Every now and then on one of the talking head channels, some
academic or political pundit will be trotted out to decry how the media depicts
rural folk (particularly Southerners like myself) as naïve bumpkins or
unsophisticated jaspers. Thrilling Days of Yesteryear firmly believes
that labeling people or tarring them with a broad brush is just plain wrong,
and always takes special care to avoid this practice…regardless of whether or
not it’s true.
Besides—this week’s edition of Mayberry Mondays is going
to do the heavy brushing for us. The
episode starts out with a reference to a previous installment entitled “Millie, the Model”—in which our favorite bakery counter girl, Millicent Swanson (Arlene
Golonka), journeys to the Big Apple for the purpose of modeling clothing for an
important designer. Sam, missin’ his gal
somethin’ terribul, follows her to New York and is treated by Millie’s new
friends as if he still had manure on his shoes…but just when he’s convinced
that he’s lost Millie to her new glamorous life, a couple of escort bimbos (one
played by Farrah Fawcett) start flirting with him and Millie sticks his ass
back on that bus to Raleigh with her faster than you can say “Ernest T. Bass.”
Anyway, let’s raise up the curtain to reveal the humble establishment of Mayberry’s resident fix-it savant, Emmett Clark (Paul Hartman), who as we can see in the above screen cap is working with dangerous power tools…and that does not bode well in the slightest. Millie walks in, and over the din created by that honkin’ big drill learns that the reason why Emmett asked her boss (the rarely seen Mrs. Boysinger) to send her over is that there is an important piece of mail for her that was delivered to Emmett by mistake. (Considering the early mail delivery in Mayberry, this doesn’t seem so contrived since the town’s up-at-the-butt-crack-of-dawn postman was probably too bleary-eyed to read the correct address.)
MILLIE: Who could be writing me
from New York ?
EMMETT: Rex Alexander…
MILLIE: Rex Alexander…
EMMETT: That’s the return address…
EMMETT (under the table): Who’s he?
MILLIE: Oh! (Opening the letter) Oh, I can’t believe it!
EMMETT: Can’t believe what?
MILLIE: Oh!
EMMETT (getting to his feet): Can’t
believe what, Millie?
MILLIE (reading the letter): Oh,
this is fantastic!
EMMETT (walking over to her):
What? What’s fantastic? What?
MILLIE: Oh…Rex Alexander!
EMMETT: What’s he say? (He starts to reach for the letter)
MILLIE: I’ve got to go tell Sam!
EMMETT: Yeah…let’s go tell Sam…
Quick cut to the city council office of poor-but-honest dirt
farmer Sam Jones (Ken Berry):
MILLIE: You remember when I was in New York about six months ago modeling those dresses?
SAM: Yeah…yeah…
MILLIE: And I was being taken to
all those cocktail parties and everything…well, I kept bumping into this man
named Rex Alexander…
I’ll bet that was painful.
(Sam gets a puzzled look on his
face)
EMMETT (to Millie): Go on, go on…
MILLIE: Well, we had a lot of
wonderful talks, and I told him all about Mayberry…and what a delightful place
it was, and…well…he’s coming to visit!
SAM: No kiddin’?
MILLIE: Uh-huh…he says the way I
described Mayberry to him it sounds just like the place to get away from it
all…
If by “it all” you mean “civilization.”
MILLIE (reading): …uh…”place of
warmth…of peace and rural tranquility…where I can escape from the grinding
pressures of the city”…
EMMETT: What is he—some kind of a
bum or somethin’?
Hobo…heal thyself.
MILLIE: Emmett…he’s a famous, famous sculptor…why, he just finished a
piece that’s going to be…uh… (Back to the letter) “…in the forecourt of the
General Electronics building on Park
Avenue …”
SAM: Wow! He’s really somebody, huh?
MILLIE: Mm-hmm…he wants me to find
a place he can rent for a month or so… (Back to the letter) Uh…”some lived-in
little house with perhaps a shed or a barn I can use as a studio…”
SAM: Huh…a house with a barn, huh?
You could lend him yours, Sam. It’s not like you’re using the barn or
anything.
EMMETT: Hey, the Murdoch place is
for rent…they took off for Delaware Water Gap last week…go live with his
mother…
SAM: Yeah…that barn’s in pretty
good shape, too—isn’t it?
