Talk:Antoni Bohdziewicz and I Love Lucy: Difference between pages

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{{infobox television |
{{WPBiography
| show_name = I Love Lucy
|living = no
| image = [[Image:Lucy1.jpg|225px|The familiar ''I Love Lucy'' logo was created for syndication.]]
|class = start
| caption = The ''I Love Lucy'' logo.
|needs-infobox = yes
| format = [[Sitcom]]
|a&e-work-group = yes <!-- Arts and Entertainment -->
| runtime = 30 minutes per episode
|listas = Bohdziewicz, Antoni
| creator = [[Desi Arnaz]]
}}
| starring = [[Lucille Ball]]<br>[[Desi Arnaz]]<br>[[Vivian Vance]]<br>[[William Frawley]]<br>[[Keith Thibodeaux|Richard Keith]]
{{dyktalk|February 4|2007|small=no}}
| country = {{USA}}
| network = [[CBS]]
| first_aired = [[October 15]], [[1951 in television|1951]]
| last_aired = [[May 6]], [[1957 in television|1957]]
| num_episodes = [[List of I Love Lucy episodes|181]] (including the "lost" Christmas episode and pilot)
| imdb_id = 0043208
|}}
'''''I Love Lucy''''' is a [[CBS]] [[television]] [[sitcom]] that aired in the 1950s. Highly popular, it received 2 [[Emmy Awards]], out of a total of 14 Emmy Award nominations.
 
The cast consisted of actress [[Lucille Ball]], her actor/orchestra leader husband [[Desi Arnaz]], stage actress [[Vivian Vance]], and movie character actor [[William Frawley]]. The series ran from [[October 15]], [[1951]], to [[May 6]], [[1957]], on [[CBS]] (181 episodes, including the "lost" Christmas episode and pilot). This show was ranked #2 on [[TV Guide]]'s top 50 greatest shows of all time in 2002, behind ''[[Seinfeld]]'' and ahead of ''[[The Honeymooners]]''. Episodes of ''I Love Lucy'' are still syndicated in dozens of languages across the world. The show was heavily based on a radio show from a few years before, ''[[My Favorite Husband]]'' about Liz and George Cooper and many of the scripts were rewritten for ''I Love Lucy'' using the same writers ([[Madelyn Pugh]] and [[Bob Carroll, Jr.]]). On this radio show, Lucy had played "Liz" and actor [[Richard Denning]] had played "George".
==Vilna, Vilnius, or Wilno==
 
The program was originally sponsored by cigarette manufacturer [[Philip Morris]], and Lucy and Ricky (as well as Ethel and Fred Mertz) were shown numerous times smoking Phillip Morris cigarettes in the early episodes. The program originally opened with a cartoon of animated match-stick figures of Lucy and Ricky climbing down a packet of Philip Morris cigarettes. It was only when the series went into reruns that the familiar "heart on satin" appeared, with ''I Love Lucy'' on it.
Perhaps the author of this article can clarify what the proper historical name for the city of Bohdziewicz's birth in 1906, should be. Not what would be correct in 1928, or 2006. Tired of having to correct it myself. [[User:Dr. Dan|Dr. Dan]] 22:39, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
::Perhaps he could. ''<font color="#901">//</font>''[[User:Halibutt|Halibu]][[User talk:Halibutt|tt]] 00:27, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
:::But perhaps he won't, because it wouldn't fit in with the other pieces of the earlier puzzle, and the result would not be to his liking. [[User:Dr. Dan|Dr. Dan]] 03:32, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
::::Or perhaps he won't, because he sees no point in discussing it with somebody who manages to offend him with every second or third post of his?--<sub><span style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">[[User:Piotrus|&nbsp;Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus&nbsp;]]|[[User_talk:Piotrus|<font style="color:#7CFC00;background:#006400;">&nbsp;talk&nbsp;</font>]]</span></sub> 05:09, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
:::::Evidently he won't because he has a "spokesperson" to clarify his position on the matter. But I should hope for an answer, not for my so-called "offending" sake, but for the benefit of having an answer for the Wikipedia project. And perhaps an answer consistent with the philosophy behind many previous edits considering the names of geographical toponyms in their historical context. [[User:Dr. Dan|Dr. Dan]] 18:58, 6 February 2007 (UTC)
:::::::Why, because he wasn't born in Leningrad and Leningrad didn't exist in 1906. I guess one has to put in Vilnius to get a correction. Afterall, if it can't be Wilno, at least that way it won't be Vilnius. [[User:Dr. Dan|Dr. Dan]] 18:30, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
 
The program was filmed at [[Desilu]], a production studio jointly owned by Ball and Arnaz. [[Gale Gordon]] and [[Bea Benaderet]], co-stars on ''[[My Favorite Husband]]'', were originally approached for the roles of Fred and Ethel, but neither could accept due to previous commitments. Gordon did appear as a guest star in two episodes, playing Ricky's boss, Mr. Littlefield. Gordon was a veteran from the classic radio days in which he perfected the role of the exasperated character, as in ''[[Fibber McGee and Molly]]''. He would go on to co-star with Ball in most of her post-''I Love Lucy'' series. Benaderet once guest starred playing the Ricardos' neighbor, the elderly Miss Lewis. Ms. Ball was reluctant to accept Vivian Vance for the role because she considered her too attractive for the role, so Vance was required to wear clothes that were too small for her in order to make her appear overweight. Ball, in fact, wanted her close friend, [[Barbara Pepper]], to play Ethel, but Ms. Pepper had been drinking very heavily after the death of her husband, Craig W. Reynolds, and thus could not be hired. Vance's on-screen husband, [[William Frawley]], was 22 years her senior. Frawley, a baseball fan, only agreed on the series provided they let him go to any main game he wanted to. Despite her scatty appearance on the show, Ball was a perfectionist and would spend an hour practicing a simple stunt. Later, when big stars started appearing on the show, she even complained to some of them about their delivery, and that if they had done it such and such a way, they would have got 30% more laughs.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
==Childish Games==
 
