Next Tuesday (July 2), Shout! Factory is officially releasing what I have often referred to here on the blog as my Holy Grail as far as
Premiering on September
28, 1959 on a Tuesday night (so the Shout! Factory Tuesday release
date is kinda like kismet), The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis was
created by Max Shulman, an author-playwright who had released a collection of
short stories about the character under that same title in 1951. The book had first been adapted as an M-G-M
film in 1953 (starring Bobby Van as Dobie and Debbie Reynolds), The Affairs of Dobie Gillis; when
Shulman brought the character to TV he decided to put Dobie in high school (he
was a college student in the original book and film) to appeal more to teenaged
viewers. (Later, Shulman penned a novel
featuring Dobie and the gang, 1959’s I
Was a Teenage Dwarf.)
And for the most part—that’s what set Dobie Gillis apart from
most of the family/domestic comedies still on the air at that time. Shows like The Adventures of Ozzie &
Harriet, Father Knows Best, The Donna Reed Show, etc. featured
teenagers as characters…but they often seemed more like mere extensions of
their parents than genuine teens. Dobie
Gillis (Dwayne Hickman) was television’s first realistic teenager. He chased girls; he wasn’t a bright student;
he avoided work and schemed for money; he rebelled against his father (who most
assuredly did not know best); he hung around weird kids (like our mothers were
always telling us: “I don’t want you associating with so-and-so”). And he talked to himself—well, technically
the television audience, in one of the best examples of “breaking the fourth
wall” in TV history. He would sit in the
city park underneath a statue of Rodin’s The
Thinker, and contemplate where he was in life and what his future would
hold—as well as commenting on whatever predicament he had gotten himself into
of late.
He was the simple son of a grocer, Herbert T. Gillis (Frank
Faylen)—whose store at 285 Norwood often
provided a backdrop for Dobie’s escapades.
The social satire of the show was particularly pungent for sitcoms of
that era: it was stressed that Dobie, because of his low intellect and even
lower status, had precious little prospects in life; all Dobie knew was that he
did not want to end up a grocer like his father. Herbert loved his son, but in the early years
of the show (primarily the first season), there was a prickliness to their
relationship: Dobie was always exploiting his Dad to cadge money despite the
senior Gillis being a tightfisted cheapskate.
After skirmishes with his son, Herbert would stare at the camera and
say: “I gotta kill that boy…I just
gotta.” CBS wasn’t particularly wild
about this aspect of the series and in the second season (with the episode “You
Ain’t Nothin’ But a Houn’ Dog”), the Herbert Gillis character was toned down
and made more sympathetic. It didn’t
necessarily ruin the series, but it kind of muted its edginess a bit.
Dobie’s mother, Winifred (Florida Friebus), doted on her boy
(often slipping him money behind his father’s back for dates) and occasionally
could be a little smothery. But she was
also his fiercest champion; the only one capable of calming her husband down
after Dobie had done something to drive him to distraction. Amusingly, both Herbert and Winnie, despite
their imperfections, were one of TV’s most loving couples—you often got the
idea that the two of them snuck into the back storeroom for a little what-have-you
from time to time, as much as they hugged and cuddled and danced and sang. Dobie also had a brother Davey (played by
Dwayne Hickman’s real-life bro Darryl) who turned up in a few episodes during
the first season (he was away at college) but he soon vanished, never to be
heard from again. (In the fourth and
last season, Bobby Diamond turned up in several episodes as Dobie’s cousin
Duncan “Dunky” Gillis—a younger version of Dob who was added when his older
cousin’s girl-chasing escapades had become a little stale.)