(Millie and Emmett murmur in
agreement)
MILLIE: Oh, yes! I think the Murdoch place will be just
perfect! I’ll go check on it—see ya!
SAM: Yeah…okay, Mill…
Millie nearly collides with Emmett as she races out of the
office, and we then dissolve back to Emmett’s shop, where our heroic fix-it man
appears to be destroying an antique chair.
He is soon joined by pedantic country clerk Howard Sprague (Jack
Dodson).
EMMETT (stealing a glance at the
vaporizer while he continues to muck around with the chair): Oh, that
thing? I had to send away for some parts
on that…
HOWARD: How long is it going to be?
EMMETT: Well, if I were you…I
wouldn’t figure on any chest colds
for another couple of weeks…
Every episode…one guaranteed laugh-out-loud moment.
HOWARD: Well…when you get it…say,
did you get an invitation to that tea at Millie’s tomorrow?
EMMETT (back to banging on the
chair): Yeah, for that sculptor fella, huh…
HOWARD: She says he’s all settled
in the Murdoch place, so she wants him to meet the gang…
EMMETT: Oh?
HOWARD: I’m very anxious to meet
him…I understand he has a beard…
That shouldn’t be so unusual for Howard. He had a beard last week; some girl named
Barbara Evans. (Ba-zinga!)
EMMETT: So what? He starts puttin’ on any airs with me, I’ll
cut him right down to size…
HOWARD: I’m sure a man like Rex
Alexander doesn’t have to put on any airs for anybody…he has ten major works of
art in front of ten buildings all over the country! New York , Chicago , Detroit …
EMMETT: Well…maybe he ought to keep
movin’…
Oh, that Emmett. We
then dissolve to Millie’s “tea,” where sculptor Rex Alexander is being feted
with egg salad (he’s offered some by diabolical housekeeper Beatrice “Aunt Bee”
Taylor [Frances Bavier]) and other nosh-like items (Howard tells him, “I think
you’ll find those deviled hams there pleasing to your palate,” as he hands him
a cup of tea). Rex is played by actor
Robert Sampson, a veteran character thesp whom you might remember from the
short-lived 1972-73 sitcom Bridget Loves Bernie, in which he
played Bridget’s brother, Father Mike Fitzgerald. (The series, a popular romcom about a
Catholic girl who marries a man of the Jewish faith, was axed after one season
because people found it offensive.)
Sampson must have been what casting directors thought priests looked
like, because he also played men of the cloth in episodes of Ironside
and Sarge…though
in the case of that last show the main character was a priest, so that’s not at
all unusual.
Sampson had a semi-regular role on the 1950s television
version of Milton Caniff’s comic strip Steve Canyon
(he was the tower operator, Sgt. Walsh) but most of the time did a lot of guest
appearances on such shows as Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The
Lawless Years, Bonanza, The Big Valley, etc. (Some of you might remember him as the father
of the little girl who vanishes in her room in the Twilight Zone outing
“Little Girl Lost.”) In the 1970s/1980s
he would continue on guesting on the likes of Police Story, Quincy , M.E. ,
Dallas,
Hill
Street Blues and The Colbys—he appeared in several
episodes of Falcon Crest as sheriff Turk Tobias. Among Sampson’s film credits: Look in Any Window, The Broken Land, Hero’s Island, Zig Zag, Mr. Ricco and the cult classic Re-Animator.
HOWARD: Well! We haven’t had much of a chance to chat…I
mean, the introductions there were coming so fast and furious…
REX: Yeah…you’re right…
EMMETT: Are you plannin’ on doin’
any sculptin’ while you’re here?
REX: Well, only if the spirit moves
me…
HOWARD: Well, I must admit…I’ve
always been a great devotée of sculpture myself…
REX: Have you really?
HOWARD: No talent for
it…but…uh…deep appreciation…yeah…I think my favorite work is Rodin’s The Thinker…
REX (smiling): Oh, yeah…
EMMETT: Is that the one where the
guy’s sittin’ there naked with his
chin in his hand?
No, Emmett…it’s the sculpture Dobie Gillis used to sit
beside, contemplating life’s problems on The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis.
HOWARD: Yes, Emmett…
EMMETT: He’s stark naked!
