As mentioned in our post for the 1960 episodes of Leave It to Beaver, the show
demonstrated a remarkable true-to-life depiction of children's perspective on
growing up because series co-creator Joe Connelly carried around a notebook to
capture what his own sons were going through. And while the series has more
recently come in for criticism for dealing with seemingly trivial inconveniences
rather than more serious problems such as drug use, teenage pregnancy, or
juvenile delinquency, Connelly and partner Bob Mosher were spot on in
portraying the root causes of many of these symptoms--peer pressure and the
fear of embarrassment. The episodes airing in 1961 still touched on the
parenting lessons of Ward and June Cleaver but began to focus more attention on
Wally and Beaver's attempts to mature. Part of this shift was forced by actor
Jerry Mathers' very noticeable drop in his voice at the beginning of Season 5,
when he is a 12-year-old 6th grader. But the topic of maturation had already
become a staple of stories in the latter half of Season 4.
Beaver begins to sense that things are changing for him in
"Beaver's Old Buddy" (February 4, 1961) when he is excited at the
prospect of having an old friend of his, Jackie Waters, spend the night at his
house so that the two can relive all the fun things they used to do together,
like swinging on a tire swing and hunting for pollywogs. But once Jackie
arrives and he and Beaver have a chance to do all of their old favorites, they
find that they aren't as fun as they used to be. And even Ward and June's
attempts to find other activities that they will enjoy together don't work out
so that Jackie winds up calling his parents to come pick him up early. Ward
tries to explain to Beaver that this is all part of growing up, but Beaver
later tells Wally the lesson he has learned is not to build up his hopes only
to have them dashed. Instead, he says he plans to expect nothing special so
that he won't be let down.
In "Junior Fire Chief" (May 20, 1961) Beaver gets
to try out being an authority when he is elected class fire chief and is
authorized to hand out citations to anyone he finds violating fire safety
standards, but the ascension to power quickly goes to his head, and he is
overzealous in handing out citations to his family and neighbors, irritating
everyone. June tells Ward he should have a talk with Beaver about going
overboard, but Ward counters that Beaver needs to learn for himself, which he does,
but not in the way Ward imagines. Instead, he has a discussion with Gus the
Fireman, who says he never handed out as many citations in his entire career as
Beaver has given out in 1 week, and that he has always found it more effective
to be nice to people and explain to them politely what they should do about
fire safety rather than coming down hard on them. Beaver takes Gus' words to
heart, tears up his citations, and is later commended by Miss Landers for
learning such a valuable lesson when he is asked to give a report to his class
at the end of the week.
However, Beaver is still susceptible to peer pressure,
particularly from his friend Gilbert Bates, who grows more like Eddie Haskell
in continuing to goad Beaver into foolish decisions, particularly in "The
School Picture" (April 22, 1961) when he dares Beaver to make a goofy face
when their school picture is being taken, leading Beaver to believe that
Gilbert would also do it. But after the picture is taken with Beaver looking
ridiculous, Gilbert tells him he didn't make a face because doing so would be
stupid. In "Kite Day" (June 10, 1961) Gilbert badgers Beaver into
taking his just-completed kite that he had worked on with Ward for a test run
even though Ward had told him not to fly it until the glue had set. Of course,
the kite crashes and splinters into a million pieces, prompting Gilbert to tell
Beaver that his father is going to kill him before running off to leave him to
face the problem alone. And in "In the Soup" (May 6, 1961), it's
Whitey who calls Beaver chicken after daring him to climb a billboard with a
steaming bowl of soup at the top to see if the bowl has real soup or not,
resulting in Beaver falling into the bowl and having to be rescued by a fireman
while the whole neighborhood watches. So while Beaver is trying on new levels
of responsibility in "Junior Fire Chief" and "Beaver Goes Into
Business" (June 3, 1961), in which he tries cutting lawns with Gilbert, he
still hasn't learned how to be his own person and brush off peer pressure from
"friends" like Gilbert and Whitey.
