|


|
THE ANDY GRIFFITH
SHOW
 The Andy Griffith Show CAST
Andy
Taylor............................................. Andy Griffith
Opie Taylor.......................................... Ronny
Howard Barney Fife (1960-65).................................
Don Knotts Ellie Walker (1960-61)..........................
Elinor Donahue Aunt Bee Taylor...................................
Frances Bavier Clara Edwards....................................
Hope Summers Gomer Pyle (1963-64)................................
Jim Nabors Helen Crump (1964-68)..........................
Aneta Corsaut Goober Pyle (1965-68).........................
George Lindsey Floyd Lawson......................................Howard
McNear Otis Campbell (1960-67)..............................
Hal Smith Howard Sprague (1966-68).......................
Jack Dodson Emmett Clark (1967-68).........................
Paul Hartman Thelma Lou (1960-65).................................
Betty Lynn Warren Ferguson (1965-66)........................
Jack Burns Mayor Stoner (1962-63).............................
Parley Baer Jud Crowley (1961-66)................................Burt
Mustin
PRODUCERS
Louis
Edelman, Sheldon Leonard
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
249 Episodes
CBS
October
1960-July 1963 Monday
9:30-10:00
September 1963-September 1964 Monday 9:30-10:00
September 1964-June 1965 Monday
8:30-9:00 September 1965-September 1968 Monday
9:00-9:30
U.S. Situation
Comedy
The Andy
Griffith Show was one of the most popular and memorable comedy
series of the 1960s. In its eight years on the air, from 1960 to
1968, it never dropped below seventh place in the seasonal Nielsen
rankings, and it was number one the year it ceased production. The
series pilot originally aired as an episode of Make Room For
Daddy, a popular sitcom starring Danny Thomas. Sheldon Leonard
produced both shows for Danny Thomas Productions.
An early example
of television's "rural revolution," The Andy Griffith Show
was part of a programming trend which saw the development of comedies
featuring naïve but noble "rubes" from deep in the American heartland.
The trend began when ABC debuted The Real McCoys in 1957,
but CBS became the network most associated with lt. The success
CBS achieved with The Andy Griffith Show provided the inspiration
for a string of hits such as The Beverly Hillbillies, Green
Acres, Petticoat Junction, and Hee Haw. Genial
and comparatively innocuous, these shows were just right for a time
when TV was under frequent attack by the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) and Congressional committees for its violent content.
Sheldon Leonard
and Danny Thomas designed The Andy Griffith Show to fit the
image of its star. Griffith's homespun characterizations were already
well-known to audiences who'd seen his hayseed interpretations of
Shakespeare on The Ed Sullivan Show and his starring roles
in the films A Face in the Crowd (1957) and No Time for
Sergeants (1958). On The Andy Griffith Show, he played Sheriff
Andy Taylor, the fair-minded and easygoing head lawman of the Edenic
small town of Mayberry, North Carolina. Neither sophisticated nor
worldly-wise, Andy drew from a deep well of unpretentious folk wisdom
that allowed him to settle domestic disputes and outwit the arrogant
city folk who occasionally passed through town. When he wasn't at
the Sheriff's office, Andy, a widower, was applying his old-fashioned
horse sense to the raising of his young son Opie (Ronny Howard),
a task he shared with his Aunt Bee (Frances Bavier).
Mayberry was
based upon Andy Griffith's real hometown, and perhaps this was partially
responsible for the strong sense many viewers got that Mayberry
was a real place. Over the years the writers fleshed out the geography
and character of the town with a degree of detail unusual for series
television. The directorial style of the series was also strikingly
distinct, employing a relaxed, almost lethargic tone appropriate
to the nostalgic settings of front porch, sidewalk, and barber shop.
The townspeople, and the ensemble of actors who portrayed them,
were crucial to the success of the show. Most of these characters
were "hicks," playing comic foils to the sagacious Andy. Gomer Pyle
(Jim Nabors) and his cousin Goober (George Lindsey) came right out
of the "bumpkin" tradition that had been developed years ago in
films, popular literature, and comic strips. Town barber Floyd Lawson
(Howard McNear) was a font of misinformation and the forerunner
of Cheers' Cliff Clavin. Otis (Hal Smith), the unrepentant
town drunk, was trained to let himself into his jail cell after
a Saturday night bender and to let himself out on Sunday morning.
