|


|
THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
 The Beverly Hillbillies CAST
Jed
Clampett......................................... Buddy Ebsen
Daisy Moses (Granny)................................ Irene
Ryan Elly May Clampett............................... Donna
Douglas Jethro Bodine.........................................
Max Baer,Jr. Milburn Drysdale................................
Raymond Bailey Jane Hathaway.........................................
Nancy Kulp Cousin Pearl Bodine (1962-63).............. Bea
Benaderet Mrs.Margaret Drysdale (l962-69)....... Harriet
MacGibbon
Jethrene Bodine (1962-63)...................... Max Baer,
Jr. John Brewster (1962-66)..........................Frank
Wilcox Edythe Brewster (1965-66)..................... Lisa
Seagram Jasper DePew (1962-63)............................Phil
Gordon Ravenswood, the butler (1962-65)..............Arthur
Gould Porter Marie, the maid (1962-63)............... Sirry
Steffen Sonny Drysdale (1962)................................
Louis Nye Janet Trego (1963-65)...............................Sharon
Tate Lawrence Chapman (1964-67).................. Milton
Frome Studio Guard (1964-66).............................
Ray Kellogg John Cushing (1964-67)............................Roy
Roberts Dash Riprock (nee Homer Noodleman)(1965-69)...........
..............................................................Larry
Pennell Homer Cratchit (1968-71).........................
Percy Helton Elverna Bradshaw (1969-71)......................
Elvia Allman Shorty Kellems (1969-71)............ George
"Shug" Fisher Miss Switzer (1969-70)..............................
Judy Jordan Helen Thompson (1969-71).....................Danielle
Mardi Miss Leeds (1969).............................. Judy
McConnell Susan Graham (1969-71)....................... Mady
Maguire Gloria Buckles (1969-71)...................... Bettina
Brenna Shifty Shafer (1969-71)..............................
Phil Silvers
Flo Shafer (1969-71)........................ Kathleen Freeman
Joy Devine (1970-71).............................. Diana
Bartlett Mark Templeton (1970-71).......................
Roger Torrey
PRODUCERS
Paul Henning, Al Simon, Joseph DePew, Mark Tuttle
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
216 Episodes
CBS
September
1962-September 1964......................................... Wednesday
9:00-9:30 September l964-September 1968 Wednesday 8:30-9:00 September
1968-September 1969......................................... Wednesday
9:00-9:30 September 1969-September 1970.........................................
Wednesday 8:30-9:00 September 1970-September 1971.... Tuesday 7:30-8:00
U.S. Situation
Comedy
The Beverly
Hillbillies (1962-71, CBS) was the brainchild of Paul Henning,
the cracker-barrel surrealist also responsible for Petticoat
Junction, The Real McCoys, and, notably, Green Acres.
Certainly the most popular sitcom in television history, and quite
possibly the most successful network series ever, it ran for over
200 episodes, clocking in as the top-rated show of its premier season,
and remaining in the top ten throughout its nine-year tenure. Individual
episodes almost always placed in the Nielsen Top 20, and on occasion
rivaled the ratings of Super Bowls.
As explained
in the opening montage and cadenced theme song, Jed Clampett (Buddy
Ebsen) is an Ozarks mountaineer who, through epic fortuity and sheer
ineptitude rather than the Protestant work ethic, falls into unfathomable
wealth with the discovery of oil beneath his worthless Arcadian
scrub oak. When a roving petrochemical concern gets wind, they buy
him out for $25 million, whereupon town sophisticate Cousin Pearl
(Bea Benaderet) convinces him fabled Beverly Hills might provide:
(a) a suitable beau for his daughter Elly May (Donna Douglas) and
(b) career opportunities for his wayward nephew Jethro Bodine (Max
Baer, Jr.). Taking their cue from The Grapes of Wrath (Steinbeck
via John Ford), they load up the truck and move to Beverly--replete
with a rocking chair up top to house Granny (Irene Ryan), the family's
reluctant matriarch.