Nor is the older Wally totally immune from being set up, as
shown in "Wally's Track Meet" (January 28, 1961). He winds up getting
kicked off the track team for violating the coach's no horseplay rule after retaliating
against Eddie and Lumpy who throw wet towels at him in the locker room just
before the coach walks in. But most of his dilemmas revolve around girls, such
as in "Teacher's Daughter" (January 7, 1961) in which he is spending
considerable time with Julie Foster, whose father is his English teacher. Eddie
considers this a smart move in getting a better grade, but Mr. Foster tells him
his dating situation will have no effect on his grade. Yet strangely Ward
advises him not to go steady with Julie because he may miss out on meeting
someone who would be better suited for him and will deprive her of perhaps
meeting a better match, too. And yet at no time is there any evidence that
Wally and Julie are not suited to each other. In "Mother's Helper"
(March 4, 1961) Wally's grades begin to suffer because he spends his afternoons
after school helping June's teenage hired helper Margie Manners instead of
doing his homework, a problem that June quickly rectifies by replacing the
daughter with the mother to help with her chores. And in "Wally's Dream
Girl" (April 15, 1961) June helps burst Wally's infatuation with the new
girl in school, Ginny Townsend, by inviting Ginny on a family picnic, where Wally
sees that Ginny is allergic to chicken and sunshine, as well as being so
worried about her weight that she won't eat a hard-boiled egg. Yet he also
shows his growing maturity in "Substitute Father" (June 24, 1961)
when Ward tells him to fill his shoes while he is away on a business trip, and
he has to have a parent-teacher conference with Beaver and Miss Landers after
she catches Beaver yelling profanity at a bully who tripped him. Though Miss
Landers is at first skeptical about Wally filling in, figuring that Beaver is
just trying to get out of telling his real parents what he has done, Wally and
Beaver manage to convince her that Wally has a history of steering Beaver's
behavior in the right direction and correcting him when he goes astray. They
finally let June know how Wally handled the situation without ever telling her
exactly what Beaver said, so that she tells Ward on the phone that he should
bring back something special for Wally as a sign of taking such a significant
step in becoming an adult.
But the most surprising indication of coming maturation, if
also the most brief, is from Eddie Haskell in "Eddie Spends the
Night" (March 25, 1961) in which he cajoles Wally into asking his parents
if Eddie can spend the night at the Cleaver's while not mentioning that his
real motive is to avoid to spending the night alone at his own home with his
parents out of town. After Eddie angers Wally by cheating at chess and then
storms home, Ward gets a call from Eddie's father saying how much he
appreciates the Cleavers taking Eddie in since he is uncomfortable being home
alone. Ward is then obligated to go with Wally to Eddie's house to bring him
back, though Eddie pretends that he isn't frightened and that his parents are
actually home. Beaver lets Eddie know in a one-on-one conversation in the
Cleaver's kitchen that he knows the real story and admits that he has the same
fear, which prompts Eddie to admit that he puts on a show of fake confidence
but deep down inside knows that he isn't fooling himself. But his vulnerability
is short-lived because in the very next episode, "Beaver's Report
Card" (April 1, 1961), he is back to his old tricks in changing a grade on
Beaver's report card from a D- to a B+ just to get Beaver in trouble. And he
gives Beaver bad advice in "Beaver Goes Into Business" by telling him
he should mow people's lawns without checking with them first and then hold out
his hand demanding payment, only to have Beaver and Gilbert ruin a man's
well-manicured lawn that he had paid a professional gardener to maintain.
However, in "Beaver's Doll Buggy" (June 17,1961) Eddie reveals that
he is always pulling pranks on others because of a traumatic childhood
experience in which his mother sent him to kindergarten one day with a home
permanent that resulted in ridicule from his classmates. He explains that this
incident prompted him to try to always get the jump on others and make them
feel bad before they have the chance to do it to him. It's certainly not a
mature approach to life or one that will make one very successful or
well-liked, but it's one that rings true to life--victims of abusive or
traumatic events tend to develop defense mechanisms to avoid being vulnerable
again.
Season 3 kicks off not only with Beaver's suddenly deeper
voice but a new introductory credit sequence that replaces Ward and June
sending the boys off to school with a new sequence in which she brings out a
tray of ice tea for Ward and the boys who are doing yard work. The first
episode of the new season, Wally Goes Steady" (September 24, 1961), then
dives right into the family's angst over Wally perhaps growing up too fast when
Ward hears locker room chatter from Wally's girlfriend's father that they may
soon be in-laws, given how much time their children are spending together. When
Wally is then invited to dinner with girlfriend Evelyn's married sister and her
husband, who are only three years older than Wally and Evelyn, June in
particular is worried that Wally will get a glimpse of marital bliss and want
to take the plunge himself, though the actual outcome is exactly the
opposite--Wally sees the newlyweds arguing, unable to keep up with their
finances without help from Evelyn's parents, and Wally's counterpart in the
couple reminiscing about his earlier carefree life. Wally later tells June that
as long as you're having a good time, there is no reason to get involved with
marriage.