Dobie’s best friend was TV’s first beatnik, Maynard G. Krebs
(Bob Denver). (Incidentally, the “G”
stands for “Walter.”) A nonconformist
regularly clad in a dirty, torn sweatshirt and sporting a goatee, Maynard loved
jazz, playing the bongos and collecting esoterica like petrified frogs and
tinfoil. In the early episodes of the
series, there was a teensy hint of menace about the character (he’s picked up
and briefly jailed for vagrancy in the premiere episode, “Caper at the Bijou”)
but as the series went on, he morphed into a naïve manchild merely at odds with
the world, with no one to lean on but his “good buddy” Dobie. He hated work almost as much as his best
friend did (often reacting to the mere mention of the word with a screechy “WORK ?!!”) and would frequently make his
entrance after a character commented (as an example) that something was “vile,
disgusting and low.” (Maynard: “You rang?”)
This gimmick was later “borrowed” for whenever Lenny & Squiggy would
burst into the apartment of TV’s Laverne & Shirley.
As for “the many loves of Dobie Gillis”—two female
characters that would appear on multiple occasions made their debut during the
first season: “Love is a Science” introduced Dobie’s nemesis Zelda Gilroy
(Sheila James Kuehl), whose devotion and love for the Dobster wasn’t quite
reciprocated by the man for which she had set her cap. Zelda, the smartest girl in the school,
explained to Dobie that there was “propinquity” between the two of them: it was
no use for him to fight it…they would eventually end up together. (And they did…but I’m kind of getting ahead
of the story.) Zelda’s pet name for
Dobie was “Poopsie,” and she would often wrinkle her nose at him like a rabbit
while he helplessly wrinkled back. (“Now
cut that out!” he would yell in a dead-on impersonation of Jack Benny.) Although Zelda was not the most attractive of
girls, she was sensible, down-to-earth and knew what was best for Dobie; in one
episode (“Dobie, Dobie, Who’s Got the Dobie?”) a girl also decides that Dobie
is worth chasing after simply because Zelda wants him…and Zelda wants only the
best.
The other frequent female character was the woman that Dobie
would give his life, his love, his all—the money-hungry blonde temptress Thalia
Menninger (Tuesday Weld). Thalia’s
obsession with money—for that was the only way she could see herself spending
the rest of her life with a pauper like Gillis—fueled many of the program’s
plots in the first season…though it would do Thalia a disservice to call her
greedy, because the money wasn’t for her, you understand. Her father was sixty years old and had a
kidney condition and her mother wasn’t getting any younger; her sister had
married a loafer (who daily ate his weight in groceries) and her brother was on
his way to becoming a public charge.
Thalia owed it to her family to be their salvation, and when Dobie would
protest that because he loved her money shouldn’t matter she would dismiss him
with “Love won’t butter parsnips.” The
Thalia character disappeared after the first season (Weld and Hickman
apparently had difficulty getting along) but returned for guest appearances in
Season 3’s “Birth of a Salesman” and Season 4’s “What’s a Little Murder Between
Friends?”
Dobie’s rival for the attentions of Thalia, BMOC Milton
Armitage, appeared in five episodes during the first season—it was one of the
first notable acting gigs for Warren Beatty before his breakthrough film role
in Splendor in the Grass
(1961). It also wasn’t Beatty’s finest
hour—he pretty much slept-walked through the role (he later dismissed the part
as “absurd”) though one or two people have suggested to me that he was
distracted by Weld, whom he had hoped to make one of his romantic conquests. (The fact that Beatty only comes to life—doing
a hilarious Marlon Brando impression—in “Dobie Gillis, Boy Actor,” the only
installment in which he appeared that does not feature Weld’s Menninger would
seem to support this.) They replaced
Milton Armitage with another privileged rich boy, Chatsworth Osborne, Jr.
(Steve Franken), who proved to be a funnier antagonist for Dobie with his
exaggerated Darien accent and frequent references to his “Moms” (“Moms will
ship me off to military school faster than you can say ‘federal reserve note’”). “Moms” was played by Doris Packer, who had
also played Milton ’s patrician
matriarch—the first name, Clarice, remained the same.