Despite his
mystification at the newfangled trappings of luxury, and the craven
depths to which almost everyone around him sinks, Jed remains a
bastion of homespun wisdom--very much the Lincolnesque backroads
scholar. Virtually recycling his George Russel character, the sidekick
in Disney's Davy Crockett series from the mid-1950s, Ebsen
eventually carried the Lincoln conceit over into his private life,
authoring a stage play in 1966 titled The Champagne Generation,
in which he starred as the late president. (When Nancy Kulp, the
birdwatching Vassar grad Miss Jane Hathaway, ran for a Congressional
seat from Pennsylvania in the early 1980s, she only lost when Buddy
Ebsen, a lifelong Republican, stepped in to actively campaign against
her.)
Despite the
silliness of much of its humor, The Beverly Hillbillies managed
to bolster its credibility among its core audience with a kind of
hillbilly authenticism. Bluegrass avatars Lester Flatt and Earl
Scruggs were enlisted for the theme song, which quickly became a
number-one hit on country-western charts, and they frequently appeared
on the show as themselves (long before their music was spot-appropriated
for its native exoticism by Bonnie and Clyde). Cousin Pearl
was a textbook recreation of Grand Ol' Opry mainstay Minnie Pearl,
and Roy Clarke was an occasional guest before inheriting the show's
constituency with his 20-year stint as host of Hee Haw. Even
the series name was taken from a bluegrass band of the 1930s. And
of course, the characters of Jethro, Elly Mae, and Granny seemed
to borrow more than casually from Li'l Abner, Daisy May, and Mammy
Yokum, respectively.
Yet turning
up in the fall of 1962 as they did, the paradigmatic arrivistes,
the Clampetts seemed to mirror almost perfectly another eccentric
clan of uninvited backwoods arrivals, one which was thrust into
the national spotlight--decisively and distastefully--with the Kennedy
assassination. Suddenly, instead of glamorous Brahmins dictating
the national agenda, we had Texas crackers straight off the farm
(whose political fortunes could be traced back to Texas Tea of their
own). And long before Lyndon Johnson was known for his consummate
political savvy and rattlesnake ruthlessness, he entered the popular
culture as a national embarrassment, remembered and endlessly ridiculed
for turning off the lights in the White House to save electricity,
or showing an incredulous nation his gall bladder scar.
By extension,
the show became in certain quarters something of a public embarrassment
as well, emblematic of the nation's having slipped another notch
into pandering anti-intellectualism--a pervasive "bubbling crude"
which stained all in its wake. By the time television had caught
up with the changing times--the fall of 1971--youth culture and
its built-in consumer demographic looked far more appealing to advertisers
on the professional rut, and The Beverly Hillbillies, while
still vastly successful, was caught in the same network purge which
claimed Jackie Gleason, Red Skelton, and rural mainstays such as
Mayberry RFD and Henning's own Green Acres. This is
the same changing of the guard which ushered in The Mary Tyler
Moore Show, All in the Family, M*A*S*H, and, ostensibly, social
realism and the death of the 1960s. A
Made-for-Television movie appeared on CBS in 1981, without Baer,
and the series was later remade as a feature film in 1993 by the
makers of Wayne's World, but neither did justice to the original.
-Paul
Cullum
FURTHER
READING
Marc,
David. Demographic Vistas: Television in American Culture.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1984.
_______________.
Comic Visions: Television Comedy and American Culture. Boston:
Unwin Hyman, 1989.
Marc,
David, and Robert J. Thompson. Prime Time, Prime Movers: From
I Love Lucy to L.A. Law, America's Greatest TV Shows and the People
Who Created Them. Boston: Little Brown, 1992.
Story,
David. America on the Rerun: TV Shows That Never Die. Secaucus,
New Jersey: Carol, 1993.
See
also Comedy,
Domestic Settings
Return to B index Return to main index |
|
Join our efforts to build a new world-class museum in Chicago. Click here to donate now. | |
More than 8,500 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! |
|