Beaver then takes his turn at wanting to be more grown-up in
"No Time for Babysitters" (October 7, 1961) when he resists having to
have a babysitter when his parents go out for the evening and Wally is also
gone on a date. To make matters worse, Gilbert and Richard don't believe it
when he tells them that he is going to spend the evening alone, so they come
over just to see his babysitter and tease him, only they are foiled because
Beaver's babysitter understands how he feels after going through something
similar when she was younger and helps Beaver out by hiding so that Gilbert and
Richard can't find her. Beaver also wants to appear more grown-up in
"Beaver's Ice Skates" (December 2, 1961) when he decides to buy some
new ice skates after seeing a sale ad in the newspaper but doesn't want June to
go with him when he buys them. However, an unscrupulous salesman ends up
selling him a pair that are far too big when he discovers they are out of Beaver's
size, and rather than admit to his parents that he has been duped, he hides out
in the library for a week while his parents think he is at the ice rink just to
avoid the embarrassment of hearing them tell him about his error. However, when
they finally do learn the truth and Ward lectures him that he should only take
responsibility when he is ready to hold it, Wally counters with the question
how can he know whether he is ready to hold it if he never takes it? Ward has
to admit that it is a dilemma, one that gives many a parent gray hair. This is
yet another example of how Leave It to
Beaver was anything but a series of pat, black-and-white lessons. At other
times, such as the aforementioned "Junior Fire Chief," Ward
recognizes that in order for Beaver to grow he will have to sometimes
experience failure, but in "Beaver's Ice Skates," Wally has to remind
Ward of this essential lesson.
Other episode titles in Season 5 seem to suggest more
dramatic growth experiences than they deliver--"Wally's Car" (October
14, 1961), "Beaver Takes a Drive" (November 18, 1961), and
"Beaver's First Date" (December 30, 1961)--but they show that more
adult-oriented opportunities are coming. Despite their growing familiarity with
adult issues, Wally and Beaver in particular continue having a hard time
imagining their parents ever being as young as they are, or of themselves ever
being in a position that their parents are currently. In "Wally's
Chauffeur" (December 23, 1961) Beaver says he can't imagine Ward ever
being small enough to be have to be told to take a bath. In "Beaver Takes
a Drive" Beaver thinks that Ward had it easier as a boy because there were
fewer ways to get into trouble, even though Ward explained to him earlier that
they, too, had automobiles in his day. And in "No Time for
Babysitters" Beaver tells Wally that he is going to let his kids do
whatever they want instead of feeling like he has to protect them, that is,
until Wally asks if he is going to let his kids hang from a rickety bridge 200
feet in the air. Though he wants to be treated like an adult, until it results
in dealing with a thorny problem, Beaver has a hard time seeing himself as ever
being anything other than what he is at the present.
For Wally, his greatest fear is public humiliation, a fear
he shares with Beaver. In "Wally's Big Date" (November 25, 1961)
Eddie Haskell tricks Wally into switching the girls from another school they
are assigned to take to a dance when Eddie at first gets stuck with a girl who
is very tall. When Wally meets her at the malt shop to discuss details about
their date and then notices when she gets up out of her booth and leaves to
meet her mother that she is a good head taller than he is, he is thrown into a
panic and is most concerned that the other boys at the dance will laugh at him.
Ward forces him to go anyway, making him consider how his date would feel if he
were to cancel on her, and Wally is surprised when she shows up appearing no
taller than he is simply by not teasing her hair up and wearing flats instead
of heels. But he faces the same predicament in "Wally's Chauffeur"
when Ward forbids him from riding up to a dance at the lake in Lumpy's car with
two other couples because of Lumpy's poor driving record. When his date Evelyn,
who already has her driver's license while Wally has yet to get his, shows up
driving her father's car, Wally at first refuses to come downstairs because he
knows that he will be teased mercilessly for being driven to the dance by a
girl. And this time he is correct as Lumpy makes a point of ribbing him as soon
as he sees Evelyn drive up to the dance hall. Of course, Wally gets the last
laugh when a traffic cop gives Lumpy a ticket for parking in a red zone and all
the kids who had ridden up with Lumpy ask if they can ride back with Evelyn.
