Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: DougR Date: 23 Apr 02 - 08:41 PM Now don't get carried away, Kendall. :>) DougR |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: 53 Date: 23 Apr 02 - 09:06 PM The show's musicical director did the whistling on the intro of the show. I just learned that last night. Bob |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: WFDU - Ron Olesko Date: 23 Apr 02 - 09:41 PM I also noticed an episode of Andy Griffith last night where there were a couple of African-American faces in a crowd scene. Granted it is not the same as having a regular character, but by doing that simple gesture I think they were trying to attempt to give Mayberry a stab at reflecting a real town. I grew up in a New Jersey town during the 1960's and the African-American population was very, very small at the time. Now in 2002 the town is happily diverse, not only a much larger African-American community but also one of the largest Filipino populations in the country as well as a strong Asian community. The town celebrates diversity with annual festivals and events that everyone celebrates. It would have been unheard of in 1960. I'm not trying to say the town is perfect, but there have been substantial changes made since the 1960's. People learn and grow. The initial comments slamming Andy Griffith were uncalled for in my estimation. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: catspaw49 Date: 23 Apr 02 - 10:22 PM RE: Greg Morris An early Dick Van Dyke show had a lot of trouble being approved by the network brass. In this show, a flashback, Dick is convinced that their infant Richie was switched for another baby at the hospital and he calls the other couple to come over to their home. The "punch line" for the show was that when the couple showed up they were black. The man was played by Greg Morris. Even this was a hard sell to the brass though. Spaw |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: khandu Date: 23 Apr 02 - 11:07 PM Do any of you remember Jack Nicholson playing a part in one Andy Griffith Show episode? He did! khandu
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Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: CarolC Date: 24 Apr 02 - 12:10 AM I saw the Nicholson episode! |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: CarolC Date: 24 Apr 02 - 12:15 AM Actually, I think the makers of the Andy Griffith show did see it as being at least in part to educate. One of Opie's friends was Jewish, and I think the show was groundbreaking in that respect also. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: irishajo Date: 24 Apr 02 - 11:26 AM The Beverly Hillbillies apparently provides good Sunday School material. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: thosp Date: 25 Apr 02 - 12:49 AM i loved the Andy Griffith Show and i still do --- as for it taking on socially relevent issues - it did - i watch the reruns on tvland --- (which was recently added to my cable vision package) and have already seen a few shows that dealt with womens rights - i'm sure other social issues were also touched on ---- bottom line it was wholesome family entertainment --- i remember three generations of my family watching it together every week-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- on another note Jac H of Elektra --- how about rereleasing D'ian and the GReenbriar Boys? peace (Y) thosp |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: SharonA Date: 25 Apr 02 - 02:15 PM Re "The Dick van Dyke Show": According to this site that GUEST referred us to earlier, Greg Morris appeared in three episodes of the show. As catspaw said, he played the character Mr. Peters in the baby-switch episode "That's My Boy" (9/25/1963), and played Mr. Peters again in the episode "The Last Chapter" (6/1/1966). Does anyone remember that 1966 episode? The third "Dick Van Dyke" episode Morris appeared in was "Bupkis" (3/10/1965), where he played Frank Mandalay. If I remember correctly, Mandalay was an old Army buddy of Rob Petrie, and together they confronted another Army buddy who had recorded and released a song the three of them had written together – but without the others' permission. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: Lonesome EJ Date: 25 Apr 02 - 02:47 PM I remember "Bupkis". I also remember it seemed like an odd song title for a goyim like Rob Petrie to come up with. :>} |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: 53 Date: 25 Apr 02 - 10:14 PM What episode did Jack play in and what was it about? |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: SharonA Date: 29 Apr 02 - 05:05 PM Well, Bob, it took a while but I finally stumbled upon the answer to your question. Jack Nicholson appeared in the episode "Aunt Bee, the Juror". If I remember correctly, this was the one where Aunt Bee thought that the guy on trial was innocent while the other 11 jurors disagreed, and she held her ground until finally another guy either confessed to or was caught for the crime. I don't remember whether or not Nicholson was the young man on trial. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: GUEST,Nerd Date: 30 Apr 02 - 06:02 PM Actually, Greg Morris only really appeared in two Dick Van Dyke episodes. "The Last Chapter" is an episode where scenes from Rob's memoirs are replayed. In other words, one of those "we're over budget, so we'll show old scenes" episodes. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: 53 Date: 30 Apr 02 - 09:42 PM How did the Dick Van Dyke show come up in this? |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: catspaw49 Date: 30 Apr 02 - 09:55 PM Kevin Bacon appeared in both. Spaw |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: CarolC Date: 01 May 02 - 12:25 AM As a sperm. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: CarolC Date: 01 May 02 - 12:25 AM (because I don't think he was born yet) |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: GUEST,Nerd Date: 01 May 02 - 03:42 PM Bob, sorry for the drift into Dick Van Dyke. It was just that Greg Morris (theoretically) appeared in both, and the whole issue of racial representation in the show was brought up by several posters. Quite a thread drift from Andy Griffith and the Dillards...but Jerry Van Dyke played the banjo in several DVD episodes :-) classic TV nerd |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: Steve Latimer Date: 01 May 02 - 03:49 PM Yeah, but it was one of them there funny banjers with four strings. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: Nerd Date: 02 May 02 - 02:27 AM Hey, Bob TV guide voted Andy Griffith the 9th best TV show ever. Thought you might like to know. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: SharonA Date: 02 May 02 - 09:32 AM Nerd: Yeah, but they voted "Seinfeld" the number-one best show ever. I'm still scratching my head over that one. I don't know why it's even in the top 10 (so I think "Andy Griffith" should be, at worst, the 8th best!). |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: Murph10566 Date: 02 May 02 - 09:49 AM Hal Smith (the self-jailing drunk, Otis) was originally from upstate New York, and sang in my Dad's band, before heading west to Hollywood, fame & Mayberry... Another upstate warbler who 'made it' on the small screen so long ago was Kirby Grant... Remember him on Saturday Mornings ? M. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: GUEST,Nerd Date: 02 May 02 - 11:16 AM To each his/her own. I love Seinfeld. But then I grew up in the neighborhood where the characters live and spent mant a college night at the Diner where they hang out. Interestingly for folk/pop fans, this diner is called "Monk's" in the show, but is actually called Tom's (they always show the exterior so that "Tom's" is off screen to the left, and the only visible word is "Restaurant.") It is the same "Tom's Diner" about which Suzanne Vega wrote the song "Tom's Diner." We went to the same University, and she also used to hang out there, but about 5 years before me...
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Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: 53 Date: 07 May 02 - 03:13 PM TV Land does not show any reruns of the Andy Griffith show now so the only way I'll be able to see them is once a week on Ch. 15 out of Chicago. Boy this is going to send me into a tailspin. Bob |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: Fortunato Date: 07 May 02 - 03:54 PM Oh, how I long for the good old nostalgia of yesteryear, it's sort of like deju vu and alzheimers mixed, I know I've forgotten it before but I know I miss it still, even if it never really happened. I'm off to Mt. Airy, to stay in the Mayberry Motor Inn and eat at the Snappy Lunch in a month. Maybe I'll remember what didn't happen again. chance |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: catspaw49 Date: 07 May 02 - 04:18 PM Yo! BOB........TV LAND still shows the Andy Griffith Show a couple of times a day. CLICK HERE......daily schedules with episode guides are there too. Spaw |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: Lonesome EJ Date: 07 May 02 - 04:18 PM As I grow older, I find great solace in old black and white movies and TV shows. Bogart, Bacall, Tracey, Hitchcock, film noire, Western Epics, plots that are clever and intricate, characters that are strongly drawn, moral issues with clear concepts of Good and Evil, where Dignity, Intelligence and Right Action reap reward. The notion of "corniness" doesn't trouble me as much as it used to, since what passes for "Cool" these days I mainly perceive as shallow and banal. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show From: 53 Date: 07 May 02 - 08:41 PM Thanks Spaw |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show & Dillards From: van lingle Date: 07 May 02 - 10:01 PM Steve-o mentions the Country Boys appearing in an episode of Andy G. Whenever I tell someone I saw Clarence and Roland White playing Bluegrass on that show they tell me it was actually the Dillards. Nice to know I'm not totally bonkers.vl |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show & Dillards From: Steve-o Date: 08 May 02 - 01:03 PM You betcha, Van Lingle. Whoever tells you the Kentucky Colonels (Country Boys) were the Dillards doesn't know his/her Bluegrass. And you sure as hell can tell the diff between Rodney (ugh!) Dillard and Clarence White on guitar!!! |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show & Dillards From: Steve Latimer Date: 08 May 02 - 01:36 PM Okay, Which episode did the Country Boys play in? I thought I had seen every episode, and I'm pretty sure that any I episode I saw featuring the Darlings, they were played by the Dillards. Did the Country Boys appear as themselves?
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Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show & Dillards From: 53 Date: 08 May 02 - 08:13 PM The Country Boys played in the episode in which they played Whoa Mule. The one about the folk music album. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show & Dillards From: Steve Latimer Date: 08 May 02 - 08:33 PM Hmm, I don't recall that one. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show & Dillards From: Steve-o Date: 09 May 02 - 12:30 PM If you're truly interested, go to Roland White's website, and you'll see a picture right there of The Country Boys and Andy Griffith playing, on that episode. They played themselves, and there is some question as to whether they were featured in one or two episodes- I believe it was two. |
Subject: RE: Andy Griffith Show & Dillards From: van lingle Date: 09 May 02 - 07:57 PM Thanks for the Roland White website mention, Steve-o. He's had one helluva career. vl |
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