HOWARD: Yes, Emmett…
REX: Uh, Mr. Sprague…um…what’s your
function here in Mayberry?
This is going to be rich.
EMMETT: Why don’t you answer the
man? (To Rex) He’s the county clerk…pays
$92.50 a week…
REX: And how about you, Mr.
Clark? What do you do here?
EMMETT: I run the fix-it
shop…anything conks out on ya, bring it in…it’s right on Main Street …
REX: I’ll remember that…thank you…
EMMETT: That’s okay…
REX: Listen…if you don’t mind, I’m
going to circulate…I want to talk to as many people as I can…
Translation: “You are sad, strange little men. And you have my pity.” As Rex takes his leave of Howard and Emmett,
Emmett hollers out at him: “If you’re looking for any action in Mayberry, we
bowl every Thursday night!” Howard
reacts to this with his typical Shameface.
With a scene dissolve, sculptor Alexander is being
introduced to Sam’s son, Mike the Idiot Boy (Buddy Foster). The reason for this will be made clear by
Aunt Bee, though I strongly suspect the real explanation is that they were hoping
the little mook would do some of his tricks to keep the guest of honor amused.
SAM: Oh!
AUNT BEE: Haven’t you, Mike?
MIKE: Well…I’m okay on horses and
cows…but my people never look like people…
AUNT BEE: Oh, Mike…you’re just
being modest…your people are just wonderful…particularly
since you’ve been making their feet
smaller…
MIKE: Can I get a sandwich?
Yeah, it’s only fair you give the kid a goodie after he’s
performed.
AUNT BEE: And it’s wonderful the
way he does hair now… (Gesturing) He doesn’t have it straight up, he makes it
lay down…
A possible foreshadowing of Mike’s future career as head shampoo
boy at Irma’s House of Coiffures?
REX: Millie, it’s truly been
delightful…now, the place is wonderful…the people
are wonderful…it’s like breathing fresh air again…
“Don’t take too deep a breath, Rex…that’s the rendering
plant just down the road…”
MILLIE: Oh, I’m so glad you’re
enjoying it…
MYRTLE: Goodbye, Millie…
MILLIE: Oh, goodbye,
Myrtle…goodbye…
You will, of course, remember Myrtle from the previous
episode “The Mayberry Road”—portrayed by veteran character actress Maudie Prickett; Myrtle
and several other guests are departing Chez Millie as Millie, Sam and Aunt Bee
converse with Rex Alexander at the front door.
MILLIE: Ah…well, I didn’t
exaggerate about Mayberry then, did I either?
REX: No…no…it’s everything you said
it was…
“And now I understand why you fled to New
York .”
AUNT BEE: We were afraid, you
coming from New York , you might think we were a little provincial…
If “provincial” is a euphemism for “Hicksville ”…then,
yes.
AUNT BEE: Mr. Alexander…from what
I’ve told you of Mike—do you think it’s a talent that should be encouraged?
SAM: Oh, Aunt Bee…
AUNT BEE: Please! Now…I’ve been working with him regularly, and
there’s something I didn’t tell you…he does very nicely with watercolors…and he
stays within his outlines…
“We just need to work on keeping him from trying to drink
the paint.”
REX: Well…I would say it’s a matter
of waiting…to see how he blossoms…
“’Cause I watched that kid try to eat a sandwich…you didn’t
do his room in lead paint by any chance—did you?” Rex has to get back to the old Murdoch place,
so he graciously says his goodbyes to Millie, Sam and Aunt Bee. Upon Rex’s departure, Sam observes: “He
really seems to dig Mayberry.”
“Yes…a lovely man,” replies Aunt Bee…in a way that reminds
me of a schoolgirl crush. On his way
home, Rex takes a stroll through various Mayberry neighborhoods…and sees sights
that one would associate with small-town life…
…old guy raking leaves—why are all these activities taking place at night, I wonder? Well, all this contemplation on Rex’s part is going to result in an announcement of major proportions…and Millie (along with Rex) runs into the council office to tell Sam all about it:
SAM: Oh? What?
REX: Well, I don’t know how
exciting it is…
MILLIE: Oh, now…don’t be modest…Rex wants to do a sculpture piece
for Mayberry!
SAM: What?