Though things turn out fine in both situations, one has the feeling that it
will take a few more incidents such as these for Wally to grow thick enough
skin not to worry about how he will look in front of the other guys if he is
forced to do something unconventional. The allure of fitting in exerts a strong
pull well into adulthood, a point in the future beyond the scope of this
series.
The Actors
For the biographies of Barbara Billingsley, Hugh Beaumont,
Tony Dow, Jerry Mathers, Ken Osmond, Frank Bank, Stanley Fafara, and Sue
Randall, see the 1960 post on Leave It to
Beaver.
Stephen Talbot
Stephen Henderson Talbot, born February 28, 1949, was the
son of veteran actor Lyle Talbot (profiled in the biography section of the 1960
post on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet) who years later said that he begged his parents to let him get
into acting. He began appearing in guest spots on a variety of programs in 1959
including Lawman, Sugarfoot, and Wanted Dead or Alive. That year he would also make the first of 57
appearances as Beaver's friend Gilbert Bates (though he was actually Gilbert
Gates in his first appearance) over the remainder of the series. His lone
feature film appearance came in the 1960 teen drama Because They're Young, and his last acting credit came the same
year that Leave It to Beaver ended in
1963.
After graduating from Harvard High School in North Hollywood
in 1966, he attended Wesleyan University in Connecticut and began making films
against the Vietnam War. After graduating in 1970, he went to work for the
State University of New York College at Old Westbury, first as an assistant to
the university president and eventually as a lecturer in the American Studies
program. In the 1980s he worked as a staff reporter and producer for PBS
television affiliate KQED in San Francisco where he produced local
documentaries as well as national documentaries that aired on PBS. His first
such documentary Broken Arrow: Can a
Nuclear Weapons Accident Happen Here? won him a Peabody Award in 1980, and
he won a second Peabody two years later for a biography of crime fiction writer
Dashiell Hammett. Beginning in 1992 he began producing documentaries for the
PBS series Frontline and won a DuPont
Award for his coverage of the 1992 U.S. Presidential election The Best Campaign Money Can Buy. In the
wake of the 9/11 attacks he was tapped to be the series editor for a new series
called Frontline World in the hopes
of raising awareness about other countries. He produced 94 episodes for the
series running through 2010. He has continued writing and producing
documentaries up to the present day, producing The Kansas Experiment for Independent
Lens and writing Moscone: A Legacy of
Change about slain San Francisco mayor George Moscone both in 2018. He
currently lives in San Francisco with his wife Pippa Gordon.
Karen Sue Trent
Born March 14, 1948, Karen Sue Trent made her film debut in
the pro-nudist feature Garden of Eden
playing the young daughter of a woman who unknowingly spends the night in a
nudist camp after her car breaks down nearby. The film was the subject of a
lawsuit whose verdict ruled that nudity on film was not inherently obscene.
After appearing on Broadway in a production of Six Characters in Search of an Author in 1955, she made her
television debut in an episode of Matinee
Theater in 1957. After single appearances on Death Valley Days, Shirley
Temple's Storybook, and Wagon Train
in 1958-59, she was cast as Beaver antagonist Penny Woods in 1960 and appeared
in the role 13 times between 1960-62. The following year she appeared in an
episode of The Rifleman and
reportedly was injured filming a scene in which her character was trapped in
quicksand, which prompted her to quit her acting career. Her whereabouts and
occupations since then have not been documented.
Richard Correll
Richard Thomas Correll was born in Los Angeles on May 14,
1948, the son of Charles J. Correll, who played Andy Brown on the long-running
radio comedy Amos 'n' Andy. Correll's
father was also a gag writer for silent comedy star Harold Lloyd near the end
of Lloyd's career, a connection that would serve the younger Correll well: as a
teenager he began helping Lloyd organize and preserve his extensive film
library and would go on to be a significant contributor to the 1991 documentary
about Lloyd The Third Genius. Today
he is credited as the chief archivist by The Lloyd Trust. Jerry Mathers has
named Correll as his best friend growing up, as indicated on Mathers' web site.
Correll broke into TV acting on a
1955 episode of The Bob Cummings Show
but didn't really gather steam until 1960, when he not only made the first of
31 appearances as Beaver's friend Richard Rickover but also had guest spots on The Betty Hutton Show, The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, and
Make Room for Daddy. Concurrent with
his Leave It to Beaver appearances,
he also appeared on National Velvet, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, Hazel, and Lassie, which was the only TV show he appeared on after Leave It to Beaver was canceled. In 1973
in the film Showdown he played Dean
Martin's character as a boy, but other than reprising Richard Rickover for Beaver reunion movies and the 1983-85
series reboot, Correll moved into TV producing, writing, and directing after
attending film school at USC.