Arnaz persuaded [[Karl Freund]], cinematographer of such films as ''[[Metropolis (film)|Metropolis]]'' (1927), ''[[Dracula]]'' (1931), and ''[[The Good Earth (film)|The Good Earth]]'' (1937), as well as director of ''[[The Mummy (1932 film)|The Mummy]]'' (1932), to be the series' [[cinematographer]], which many critics believe accounts for the show's lustrous black and white [[cinematography]].
To the author of this article: Even though you have been personally insulting to me lately by your demeanor and sniping against me, don't worry, I won't try some lame attempt to censor you, block you, investigate you, or the like. You have demonstrated your lack of consistency and historical accuracy when you began this article by claiming that the appropriate name for the city in 1906 was Wilno. Only after this Lithuanian city received the currently acknowledged name in the English language of [[Vilnius]] by me, were you moved to "correct" your error, inspite of a colleague of yours repeatedly vandalizing my multiple corrections of your error (and silence from you). I even gave you an opportunity to correct your colleague's argument ''it was known to him by this name''. I mean is that a lame argument if you ever heard one or what? Correctly calling Vilnius a Lithuanian city is not a childish game, but a fact. Referring to Leningrad and Montreal in some attempt to deny this however, is a childish game. What's next, that Jerusalem should be called [[Aelia Capitolina]], and is a [[Roman Empire|Roman]] city? [[User:Dr. Dan|Dr. Dan]] 15:24, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
 
''I Love Lucy'' is the first of only three shows to end its run as the ''#1'' TV show in America (the other two being ''[[The Andy Griffith Show]]'' in 1968 and ''[[Seinfeld]]'' in 1998), and it has since had a significant impact on [[popular culture]]. Most of the cast have since died. Ball was the last main cast member to die, on [[April 26]], [[1989]]. The only living member of the non-guest cast is [[Keith Thibodeaux]] (credited as "Richard Keith") who played Lucy and Ricky's young son "Little Ricky" in the last season and on ''[[The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour]]'' until 1960.
::Indeed, Vilna was Lithuanian in 1906. Similarly, Breslau was Polish in 1906 and Koenigsberg was Russian. ''<font color="#901">//</font>''[[User:Halibutt|Halibu]][[User talk:Halibutt|tt]] 16:22, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
 
:::Good, now we're making progress (although only one correct answer out of three, still gives you a failing grade). How about Cracow in 1906, Polish or [[Austro-Hungarian]]? A chance to redeem yourself and tell all of us in the Wikipedia project what the right answer is. [[User:Dr. Dan|Dr. Dan]] 23:50, 9 February 2007 (UTC)
==The show==
::::And when you get around to it, tell us if [[Krakau]] is the historically correct name for the Austro-Hungarian city in that time period? I think German was the official language of the Empire. Certainly you aren't of the belief that Kraków is the appropriate name for the city's name in 1906, in English WP. Or are you? [[User:Dr. Dan|Dr. Dan]] 19:05, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
[[Image:Lucy ricky.jpg|thumb|left|"Oh Ricky, you're wonderful!"]]
::Read up on the official languages of Galicia and come back later. ''<font color="#901">//</font>''[[User:Halibutt|Halibu]][[User talk:Halibutt|tt]] 14:15, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
Set in [[New York City]], ''I Love Lucy'' is centered around '''Lucy Ricardo née McGillicuddy''' ([[Lucille Ball]]), a housewife, her husband '''Ricky Ricardo''' (full name: Enrique Alberto Ricardo y de Acha III <ref name="LucyRaisesTulips">{{cite episode | title = Lucy Raises Tulips |
| series = I Love Lucy | network = CBS | airdate = 1957-04-29 | season = 6 | number = 26}}</ref>) ([[Desi Arnaz]]), a singer and bandleader, and their friends and landlords '''Fred''' (full name: Frederick Hobart Mertz <ref name="LucyRaisesTulips"/>) and '''Ethel Mertz''' ([[William Frawley]] and [[Vivian Vance]]). Most episodes take place in the Ricardos' modest brownstone apartment at 623 East 68th Street--which in reality would be in the middle of the [[East River]]--or at the downtown "Tropicana" nightclub where Ricky is employed, and sometimes elsewhere in the city. Later episodes took the Ricardos and the Mertzes to Hollywood for Ricky to shoot a movie, and then they all accompanied Ricky while he and his band toured Europe. There was also a trip to Florida for the two couples with a side trip to Ricky's homeland of Cuba. Eventually, the Ricardos and the Mertzes moved to a house in the rural town of [[Westport, Connecticut]]. Other blocks of episodes were set in [[Los Angeles]] and [[Miami]].
 
Lucy Ricardo is a loving if somewhat naïve housewife with an ambitious character who has an overactive imagination and a knack for getting herself into trouble. In particular, she is obsessed with joining her husband in show business. Fred and Ethel are themselves former [[vaudevillian]]s, which strengthens Lucy's resolve to prove herself as a performer. Unfortunately, Lucy Ricardo cannot carry a tune or play anything other than an off-key rendition of "Glow Worm" (or "Sweet Sue") on the [[saxophone]] and evidently has no other artistic or managerial talent. Yet Lucy is determined to show everyone around her that she is much more than an ordinary housewife. A typical ''I Love Lucy'' episode involves one of Lucy's ambitious but hare-brained schemes, whether it be sneaking into Ricky's nightclub act, finding a way to hobnob with celebrities, trying to find a real job, showing up her fellow women's club members, or simply trying to improve the quality of her life. Usually she ends up in some comedic mess, often dragging in Ethel (and Fred) as her (usually) reluctant companion.
 
==Innovative techniques==
[[Image:Lucy3.jpg|right|frame|"It's so tasty, too!"]]
At the time, most television shows were broadcast live from New York City, and a low-quality [[35mm]] or [[16mm]] [[kinescope]] print was made of the show to broadcast it in other time zones. But Ball was pregnant at the time, and she and Arnaz therefore insisted on filming the show in [[Hollywood, Los Angeles, California|Hollywood]]. The duo, along with co-creator [[Jess Oppenheimer]], then decided to shoot the show on [[35 mm film]] in front of a studio audience, with [[Multicamera setup|three cameras]], a technique now standard among present-day sitcoms. The result was a much sharper image than other shows of the time, and the audience reactions were far more authentic than the "[[Laugh track|canned laughter]]" used on most filmed sitcoms of the time. The technique was not completely new--another CBS comedy series, ''[[Amos 'n' Andy]]'', which debuted four months earlier, was already being filmed at [[Hal Roach Studios]] with three 35mm cameras to save time and money. But ''I Love Lucy'' was the first show to use this technique with a studio audience.
 
