| Index | 8 reviews in total |
11 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
A forgotten gem of television's golden years, 20 August 2003
Author:
juliafwilliams from New York, NY
Here's a blast from the past. This was one of television's earliest
spin-offs before spin-offs became a dynamic commodity of television. This
show was spun-off from another memorable comedy, December Bride, reruns
of
which were broadcast in the late 1950's to early 1960's, during the winds
of
change in American society.
Two of the players, Helen Kleeb and Shirley Mitchell, went on to play The
Baldwin Sisters on The Waltons.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
One of the first spin-offs, 19 May 2006
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Author:
sandlot3 from United States
December Bride had a neighbor Pete Porter played by Harry Morgan (later featured in Dragnet and M*A*S*H) but Gladys, his nagging and sloppy wife, was never seen. Here she was featured as well as some of the supporting cast from Bride, as that show had just ended. Gladys proved to be neither nagging nor a slob but was kind of wacky in the Lucy vein. This was probably Morgan's funniest role, as audiences loved his sarcastic humor on Bride that fueled the spin-off. Morgan and Cara Williams were veteran actors from TV and movies so they performed well together and the comedy chemistry clicked. Williams had a short-lived show of her own (The Cara Williams Show) after this one ended.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
A standard '60's situation comedy, 5 May 2000
Author:
Bruce McGee from Asheville, NC USA
Pete (Harry Morgan) was a regular on the long
running "December Bride" TV series playing a
henpecked husband. On this series, Gladys was only mentioned and never
seen. She was portrayed as a nagging terror by her husband
Pete.
When this series debuted in 1960, we met Gladys for
the first time. The only problem: Gladys is a
totally likeable charactor and does not come across
as a nag. She is a normal '60's housewife. They
live in a modest home.
The only other December Bride regular is the
wonderful Verna Felton as Hilda Crocker. She often
has the best lines in the show.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
The Cycle Had Run Its Course, 27 February 2008
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
Pete and Gladys gave the American public finally a look at just what
Harry Morgan had been complaining about lo these past five years. On
December Bride where Morgan was a regular, we never got to see Gladys,
all we knew about her is Morgan's regular one liners about her. She was
the distaff equivalent of Phyllis Diller's never seen husband, Fang.
Anyway the Pete and Gladys show opened the year after December Bride
shut down with Peter Porter moving away from the neighborhood where he
lived next to Dean Miller, Frances Rafferty and Spring Byington. And we
finally got to meet Gladys who was played by Cara Williams.
Desilu Productions had split the way Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz had
split, but creators Bob Schiller and Bob Weiskopf who wrote I Love Lucy
and December Bride created another kookie wife to get into constant
trouble to the annoyance of her harried husband.
Cara Williams was very funny as Gladys Porter, but the cycle had really
run its course by the time Pete and Gladys made its debut. Harry Morgan
was an Americanized version of Ricky Ricardo. Later on we saw how
exasperated he could get with the 4077 MASH unit.
Still I wouldn't mind seeing some of those today.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Lots of fun with ingenious Gladys, 12 May 2008
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Author:
earlytalkie from United States
This show is a real blast from the past. Not having seen this show since I was a little boy, I wondered if it would hold up to my memory of it. It did. Cara Williams was very funny playing a housewife not unlike Lucy Ricardo. Harry Morgan plays a sort-of Americanized version of Ricky in this. Why this series has been off the air for so many years remains a mystery to me. Cara Williams was a very talented actress who was not appreciated in her day. As she is still alive at this writing, I would like to say to her "Thank you" for the wonderful performances she has given us, not only in television, but her film appearances as well. Pete and Gladys is a fun show that unfortunately has not been seen or heard of by the majority of today's television audience.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Daytime Portion, 27 June 2000
Author:
bhallumsro (bhallumsro@juno.com) from Marietta, Georgia, USA
"Pete & Gladys" was also seen on reruns on CBS-TV Daytime on Weekdays from October 1, 1962 to October 4, 1964. The Daily portion was joined with "The Real McCoys" that same day as well as "The Lucille Ball Show" and later "The Lucy Show" was debuted on prime time.
10 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
The day Kennedy was shot..., 13 August 2004
Author:
Eric-1226 from Seattle, Washington
...my mom and little sister were watching a rerun of "Pete and Gladys" when
the local news announcer interrupted the program to deliver the grim news
about Kennedy's assassination.
Even today, some 40 years after the event, I can't get my mom to make a
comment about the day Kennedy was shot without her prefacing her
recollections by first mentioning that she and my little sis were at home
watching "Pete and Gladys".
I don't remember too clearly what I was doing that day. I know I was in
second grade, and they put the news on the school intercom and we listened
to it non-stop until school let out. Then I went home. But I've always
wondered what it must have been like to have been watching "Pete and Gladys"
only to have the show interrupted by news of the president's
assassination.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Whoa! Can this be the same show I remembered so warmly?, 21 November 2012
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Author:
GoUSN from Northern California
Some memories should be left that way. I was born in the mid-fifties,
and this is one of the very first shows I remember watching as a very
small child. My mom must have liked it, we must have watched it
routinely, and it became etched in my memory. I was surprised to learn
it was only on for two seasons.
I hadn't seen it until learning on this very site that a full episode
had been uploaded to YouTube, titled Garden Wedding.
The show opened with two couples driving, men in front - Pete/Harry
Morgan was driving with Bob Hastings, lka "Lt. Carpenter" in McHale's
Navy, as passenger - and the women in back - Gladys and a friend, wife
of the Bob Hastings character.
You couldn't help but compare the visual of that foursome to the
foursome in I Love Lucy and the "California Here We Come" episode.
Fifties cars, fifties couples, black and white presentation.
But there the similarities ended. I was astonished at how boring and
predictable the Pete and Gladys show was. Bad writing (though I believe
written by two of Lucy's former writers), absurd story line, wooden
acting, and completely predictable outcome. Clearly not as timeless as
Lucy. I can see why this show is no longer shown.
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