In the early 1980s he began writing for series such as Happy Days and moved into producing
shows such as Valerie and Full House by 1987. In the 1990s he
produced many more TV programs including 86 episodes of Family Matters, 50 episodes of Step
by Step, and 14 episodes of Two of a
Kind. After producing 8 episodes of The
Jamie Foxx Show in 1999-2000, he moved into children's programming on
channels such as the Disney Channel and Nickelodeon and produced multiple
episodes of The Amanda Show starring
Amanda Bynes, So Little Time starring
the Olsen Twins, All That, That's So Raven, and The Suite Life of Zack and Cody before
going on to create the Miley Cyrus series Hannah
Montana. But in 2010 he sued Disney for unfair termination and failure to
pay him creative royalties for the show. Since then he has continued producing
a number of TV series, including some for Disney, as well as Are We There Yet?, See Dad Run, Jessie, Bunk'd, and the Full House reboot Fuller
House.
Cheryl Holdridge
Born Cheryl Lynn Phelps in New Orleans on June 20, 1944, she
was adopted by her step-father in 1953 after her mother had relocated to Burbank,
California three years prior. Her birth father has never been identified. She
took dance lessons from an early age and made her show business debut at age 9
while performing in a New York City Ballet performance of The Nutcracker in Los Angeles. After an uncredited appearance in
the feature film Carousel in 1956, she auditioned for and was selected
for the original troupe of Mouseketeers on The
Mickey Mouse Club beginning in 1956 and appeared in two of the program's
serials Boys of the Western Sea and Annette in 1958. In 1959 she made the
first of four appearances on Bachelor Father, the last 3 as Lila Meredith, and made her first of two appearances
on Leave It to Beaver as Gloria
Cusick. Beginning in 1961, she appeared 6 more times on the program as Wally's
friend Julie Foster.
During her years on Leave
It to Beaver she also appeared on a number of other TV programs, such as The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, My Three Sons, Dennis the Menace, The Donna Reed Show, and The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. In 1964, the year after Beaver
was canceled, she continued getting guest spots on shows such as Bewitched, Wagon Train, and The Dick Van Dyke Show, but she retired from acting when she married race car driver
Lance Reventlow, the lone child of Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton. After
Reventlow died in a plane crash in 1972, she married car rental owner Jim
Skarda but returned to acting briefly to reprise her role as Julie Foster on
two episodes of The New Leave It to
Beaver in 1985 and 1987. She divorced Skarda in 1988 and married California
political operative Manning J. Post in 1994, at which time she became active in
philanthropic concerns such as serving on the council of the Children's Burn
Foundation and supporting environmental causes. She made one last acting
appearance in the feature film The Flintstones
in Viva Rock Vegas in 2000 and died
from lung cancer on January 6, 2009 at the age of 64.
Pamela Baird
Born Pamela Beaird in Bexar County, Texas on April 6, 1945, she
broke into acting playing Hildy Broberg on the TV series My Friend Flicka, on which she would appear 12 times from 1955-56.
She appeared twice in 1956 on The Mickey
Mouse Club as a singer, the first of these when she won the Talent Round-Up
segment on the November 2 episode and then returned to sing again on the
December 24 episode. She also appeared in a number of other drama anthology
series and one-off guest spots on shows such as Our Miss Brooks, Fury,
and The Adventures of Jim Bowie over
the next two years before appearing 4 times as Nancy on Bachelor Father in 1958. That was the same year she made the first
of her 6 appearances as Wally's love interest Mary Ellen Rogers on Leave It to Beaver. During this time she
performed in the vocal trio The Holly-Tones with her two cousins Deanna and
Joyce Beaird and also released a single as a solo artist "My Second
Date" on Dynasty Records in 1960.
Her last appearance on Beaver
came in 1961 after which she appeared on only a half dozen shows between
1962-64 including Make Room for Daddy,
Perry Mason, and two appearances on Mr. Novak. After graduating from Covina
High School in 1963, Pamela left the acting profession a year later and
attended Westminster Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey, from which she
graduated in 1968. In 1973 she married Robert H. Hensley, who had performed as
a singer under the name Jericho Brown and as an actor under the name Bob Henry.