Scenes were often performed in sequence, as a play would be, which was unusual for comedies at that time. Retakes were rare and dialogue mistakes were often played off for the sake of continuity. For example, in her last run-through of the famous Vitameatavegamin commercial, Lucy skips to the end of the speech, veering from the script, realizes her mistake, and returns to the midpoint without missing her comic timing. Another example is in an episode in which Ricky is translating between Spanish and English for Lucy and some old friends from Cuba. Arnaz repeated in English what had just been said in English, rather than translating it into Spanish. This reportedly was not part of the script, but Arnaz expertly played it as a joke. This technique allowed the show to remain fresh for years and retain its originality and liveliness.
 
Just before the show was to be filmed, Lucy became pregnant with her and Desi's first child- [[Lucie Arnaz]]. They actually filmed the original pilot while Lucy was "showing", but did not include this real-life fact into that episode. Later during the second season, Lucy was pregnant again with second child, [[Desi Arnaz, Jr.]] This time, they incorporated her pregnancy into the storyline. Despite popular belief, Lucy's pregnancy was not TV's first on-screen pregnancy. It was actually Mary Kay's pregnancy on the late 1940s sitcom ''[[Mary Kay and Johnny]]''.
 
During those times on television, saying the words "pregnant" or "pregnancy" was prohibited. When the character Lucy finds out she is pregnant, she announces to Ethel: "I am going to have a baby!" The episode [[Lucy Is Enceinte]] aired on [[December 8]], [[1952]]. The word "enceinte" being French for "expecting" or "pregnant". The episode [[Lucy Goes To The Hospital]] first aired on [[January 19]], [[1953]], the same day Lucille Ball gave birth to Desi, Jr., and was watched by more people than any other TV program at that time. Throughout the series' run, it was still forbidden for any cast member to say "pregnant" on air, and so they always described Lucy as "with child."
 
Lucille Ball liked naming supporting characters after real-life people. For instance, Carolyn Appleby was one of her teachers, and Marion Strong was a friend in [[Jamestown, New York]].
Many character actors were featured numerous times on the show. Actress [[Barbara Pepper]] (later featured as Doris Ziffel on the series ''[[Green Acres]]''), frequently had one or two lines in a crowd scene. Her friendship with Ball dated back to the film ''[[Roman Scandals]]'', in which both appeared as [[Goldwyn Girls]].
Many facts about Ball and Arnaz made it into the series: like Ball, Lucy Ricardo was born on August 6th in [[Jamestown, New York]], and attended high school in Celoron, New York. Also, the Ricardos were married at the Byram River Beagle Club in [[Greenwich, Connecticut]], just as the Arnazes had been.
 
On [[January 19]], [[1953]], 68% of all [[United States]] [[television]] sets were tuned in to ''I Love Lucy'' to watch Lucy when the time arrived for her to give birth. The next month, on [[February 18]], Ball and Arnaz signed an $8,000,000 contract to continue ''I Love Lucy'' through 1955. After the end of the weekly series, the actors reunited for monthly one-hour specials under the title ''[[The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour]]''.
 
Later that year, [[Desilu]] produced an [[I Love Lucy (film)|feature film version]] of the show. The film consisted of three first-season episodes edited together: "The Benefit", "Breaking the Lease" and "The Ballet". New scenes featuring the cast were filmed and put between the episodes to tie them into one cohesive story. A successful [[test screening]] was held in [[Bakersfield, California]]; however, [[MGM]] demanded the [[I Love Lucy (film)|''I Love Lucy'' movie]] be [[shelved]] because they felt it would diminish interest in the ''[[The Long, Long Trailer]]''. Although ''I Love Lucy'' was never theatrically released and ultimately forgotten, in 2001, it was found and clips of it were featured in ''I Love Lucy's 50th Anniversary Special''. A screening was held in 2002 at a ''Lucy'' [[fan convention]].
 
==Post-''Lucy''==
After the conclusion of the 6th season of ''I Love Lucy'', Lucy and Desi decided to cut down on the number of episodes that were filmed. So, instead of the usual 30 minutes, they extended ''I Love Lucy'' to 60 minutes, with a guest star each episode. This did not run every week, it ran every month or so. The main cast, Lucille Ball, Desi Arnaz, Vivian Vance, and William Frawley were all in the show, which was renamed, ''[[The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show]]'', and later changed for syndication to ''[[The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour]]''. Thirteen Lucy-Desi comedy hours aired from [[1957]] to [[1960]], as Ball and Arnaz's eventual off-screen personal problems had a serious effect, contributing to the show's end. Their pending [[divorce]] affected the series' final episodes, which they were contractually obligated to film. This is why in the last episodes of the series, one can see Ball looking as if she had just been crying, even in supposed-to-be funny scenes, and the day after the last episode was filmed, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz filed for divorce. It is now well-known that Vance and Frawley did not get along, which seemingly added some humorous edge to their on-screen interaction. In fact, their on-screen chemistry was so great, many consider that to be one of the main assets to the show. When the series ended, Vance and Frawley were said to have been offered a chance to take their Fred and Ethel characters to their own spin-off series. Frawley was willing to do so, but Vance refused to ever work with Frawley again. Frawley did appear once more with Lucille Ball--in an episode of ''[[The Lucy Show]]'' that was filmed only after Vance had already retired from that series (Vance had co-starred on ''[[The Lucy Show]]'' during the first three seasons, 1962-1965, and Frawley made his single guest appearance during the fourth season). In that episode, Frawley appeared in a brief cameo as a stable attendant who encounters Lucy. As soon as Frawley's character exited the scene, Lucy turns to her friend (played by [[Ann Sothern]] ) and comments, "you know, he reminds me of someone I used to know," to audience laughter. Ironically, this 1965 cameo turned out to be William Frawley's final television appearance; he died about four months after it aired. The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour is now on DVD, released as ''I Love Lucy: The Complete Seasons 7, 8, & 9''.
 
