Showing posts with label Frank Cady. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Cady. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

TV Tuesday: Green Acres - Season 1; Episode 1 (1965)

 
Green Acres - 1965

Coming up next on this edition of TV Tuesday, we feature the first episode of the hit TV series "Green Acres", where a Park Avenue penthouse couple find themselves living in a dilapidated old farmhouse in a place called Hooterville.

The episode's cast includes Eddie Albert, Eva Gabor, Eleanor Audley, Edgar Buchanan, Rufe Davis, Frank Cady, Hank Patterson, John Daly, and Arnold The Piggy.

"Green Acres is the place to be.  Farm livin' is the life for me.  Land spreadin' out so far and wide.  Keep Manhattan just give me that country side!"  And that's how it all begins.


To begin things, John Daly narrates the life story of New York attorney Oliver Wendell Douglas.  Mr. Daly begins, "Every day at this time when Mr. Douglas comes homes from the hustle and bustle of his law practice and after fighting the rush hour traffic, he enjoys walking out on his terrace, and looking at his magnificent view of the city, and saying..."  "I hate it!" interjects Oliver.

Oliver's wife Lisa does not share his opinion.  She loves every aspect of New York living.


Knowing that Oliver wants to buy a farm, Lisa allows him to try his hand at farming on their terrace.  He takes it very seriously.


While on a business trip to Chicago, Oliver takes a detour to a place called Hooterville.  There, he buys his long awaited for farm.  He meets some of the locals, who are very surprised that someone bought the old "Haney place"!

When Lisa finds out that Oliver has bought a farm, she is devastated!  Actually, devastated may be an understatement.

Oliver's mother takes her daughter-in-law's side in the matter.  She even tells Lisa to pack a bag and move in with her.  She then amends the statement.  "Don't bother to pack.  We'll buy a whole new wardrobe...and charge it to him," she says indicating at her son.

Oliver is convinced that because he was born on a farm the fault with him wanting to live on one lies with his mother.  "If anyone’s to blame, it’s your father.  If he hadn’t insisted on staying for that last race at Saratoga, we would’ve made it to the hospital," she counters.

Eventually, Oliver convinces Lisa to move with him to the farm.  She tells him she will go on a trial period.  If after six months she isn't thrilled with farm life, she's moving back to New York.  He'll take anything he can get.



Oliver takes Lisa to their new farm, Green Acres.  She is shocked at the ruined look of the place.  "I have a great idea," she says.  "Let's go back!"  But, a promise is a promise.  She'll have to wait six months.


We cut back to John Daly, who is looking at the new Douglas farm.  Signing off, he says, "And that’s how Oliver Wendell Douglas bought a farm.  This is John Daly in New York.  Thank goodness."

Cast rundown:

Eddie Albert - Green Acres
   Eddie Albert...............................Oliver Wendell Douglas

Eva Gabor - Green Acres
   Eva Gabor..................................Lisa Douglas

Eleanor Audley - Green Acres
   Eleanor Audley............................Eunice Douglas

Edgar Buchanan - Green Acres
   Edgar Buchanan..........................Joe Carson

Rufe Davis - Green Acres
   Rufe Davis..................................Floyd Smoot

Frank Cady - Green Acres
   Frank Cady..................................Sam Drucker

Hank Patterson - Green Acres
   Hank Patterson............................Fred Ziffel

John Daly - Green Acres
   John Daly....................................Himself

Arnold The Piggy - Green Acres
   Arnold The Piggy..........................Arnold

And that's it for Green Acres.  It was a tremendously successful show that still entertains audiences today.  Eleanor Audley, who played Eddie Albert's mother in the show, was actually only one year older than her on-screen son.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.


Thursday, August 27, 2020

Rear Window (1954)

Rear Window - 1954
Our next film is 1954's "Rear Window", which follows the story of a man who is wheelchair bound with nothing to do but look outside at the neighbors.  When something happens to one of those neighbors, he must find out what happened to them.

The film's cast includes James Stewart, Grace Kelly, Thelma Ritter, Raymond Burr, Judith Evelyn, Frank Cady, Jesslyn Fax, and Gig Young.


"Jeff" Jeffries is a photographer who was injured on the job.  Because of his broken leg, he's wheelchair bound and he's got nothing to do but stare out of his windows at the neighbors.






And it's quite the assortment of neighbors, too.  There's an acrobatic dancer, a songwriter, a squabbling husband and wife, a lady who is hard of hearing, and a woman who is desperate for romance in her life.



The few visitors that Jeff does get are his nurse, Stella, and his girlfriend, high society girl Lisa.


Beautiful Lisa and the slovenly Jeff make for an unlikely couple.  Lisa wants to marry Jeff, but he doesn't think that their lifestyles will mesh.


She gets upset when Jeff tells her about what his life is like when he's on an assignment and how it wouldn't be agreeable to her.



When he's all alone, Jeff notices that the squabbling husband and wife seems to be now just a husband.  The apartment is completely closed up, and the husband is keeping odd hours.  Jeff thinks that the man has murdered his wife and is disposing of her somehow.


When he tells Lisa of his suspicions, she thinks he's lost his mind.  (FYI: this is the only film in which Grace Kelly appeared smoking.  She refused to be seen with a cigarette in all her other films.)



However, once the apartment windows are opened and they see the man tying up a large trunk and the mattress on the bed has been rolled up, Lisa begins to see things Jeff's way.  "Tell me what it is you saw and what you think it means," she says.


Even Stella gets in on the action.  She's constantly theorizing how he could have murdered her.  The case seems to fascinate her.


However, when Jeff and Lisa bring the case up to the police, they are disappointed when the police tell them that there is no case.  Everything with the man's story checks out.



Not content with letting things go, Jeff, Lisa, and Stella take matters into their own hands.  This includes anonymous letters and phone calls to the husband.  Lisa even breaks into the apartment to find evidence.


She finds the evidence but is caught by the husband in the process.  She tries to get Jeff's attention.  The husband notices this and now he knows who has been sending him the notes and making the phone calls.


This, of course, puts Jeff's life in danger.  Jeff finds himself hanging onto his apartment for dear life when the man makes his way there and decides to get rid of Jeff.



Don't worry.  Jeff doesn't get killed.  He does, however, break his other leg, which means he's now got two casts instead of one.


He's also got Lisa.  She's traded her fancy clothes for more sedate blue jeans and a blouse.  She watches lovingly over Jeff while he sleeps.


Being dressed down doesn't mean that Lisa has lost her love of high fashion.  Once she's sure Jeff is asleep, she trades her novel for a copy of Harper's Bazaar.

Cast rundown:


   James Stewart...............................L.B. "Jeff" Jeffries


   Grace Kelly....................................Lisa Freemont


   Thelma Ritter.................................Stella


   Raymond Burr................................Lars Thorwald


   Judith Evelyn.................................Miss Lonelyhearts


   Frank Cady....................................Man On Fire Escape


   Jesslyn Fax....................................Miss Hearing Aid

   Gig Young.....................................Jeff's Editor (voice only)

And that's it for Rear Window.  Of the four movies he made with Alfred Hitchcock, James Stewart always said that this was his favorite.  In 1998, it was included on the American Film Institute's list of Top 100 Greatest American Movies.  And it has also been included on the list of greatest movies of all time.


True to form, director Alfred Hitchcock made a cameo in this film.  He appears about half an hour into the movie, where he winds a clock for the songwriter.  Another piece of trivia: the songwriter is Ross Bagdasarian, who created Alvin and the Chipmunks.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.