Thanks to Shout! Factory rep Tom Chen, I was the beneficiary
of a review copy of The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis: The Complete Series. It is a handsome box set, containing all 147
episodes from the program’s four-year-run…and a bonus disc in the Season 4 case
has some interesting curios including the CBS pilot for the series (which is
the same as the inaugural episode, “Caper at the Bijou,” except with extended footage
at the end featuring messages from the cast urging on sponsors), three episodes
of The
Bob Cummings Show (a.k.a. Love That Bob) which Dwayne Hickman
co-starred on from 1955-59 and an episode of The Stu Erwin Show
(a.k.a. The Trouble with Father), which was one of James Kuehl’s early
gigs. There are clips from a 1960
telecast of The Dinah Shore Chevy Show featuring Hickman (a Dobie Gillis
skit in color!) and from The Coke Time Special (also from
1960), hosted by Pat Boone and featuring Bob Denver and Edd Byrnes in their
Maynard and Kookie (from 77 Sunset Strip) personas. An interview with Dwayne Hickman (in which he
does admit that he did channel Jack Benny often playing Dobie) and some PDF
files from Max Shulman’s “vault” round out the goodies (the pilot for the
potential Zelda spin-off is included in these).
Some of the episodes are a little rough. 20th Century Fox didn’t seem to be too dedicated
to cleaning up some of the shows (I’ve noticed the same issues in watching
reruns of Dobie on Me-TV) but I’ve noticed this mostly occurs in the
first season (and Shout! issues a disclaimer on one of the episodes,
“Rock-a-Bye Dobie,” that the elements aren’t completely up to snuff). Diehard fans are going to overlook this; I
know I am because I’m just giddy that the show has finally made it to DVD ,
and in spending a few days watching selected episodes I’ve discovered why I
fell in love with the show in the first place.
I mentioned at the beginning of this review that Dobie
Gillis was a unique sitcom because it looked at life through the eyes
of a teenager—that and the snap, crackle, pop of the series makes it so
refreshing to watch today. And by “snap,
crackle, pop” I mean the innovative editing of the series, the punchy, funny
dialogue, the fresh characterizations.
You always expected the unexpected on Dobie Gillis; people
popped up out of nowhere and the characters’ dialogue exchanges had a rhythm
that was almost like jazz. There was
also a sentimentality about the show, which would always be cut with a
lemon-like tartness to keep it from being too gloppy (Maynard’s frequent
admission of “I’m gettin’ all misty, Dob”).
One of my favorite episodes is a first season installment
entitled “Room at the Bottom”: Thalia, discouraged that Dobie is not going to
amount to much in life, is nevertheless convinced that because her paramour is
so likable he might be able to muddle through by making the right
contacts…especially if his father allows him to attend an exclusive preparatory
academy, Willoughby Hall.
Dobie is secure in the knowledge that his father will never
agree to an extravagance…but he hasn’t counted on the persuasive powers of Ms.
Menninger. Herbert has a vision of his
son becoming the BFF of the wealthy Winthrop van Money (Steve Franken, before
he started playing Chatsworth) and the senior Money bestowing a chain of
grocery stores upon Herbert T. in grateful acknowledgement of Dobie being a pal
to young Winthrop .
So Dobie is going to be packed off to Willoughby …but
there’s a chance for a stay of execution.
If he can get a perfect grade on his mathematics test (scoring 100), it
will prove to Thalia that he’s is not a complete clod and that Dobie might be
able to get ahead in life without having to schmooze. But Mrs. Menninger did not raise any foolish
girls; Thalia knows Dobie can’t pass
that test.
Dobie and Maynard go over to the home of their math teacher,
Mrs. Ruth Adams (Jean Byron), to ask for a little tutoring help. Mr. Adams (John Bryant) takes advantage of
the situation by asking the boys if they’ll baby-sit their son (Ronny Howard)
while he and Mrs. A go out to the movies (to see The Monster That Devoured Cleveland, one of the show’s running gags
in that it always seemed to be the only movie playing at Central City’s
theater). Disgruntled that they’ve been
shanghaied into sitting, the two of them find a copy of the test they’re supposed
to take the next day…and though they know it’s wrong, they agree to copy down
the answers so Dobie can get a perfect grade and not have to go to Willoughby .