Hensley had left the entertainment business for Christian ministry in 1970, and
the couple settled in the Arlington, Texas area and had five children. She
pursued a Masters Degree in Education at Southwestern Assemblies of God
University in Waxahachie, Texas and graduated with a doctorate in Curriculum
and Instruction from Liberty University in 2015. Her husband passed away in
2016 at the age of 80.
Burt Mustin
Born in Pittsburgh on February 8, 1884, Burton Hill Mustin
didn't take up acting until age 67. His father was a stockbroker, and Mustin
graduated from Pennsylvania Military College in 1903 with a degree in civil engineering
and experience as the school's goalie on its hockey team. After giving
engineering a try, he gave it up and became an automobile salesman, first for
Oakland, then Franklin, and finally for Lincoln and Mercury up until World War
II, at which point he worked for the Better Business Bureau and Chamber of
Commerce. Besides appearing in local productions of a Gilbert & Sullivan
troupe and The Pittsburgh Opera, in 1921 Mustin became the announcer for a
variety program on Pittsburgh's KDKA radio station. That same year he was one
of the original founders of Pittsburgh's Lions Club. He also was a member of
the Barbershop Harmony Society and traveled to San Francisco in 1925 to take
part in a quartet competition. But his acting career didn't get started until
he retired and moved with his wife to Tucson, Arizona where director William
Wyler saw him in a theater production of Detective
Story and told him to look him up if he wanted to pursue a film career. As
a result, Mustin was cast in the film version of Detective Story in 1951 and from there had a long and prolific
career. He made his television debut the same year in an episode of The Adventures of Kit Carson , and while
his feature film credits outnumbered his TV guest appearances over the next
several years, he made 5 appearances on Our
Miss Brooks between 1952-55 before landing his first recurring role as
Foley on The Great Gildersleeve in
1955-56. This was followed by a stint as Mr. Finley on Date With the Angels in 1957-58 and the first of 14 appearances as
Gus the Fireman on Leave It to Beaver
in 1957, continuing in the role until 1962.
Concurrent with his appearances on Beaver, he was cast as Jud Fletcher on The Andy Griffith Show, making 9 appearances as this character
through 1966 as well as playing a few other characters during that span. He also
continued getting guest spots on a number of other TV series including The Texan, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, Dr. Kildare, and The Twilight Zone. At
this point his TV work far outpaced his feature film roles, but he did appear
in the Don Knotts comedies The Ghost and
Mr. Chicken, The Reluctant Astronaut,
and The Shakiest Gun in the West. In
1971 he was cast opposite Queenie Smith as part of an elderly couple in the
sketch comedy series The Funny Side,
which lasted less than 6 months, but he continued to find work on shows such as
Love, American Style and Adam-12 before playing Justin Quigley on
4 episodes of All in the Family between
1973-76. In 1976 he also appeared 3 times on Phyllis as the suitor of Phyllis' cranky grandmother-in-law Mother
Dexter. He passed away the next year on January 28, 1977 at the age of 92.
Notable Guest Stars
Season 4, Episode 15, "Teacher's
Daughter": Ross Elliott (shown on the left, played Freddie the director on The Jack Benny Program and Sheriff Abbott on The Virginian) plays Wally's English teacher Mr. Foster.
Season 4, Episode 18, "Wally's
Track Meet": John Close (Lt. John Jameson on Big Town) plays Wally's track coach Mr. Henderson. Richard Deacon
(see the biography section for the 1961 post on The Dick Van Dyke Show) plays Lumpy's father Fred Rutherford.
Season 4, Episode 19, "Beaver's
Old Buddy": Gary Hunley (Mickey on Sky
King) plays Beaver's old friend Jackie Waters.
Season 4, Episode 20,
"Beaver's Tonsils": John Gallaudet (Chamberlain on Mayor of the Town, Judge Penner on Perry Mason, and Bob Anderson on My Three Sons) plays physician Dr.
Kirby.
Season 4, Episode 21, "The
Big Fish Count": Jennie Lynn (Jennie Baker on Love and Marriage) plays little girl Sally Ann Maddox.
Season 4, Episode 23,
"Mother's Helper": Candy Moore (shown on the right, played Angie on The Donna Reed Show, Chris Carmichael on The Lucy Show, and hosted The
Dream Girl of 1967) plays June's helper Margie Manners.
Season 4, Episode 24, "The
Dramatic Club": Katherine Warren (appeared in The Lady Pays Off, The Glenn
Miller Story, and The Caine Mutiny)
plays math teacher Mrs. Prescott.