Without much real police work to attend to, Andy's true job was
protecting these and other citizens of Mayberry from their own hubris,
intemperance, and stupidity.
Most of Andy's
time, however, was spent controlling his earnest but over-zealous
deputy, Barney Fife. Self-important, romantic, and nearly always
wrong, Barney dreamed of the day he could use the one bullet Andy
had issued to him. While Barney was forever frustrated that Mayberry
was too small for the delusional ideas he had of himself, viewers
got the sense that he couldn't have survived anywhere else. Don
Knotts played the comic and pathetic sides of the character with
equal aplomb and was given four Emmy Awards for doing so. He left
the show in 1965 and was replaced by Jack Burns in the role of Deputy
Warren Furguson.
The Andy
Griffith Show engendered two spin-offs. Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.,
was a military sitcom featuring Gomer in the Marines. Mayberry,
R.F.D., was a reworking of The Andy Griffith Show made
necessary by Griffith's departure in 1968. Like the parent show,
the spin-offs celebrated the honesty, the strong sense of community,
and the solid family values supposedly inherent in small town life.
By the late
1960s, however, many viewers, especially young ones, were rejecting
these shows as irrelevant to modern times. Mayberry's total isolation
from contemporary problems was part of its appeal, but more than
a decade of media coverage of the civil rights movement had brought
about a change in the popular image of the small Southern town.
Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., was set on a U.S. Marine base between
1964 and 1969, but neither Gomer nor any of his fellow soldiers
ever mentioned the war in Vietnam. CBS executives, afraid of losing
the lucrative youth demographic, purged their schedule of hit shows
that were drawing huge but older-skewing audiences. Gomer Pyle,
U.S.M.C., was in second place when it was canceled in l969.
Mayberry, R.F.D., and the rest of the rural comedies, met
a similar fate within the next two seasons. They were replaced by
such "relevant" new sitcoms as All In the Family and M*A*S*H.
The
Andy Griffith Show remains an enduring favorite In syndicated
reruns. New fan books about the program, including a cookbook of
favorite dishes mentioned in specific episodes, continued to appear
nearly thirty years after the end of the original network run. In
1986, a reunion show brought together most of the original cast
and production team. Return To Mayberry was the highest-rated
telefilm of the season.
-Jerry
Haggins
FURTHER
READING
Barnouw,
Erik. Tube of Plenty: The Evolution of American Television.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.
Beck,
Ken, and Jim Clark. The Andy Griffith Show Book. New York:
St. Martin's, 1985.
Eisner,
Joel, and David Krinsky. Television Comedy Series: An Episode
Guide to 153 Sitcoms in Syndication. Jefferson, North Carolina:
McFarland, 1984.
Kelly,
Richard. The Andy Griffith Show. Winston-Salem, North Carolina:
John F. Blair, 1981.
Marc,
David. Demographic Vistas: Television in American Culture.
Philadelphia: The University of Pennsylvania Press, 1984.
_______________.
Comic Visions: Television Comedy and American Culture. Boston:
Unwin Hyman, 1989.
Watson,
Mary Ann. The Expanding Vista: American Television in the Kennedy
Years. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.
See
also Comedy,
Domestic Settings; Griffith,
Andy
Return to A index Return to main index |
|
Join our efforts to build a new world-class museum in Chicago. Click here to donate now. | |
More than 7,000 digitized TV and radio programs are available once again for public viewing in the MBC archives. Search the archives! | |
Starting or adding to your TV on DVD collection is the best way to enjoy your favorite shows. Choose from over 5,000 TV on DVD series, seasons, episodes and soundtracks. Visit the MBC store now! | |
Own the most extensive look at the history of television. Relive great moments and learn about the people and shows that made television what is today. Purchase the 2nd edition now! |
|