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The Great Gildersleeve

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You're a brii-ii-iight boy, Leroy!—Harold Peary at the height of his popularity as classic radio's Great Gildersleeve.

The Great Gildersleeve (1941-1957) was the arguable founding father of the spin-off program, as well as one of the first true situation comedies (as opposed to sketch programs) in broadcast history. Hooked around a character who had been a staple on the classic radio hit Fibber McGee and Molly, The Great Gildersleeve enjoyed its greatest period in the 1940s, when Harold Peary graduated the character from the earlier show into the sitcom and in a quartet of likeable feature films at the height of the show's popularity.

From Wistful Vista to Summerfield

On Fibber McGee and Molly, Peary's Gildersleeve was a pompous windbag who became a consistent McGee nemesis ("You're a haa-aa-aa-aard man, McGee!" became a Gildersleeve catch phrase). But he also became a popular enough windbag that Kraft Foods---looking primarily to promote its Parkay margarine spread---sponsored a new series with Peary's Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve (the character assumed several first names on Fibber McGee and Molly) as the central, slightly softened, and slightly befuddled focus of a lively new family.

Premiering on NBC on August 31, 1941, The Great Gildersleeve moved the title character from the McGees' Wistful Vista to Summerfield, where Gildersleeve now oversaw his late sister's estate and took on the rearing of his orphaned niece and nephew, Marjorie (Lurene Tuttle followed by Louise Erickson and Mary Lee Robb) and Leroy (Walter Tetley) Forester. Gildersleeve's famous catch phrase was now altered to, "You're a brii-ii-iight boy, Leroy!"). In a striking forerunner to such later television hits as Bachelor Father and Family Affair, both of which are centered on well-to-do uncles taking in their deceased siblings' children, Gildersleeve was a bachelor raising two children while administering a girdle manufacturing company ("If you want a better corset, of course it's a Gildersleeve") and serving as Summerfield's water commissioner, between time with the ladies and nights with the boys. Indeed, The Great Gildersleve may have been the first broadcast show to be centered on a single parent balancing between child-rearing, work, and social life, done with taste and genuine wit, often at the expense of Gildersleeve's now slightly understated pomposity.

The key to the show was Peary, one of the most gifted voice actors of his generation (and several others), whose booming voice and facility with moans, groans, laughs, shudders, and inflection was as close to body language and facial suggestion as a voice got. Peary was so effective, and Gildersleeve became so familiar a character, that he was referenced and satirised periodically in other comedies and in a few cartoons. (No small irony there: Peary in later life included cartoon voicings in his work after his radio stardom.)

Family and Neighbors

Family

Aiding and abetting the periodically frantic life in the Gildersleeve home was family cook and housekeeper Birdy Lee Coggins (Lillian Randolph), who was the real brains and caretaker of the household. In some of the episodes Gildersleeve has to acknowledge Birdie's common sense approach to some of the predicaments he finds himself in. In doing so, the show was definitely avant garde when it came to race relations (Birdie is black) within American society.

By the late 1940s, Marjorie slowly matures to a young woman of marrying age. During the 9th season (Sept 1949-June 1950) Marjorie meets and marries (May 10) Walter "Bronco" Thompson (Richard Crenna), star football player at the local college. The event was popular enough that Look Magazine devoted five pages in its May 23, 1950 issue to the wedding. After living in the same household for a few years with their twin babies Ronnie and Linda, the newlyweds move next door to keep the expanding Gildersleeve clan close together.

Leroy, aged 10-11 during most of the 1940s, is the "All-American Boy" who grudgingly practices his piano lessons, gets bad report cards, fights with his friends and can't seem to remember not to slam the door. Although he is loyal to his Uncle Mort, he is always the first to deflate his ego with a well-placed "HA!!!" or "What a character!" Beginning in the Spring of 1949, he finds himself in junior high and is at last allowed to grow up. Most notable is his relationships with the girls in the Bullard home across the street. From an awkward adolescent who hangs his head, kicks the ground and giggles whenever Brenda Knickerbocker comes near, he willfully transforms himself overnight (Nov 28, 1951) into a more mature young man when Babs Winthrop (both girls played by Barbara Whiting) approaches him about studying together. From then on, he branches out with interests in driving, playing the drums and dreaming of a musical career.

