Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 91. He was probably 61 or 62 when that Lucy show was shot. No - he was not a spring chicken, but I'm that age now and I could do a cartwheel. Probably just one... But that's all that musical number needed
I applaud you both for your ability. I didn't mean the term to be insulting. I thought any variant of "old" would be too cruel.Lkeller said:Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 91. He was probably 61 or 62 when that Lucy show was shot. No - he was not a spring chicken, but I'm that age now and I could do a cartwheel. Probably just one... But that's all that musical number needed.
I have heard that, too. I have always wondered how, if the show had been renewed, the "Hollywood Squares" lineup at the opening and closing of the show would have looked. Reed would have been out, but somehow, presumably, Robbie Rist (cousin Oliver) would have had to be added in there, too. Greg was supposedly leaving for college, so this would have meant a reduced role for Barry Williams. The theme song might have had to be changed, as well.vjm said:Reed felt it was so stupid he refused to appear. Schwartz was so pi$$ed off at Reed for "going on strike", that if the show had been renewed for season 6, Mike Brady would have been killed off.ShawnHill1 said:As far as Reed, I believe it was recently discussed here about and his time on The Brady Bunch...although he got along very well with his castmates, he always thought that much of the material was beneath his acting talents. It came to a boiling point at the end of the original series, when he didn't appear in the series finale. I always wonder why if he hated the show so much, why come back for the reunions and revivals series. I guess he had that much affection for his castmates or money talk$ (or both). At least Tina Louise stuck to her principles for several years, refusing to appear in any of the reunion movies.
All of the original Brady daughters skipped at least one of the reunion specials, except for (most notably) The Brady Brides. Apparently, getting married was enough of an incentive for all of the original "daughters" to appear!Ultimajock said:...Plumb claims she was more than willing to do the variety hour, but already had commitments to NBC for movies-of-the-week and guest shots, so she couldn't agree to the five-year option that Sid & Marty Krofft were demanding all the participants commit to...ixnay said:Eve Plumb was on The Brady Bunch, The Brady Brides, and The Bradys, but there was a different Jan on The Brady Bunch Hour (Geri Reischl, per Brooks and Marsh). Why did Plumb do a Tina Louise regarding Hour? Or was Plumb otherwise occupied?
michael hagerty said:bpatrick said:onairb said:IMDB shows Reed appeared in 22 episodes of 'Mannix'...initially as a sergeant, later promoted to Lieutenant. Character actors Ward Wood(listed in Brooks and Marsh) and Jack Ging(not credited in that book) were the other lieutenants.
Tim Brooks, in his "Complete Directory of Prime Time TV Stars," simply says that Jack Ging was a frequent supporting player on "Mannix" in the late '60s and early '70s but gives no dates as to his time on the show. It always seemed to me that Ward Wood (Lt. Art Malcolm) and Reed alternated weeks, perhaps because of Reed's shooting schedule on "The Brady Bunch."
If Reed had alternated weeks, he would have had 22 episodes by the end of season two. The show ran eight. And, as noted before, both shows were shot on the Paramount lot or a few minutes' drive away. Neither required Reed for more than a few minutes of screen time.
bpatrick said:I also recall, when Gary Morton died, the obits listed his age as 74. If that's true, he would have been born in the 1920s or possibly early 1930s and Lucy would have been a decade or two older. I always thought he and Desi were the same age.
Lkeller said:Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 91.
Dighton Rockhead said:Lkeller said:Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 91.
That means Gale Gordon was 82 at the time of Lucy's ill-fated Aaron Spelling sit-com "Life With Lucy"...on which Gordon co-starred.
Looking back....It was really very sad to watch Lucy and Gale Gordon try to re-capture the golden glory they shared during the days of CBS' "The Lucy Show" and "Here's Lucy".
Aaron Spelling: THIS WAS YOUR FAULT ! ! !
Secondary fault goes to ABC
Dighton Rockhead said:Lkeller said:Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 91.
That means Gale Gordon was 82 at the time of Lucy's ill-fated Aaron Spelling sit-com "Life With Lucy"...on which Gordon co-starred.
Looking back....It was really very sad to watch Lucy and Gale Gordon try to re-capture the golden glory they shared during the days of CBS' "The Lucy Show" and "Here's Lucy".
Aaron Spelling: THIS WAS YOUR FAULT ! ! !
Secondary fault goes to ABC
FredLeonard said:(Ball) also was a terrible executive and ran Desilu into the ground after Desi left. She owes most of her success to Desi. She was funnier with Desi than she ever was later and it was Desi who creates and built the business. After Desi, she just ran on inertia.
FredLeonard said:Dighton Rockhead said:Lkeller said:Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 91.
That means Gale Gordon was 82 at the time of Lucy's ill-fated Aaron Spelling sit-com "Life With Lucy"...on which Gordon co-starred.
Looking back....It was really very sad to watch Lucy and Gale Gordon try to re-capture the golden glory they shared during the days of CBS' "The Lucy Show" and "Here's Lucy".
Aaron Spelling: THIS WAS YOUR FAULT ! ! !
Secondary fault goes to ABC
Aaron Spelling played a hillbilly in a gas station Lucy, Ricky, Fred and Ethel meet on their cross-country trip to California. If Lucy and Desi had given him more acting he gigs, maybe he'd never have become a schlock producer.
That said, Lucy just couldn't pull off playing a grandma. Maybe because Lucy had issues about getting old and still insisted on being "glamorous." It wasn't such a bad concept for a show. Too bad they didn't go to the star of two other 50s sitcoms: "Life with Elizabeth" and "Date with the Angels."
Another problem: Lucy had a well deserved reputation for physical comedy. She wasn't that good as a comic actress when you take away props and pratfalls. She also was a terrible executive and ran Desilu into the ground after Desi left. She owes most of her success to Desi. She was funnier with Desi than she ever was later and it was Desi who creates and built the business. After Desi, she just ran on inertia.
bpatrick said:The best I can say about Desilu in the post-Desi years was Gary Morton's decision (and he really ran the place) to add some dramas. Out of that came "Star Trek," "Mission: Impossible," and "Mannix," not a bad call on Gary's part at all.
firepoint525 said:There was also a significant age difference among the actors who played the Howells on Gilligan's Island. Natalie Schafer was significantly older than Jim Backus. I did not find that out until after they both died.
FredLeonard said:bpatrick said:The best I can say about Desilu in the post-Desi years was Gary Morton's decision (and he really ran the place) to add some dramas. Out of that came "Star Trek," "Mission: Impossible," and "Mannix," not a bad call on Gary's part at all.
Do you have a source for that?
According to Robert Justman and Herbert Solow, "Inside Star Trek: The Real Story," Gary Morton had no real role in running Desilu. Lucy let him build an additional set to keep busy; he messed it up completely, wasted a lot of money and the set was never used.
Lucy is usually credited with the decision to back Star Trek and Mission: Impossible. At the time, Desilu had no shows of its own on the lot except The Lucy Show and was surviving by renting space to others (Danny Thomas-Sheldon Leonard, Bing Crosby Productions, Don Fedderson). Desilu had produced dramas under Desi: The Untouchables and The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. Sheldon Leonard's I Spy was produced at Desilu. Dramas were not new.