Premium Only Content
The Great Gildersleeve 42/01/04 Gildy Goes on a Diet
The Great Gildersleeve is a radio situation comedy broadcast in the United States from August 31, 1941, to 1958. Initially written by Leonard Lewis Levinson, it was one of broadcast history's earliest spin-off programs. The series was built around Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve, a regular character from the radio situation comedy Fibber McGee and Molly. The character was introduced in the October 3, 1939, episode (number 216) of that series. Actor Harold Peary had played a similarly named character, Dr. Gildersleeve, on earlier episodes. The Great Gildersleeve enjoyed its greatest popularity in the 1940s. Peary played the character during its transition from the parent show into the spin-off and later in four feature films released at the height of the show's popularity.
In Fibber McGee and Molly, Peary's Gildersleeve had been a pompous windbag and antagonist of Fibber McGee. "You're a haa-aa-aa-aard man, McGee!" became a Gildersleeve catchphrase. The character went by several aliases on Fibber McGee and Molly; his middle name was revealed to be "Philharmonic" on October 22, 1940, in episode #258, "Fibber Discovers Gildersleeve's Locked Diary".
"Gildy" grew so popular that Kraft Foods—promoting its Parkay margarine—sponsored a new series featuring Peary's somewhat mellowed and always befuddled Gildersleeve as the head of his own family.
Premiere
The Great Gildersleeve premiered on NBC on August 31, 1941. It moves the title character from the McGee’s' Wistful Vista to Summerfield, where Gildersleeve oversees his late sister and brother-in-law's estate (said to have both been killed in a car accident) and rears his orphaned niece and nephew, Marjorie and Leroy Forrester.
At the outset of the series, Gildersleeve administers a girdle manufacturing company ("If you want the best of corsets, of course it's Gildersleeve"); later and during the remainder of the show he serves as Summerfield's water commissioner.
Decline and fall
In 1950, Harold Peary was persuaded to move The Great Gildersleeve to CBS, but sponsor Kraft refused to sanction the move. Peary, now contracted to CBS, was legally unable to appear on NBC as a star performer, but Gildersleeve was still an NBC series. This prompted the hiring of Willard Waterman as Peary's replacement as Gildersleeve. Peary, meanwhile, began a new series on CBS which attempted to reproduce the Gildersleeve show with the names changed. The Harold Peary Show, lasting one season, included a fictitious radio show within the show. This was Honest Harold, hosted by Peary's new character.
As with most radio sitcoms still on the air at the time, The Great Gildersleeve began a slow but massive reformat in the early 1950s. Starting in mid-1952, some of the program's longtime characters (Judge Hooker, Floyd Munson, Marjorie and her husband, Bronco) were missing for months at a time. In their place were a few new ones (Mr. Cooley the Egg Man and Mrs. Potter the hypochondriac) who would last only a month or so. By 1953, Gildersleeve's love life took center stage over his family and friends. His many love interests were constantly shifting, and women came and went with great frequency. In November 1954, after an extended summer hiatus, Gildersleeve was reformatted as a 15-minute daily sitcom. Only Gildersleeve, 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 series finally ended its run in 1958.
Television
Willard Waterman and Stephanie Griffin in the TV series The Great Gildersleeve, 1955
Lillian Randolph as Birdie on the TV version (1955)
As with most radio series, the show suffered from the advent of television. A televised version of the series, produced and syndicated by NBC, also starring Waterman, premiered in 1955, but lasted only 39 episodes. During that year, both the 15-minute radio show and the television show were being produced simultaneously.
On the television series, Gildersleeve was sketched as less lovable, more pompous and a more overt womanizer. Harold Peary stated that the problem with the television series was that "Waterman was a very tall man" and "Gildersleeve was not a tall man, he was a little man, who thought he was a tall man, that was the character." He added, "Willard [Waterman] did a very good job on the radio show" but was "miscast on the television version".
Actress Barbara Stuart landed her first television role on The Great Gildersleeve in the role of Gildersleeve's secretary, Bessie. Child actor Michael Winkelman, later of The Real McCoys, also made his first television appearance on the show in the role of 9-year-old Bruce Fuller. Actor Clegg Hoyt also made his television debut on the series as a carnival barker in "Practice What You Preach" (1955).
-
LIVE
Vigilant News Network
12 hours agoDoctors Drop Post-Election COVID Bombshell | Media Blackout
3,772 watching -
14:13
Scammer Payback
12 days agoTelling Scammers Their Address
161K86 -
5:43:21
Barstool Gambling
16 hours agoBig Cat and Co Sweat Out the Week 10 Sunday Slate | Barstool Gambling Cave
121K3 -
2:49:36
The Jimmy Dore Show
2 days agoRumble Time Live w/ Jimmy Dore & Special Guests Roseanne Barr, Dr. Drew, Drea de Matteo & More!
586K702 -
17:17
DeVory Darkins
1 day agoKamala Post-Election BOMBSHELL Exposes $1 BILLION Campaign DISASTER
108K194 -
19:52
Stephen Gardner
1 day ago🔥HOLY CRAP! Trump just did the UNTHINKABLE!!
110K603 -
4:34:55
Pepkilla
16 hours agoBlackops Terminus Zombies Boat Glitch
158K7 -
5:50
CapEx
1 day ago $25.93 earnedWhat the Coming & Inevitable Sovereign Debt Crisis Means for YOU | CapEx Insider
141K38 -
1:34:00
Tactical Advisor
17 hours agoAR15 Giveaway WINNER/Trump Winning | Vault Room Live Stream 008
98.1K44 -
5:41:10
Vigilant News Network
19 hours agoOfficials CAUGHT Changing Ballots in Arizona | The Daily Dose
147K118