In [[1962]], Ball began a six-year run on her own show, ''[[The Lucy Show]]'', followed immediately in 1968 by six more years on yet another sitcom, ''[[Here's Lucy]]'', finally ending her long run as a CBS sitcom star in 1974. Both ''[[The Lucy Show]]'' and ''[[Here's Lucy]]'' are notable for having Vance as recurring characters named ''Viv'' (Vivian Bagley Bunson on ''[[The Lucy Show]]'' and Vivian Jones on ''[[Here's Lucy]]''), so named because she was tired of being recognized on the street and addressed as ''Ethel''. Vance was a regular during the first three seasons of ''[[The Lucy Show]]'' but continued to make guest appearances through the years on "The Lucy Show," and on ''[[Here's Lucy]]''.
 
(Ball and Arnaz also capitalized on the series' popularity by starring in [[Vincente Minnelli]]'s 1953 film ''[[The Long, Long Trailer]]'' as Tacy and Nicky Collini, two characters very similar to Lucy and Ricky.)
 
The familiar opening featuring the credits superimposed over a "heart" image, known to most of the show's younger fans and still used when it is shown in syndication, was created specifically when ''I Love Lucy'' went into syndication. When originally broadcast on CBS, the episodes featured an opening with animated drawings of Ball and Arnaz, making reference to whomever the particular episode's sponsor was (usually [[Philip Morris]]). These sequences were created by the animation team of [[Bill Hanna]] and [[Joe Barbera]], who declined screen credit because they were technically under exclusive contract to [[Metro-Goldwyn Mayer|MGM]] at the time. Since the original sponsor references were no longer applicable when the shows went into syndication (or, in the case of cigarette advertising, banned by the U.S. government since 1971), the new opening was created. The original openings with the sponsor names edited out are now used on [[TV Land]] showings, with a TV Land logo pasted on top of the sponsor's logo. Ironically, this has led many to believe the restored introduction was created specifically for TV Land as an example of [[kitsch]].
 
''I Love Lucy'' remained successful even after it ended. For instance, it was one of the first programs made in the USA seen on British television, which became more open to commerce with the launch of [[ITV]], a commercial network that aired the series, in September 1955. As of [[2006|April 2006]], it remained the longest-running program to air continually in the [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] area, almost 50 years after production ended. Ironically, the series is currently aired on [[KTTV]], which had given up the CBS affiliation several months before ''I Love Lucy'' premiered.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} This is particularly notable because, unlike some shows to which a cable channel (e.g. TV Land) is given exclusive rights in order to maximize ratings, ''Lucy'' has been consistently&mdash;and successfully&mdash;broadcast on multiple channels simultaneously.
 
==Episodes==
{{main|List of I Love Lucy episodes}}
 
==Themes and Highlights==
In the course of the show, numerous comic ideas were introduced, and often reappeared in subsequent episodes. Several bits remain famous and beloved, often listed amongst television's best. The following list reviews some of the high points.
 
'''The clown'''
 
Considered by professional [[clowns]] to be one of their own, Lucille Ball's 'clown character' was "Lucy Ricardo." (''nee'' "Lucille McGillicuddy" &mdash; an instantly recognizable clown [[monicker|moniker]]). Lucy Ricardo was a friendly, ambitious and somewhat naïve [[homemaker|housewife]], constantly getting into trouble of one kind or another.
 
The setup of the show provided ample opportunities for Ball to display her skills at clowning and [[physical comedy]]. She is regarded as one of the best in the history of film and television at physical '[[schtick]]'.
 
In the course of the series, Lucy shared the screen with numerous famous clowns. Prominent among these were [[Red Skelton]] and [[Harpo Marx]].
 
'''Lucy's imagination gets the best of her''' - One of the most famous parts of the show has Lucy letting her imagination run wild, to which Ricky and Ethel often have to calm her down. In the classic fourth episode (first one to be shot) "Lucy Thinks Ricky Is Trying To Murder Her," Lucy has finished the chilling [[Mockingbird Mystery]] novel when she overhears Ricky talking to his agent about having to "get rid" of a singer. Truly one of the world's most suggestive women, Lucy completely misinterprets the conversation and comes to the conclusion Ricky wants to kill her. At one point, she even straps a [[skillet]] to her chest to protect her from bullets. Desi Arnaz wrote in his autobiography that in that particular scene, he had to bite the inside of his cheek to keep himself from laughing out loud.
 
'''Lucy tries to get into the act''' — a recurring and almost omnipresent theme on the show, was that "talentless" plain old Lucy the Housewife dearly desired a chance to perform, as anything: a dancer, clown, [[singing cowboy]] &mdash; or in any role. The real joke here is that Lucille Ball, aside from being regarded as beautiful, was also quite talented in a variety of performance arts, as well as being a ground-breaking television producer. Perhaps the best example of this gag is when Lucy shows up unannounced at Ricky's club, toting a clown-modified cello and pretending to be a musician, asking to speak with "Risky Riskerdoo" (Ricky Ricardo). This classic includes Lucy winding the cello's tuning peg as if it were a watch (to the accompaniment of ratcheting sounds) and shooting the cello's bow at Ricky's backside.
 
'''Job Switching'''— ("Speeeeeeed it up a little!!") Lucy and Ethel attempt to get jobs, for which they are demonstrably unprepared. The classic candy-gobbling scene in this episode was a variation on an old vaudeville routine and has become an American cultural icon. [[Saturday Night Live]] once performed a skit that was a direct parody of this scene (with [[Dan Aykroyd]] as the foreman, [[Gilda Radner]] as Lucy, and a noticeable lack of an Ethel parallel, leaving Radner to carry most of the scene on her own energy) in which Lucy is working on a conveyor belt of [[atomic bombs]], given the hilarious duty of putting whipped cream and a cherry on top of each bomb, and placing each bomb on the shelf. It was also imitated in an episode of [[Hi Hi Puffy AmiYumi]]. [[Jackie Gleason]] also did a variation, involving decorating and boxing cakes as they came off an assembly line. An obvious parody is in the television family show [[Drake and Josh]] where they box sushi in order to get money to buy new furniture to replace the one at their house that was stolen. They even continue the gags such as "Speed it up a little... well, look's like someone's asleep at the control room" and the sushi moving too fast across the conveyor belt for them to pack, so they end up panicking by eating them and stuffing them in their hats.
 