REX: Yeah…something you can put up
in your town square…
SAM: Oh…ho…that’d be great, Rex…and
I’d know everybody’d like it…but the kind of fees you get? Oh, we can’t afford…
MILLIE (interrupting): Oh…it’s a
gift, Sam!
SAM: A gift?
REX: Yes… (Slight pause) You know,
since I’ve been here for a week now…this town has really grown on me…I mean,
it’s given me an understanding of a different way of life…
SAM: And…and you want to do a piece
of sculpture for us?
REX (smiling): Yes, that’s
right…no, I want to do something that…uh…I don’t know what yet…but…uh…something
that will symbolize the spirit of this town…
I have it: a giant block of stone with the words “Back in
five minutes” carved on it.
MILLIE: Imagine! A genuine Alexander right here! Well, we’ll be the envy of towns from miles
around!
“Hey—did you see that giant ashtray over in the town square
in Mayberry? I wish we had one.”
SAM: Oh, yeah…well, it would be an honor all right…I mean, knowing how much
your work is sought after, and everything…
REX: Well, it will be a labor of
love—I want to start right away! (He
turns and leaves the office)
SAM: Well…great! Thanks!
MILLIE: Sam, isn’t this exciting!
SAM: Gee…imagine that…Mayberry with
a famous work of art… (Millie nods in
assent) You know…this just might be how Paris got started…
Except Paris is
in France , where
there’s good food and wine—which gives them a bit of a head start. Not everyone is as sold on the idea of a work
of art placed prominently in Mayberry…and by everyone, I mean a certain fix-it
shop man whose idea of great art is a specially framed edition of a Gasoline Alley strip that made him laugh
once.
EMMETT: Just what I said…if this
thing’s gonna be outside the Town Hall, I wanna know what it’s gonna be…is it
gonna be a general on horseback, or is it gonna be a nymph with water squirtin’
out of her head, or what?
HOWARD: All we know is that Rex
Alexander has been inspired by what he feels about Mayberry…now what form the inspiration is going to take,
we don’t know…
EMMETT: Well, why can’t he give us
a sketch?
HOWARD: Oh, Emmett—it wouldn’t be right
to ask him for one…doesn’t it mean anything to you that we’re getting a
genuine Rex Alexander…for free?
EMMETT: Nope…not until I see it…
Howard then throws both of his arms up in the air in that
“I’m surrounded by yokels!” fashion, and there is then a dissolve to what
appears to be the town’s ice cream parlor, where Myrtle runs into Aunt
Bee. Myrtle must have come off the bench
to be the substitute Clara (Hope Summers) this week, just as Emmett is providing
all the idiocy we usually get from gas pump jockey Goober Pyle (George
Lindsey). During their conversation, an
unidentified soda jerk prepares some ice cream for Aunt Bee—the old fashioned
way, where they’d pack it in those cardboard pint containers. (I got a little misty with nostalgia watching
him.)
AUNT BEE: No, but he’s working on
it night and day, though…
MYRTLE: No clue as to the theme?
AUNT BEE: No, and…none of us feel
as if we should ask…
MYRTLE: But we will have an unveiling?
AUNT BEE: Yes, we talked to him about
that… (She hands the jerk money to pay for the ice cream) There…
MYRTLE (also addressing the
counterman): A cup of coffee, please…you know, Bee, I think it’s just
unbelievable…unbelievable that
Mayberry should be so blessed…
AUNT BEE: You know, we were talking
about that last week…this will be Mayberry’s first important piece of art…
MYRTLE: Since we put the iron deer
on the firehouse lawn!
The two women say goodbye, and with Myrtle sitting down at
the counter for her coffee (she takes it black…like her men), there’s a
dissolve to Sam as he saunters past the fix-it shop. You would think he’d learn by now that it
would be better for him to sprint
past the fix-it shop…but some people are slower than others…and I don’t mean
sprinting speed.
EMMETT: Any news from the genius?
SAM: No no no…he’s still working…
EMMETT: What’s takin’ him so long?
Well, gosh, Emmett…I guess the Testor’s hasn’t sufficiently
dried yet. (Schmuck.)
SAM: Well, Emmett…a man does an
important piece of sculpture—it takes time…
EMMETT: But it’s been two weeks! Martha’s brother’s a sculptor down in Florida …he can carve an alligator
out of a railroad tie in half a day!