The next day, Ruth confesses to her husband that she
suspects Dobie and Maynard cheated on the exam after she hands out the papers
to the class and Thalia is delighted with Dobie’s perfect score. She acknowledges it’s possible Dobie could
have done that well but Maynard…anyway,
Ruth is disillusioned and vows to her husband that she doesn’t think she’ll
ever be able to trust Dobie and Maynard again.
And then Dobie and Maynard return to the classroom…to
confess their vile deed. Mrs. Adams is
overjoyed (“You’ve made me very happy”), and while she will have to flunk both
of them (Maynard: “This makes you happy?” ) her faith in her students has been
restored. She tells Thalia as she and
her husband leave: “You have a fine, sweet, sensitive, wonderful boy.”
Thalia responds: “Yes, I have a fine, sweet, wonderful,
sensitive boy…who’s never going to make a
dime!”
“Room at the Bottom” was later recycled into a third season
episode, “Dobie Gillis: Wanted Dead or Alive,” with Leander Pomfritt (William
Schallert) the instructor and his poetry exam the test Dobie and Maynard cheat
on. Pomfritt was another great character
on the show; a cynical-around-the-edges teacher (he often greeted his class
with “Hello, my young unemployables…”) whose dedication to his profession often
trampled on his pessimism. (He’s the
subject of another favorite Dobie episode of mine, the second
season closer “Goodbye, Mr. Pomfritt – Hello Mr. Chips.”) Pomfritt taught at Central
High School in the first two
seasons of the show, then became the gang’s instructor at S. Peter Pryor Junior
College when the series shifted gears in Season 3 (Dobie and Maynard also
served a temporary hitch in the peacetime Army in the latter part of Season
2). Jean Byron returned to the show in
the guise of a different professor, Imogene Burkhart (the in-joke was that this
was Byron’s real name)—and it always amused me that after Dobie Gillis ended its
run Schallert and Byron played husband and wife on The Patty Duke Show.
By its fourth and last season, Dobie Gillis had sort of
lost its mojo; interestingly, Hickman’s Dobie started to recede into the
background as more of a straight man while Denver’s Krebs took center stage in
many of the episodes (some with a surrealistic, fantastical bent like “Dr.
Jekyll & Mr. Gillis” and “Requiem for an Underweight Heavyweight”). I remember reading one time a critique of Gilligan’s
Island in which the author tried to argue that while Denver made a
great second banana on Gillis he simply wasn’t capable of
carrying the star load on Gilligan (I get the feeling he
didn’t watch Dobie much…and as Peter Nellhaus suggested to me on Facebook,
there’s a reason why Shout! features Denver prominently on the cover). There was an attempt to rekindle interest in
the series in 1977 with a half-hour pilot entitled Whatever Happened to Dobie
Gillis?—I never saw it; our CBS affiliate in Charleston, WV refused to
air it for some reason or another—and in 1988, a reunion TV-movie aired
entitled Bring Me the Head of Dobie Gillis that brought back most of the
still-living cast with the exception of Beatty and Weld (Connie Stevens played
Thalia, and I thought she did rather well).
8 comments:
A terrific salute to the first prime-time series I was a regular fan of, one that would appear to be very much of its time, but had a tempo and tone that makes it hold up more than half a century later (its breakneck pace made "Dobie" to sitcoms what Little Richard was to rock 'n' roll). And I've been lucky enough to interview both Hickman and Schallert as well.
As you already know, Dobie Gillis is one of my favourite sitcoms of all time. I think it was incredibly innovative. In fact, I think of it as the first true Sixties sitcom (even if it debuted in 1959). Aside from centring on teenagers, it had a pace that made its contemporaries seem slow by comparison. And its humour could not only be biting, but also very broad and even surreal at times. I think it can be counted as the direct forerunner of such Sixties comedies as The Monkees, He & She, and even such diverse entries as Bewitched and Get Smart. It's really a shame it is not better known today!ab
Vince spoke up:
its breakneck pace made "Dobie" to sitcoms what Little Richard was to rock 'n' roll
Very nice.