'''Lucy and Harpo Marx''' — now a classic improvisational acting exercise (with [[Harpo Marx]]), in which Lucy, dressed as Harpo Marx encounters the ''real'' Harpo while hiding in the kitchen doorway. Harpo is perplexed at what he sees when he confronts his reflection, and Lucy is forced to mimic his every move. This bit was a tribute to Harpo and [[Groucho Marx|Groucho]]'s famous mirror scene in the [[Marx Brothers]] comedy classic, ''[[Duck Soup]]''. <ref name="LucyHarpo">{{cite episode | title = Lucy and Harpo Marx | series = I Love Lucy | network = CBS | airdate = 1955-05-09 | season = 4 | number = 27}}</ref>
 
'''The Ballet''' (aka [[Slowly I Turned]]) in which a veteran clown introduces Lucy Ricardo to some basics of the clown art, and is schooled in this classic (and at that time quite familiar) vaudevillian routine, complete with 'seltzer bottles' (a familiar clown prop) and slapstick. [[The Three Stooges]] are among many others who performed variations on this classic.
 
'''Vita-meata-vega-min''' — One of the most memorable episodes was titled "Lucy Does a TV Commercial", filmed during the first season (episode 30 of 35) on [[March 28]], [[1952]], and first aired on [[May 5]] of that year. In this episode, Lucy manages to get a role as the "Vitameatavegamin girl" and is tasked with trying to sell the public a tonic that has healthy amounts of [[vitamin]]s, [[meat]], [[vegetable]]s, [[mineral]]s — and the less than healthy dose of 23% [[ethanol|alcohol]]. "And it's so tasty too - [grimacing] - just like candy!" During rehearsal, Lucy becomes progressively more inebriated, with the inevitable hilarious result, too sloshed to stand up straight, but keeps on pitching the product. She made this funnier by the alliterative, tongue twisting product name and pitch. "Do you '''pop''' out at parties? Are you un'''poop'''ular? Well, the answer to all your troubles is in this bittle lottle!" In November of 2001, fans voted this episode as their all-time favorite during a 50th anniversary ''I Love Lucy'' television special.
 
'''Lucy Tries to Meet the Famous Star''' — another main recurring theme of the show was that many stars eager to appear on the show; hilarity ensued in myriad situations in which Lucy tried to meet the rich and famous, usually successfully but not under the desired circumstances she might have hoped for.
 
'''Cousin Ernie Visits''' story arc. Lucy receives a letter informing her that her "Mother's Best Friend's Roommate's Cousin's Middle Boy" &mdash; of whom she has never heard &mdash; is coming to visit from "Bent Fork, Tennessee". 'Cousin Ernie' (immaculately played by [[Tennessee Ernie Ford|"Tennessee" Ernie Ford]]) is a stereotypical Country Boy in the Big City, in awe of the sophistication (as he perceives it) of his new hosts. Cousin Ernie and the citizens of Bent Fork and its environs are encountered several times during the course of the show's life.
 
'''The Singing Jailbreak''' — This episode is part of the Hollywood story arc. Ricky, Lucy, Fred, and Ethel participate in a square dance called by Cousin Ernie to escape a Bent Fork, Tennessee jail in the course of which the sheriff and his two rotund daughters are tied up with a handy piece of rope. Then Ricky, Lucy, Fred and Ethel make their escape to continue their cross country venture.
 
'''Lucy Meets Superman''' - Among the many guest stars was [[George Reeves]], star of the 1950s Superman TV series. They never mention his real name on the show, always referring to him as Superman. In the story, Lucy tries to get him to appear at Little Ricky's birthday party and fails, so she dresses up as Superwoman herself, only to have Superman/Reeves turn up at the last minute. After many misadventures, Ricky tells Reeves that he's been married to Lucy for 15 years to which Reeves replies; "And they call ''ME'' Superman!"
 
'''Lucy sets her nose on fire''' - In the episode "LA At Last", Lucy, Fred, and Ethel have lunch at The [[Brown Derby]], where Lucy accidentally causes a waiter to heave a pie in [[William Holden]]'s face. Later at the hotel, Ricky says he has a surprise for her. He has brought one of her favorite actors to meet her — the same William Holden. Fearing he would recognize her, she puts on a disguise that includes a putty nose. When she lights a cigarette, she sets her nose on fire.
 
'''Lucy does the Tango''' - When the Ricardo's and the Mertzes have moved to Connecticut to the country and their [[chicken]] business is not going very well, so Lucy and Ethel come up with a plot to fool the boys into thinking the hens are laying by smuggling [[Egg (biology)|eggs]] in the henhouse, hidden underneath their clothes. However, Ricky insists that he and Lucy rehearse their [[Tango (dance)|tango]] number for a local benefit. Unbeknownst to Ricky, Lucy's blouse is filled with chicken eggs. When Lucy slams into Ricky in the final dance step, the eggs break, saturating Lucy's shirt with broken eggs. Even after the eggs break and are running down her body, Lucy tries to act nonchalant. The skit resulted in the longest audience laughter in the show's history, 65 seconds. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
==Memorable lines==
*Ricky: "Lucy, I'm Home" ''Said by Ricky whenever he gets home from work.''
*Lucy: "Do you poop out at parties? Are you unpopular?" ''Part of Lucy's Vitameatavegamin script from "Lucy Does a TV Commercial". Later rephrased as'' "Do you '''pop''' out at parties? Are you un'''poop'''ular?"
*Ethel: "Oh honestly, Lucy...". ''Spoken whenever Ethel expressed reluctance to go along with one of Lucy's schemes''
*Ethel: "Hey Lucy, the chickens are talking about Fred..they're saying 'cheep, cheep, cheep'..." '' From "Lucy Raises Chickens".''
*Lucy: "Eeeewwww." ''Lucy's signature line whenever she realizes that she has ended up in a bad predicament. Carried over from ''[[My Favorite Husband]]
*Ricky: "Mira que cosas tiene la mujer esta..." Which can be translated into, "Look what things this woman has done" ''Said by Ricky in Spanish whenever he is upset.''
*Lucy: "Can I be in the show?" ''Asked by Lucy whenever she finds out Ricky is staging a new show.''
*Ricky: "No!" ''Ricky's inevitable response upon Lucy's asking to be in the show.''
*Ricky: "Lucy, you got some 'splainin' to do!" ''Said by Ricky whenever he finds out Lucy has been up to something.''
*Lucy: "No offense Ethel, but anybody can see that you look more like a witch than I do."
*Ethel: "You wouldn't dare." Lucy: "Oh, wouldn't I." ''Said on numerous occasions when Lucy tells Ethel about one of her schemes.''
*Ricky: "Ai-yai-ai-yai-yai" ''One of Ricky's signatures when Lucy creates a mess.''
*Lucy {Sometimes Ethel): Well... ''Said by Ethel or Lucy when refusing to explain something but soon deciding to explain hesitantly.''
== The ''I Love Lucy'' lyrics==
This was sung by Ricky in one episode, to the ''I Love Lucy'' theme music:
 
