The Jim Nabors Hour: The Marines Want Variety

Before I get into my blog for the day, I just wanted to thank those of you who follow my blog and have been with me on this journey. Today is my 500th blog. I remember writing my first one and wondering if I would be able to come up with enough topics to last a year. Here we are almost ten years later!

Our theme for March is “Variety is the Spice of Life.” We are taking a look at several variety shows that debuted in the sixties and seventies. We’re ending the month with The Jim Nabors Hour.

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If people only knew Jim Nabors as Gomer Pyle, they were in for a treat once they tuned into this show. This show debuted on CBS in 1969 and ran until 1971. However, Nabors didn’t leave all of his Gomer Pyle life behind. Ronnie Schell and Frank Sutton, who played Duke and Sgt. Carter, joined this one as regulars along with Karen Morrow. In addition, the Tony Mordente Dancers and the Nabors Kids were available to help performances.

Nabors was tired of playing Gomer after five years and decided to end the show. He was often a guest on The Carol Burnett Show, and she was one of his best friends, so he opted for a variety show of his own.

His first guest star was Andy Williams, and Don Knotts also made an appearance.

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As a fun feature, each episode had a guest announcer who read the introduction to the show and shared the guests for the day. Mavis Nabors, Jim’s mom, was the first.

Nabors acquired an impressive guest list including Carol Burnett, Glen Campbell, Johnny and June Cash, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Rock Hudson, Shirley Jones, Ricky Nelson, Don Rickles, Kate Smith, and Jane Wyman.

The show started out strong and was #12 at the end of season one. It continued to rein in good ratings while it was on the air. Even though it was in the top thirty, it was canceled along with all of the other shows that were part of the 1971 rural purge.

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According to YouTube channel’s “Classic Rural Comedies Facts and Trivia,” NBC wasn’t happy Nabors wanted to end his Gomer Pyle show when the ratings were still so good. However, they also didn’t want ABC or CBS to sign their star, so they reluctantly gave in to a variety show. Partway through season one, the network put pressure on Nabors to limit Sutton’s appearances and eventually demanded he get fired. Nabors refused, and many people assume that’s why it got thrown in with the rural sitcoms in the purge.

Sadly, there isn’t a lot of information about this show. A handful of shows are available on
YouTube, but most of them are no longer available to watch. No one talked about this show during their television academy interviews, so stories are hard to come by about this variety series. Many people have fond memories of the show, and I guess that has to be enough for us to appreciate this show which ended before its time.

Little House on the Prairie: Drama On and Off the Set

This month we are visiting with some of our favorite families. I absolutely would have included The Waltons this month if we had not covered the show recently. However, another historic family, the Ingalls, is on the schedule. Little House on the Prairie was on the air for nine seasons. Many of us got to know the family through Laura Ingalls Wilder’s books.

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Television producer Ed Friendly acquired the film and television rights from the books. Oddly enough, the other show Friendly is known for as producer is Rowan and Martin’s Laugh In. He decided to make Little House a two-hour pilot and asked Michael Landon to direct it. Landon agreed to do so if he could also play Pa, Charles Ingalls. The pilot aired in March of 1974, and in September the series began.

Along with starring in the show, Landon continued to direct as well; he directed 87 of the 204 episodes. The other directors included William F. Claxton, Victor French, Maury Dexter, and Leo Penn.

Landon also got in on the writing of several episodes. He had written several scripts for Bonanza when he appeared on that show, and several of them were recycled for Little House.

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Like The Waltons, while this series was often happy with comedic notes, it dealt with many serious issues as well, including alcoholism, drug addiction, poverty, racism, child abuse, and rape. The show focused on the struggles and joys of a pioneer family living in the late 1800s.

Along with Landon, Karen Grassle played Ma, Melissa Gilbert played Laura, Melissa Sue Anderson was Mary, with Lindsay and Sidney Greenbush alternating as Carrie. In addition to the Ingalls family, other town folk on the show included Nellie Oleson (Alison Arngrim), Nels Oleson (Richard Bull), Harriet Oleson (Katherine “Scottie” MacGregor, and Miss Beadle (Charlotte Stewart).

Some of the guest stars included Willie Aames, Anne Archer, Lew Ayres, Hermione Baddeley, Ken Berry, Ray Bolger, Ernest Borgnine, Johnny and June Carter Cash, Burl Ives, Charles Lane, Vera Miles, Sean Penn, and Ray Walston.

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The theme song, “The Little House,” was written and conducted by David Rose. Rose won two Emmys for his work on the show.Although the pilot ranked #3 for the 1974 ratings, the first two seasons were much lower. Season 3 found the show on Monday nights where it remained one of the highest-ranking series through season 7. Season 8 had a significant decline and season 9, with the loss of most of the family members, never really caught on with viewers. However, season two is the only year the show was not in the top 30. The schedule was a bit crazy when you analyze it. Although, this show did have to compete with The Jeffersons and WKRP in Cincinnati, because they were half-hour shows and this was an hour show, many people probably continued watching the second half. For many of these years, there were up to six different shows in this time spot on CBS and many of them changed from year to year, so there were rarely shows in this spot against Little House for more than a month or two.

After eight seasons, both Michael Landon and Karen Grassle were ready to move on; however, Landon did stay on as a director and writer. The show focused on Laura Almanzo and the younger generation for the ninth and final season.

The show was loved by critics as well as viewers and received sixteen Emmy nominations. The series won four of them, all for music and cinematography. The only cast member nominated was Melissa Sue Anderson; she lost to Sada Thompson for Family.

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Viewers were not ready to leave the Ingalls for good. Three made-for-tv movies were written: Little House: Look Back to Yesterday in 1983, Little House: The Last Farewell and Little House: Bless All the Dear Children, both in 1984. In 2008 the Ingalls’ lives also became a musical at the Guthrie Theater.

One fun story is when the show moved from Paramount to MGM Studios in the late seventies, they were uncovering sets so they could build new ones and found the yellow brick road from the Wizard of Oz which delighted the kids in the cast; I’m guessing it delighted many of the adults as well.

Another fun story was learning what the cast ate on the show. Since beef stew was a popular meal in the 1800s, the family often had that for its meal and when they did, they were actually eating Dinty Moore Beef Stew. When they had chicken, it was KFC that appeared on their plates.

The kids must have been troopers because each episode took about seven days to shoot. They were on location at Big Sky Ranch for four days and in the studio for interior shots about three days. In addition, they were probably witnesses to off-air scenes that were not the best. Grassle and Landon were not close, probably because his role seemed much bigger than hers and he was directing as well. Unfortunately, both Grassle and Landon were alcoholics, and alcohol was part of their life on set. During season four, Grassle quit when she realized the seriousness of her problem. Landon was never able to kick his dependence and died from pancreatitis.

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Gilbert said that Michael Landon had interesting ways to inspire his kids to get emotional on the set. He worked himself up to become very emotional and with eyes full of tears would ask her “Do you know how much I love you?” which would bring tears to her eyes as well.

It might have been a way to get her to cry, but it was not a lie. Gilbert lost her own father when she was eleven, and Landon became a second father to her. He often had Gilbert at his house on the weekends. She said it was a huge house and the kids ran through the house at will. Often Landon would hide behind doorways and jump out and scare them. Gilbert said Landon provided her with a lot of great advice. The most memorable for her was that nothing is more of a priority than home and family, and no success is as important as loving your people and contributing to a community. And to have fun above all in your career.

That is sage fatherly advice for us all to remember.