And I've been lucky enough to interview both Hickman and Schallert as well.
I'm not jealous of this. My complexion is not green due to envy, it's because...um...jet lag! Yeah, that's the ticket...
Terry put in his two cents:
I think it was incredibly innovative. In fact, I think of it as the first true Sixties sitcom (even if it debuted in 1959).
If I stopped to think about how much of an influence Dobie Gillis had on my sense of humor, I think the implications would be staggering. I quote from it all the time ("You're, like, a real human being").
It's really a shame it is not better known today
A Facebook friend of mine told me that he really wanted to like the series...but he thought there was just a little too much Bob Denver. And I can certainly see his point; the Maynard character kind of took over that show in later seasons like Fonzie conquered Happy Days.
Another thing that impressed me about the show at the time was the feel of late '50s urban funk, almost a "Naked City" or "Car 54" vibe to the scenes in the grocery, despite the apparent small-city setting. The Shulman influence, I'm sure, a welcome change from so many of the fresh-scrubbed sitcoms of the time (and since).
Back in those days, our local CBS affiliate produced a live March of Dimes fundraiser every year for which they'd bring in TV stars to perform, usually wearing their familiar costumes. I remember Abby Dalton showing up from "Hennessey" and Kirby Grant dressed as Sky King and impressing everyone with his singing ability. Uncle Sky had nice pipes.
During the first year or two of "Dobie," Bob Denver showed up at the fundraiser in full Maynard regalia, and my mother took me to the big hall where the show was performed just so I could meet him. I remember the two of us trailing him as he dashed around the hall, my mother calling out "Maynard - Maynard" until he finally gave up and turned to us. He turned out to be thoroughly abashed for having forced a grown woman to chase him and apologized for thinking that he was being stalked by "some kid." He chatted with us for several minutes and was charming and polite. At the age of five or six, I was mostly impressed with his goatee and the holes in his sweatshirt. It's a memory that still makes me smile.
I'm glad to hear that the show's going to be available again. Your write-up makes your own love for the series clear.
I like how Dobie is featured with a different gal on each disc cover. That looks like a great set, and YES, a long awaited for one. ( Giving a shout out to Shout! ) This was a childhood favorite of mine too - from tv reruns - and I always enjoyed Dobie's philosophies on life best.... even though they weren't always sound.
James Vance walked up to the podium:
Kirby Grant dressed as Sky King and impressing everyone with his singing ability
Kirby shows off his pipes in the Olsen & Johnson comedy Ghost Chasers, which is tremendously hooty.
During the first year or two of "Dobie," Bob Denver showed up at the fundraiser in full Maynard regalia, and my mother took me to the big hall where the show was performed just so I could meet him. I remember the two of us trailing him as he dashed around the hall, my mother calling out "Maynard - Maynard" until he finally gave up and turned to us. He turned out to be thoroughly abashed for having forced a grown woman to chase him and apologized for thinking that he was being stalked by "some kid." He chatted with us for several minutes and was charming and polite. At the age of five or six, I was mostly impressed with his goatee and the holes in his sweatshirt. It's a memory that still makes me smile.
When Denver relocated to Princeton, WV in his retiring years, he occasionally appeared as a weatherman on one of the local TV stations according to some friends of mine. Never got the opportunity to see him but I find the concept of Maynard G. Krebs, meteorologist screamingly funny. ("It's, like, partly cloudy...")
The Sisters Metzinger gushed:
I like how Dobie is featured with a different gal on each disc cover.
The packaging/artwork for these discs is really first-rate. Dobie and Zelda are featured on the fourth season case in a wedding pose...which kind of foreshadows where the reunion movie went. :-)
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