I Hate LUCY
 
I hate Lucy and she hates me
 
We're as ugly as two can be
 
Sometimes we quarrel but then
 
How we hate dieing again
 
Lucy kisses like no one can
 
She's my Mrs. and I'm her man
 
And life is heaven you see
 
'cause I hate Lucy
 
Yes I hate Lucy
 
and Lucy hates me
 
==Main Cast==
*[[Lucille Ball]] .... Lucille 'Lucy' Esmeralda McGillicuddy Ricardo
*[[Desi Arnaz]] .... Ricardo Alberto Fernando Ricardo de Acha (in "Hollywood Anniversary"), Enrique 'Ricky' Alberto Ricardo y de Acha III (in "Lucy Raises Tulips")
*[[Vivian Vance]] .... Ethel Potter (maiden name), Ethel Roberta Mertz (in "Million Dollar Idea"), Ethel Louise Mertz (in "Lucy and Ethel Buy the Same Dress), Ethel Mae Mertz in ("Ethel's Hometown and subsequest episodes)*
*[[William Frawley]] .... Frederick 'Fred' Hobart E.D. Mertz I
*[[Keith Thibodeaux]] (billed as [[Keith Thibodeaux|Richard Keith]]) .... Ricky Ricardo, Jr. "Little Ricky" (1956-1960)
 
==Supporting Cast==
*[[Elvia Allman]] .... various roles
*[[Kathryn Card]] .... Mrs. McGillicuddy, "Lucy's" mother (1955-1956) (earlier appearance as "Minnie Finch" in 1954)
*[[Mary Jane Croft]] .... Betty Ramsey (1957) (earlier appearances in various roles)
*[[Ross Elliot]] .... various roles
*[[Jerry Hausner]] .... Jerry, Ricky's agent (1951-1954)(was also the show's announcer in early seasons)
*[[Bob Jellison]] .... Bobby, the Hollywood bellboy (1955) (earlier appearances in various roles)
*[[Lou Krugman]] .... various roles
*[[Joseph A. & Michael Mayer]] .... Ricky Ricardo, Jr. (baby) (1953-1954)
*[[Charles Lane]] .... various roles
*[[Doris Singleton]] .... Caroline Appleby (1953-1957)
*[[Shirley Mitchell]] .... Marion Strong (1953-1954)
*[[Frank Nelson]] .... Ralph Ramsey (1957) (many earlier appearances in various roles, including that of "Freddie Filmore", a game show host, and Mr. Ramsey, the Ricardos' neighbor while living in [[Connecticut]])
*[[Louis A. Nicoletti]] .... as Desi's stand-in, he played many bit parts and other various roles
*[[Elizabeth Patterson (actress)|Elizabeth Patterson]] .... Mrs. Matilda Trumbull (1953-1956)(earlier appearance as "Mrs. Willoughby" in 1952)
*[[Amy McDaniel]] .... various roles
*[[Barbara Pepper]] .... various roles
*[[Hazel Pierce]] .... as Lucy's stand-in, she played many bit parts and other various roles
*[[Richard & Ronald Lee Simmons]] .... Ricky Ricardo, Jr. (baby) (1954-1955)
 
==Emmy Awards==
===''I Love Lucy'' (The Show)===
* 1952: Nominated - Best situation Comedy Show
* 1953: '''Won''' - Best Situation Comedy
* 1954: '''Won''' - Best Situation Comedy
* 1955: Nominated - Best Written Comedy Material: Madelyn Pugh Davis, Jess Oppenheimer, Robert G. Carroll
* 1955: Nominated - Best Situation Comedy
* 1956: Nominated - Best Comedy Writing: Bob Carroll Jr., Madelyn Davis, Jess Oppenheimer, Bob Schiller, Bob Weiskopf for episode: ''"L.A. At Last"''
 
===Lucille Ball===
*1952: Nominated - Best Comedian or Comedienne
*1953: Nominated - Most Outstanding Personality
*1953: '''Won''' - Best Comedienne
*1954: Nominated - Best Female Star of Regular Series
*1955: Nominated - Best Actress Starring in a Regular Series
*1956: Nominated - Best Comedienne
*1956: '''Won''' - Best Actress - Continuing Performance
*1957: Nominated - Best Continuing Performance by a Comedienne in a Series
*1958: Nominated - Best Continuing Performance (Female) in a Series by a Comedienne, Singer, Hostess, Dancer, M.C., Announcer, Narrator, Panelist, or any Person who Essentially Plays Herself
 
===Desi Arnaz===
*Never nominated.
 
===Vivian Vance===
* 1954: '''Won''' - Best Series Supporting Actress
* 1955: Nominated - Best Supporting Actress in a Regular Series
* 1957: Nominated - Best Supporting Performance by an Actress
* 1958: Nominated - Best Continuing Supporting Performance by an Actress in a Dramatic or Comedy Series
 
===William Frawley===
* 1954: Nominated - Best Series Supporting Actor
* 1955: Nominated - Best Supporting Actor in a Regular Series
* 1956: Nominated - Best Actor in a Supporting Role
 
{{start box}}
{{succession box | before = [[The Red Skelton Show]] | title = [[Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series|Emmy Award Winner - Outstanding Comedy Series]] | years = [[1953]], [[1954]] | after = [[Make Room for Daddy]]}}
{{end box}}
 
==DVD Releases==
[[Paramount Home Entertainment|Paramount Home Video]] has released all 6 Seasons of I Love Lucy on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time. They have also released all 13 episodes of '''The Lucy and Desi Comedy Hour''' but under the banner- ''I Love Lucy: The Final Seasons - 7, 8, & 9''. Bonus features include rare on-set color footage, the "Desilu/Westinghouse" promotional film, as well as deleted scenes and on-air flubs.
 