Season 4, Episode 25, "Wally
and Dudley": Jimmy Hawkins (shown on the left, see the biography section for the 1961 post on
The Donna Reed Show) plays Wally's
new classmate Dudley McMillan. Marta Kristen (Judy Robinson on Lost in Space) plays Eddie Haskell's girlfriend Christine
Staples.
Season 4, Episode 28, "Mistaken
Identity": Alan Hewitt (starred in That
Touch of Mink, Days of Wine and Roses,
The Misadventures of Merlin Jones,
and The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes
and played Det. Bill Brennan on My
Favorite Martian) plays police Lt. Barnes. Marvin Bryan (Lt. Bacon on Yancy Derringer) plays police Officer
Medford.
Season 4, Episode 29, "Wally's
Dream Girl": Linda Bennett (appeared in The Big Heat, Creature With
the Atom Brain, and Queen Bee and
was a recording artist whose credits include one of the worst Christmas singles
of all time, "An Old Fashioned Christmas (Daddy's Home)") plays Wally's
crush Ginny Townsend.
Season 4, Episode 30, "The
School Picture": Gage Clarke (see the biography section for the 1961 post
on Gunsmoke) plays school
photographer Mr. Baxter. Doris Packer (see the biography section for the 1960
post on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis)
plays school principal Mrs. Rayburn.
Season 4, Episode 31, "Beaver's
Rat": Richard Deacon (shown on the far right, see "Wally's Track Meet" above) returns as
Fred Rutherford. Veronica Cartwright (shown on the near right, starred in The Birds, The Children's
Hour, Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(1978), Alien, The Right Stuff, and The
Witches of Eastwick and played Jemima Boone on Daniel Boone, Molly Hark on Tanner
'88, A.D.A. Margaret Flanagan on L.A.
Law, Cassandra Spender on The X-Files,
Valerie Shenkman on Invasion, and Bun
Waverly on Eastwick) plays his
daughter Violet.
Season 4, Episode 32, "In the
Soup": Harry Holcombe (appeared in The
Fortune Cookie, The Unsinkable Molly
Brown, Foxy Brown, Escape to Witch Mountain, and Empire of the Ants and played Frank
Gardner on Search for Tomorrow, Doc
Benson on My Mother the Car, Mr.
Kendricks on Barefoot in the Park,
and Dr. J.P. Martin on Bonanza) plays
Whitey's father Frank Whitney.
Season 4, Episode 33,
"Community Chest": Lee Meriwether (shown on the left, starred in Batman: The Movie, Angel in
My Pocket, and The Undefeated and
played Anne Reynolds on The Young
Marrieds, Nurse Bonnie Tynes on Dr. Kildare, Dr. Ann MacGregor on The
Time Tunnel, Tracey on Mission:
Impossible, Lee Sawyer on The New
Andy Griffith Show, Betty Jones on Barnaby
Jones, Lily Munster on The Munsters
Today, Ruth Martin on All My Children,
and Birdie Spencer on Project: Phoenix)
plays a young woman donating to the community chest.
Season 4, Episode 36, "Beaver
Goes Into Business": Amzie Strickland (Mrs. Phillips on The Bill Dana Show and Julia Mobey on Carter Country) plays a woman whose lawn
Beaver mows. William Stevens (Officer Jerry Walters on Adam-12) plays a man upset after Beaver cuts his lawn.
Season 4, Episode 37, "Kite
Day": Jason Robards, Sr. (father of Jason Robards, Jr.) plays judge Mr.
Henderson.
Season 4, Episode 38,
"Beaver's Doll Buggy": Jean Vanderpyl (shown on the right, see the biography section for
the 1960 post on The Flintstones)
plays Penny Woods' mother Mrs. Woods. Jennie Lynn (see "The Big Fish
Count" above) plays little girl Patty Ann Maddox.
Season 5, Episode 1, "Wally
Goes Steady": Pat McCaffrie (Chuck Forrest on Bachelor Father and Dr. Edgar Harris on Outlaws) plays Ward's athletic club acquaintance Bill Boothby. Mary
Mitchel (appeared in Twist Around the
Clock, Panic in Year Zero, A Swingin' Summer, and Dementia 13) plays his daughter Evelyn. Ryan
O'Neal (shown on the far left, starred in Love Story, What's Up, Doc?, Barry Lyndon, Paper Moon,
A Bridge Too Far, and The Main Event and played Tal Garrett on
Empire, Rodney Harrington on Peyton Place, Bobby Tannen on Good Sports, Robert Roberts, Jr. on Bull, Jerry Fox on Miss Match, and Max Keenen on Bones)
plays his son-in-law Tom Henderson.
