Hey Mulligan! The Mickey Rooney Show



This month our blog series is “It’s Their Show.” Today we are taking a look at The Mickey Rooney Show. This show debuted on NBC in 1954. It was on for one season, producing 39 episodes.

📷singingnewstv.com

Rooney plays Mickey Mulligan, a Guest Relations Staff member who works at a television network, hoping to land an acting career by taking acting lessons at night. It’s interesting that they set the show at a television network, because only 56% of families had televisions in 1954. It’s also interesting that Rooney was playing a young adult, although he was in his mid-thirties.

Mulligan is not content with his salary of $47.62 a week. Lucky for him, his girlfriend Pat (Carla Balenda) is a secretary to the studio program manager, Charles Brown (John Hubbard). Rounding out the cast is the head of the network (John Hoyt) and Mickey’s best friend Freddie (Joey Forman). Freddie also works at the network, and the two friends often grab lunch at the Hamburger Hut.

📷internetarchive.com

To make ends meet, Mickey lives with his parents, Joe (Regis Toomey) and Nell (Claire Carleton). Joe is a retired police officer who met his wife when he arrested her because she was a burlesque dancer.

There were a lot of talented people behind the camera on this show. Blake Edwards was one of the creators,  an executive producer, and one of the writers on the show. He would write and produce several shows including Richard Diamond Private Detective and Peter Gunn before moving into movies in the sixties. Later in life he would be known for the Pink Panther movies and marrying Julie Andrews.

Van Alexander was an arranger for Capitol Records, and he produced the soundtrack for the show. He was a collaborator with Ella Fitzgerald and worked on Bewitched and I Dream of Jeanne as well as big-screen productions.

📷BBC.com Van Alexander

Leslie H. Martinson was one of the primary directors for the show, working on 33 of the episodes. In a Television Academy interview, he discussed working on the series. He said he often had to shoot around Mickey’s role because Mickey was off at the racecourse and then they’d film him when he showed up. He said Rooney was a genius with the way he reacted to things and often his expressions made the entire scene worthwhile.

NBC scheduled the show on Saturday night against The Jackie Gleason Show, which was one of the most popular shows on television at the time. There were some derogatory comments made about Gleason by Rooney that got leaked to the public, and it caused a lot of turmoil for the show before it even aired.

📷amazon.com

The show started with a tagline, sort of like the beginning of That Girl had. While Rooney is boxing, someone yells “Hey Mulligan.” I watched episode 8 of the first year, “Tiger Mulligan.” In this episode, Mulligan’s parents are watching television when Mickey comes home from the gym where he’s working out to be an amateur boxer. His dad is ecstatic, but his mom is not too happy. His girlfriend agrees with her, and she doesn’t like having to sit around by herself at night. His mom, who is a fun character, convinces him that he’s trained too hard and is overly weak. She sets him up by gluing some items to the shelf and making a jar impossible to open. He thinks his mom is stronger than he is and that he needs to pull out of the fight. However, his dad realizes what she’s up to and when he calls her on it, Mickey gets excited for the match. However, at the ring he realizes that his opponent looks like a weakling but has a strong right arm. The fight ends with both of them passing out when they see blood. I really enjoyed the writing, the characters, and the music; I will say that the laugh track was a bit hard to get used to though.

I know something has to go up against the big hits on the television schedule, but it seems like this would have been a fun show if it had competed against a show that wasn’t in the top ten. The entire series is available on DVD if you want to check it out.