{| class="wikitable"
!Cover Art
!DVD Name
!Ep #
!Release Date
 
|-
| [[Image:Lucy 1.jpg|90px]]
| The Complete 1st Season
| 36
| [[June 7]] [[2004]]
|-
| [[Image:Lucy 2.jpg|90px]]
| The Complete 2nd Season
| 31
| [[August 31]] [[2004]]
|-
| [[Image:Lucy 3.jpg|90px]]
| The Complete 3rd Season
| 31
| [[February 1]] [[2005]]
|-
| [[Image:Lucy 4.jpg|90px]]
| The Complete 4th Season
| 30
| [[May 3]] [[2005]]
|-
| [[Image:Lucy 5.jpg|90px]]
| The Complete 5th Season
| 26
| [[August 16]] [[2005]]
|-
| [[Image:Lucy 6.jpg|90px]]
| The Complete 6th Season
| 27
| [[May 2]] [[2006]]
|-
| [[Image:Lucy 7 8 9.jpg|90px]]
| The Final Seasons 7, 8 & 9
| 13
| [[March 13]] [[2007]]
|}
 
'''Other Releases'''
 
* "I Love Lucy- Season 1" (9 Separate discs labeled "Volumes", first volume released July 2, 2002, final volume released September 23, 2003)
* "I Love Lucy- Season 1" (9 Volumes in boxset, released September 23, 2003)
* "I Love Lucy- 50th Anniversary Special" (1 disc, released October 1, 2002)
* "I Love Lucy- Seasons 1-6" (30 discs, released July 11, 2006)
 
The DVD releases feature the syndicated heart opening, and offer the original broadcast openings as bonus features. Season 6 allows viewers to choose whether to watch the episodes with the original opening or the syndicated opening. The TV Land openings are not on these DVDs, likely they are exclusive to TV Land.
 
Initially the first season was offered in volumes (similar to Paramount's Star Trek: The Original Series), with four episodes per disc (Star Trek had two episodes per disc due to its length). After the success of releasing seasons two, three, and four in slimpacks, the first season was re-released as a seven disc set, requiring new discs to be mastered and printed to include more episodes per disc so there would be fewer discs in the set. The individual volume discs for the first season are still in print, but are rare due to lack of shelf space
 
Episodes feature English closed-captioning, but only Spanish subtitles.
 
==Popular culture==
 
* On an episode of '''''[[M*A*S*H (TV series)|M*A*S*H]]''''', [[Sidney Freedman|Dr. Freedman]] remarks to CPL Walter "Radar" O'Reilly that people think '''''I Love Lucy''''' is real; although '''''I Love Lucy''''' was on TV during the [[Korean War]] it did not become popular until after the Korean conflict.
* In '''''[[The Golden Girls]]''''' episode "Son In Law Dearest" in Season 2, Blanche and Rose are watching a 12 hour '''''I Love Lucy''''' marathon. Rose asks Dorothy if she wants to join them and watch "I Like Lucy," which Blanche corrects, saying "I ''Love'' Lucy." Rose replies, "Well, I haven't seen it yet, so I don't know how I feel about it." Later in the episode, Dorothy and her daughter Kate are having a fight in the living room, so Blanche suggests that she and Rose go to the kitchen to finish the marathon on the portable TV. As Blanche drags Rose into the kitchen, Rose complains, "but that set's in black and white!"
* In another episode of '''''[[The Golden Girls]]''''' from Season 3 entitled "Three On A Couch," Blanche makes a statement about her hair being its natural color, and Dorothy replies by saying, "Yes Blanche, yours and Lucy's."
* '''''I Love Lucy''''' is one of the few television shows, particularly for its time, to inspire [[fan convention]]s and innumerable merchandising attempts.
* [["Weird Al" Yankovic]] parodied the TV show, as well as [[Toni Basil]]'s song "Mickey," in the song '''''[[Ricky (song)|Ricky]]''''' on his 1983 [["Weird Al" Yankovic (album)|debut album]], working in many of the show's classic [[schtick]]s and closing with a segment of the '''''I Love Lucy''''' theme. Yankovic also produced an album of the show's greatest musical moments entitled '''''Babalu Music'''''.
* On an episode of ''[[Match Game]]'', host [[Gene Rayburn]] posed this question "A TV listing from 1953. Monday night: CBS. ''I Love Lucy''. A typical day at the Ricardo household when Ricky brings home a stuffed moose and Lucy tries to ____________ it." The contestant and all six panelists said "cook".
* In a 1985 episode of the television series '''''[[Amazing Stories (TV series)|Amazing Stories]]''''' titled "Fine Tuning," a group of teens accidentally tune into an extrastellar broadcast in which aliens have remade '''''I Love Lucy''''' (as well as other classic television series) with alien actors and dialogue.
* When [[Dolly Parton]] appeared as host of '''''[[Saturday Night Live]]''''' in 1989, there was a scene where she and the show's cast appeared "as themselves," and she told them about her country childhood, saying that her family had no television set; but describing how her mother would regale the children with made-up tales of a "crazy redhead and her Cuban husband," so that it was obvious to the ''SNL'' cast that her mother had secret access to a TV somewhere.
* The show is referenced to in several '''''[[Seinfeld]]''''' episodes. In one Jerry says, "Who am I, [[Fred Mertz]]?" In another episode, however, he says "I have never seen a single '''''I Love Lucy''''' episode." A third episode involves Elaine reading '''''[[TV Guide]]''''' on a subway, when a man takes and informs that on one day she could have "watched three hours of Lucy!"
* In 1976, the [[Wilton Place Street Band]] made a disco version of the I Love Lucy theme entitled "Disco Lucy."
* On '''''[[Babylon 5]]''''', Ambassador Sinclair refers to himself and Captain Sheridan as "Lucy and Ethel." Sheridan responds, "Lucy and Ethel?"
* A parody of the show is seen in an episode of '''''[[The Fairly Oddparents]]'''''. In the episode, a power outage leads characters Cosmo and Wanda to jump into the television, and act out shows so that no one will suspect that the TV isn't even plugged in. One of the shows is "I Love Wanda." The 15-second parody references '''''[[Babalu]]''''', "You've got some 'splainin' to do!," the "heart on satin" background, the fact that Lucy has a baby, and Lucy's annoying manner of crying.
* In a '''''[[That's So Raven]]''''' episode, [[Raven Baxter]] watches a parody of '''''I Love Lucy''''' (featuring [[Raven Symone]] and the rest of the main cast of the show) while hallucinating from the effects of hot soup.
* '''''That '70s Show''''' did a parody in the third season in the episode "Fez Dates Donna." Fez and Donna were Ricky and Lucy, Kitty and Red were Ethel and Fred.
* On the cartoon '''''[[The Simpsons]]''''', Krusty the Clown's production studio is called Krustylu Studios in reference to Desilu Studios.
* In the movie '''''[[Rat Race (film)|Rat Race]]''''', one of the characters pretends to be a coach driver and drives a group of women (although at least one is a man in [[drag]]), dressed up as Lucy to the "Third Annual '''''I Love Lucy''''' Convention." In a deleted scene, after the women find out he wasn't their bus driver, they chase him down the road, only to run into a bus full of Desi/Ricky lookalikes.
* '''''[[In Living Color]]''''' featured a sketch titled "I Love Laquita," in which Jim Carrey impersonated Desi Arnaz and Kim Wayans impersonated Lucille Ball.
* In the '''''[[Star Trek Enterprise]]''''' episode, "[[Carbon Creek]]," [[T'Mir]] and her crew watch '''''I Love Lucy'''''; although, it is implied that this is when it is still a weekly TV series, despite the fact that in the time frame of this episode, October 1957, that was no longer true.
* In the movie 1998 version of '''''[[The Parent Trap]]''''', [[Lindsay Lohan]]'s character asks two arguing friends "Who are you, Lucy and Ethel?"
* '''''[[MADtv]]''''' made a parody of '''''I Love Lucy''''' in a few skits of its first five seasons. The skits were typically called '''''I Love Lucy''''' + (year when filmed). The goal was to present the same style and format of the original, but to have it involve risque subjects such as murder or cocaine-dealing for shock value.
* During a scene in the movie '''''Pretty Woman''''', the famous grape smashing scene can be seen playing on the television in the background.
* The show's theme song was prominently featured in a recent [[Mastercard]] commercial, only to be removed by copyright infringement laws.
* In the '''''[[Futurama]]''''' [[Christmas]] episode, "A Tale of Two Santas," the Elves turn the conveyor belt from "High" to "Lucy," referencing the famous scene in which Lucy and Ethel have to keep up with an insanely fast conveyor belt.
*In an episode of '''''[[Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (TV series)|Sabrina, The Teenage Witch]]''''', Sabrina jumps up onto a chair when she needs to speak to everyone at her work, prompting her boyfriend to quote Desi Arnaz: "Aw Lucy not another plan!"
*In the song "The Night Hank Williams Came to Town," Johnny Cash says he missed the premier of ''I Love Lucy'' to see Hank perform.
* Three XM Satellite radio channels are named Lucy, Ethel and Fred. (No Ricky)
* In an episode of ''''Moesha'''' (entitled '''I Love Moesha'''), Moe (actress / singer Brandy) imagines her friends are in an episode of I love Lucy. Moesha plays the role of (talent-less) Lucy and is eagerly attempting to get a part in 'Ricky's' show.
* In an episode of the [[Nickelodeon (TV Channel)|Nickelodeon]] show '''''[[Drake and Josh]]''''', Drake and Josh get jobs at a sushi factory packaging sushi. The scene runs identical to the "Lucy" episode where Lucy and Ethel get jobs wrapping chocolate. A few lines are actually taken from this episode.
* The [[soap opera]] '''''[[As the World Turns]]''''' did a mini-spoof of ''I Love Lucy'' called "I Love Katie" as a part of their 50th Anniversary celebration on [[March 30]], [[2006]]. Character [[Katie Peretti|Katie Kasnoff]] played Lucy, [[Mike Kasnoff]] played Ricky, and [[Henry Coleman]] played Fred and Ethel (Henry & Henrietta).
 