After all the kvetching and kibitzing and pissing and moaning from various Mayberrians…the big day has arrived. The populace has gathered in the town square, ready to feast their eyes on Rex Alexander’s tribute to their fair, tranquil city. Howard makes his way through the crowd and stands beside Emmett, who for reasons unexplained is standing next to Myrtle—his long-suffering wife Martha (Mary Lansing) apparently not able to make this episode.
EMMETT: Yeah…big thing, ain’t it?
MYRTLE: Well, you can tell from the
very size of it that it’s important…
Sam brings the crowd to attention and introduces your
mistress of ceremonies…Aunt Bee.
AUNT BEE: Friends…friends of
Mayberry…and fellow art lovers…
“Oh…and you, too, Emmett…”
AUNT BEE: This is the occasion that
we have all been looking forward to…the unveiling of this work of art that has
been so generously bestowed upon us by Mr. Rex Alexander of New York City … (She nods to where Rex is standing with Sam, Millie and
Mike the Idiot Boy as the crowd breaks out in applause) And so…with no further
ado…Miss Millie Swanson—who is responsible for his being in our midst—will
unlock the beauty of this work of art…this most distinguished gift…Miss Millie
Swanson…
As Millie gets a nice hand from the crowd (I’d like to give
Millie a nice hand…nudge nudge…wink wink…), she pulls away the covering to
reveal…
HOWARD: Yep…heh heh…that’s it, all
right…
SAM: Well, hey…heh heh…wow! How about that!
AUNT BEE: Yes…how about that!
MIKE (opening his big yap): Pa…
SAM (menacingly): Nuhh… (To Rex)
Boy, that’s…that’s really…that’s…oh, boy…
Back from commercial, several of the members of Mayberry’s
prominent think tank have congregated in the diner to discuss the meaning of
Alexander’s latest masterpiece.
EMMETT (carrying a cup of coffee to
a table where Howard and Myrtle are also seated): Okay…the title is “The
Struggle”…
HOWARD: That’s right…
EMMETT: So would somebody tell me what’s
struggling with what?
AUNT BEE: Well, it appeared to me
that it might be good versus evil…?
HOWARD: Maybe he was trying to
depict the struggle for economic survival…
AUNT BEE: Hmm…maybe…
MIKE: What was it, Pa?
SAM: Finish your donut…
MIKE: All I wanted to know is what
it was…
SAM: Well, if you keep your ears open you’ll find out…
Spoken like a true parent.
You just might get the hang of this yet, Samuel.
MYRTLE: In my opinion, it’s war and
peace…
EMMETT: And in my opinion, it’s a
piece of junk…and we ought to load it
on a truck and dump it in Myers’ Lake …
MILLIE: Emmett, that’s no way to
talk about a great work of art…
MIKE: Is it a great work of art,
Pa?
SAM: Of course it is, Mike…
MIKE: Well…what’s it mean?
SAM: Drink your milk…
They either held this ceremony on a Saturday or they let
school out for the occasion. Either way,
they could have saved themselves a lot of trouble by rounding up everyone below
the age of 12 until it all blew over.
(Okay, I have to confess I did snicker at the next bit: Emmett yells out
in the restaurant, “All those in favor of dumping it into Myers’ Lake
raise your hands…” which prompts Mike to raise his.)
SAM: Yeah, I’m for that, Emmett…you
know, Rex Alexander didn’t get where he is by turning out junk…
MILLIE: And it’s not his fault that we’re having trouble
understanding his work…
AUNT BEE: Well…do you think we dare
ask him?
HOWARD: Well, Aunt Bee—you can’t go
up to a famous artist and ask him flat
out what he’s driving at…
AUNT BEE: Oh…I suppose not…but…one
thing’s for certain—we have to know what it’s all about if we’re going to learn
to appreciate it…
SAM: Hey, Howard…you’ve kind of
dabbled in the arts…maybe if you and Rex had a talk…you know, on an
artist-to-artist basis…
HOWARD: Yeah…maybe…
MILLIE: Well, I could ask him to
drop by my house…
HOWARD: Yeah…if I were to approach
the subject in a…subtle way…all right, I’ll give it a try!
