns as The Lucy-Desi Comedy
Hour).
- During seasons two and three, footage and stills from previous
episodes were used.
- During the final three seasons, a "kaleidoscope" opening was used, in which
footage was used of Ball, in a kaleidoscope-like pattern. This is
perhaps the best known opening to younger viewers (e.g. those too
young to have watched the show when it originally aired on CBS), as
the package that was aired on CBS Daytime (and later shown on Nick
at Nite) used this opening for nearly all the episodes. The current
syndicated package available to stations has the original openings
restored.
- An additional opening was created at the beginning of the 1966
season, that featured Lucille Ball as an animated
"jack-in-the-box". Ball reportedly hated it, and it was only used
in a handful of episodes at the start of the season, before being
replaced. However, due to poor editing, the theme music to this
opening was left on, while the kaleidoscope opening plays, for
several of the early 1966 fall episodes.
The music was composed by
Wilbur Hatch,
who was also responsible for the
I Love
Lucy theme music.
Nielsen Ratings
- 1962-63: #5
- 1963-64: #6
- 1964-65: #8
- 1965-66: #3
- 1966-67: #4
- 1967-68: #2
Just like
I Love Lucy, "The
Lucy Show" never dropped out of the top 10 for its entire
run.
The fifth and sixth seasons drew the highest ratings, as well as
Emmy awards for the star.
DVD Releases
Before July 2009, there were only about thirty
public domain episodes available on DVD and/or
VHS mainly from the California era of the show. These episodes have
been released again and again by different companies. Most of the
episodes are of substandard video quality.
On April 20, 2009,
CBS DVD announced that
the entire first season of the series would be available for sale
on DVD beginning July 21, 2009. CBS also announced that the
episodes have been remastered using the original 35mm negatives. In
addition to the 30 episodes from the first season, the release
includes a twenty minute interview with Lucie Arnaz and original
cast commercials not seen since the show aired in the 1960s.
Because of the positive response to the first season's
release,
CBS Home Entertainment has
reported that the second season is already being planned for DVD,
with a proposed release date of July 13, 2010.
[60210] If sales are well enough regarding the second
season, the third season is tentatively planned for October 12,
2010, with the remaining three seasons to follow soon after.
| DVD Name |
Ep # |
Release date |
Bonus Features |
| The Official First Season |
30 |
July 21, 2009 |
- Closed-captioned
- New Interviews with Lucie Arnaz & Jimmy Garrett
- Clips from "Opening Night" Special
- Vintage Openings/Closings
- Cast Commercials
- Vintage Network Promos
- Cast Biographies
- Production Notes
- "The Lucy Show": Vintage Merchandise
|
| The Official Second Season |
28 |
July 13, 2010 |
|
| The Official Third Season |
26 |
October 12, 2010 (tentatively) |
|
Production history
Desi Arnaz was originally involved as the show’s producer, but quit
after the first season. Bob Carroll Jr. and Madelyn Pugh, two of
the I Love Lucy writers, were also hired for The Lucy Show, but
they quit after the second season.
Vivian Vance made it a condition for doing the series her
character's name be Vivian. After doing
I Love Lucy, she was still being called
Ethel by people on the street, much to her unhappiness. Though a
number of TV historians have through the years cited
One Day at a Time’s Ann Romano
(
Bonnie Franklin) as television's
first regular running character who was a divorcée, that
accomplishment actually belongs to
The Lucy Show’s Vivian
Bagley. Ironically, it was decided early on that the Lucy
Carmichael character should be a widow, not a divorcée, since
viewers might incorrectly assume that Ball's previous character,
Lucy Ricardo, had divorced Ricky, even
though Ball and Arnaz were, in fact, divorced in real life.
While filming the 1963 episode "Lucy and Viv Put In A Shower", in
which the leading ladies attempted to install a shower stall (but
become trapped inside, unable to shut the water off), Ball nearly
drowned while performing in the tank of water. She was unable to
bring herself back to the surface, and it was Vance who realized
there was a problem and pulled her co-star to safety; Vance went on
to ad lib until Ball could catch her breath to resume speaking her
lines (all the while, cameras continued to film). Neither the film
crew nor the live studio audience realized there was a
problem.
An episode from the 1966-67 season called "Lucy Flies to London"
served as the basis for a standalone one-hour special called
Lucy in London, which
featured Ball with guest stars
Anthony
Newley and the
Dave Clark Five.
Much of the "Lucy Flies to London" episode, which centered around
Lucy’s lack of experience in air travel, was based on an unsold
pilot written and shot in 1960.
References
External links