==References==
* Joe Garner, ''Stay Tuned: Television's Unforgettable Moments'' (Andrews McMeel Publishing; 2002) ISBN 0-7407-2693-5
* Bart Andrews, ''The 'I Love Lucy' Book'' (Doubleday & Company, Inc.; 1976)
* Coyne Steven Sanders & Tom Gilbert, ''Desilu: The Story of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz'' (William Morrow & Company, Inc.; 1993)
<references />
 
==Trivia on Cast Members==
* [[Keith Thibodeaux]] is the only main cast member still living.
* [[Doris Singleton]] (Caroline Appleby) and [[Shirley Mitchell]] (Marion Strong) are the only recurring cast members still living.
* [[William Frawley]] was the only Main Cast Member to be born in the [[1800's]]. (He was born in [[1887]]).
* Out of all of the Main and Recurring Cast Members [[Elizabeth Patterson (actress)|Elizabeth Patterson]] (Mrs. Matilda Trumbull) was to be the oldest. (Elizabeth was born in [[1875]]).
 
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
 
* [http://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards/forumdisplay.php?f=40 Sitcoms Online "I Love Lucy" Message Board]
* [http://longlivelucy.blogspot.com Long Live Lucy Blog]
* [http://east68street.com/ East 68th Street - ''Everything "I Love Lucy"'']
* {{imdb title|id=0043208|title=I Love Lucy}}
** {{imdb title|id=0297959|title=I Love Lucy's 50th Anniversary Special}}
** {{imdb title|id=0050033|title=The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour}}
* [http://www.youns.com/lucy Everything Lucy]
* [http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/I/htmlI/ilovelucy/ilovelucy.htm Encyclopedia of Television]
* [http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=%22archive+of+american%22+%22bob+carroll%2C+madelyn%22&pl=1&lv=1 Archive of American Television Video Interview with ''I Love Lucy'' writers Madelyn Pugh Davis and Bob Carroll, Jr.]
* [http://www.tvland.com/shows/lucy/ ''I Love Lucy'' on TVLand.com]
* [http://www.tvweek.com/page.cms?pageId=552 ''I Love Lucy'' retrospective on TVWeek.com]
 
[[Category:1950s American television series]]
[[Category:1951 television program debuts]]
[[Category:1957 television program series endings]]
[[Category:American comedy television series]]
[[Category:Nielsen Ratings winners]]
[[Category:Sitcoms]]
[[Category:Television series by CBS Paramount Television]]
[[Category:Television shows set in New York]]
 
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