SAM: Good, Howard…good…
MIKE: Pa…why don’t…
SAM (firmly): We’re leaving…
So Millie whips up more tea and biscuits (the English term
for “cookies”) and she, Howard and the esteemed Mr. Alexander are seated in her
parlor, having a bit of a chinwag.
HOWARD: As you can well imagine, Mr. Alexander…the whole town’s been buzzing with comments…heh…over your magnificent gift…
REX: Oh…well, I just hope they find
it meaningful…
MILLIE: Oh, it’s very meaningful…
HOWARD:
Yes…yes…it…although…naturally, the true meaning of the piece was obvious to me…uh…ah…strangely enough, s-some of our
good townspeople…look at it in many different
ways…
REX: Ah…that’s great!
HOWARD (momentarily taken aback):
Yeah…yeah! But I was wondering…if…if for
the benefit of those of us who aren’t quite as perceptive as others…I was wondering if you could possibly express
what you felt about the work…I mean,
while you were in the throes of creativity…so to speak…
I think this next bit is where Chrysler got the idea for
their “Halftime America ”
campaign.
REX (sighing): Well…all right…uh…I
think if I were going to put it into words I would say that it was…uh…inspired
by…the spirit of Mayberry…and its
courageous, free-thinking people…
He has to be
talking about some other Mayberry.
REX: The Struggle…is symbolic of
the…microcosm…now in this case, the small town…standing firm in its simplicity
against the contaminating influences of our computerized society…
REX: Uh…to put it more simply…I…I
would categorize the pieces…uh…representing man against machine…
HOWARD: Well… (Chuckling) Well, I’d
say…I’d say…I agree with that wholeheartedly!
(More chuckling) Wouldn’t you, Millie?
MILLIE: Oh, yes! Yes!
Yes, indeedy!
HOWARD: That sums it up very
nicely…heh heh…man against machine…
And now it’s time for Rage Against the Machine:
HOWARD: Emmett, I’m just giving you
the meaning of his particular work of art in simple terms…
AUNT BEE: And I was so sure it was good against evil…
SAM: I still don’t get it, Howard…
HOWARD: Well, that’s all he
said…that and something about contaminating our society with computers…
AUNT BEE: Oh…dear…
SAM: Well…look…it’s only been here
one day…I think we ought to give it a fair chance…why don’t we try to live with
it for a while and…kind of study it, huh?
HOWARD: That’s the way I feel…I
mean…if Mayberry rejects a work of art by a man like Rex Alexander everybody’s
just going to think we’re a bunch of hicks…
Oh, no, Howard…they couldn’t possibly think that.
AUNT BEE: I agree…I think we owe it
to ourselves to give this thing a fair trial…I mean—look how long it took us to
get used to sliced bread…
Okay. Nearly had an
iced tea accident with that one. So we
then get a montage of various Mayberry people intensely studying The
Struggle.
EMMETT: Bee…it’s no use…I’ve tried,
too…
AUNT BEE: Oh…you know, in its own…
(Her voice trails off)
So we dissolve to the fix-it shop, where Sam, Emmett and
Howard discuss why it’s important to maintain music, art and drama classes in
school curriculums.
SAM: I’ll tell you the truth,
guys…I haven’t found anybody in this whole town
who can come right out and say what it is…
HOWARD: I know…we’ve all tried
pretty hard, but it’s just been a losing battle…
SAM: I’m afraid so…
HOWARD: I don’t know what there is
about it…but a work of art is supposed to reach out, and…speak to you…
SAM: Yeah…
EMMETT (looking up from his work):
If that thing starts talkin’, we’re all
in trouble…
SAM: Well, I’m afraid we just…have
to face it—modern art is not for Mayberry…
EMMETT: Well…what are we gonna to
do to get rid of it? (Brightening)
Myers’ Lake ?
SAM: Oh, come on, Emmett…we’ve got
to be diplomatic about this…
HOWARD: Yeah…we gotta be careful…I
mean…we don’t want to hurt Rex Alexander’s feelings—after all, it is a gift…
And this is why you should always hang onto the
receipt. Before Emmett can make another
idiotic suggestion, Sam cuts him off shortly and explains that both he and Aunt
Bee (twisted and evil) have been talking the Alexander matter through and think
they’ve hit upon a solution to wiggle out of the town’s predicament. There is then a scene change to the Mayberry
town square, where we see the Alexander sculpture and then cut to a long shot
of Sam addressing the good people of that gentle hamlet with another boring
speech.