Neighbors and Friends

Outside the home, Gildersleeve's closest association was with the cantankerous estate executor Judge Horace Hooker (Earle Ross), whom he had many battles with during the first few broadcast seasons. After a change in script writers from Leonard L. Evenson (August 1941 to December 1942) to the writing team of John Whedon and Sam Moore in January 1943, the confrontations slowly subside and a true friendship slowly blossoms.

Joining Throckmorton's circle of close acquaintances during the second season (September 1942) are Richard Q. Peavey (Richard LeGrand), the friendly neighborhood pharmacist, whose famous line "Well now, I wouldn't say that" always elicited giggles from the studio audience, and Floyd Munson (Arthur Q. Bryan), the rough-around-the-edges neighborhood barber.

In the fourth season, (Oct. 8, 1944) these three friends, along with Police Chief Donald Gates (Ken Christy), form the nucleus of the Jolly Boys Club whose activities revolve around practicing barbershop quartet songs between sips of coke.

Adding spice to Gildersleeve's life are the women who come and go: the Georgia widow Leila Ransom (Shirley Mitchell), whom he almost marries (June 27, 1943), and the school principal Eve Goodwin (Bea Benaderet), who was another close call at the alter of matrimony (June 25, 1944). After almost being trapped a third time (1948-49 season) to Leila's cousin Adeline Fairchild (Una Merkel) Throckmorton learns his lesson and makes sure his future involvement with women is much more circumspect. He dates Nurse Katherine Milford (Cathy Lewis) as well as the sisters of his surly neighbor from across the street, Ellen Bullard Knickerbocker (Martha Scott) and Paula Bullard Winthrop (Jean Bates), in an on-and-off fashion over many years, making sure the situation doesn't progress beyond the just friends state (although he's always after that special kiss).

To add adversity to Gildersleeve's world is the aforementioned surly neighbor from across the street: Rumson Bullard (Gale Gordon), the retired millionaire (who goes from being a happily married man with two children to being a bachelor with some sisters and nieces living with him on and off — there was a definite continuity problem on the Gildersleeve writing staff) who was more pompous than the Gildersleeve character from Wistful Vista. In numerous episodes, Mr. Bullard alters between being chummy with Gildy in order to get something he wants from him, to calling him a "nincompoop water buffalo", to courting the same women (namely Katherine Milford) whom Gildy is currently dating.

Decline and Fall

Beginning in 1950, the show's momentum changed as the legendary CBS talent raids of the time began to factor in. Though the highlight of the raids was Jack Benny jumping from NBC (and taking Burns and Allen with him, prodding NBC to offer big new deals to Fred Allen and Phil Harris & Alice Faye), Harold Peary was convinced to move The Great Gildersleeve to CBS. The problem was that Kraft, the sponsor, refused to sanction the move. Peary's CBS contract of course prevented him from appearing on NBC as a star performer, prompting Willard Waterman's hiring to succeed Peary as Gildy.

Waterman and Peary were longtime friends from Chicago radio; Waterman had replaced Peary as the Sheriff in Tom Mix, Ralston Sharpshooter in the 1930s. His voice was a near-perfect match for Peary's, though he refused to use Peary's signature laugh. Peary reportedly sued unsuccessfully to retain the right to both the Gildersleeve character and vocalisms, but Waterman agreed with Peary that only one man held the patent on the Gildersleeve laugh.

Starting in mid-1952, some of the program's long time characters (Judge Hooker, Floyd Munson, Marjorie and her husband) would be missing for months at a time. In their place were a few new ones (Mr Cooley the Egg Man and Mrs Potter the hypochodriac) who would last only a month or so. Likewise, Gildy's love interests would suddenly disappear for unexplained reasons to be replaced with new women who would only last a few episodes.