Season 5, Episode 2, "No Time
for Babysitters": Barbara Parkins (shown on the right, starred in Valley of the Dolls, The
Mephisto Waltz, and Puppet on a Chain
and played Betty Anderson Harrington on Peyton
Place) plays Beaver's babysitter Judy Walker.
Season 5, Episode 3, "Wally's
Car": Ralph Sanford (Mayor Jim Kelley on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays junkman Mr. Garvey.
Season 5, Episode 5, "Beaver's
Cat Problem": Grace Wallis Huddle (mother of Sue Ane Langdon) plays cat
owner Mrs. Prentiss.
Season 5, Episode 6, "Wally's
Weekend Job": Tim Graham (Homer Ede on National
Velvet) plays drugstore owner Mr. Gibson. Bill Baldwin (the narrator on Harbor Command and Bat Masterson and the announcer on The Bob Cummings Show) plays Mary Ellen Rogers' father Mr. Rogers.
Season 5, Episode 7, "Beaver
Takes a Drive": Maurice Manson (shown on the left, played Frederick Timberlake on Dennis the Menace, Josh Egan on Hazel, and Hank Pinkham on General Hospital) plays traffic court
Judge Morton. Gail Bonney (Goodwife Martin on Space Patrol and Madeline Schweitzer on December Bride) plays his clerk. Stuffy Singer (Donnie Henderson on
Beulah and Alexander Bumstead on Blondie) plays Wally's friend Steve.
Season 5, Episode 8, "Wally's
Big Date": Judee Morton (appeared in Zotz!
and The Slime People and played Dr.
Smithson on General Hospital) plays Wally's
original dance date Marjorie Muller. Laraine Stephens (Susan Wentworth on O.K. Crackerby!, Diane Waring on Brackens World, and Claire Kronski on Matt Helm) plays Wally's new date Gail
Preston.
Season 5, Episode 9,
"Beaver's Ice Skates.": Stanley Clements (Stanislaus "Duke"
Coveleskie in 6 Bowery Boys feature films) plays a shoe salesman.
Season 5, Episode 10, "Weekend
Invitation": David Kent (later played Bill Scott on Leave It to Beaver) plays Wally's new classmate Scott. Richard
Deacon (see "Wally's Track Meet" above) returns as Fred Rutherford.
Season 5, Episode 12, "Wally's
Chauffeur": Mary Mitchel (see " Wally Goes Steady " above) returns
as Wally's girlfriend Evelyn Boothby. James Seay (shown on the right, see the biography section for
the 1960 post on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp) plays her father. Mark Allen (Matt Kissel on The Travels of Jamie McPheeters and Sam
Evans on Dark Shadows) plays a
policeman.
Great summary. THANKS! I got here after googling "were there two mary ellen rogers on leave it to beaver".. there weren't. After 55 years of watching the Beav, I realized I'd get Julie Foster mixed up with Mary Ellen Rogers.
ReplyDeleteGreat summary. I'm old enough to have seen the original broadcasts, and have watched them in syndication for the past, gasp, 60+ years. While the show was idealized in some ways, not depicting youth issues that were becoming more prevalent, especially by the early 60s, that wasn't quite yet in the sitcom purview at the time. Those criticizing LITB on those grounds may not recognize a time when married sitcom couples had probably only recently started sleeping in the same bed. It would remain for a later generation of shows like "Roseanne," "Good Times," etc. to explore those issues. Not having Eddie freak out smoking weed (he almost certainly would have) doesn't detract from the beauty of the show.
ReplyDeleteHaving said that, I'm also guilty of looking back and finding faults I didn't see back in the day. Watching the show today, I find myself irritated at Ward always dismissing June's parenting ideas. With very rare exceptions, he's always portrayed as being right, while she comes off as the needlessly fretful, over protective female, who just doesn't understand boys or the male perspective. Meanwhile, he seems to congratulate himself just because he doesn't beat them, like his father would have. It was literally father always knew best. Of course, I realize that this too was perhaps a reflection of the times that hasn't worn as well as the depictions of the kids' day to day issues - which seem "trivial" only to adults who can't remember having them themselves. Those are truly timeless and make for the series' enduring appeal. Even if it's breaking a video game instead of a kite, from a child's perspective, some things never change.