SAM: I’ve asked you folks here this
afternoon to…witness yet another ceremony…with this…imposing piece of
sculpture…we’re very fortunate to have with us…a distinguished visitor…Mr.
Anthony Harper…
A distinguished-looking gentleman acknowledges the
audience’s applause, and Mayberry Mondays aficionados should
have little difficulty in recognizing him as character great Howard
Wendell…making his second appearance on R.F.D.—the first as one-percenter
Lucius Fremont in “The Church Bell.”
(After seeing Wendell in that previous episode, it was like I couldn’t
get away from the guy after that—he kept popping up in practically every rerun
I watched afterward.)
SAM: Uh…Mr. Harper is a man to whom
Rex Alexander’s reputation in the art world is very well known…and now, I’d like to present Miss Beatrice
Taylor…who’ll explain the reason for Mr. Harper’s visit…
(Crowd applause)
AUNT BEE: Fellow art lovers…
“And you, too, Emmett…” (Hey—we’re short on jokes this week;
we have to recycle what we can.)
AUNT BEE: …Mr. Harper…Mr.
Alexander…after much thought…and soul searching…the Fine Arts Committee of the
town council…
Mayberry has a Fine
Arts Committee. Who’da thunk it?
AUNT BEE: …has come to the
conclusion…than in as much as Mayberry is a small town….
“How…small…is it?” “It’s so small, the
‘Welcome’ and ‘Come Again’ signs are on the same post…heeeyyyyoooo!!!”
(Rimshot!)
AUNT BEE: …and off the beaten
path…it hardly seems fair to us to
keep this authentic Alexander masterpiece to ourselves, and hide it from the
rest of the world…
EMMETT: Hear, hear!
(Howard shoots him a look)
AUNT BEE: When we approached Mr. Harper,
who is the curator of the Raleigh Art Museum…he wholeheartedly agreed…and so, with the kind permission
of Mr. Alexander, of course, we are placing this work of art…on permanent loan…to the museum, where
thousands of people can enjoy it…instead of the few who would see it in
Mayberry…
So Harper gets up and makes another pretty speech about how
grateful the museum is to be getting such a breathtakingly beautiful piece of
art no one in Mayberry can appreciate.
Standing before the sculpture, he engages the only man in that town with
a little Moxie on the ball in conversation:
HARPER: It’s overwhelming…isn’t it, Mr. Jones?
SAM: Ah, yeah…
HARPER: Such an inspiring portrayal…of man against
machine…
SAM: Yeah…
HARPER: Man here on the left…caught
in a magnificent turmoil of stone…Machine…here on the right…with its concentric
convolutions…of perpetual motion…
SAM: Uh…actually…Mr. Harper…the way
I understand it…the, uh, the machine is on the left…the man is on the
right…
HARPER: Well…heh heh…yes…yes, of
course…
Coda time!
Howard drifts into Sam’s office with his briefcase—he had
work to do for the county, and while he was there he stopped by the museum to
take a look at Mayberry’s sculpture.
HOWARD: …very prominent position,
with a spotlight on it and everything…
SAM: Yeah? Were there a lot of people around it, what?
HOWARD: Oh, just a few…but you know
something? They were arguing over what
The Struggle meant…
SAM: Oh…
HOWARD: Yeah…
SAM: …just like we were…
HOWARD: Yeah…they finally had to
ask the guard to settle…
SAM: Yeah? What did he say?
HOWARD: He told them it was a
struggle between the sexes…
SAM: No…
HOWARD: Man versus woman on the eternal battlefield of love… (Sam laughs)
You know something?
SAM: Mmm?
HOWARD: There was a sizeable crowd
gathered around that statue in no time!
Well, I think we learned a valuable lesson in all of
this. Modern art is evil and should be
shunned, and Millie should probably be burned in the town square for bringing
it to Mayberry in the first place.
With Aunt Bee back in fine fettle (you don’t think Sam was
the one who came up with that proposal to fob off that sculpture on the Raleigh
Museum, do you?), Thrilling Days of
Yesteryear’s patented Bee-o-Meter™ notches up another Bavier appearance,
making a grand total of ten appearances for the show’s second season, and a
tally of twenty-two for the series overall.