The year 1954 saw a drastic change in the show's format. After missing the fall schedule, it finally appeared in November as 15 minute episodes that aired 5 times a week, Sunday through Thursday from 10:15 to 10:30 p.m. Only Gildy, Leroy and Birdie remained on a continuing basis. All other characters were seldom heard and gone were Marjorie and her family as well as the studio audience, live orchestra and original scripts.

The radio show also suffered from the advent of television. A televised version of the show, also starring Waterman, premiered in 1955 but lived for only 39 episodes. During that year, both the 15 minute radio show and the television show were being produced simultaneously. The radio series was tapped on days when the TV production was inactive. Because of the gueling schedule for everyone involved, the program quality suffered and only a few examples of the quarter hour shows have survived. By the time the radio show entered its final season, The Great Gildersleeve's remaining radio audience heard recordings of previous episodes.

The TV version is considered now to be somewhat of an insult to the Great Gildersleeve legacy. Gildersleeve himself was sketched as less loveable, more pompous, and a more overt womanizer, an insult amplified when Waterman himself said the key to the television version's failure was its director not having known a thing about the radio classic.


Movies

The Great Gildersleeve was not the only radio classic to be sent to the movies, but it may have been one of the better executed of the breed. The first film, The Great Gildersleeve in 1942, carried Peary and Randolph from the radio cast to the screen, with Nancy Gates as Marjorie and Freddie Mercer as Leroy. Walter Tetley, who played Leroy on radio, couldn't be seen on screen as Leroy because he was actually a child impersonator; the screen role was assumed by Freddie Mercer.

Gildersleeve on Broadway followed, in 1943; the story is centered on Leroy as the odd boy out as everyone around him is falling in love. Gildersleeve's Bad Day (1943) followed the mishaps around Gildy's call to jury duty; and, Gildersleeve's Ghost (1944) brings Gildy's relatives Randolph and Johnson up from the dead to help his campaign for police commissioner.

Peary went on to continue his career (often billing himself as Hal Peary) in films and television well into the 1970s. He died of a heart attack in 1985.

Trivia

Many of original episodes were co-written by John Whedon, the father of Tom Whedon (who wrote The Golden Girls), and grandfather of Joss Whedon (creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer).

Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve's middle name was "Philharmonic." Gildy admits as much at the end of "Gildersleeve's Diary" on the Fibber McGee and Molly series (10/22/40).

In full Gildersleeve character, at the height of the show's popularity, Harold Peary recorded three albums reading popular children's stories for Capitol Records, in heavy-bookleted four-disc 78 rpm record albums (the way albums were configured before the invention of the long-playing record). Stories for Children, Told in His Own Way by the Great Gildersleeve, was released in 1945 and was Capitol's first-ever such release for children. With orchestral accompaniment, it featured "Puss in Boots," "Rumpelstiltskin," and "Jack and the Beanstalk." The second album, Children's Stories as Told by the Great Gildersleeve, in 1946, featured "Hansel and Gretel" and "The Brave Little Tailor," again with orchestral accompaniment. The third and final album in the series, reverting to the title of the first and released in 1947, included "Snow White and Rose Red" and "Cinderella," once more with full orchestral accompaniment. The music was done by Robert Emmett Dolan. And to make sure stories would be unmistakably Gildersleevian without compromising their core integrity, Capitol brought in The Great Gildersleeve's chief writers, Sam Moore and John Whedon, to adapt them to Gildy's unmistakable bearing.

The Gildersleeve character was parodied in a Bugs Bunny cartoon called "Hare Conditioned", in which the rabbit distracts a menacing taxidermist by telling him that he sounds "just like that guy on the radio, the Great Gildersneeze!" The taxidermist responds with "Really?!" followed by Harold Peary's famous chuckle.

In an early episode of The Great Gildersleeve, Throckmorton was given the key of the city to Gildersleeve, Connecticut, a village in the town of Portland, Connecticut.

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