But we’ll probably have to resign ourselves to seeing that number refuse
to budge for the next several episodes (since I’ve previewed them and she’s off
on another sabbatical again). Goober
fans can rejoice that our favorite grease monkey returns next week in “The
Health Fund,” R.F.D.’s wacky look at the controversial issue of healthcare
which will have some additional verisimilitude with the recent Supreme Court
decision upholding the Affordable Care Act and all. Be sure to join us next week for another Mayberry
Mondays!
7 comments:
Millicent Swanson
Uh-oh, her full name. Did she do something wrong?
I understand he has a beard…
Ha!
Sometimes I forget that wearing a beard used to be code for being some liberal elitist thinkin' type. This was one of those times. The other definitions of beard are just so much more interesting (and accurate) though.
For some reason, we got reruns of Bridget Loves Bernie on a Springfield MO station in the mid 1970s, maybe late 1970s. I liked it, though I recall really hating David Birney HEY ROBERT SAMPSON WAS DEAN HALSEY IN RE-ANIMATOR. I never made that connection before!
several Klansmen washing a car
They've been there since William Shatner passed through back in 1962.
That is really a crappy papier mache "statue," but I have to tell you, a real sculpture with that particular design wouldn't look half bad. A little dated but not horrible or anything.
AUNT BEE: Mr. Alexander…from what I’ve told you of Mike—do you think it’s a talent that should be encouraged?
Hoo boy. When my Grandmother learned I was pursuing an art degree, she pulled my mother aside and said concernedly "don't you think that's a bit lavender, dear?"
My Mom told me about it and we laughed for weeks.
Also, has Emmett ever actually fixed anything?
Seems he is always "about to get around to it" or returning it to its owner with instructions on how to work around the "repair" Emmett has just performed, or something.
Also, since we now live in an economic era in which it is impossible to imagine taking a failed toaster to a repair shop, not to mention a television (many are just kicked to the curb now, the repair estimate typically being more than the value of the item), I'm fascinated by the question of just how inexpensive an item would have to be before Emmett would counsel the owner that it simply wasn't worth it.
May be worth keeping an eye on, Ivan-- sort of tracking the lower threshold of Emmett's repair catalog. [laughing] How low can he go?
Emmett continually pulls the weekly episodes best guffaw - fulfilling that contractual obligation to appeal to the corn poke highbrow demographic... And maintaining Goober's rightful place as the hick's Gunther Toody. If Sam could only up his straight an game a hickory notch, Mayberry RFD would have been an ideal crossover candidate for that more Bizarro-world version of the sticks, Green Acres...
Who wouldn't have loved to see a greased battle to-the-end between Aunt Bee and Arnold Ziffle?
Thanks, rockfish, I could have done without the image of Frances Bavier and Arnold the Pig locked like lovers.
A note on Arnold's Dad, Fred Ziffle, aka Hank Patterson:
As I'm sure Ivan is aware, my main meat is the sci-fi b-movies of the fifties, in which Hank was a common sight (Tarantula, Earth v The Spider, Puppet People, Beginning of the End, and many more).
Hank was one of those obliging character actors whose character was so well defined that he brought his own wardrobe to the set (yes, including that hat), thus sparing the production the trouble of outfitting him. Thus he is essentially Fred Ziffle in all of these movies, which of course makes them all the more fun-- it's like Maynard G Krebs popping into movies at random. You rang?
Arnold Ziffle, on the other hand, while largely content to work in the nude, was a constant challenge to the wardrobe department when clothing was asked for--
A prima donna, and yes, there is here a nearly irresistible pun but I ain't goin' there, because it's just too easy.
And a last add:
Being of a wicked nature, if in Mayberry in that day, I would have told Emmett that the meaning of the statue was the struggle against xenophobia.
What happened to the statue they had in the town square of good old Seth Taylor? He was the ancestor of Aunt Bee's believed to have done the most for Mayberry but actually swindled them. He caused the railroad to go through Mount Pilot and helped keep Mayberry a delightful small community where the "children all had nice teeth!" Floyd Lawson's belief,not mine!
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