Yes, friends and neighbors—it’s Monday, and once again Thrilling Days of Yesteryear presents its continuing dissection of the underwhelming television classic The Doris Day Show—or what we like to call here Doris Day(s). (Sorry about the preemption last week, by the way.) This week’s episode was written by Sid Morse, who was the series’ story editor in its first bucolic season until the producers woke up one day and realized: Sid was not particularly funny. (Sid had a few Andy Griffith Show episodes among his writing credits, which I guess made him the ideal candidate for Doris’ program—though I can’t believe Mayberry R.F.D. let him get away.)
In the opening scene, The Widow Martin and her soon-to-be-fired housekeeper, Aggie Thompson (Fran Ryan) are pulling loaves of hot bread out of the oven—which is highly unusual, since most of the time they’re baking it’s some calorie-laden treat for her hopped-up-on-sugar children. Doris takes a deep whiff of the bread and then starts to laugh.
AGGIE: Mind telling me what the joke is?
“I was just picturing you standing in line at the Cotina County
Department of Labor…”
DORIS: Smelling fresh bread always reminds me of the first
time we met Leroy…remember?
AGGIE (staring off into space): Leroy B. Simpson…
This episode really is odd because it’s essentially an extended flashback—the wavy screen starts to kick in after Aggie’s line and we wind up in the kitchen again as the two women pull the bread out of the oven. Maybe it’s just me, but if I were Dodo and had planned to reminisce on my self-titled sitcom, it would probably be something involving my family; say, the birth of either of my two sons, Billy (Philip Brown) or Toby (Tod Starke) or the first time I moved back after living in the city for many years. That there’s a flashback to when the family hired the doofus farmhand (James Hampton) suggests to me that this may have been the pilot for the show and then someone thought better and scheduled it instead for later, adding the opening “remember” sequence.
AGGIE: Mm-hmm…that and babies…
DORIS: Speaking of babies—have you seen the short one and
his brother lately?
AGGIE: Not since school…they just dropped their books and
ran…
DORIS (handing her an empty pan): Here you are…one whiff of
this and they’ll be here…
Aggie looks out the kitchen window and motions for “Do” to come over and have a look. (She gets to call her “Do” because she hasn’t been fired yet.) The two women observe Doris’s father, Buck Webb (Denver Pyle), as he attempts to sneak up on a crow by clobbering it with a rock. The crow takes flight, and Buck heaves the rock…
…well, that could have happened to anybody. (I just hope it wasn't the one up on blocks.) But it’s Pyle’s Oliver Hardy-like facial
reaction that made me laugh hard…
…that and the fact this scene reminds me of my mother’s continuing battle with the crows that are abundant around Rancho Yesteryear, where she has threatened—and this is a direct quote—to “shove a broomstick up their ass.” (On occasion, my mother adopts the social graces of Ruth Gordon from all those Clint Eastwood orangutan movies.)
DORIS: You know—I can’t convince him that crow does less damage than he does with those
rocks…
AGGIE: He won’t believe that bird’s smarter than he is…
The two of them hear the front door slam and realize that young
William and Tobias have returned from their childlike japes and are ready to chow
down on some homemade bread before a hearty supper of chocolate éclairs and
licorice whips.
DORIS: You’re kidding!
AGGIE: How many does that make?
DORIS: Three…
TOBY: Four!
BILLY: And the window in the shed…
DORIS: Now when did that
happen?
BILLY: Just this morning while you were making breakfast…
Li’l Toby asks his mother for two pieces of bread…and while
Doris has initial concerns that such a repast might spoil his dinner, his
brother assures Mother Martin that the kid will be hungry. So armed with extra bread (and I’m not joking
about this—they spread butter and sugar on each piece; Paula Deen is probably having
an orgasm somewhere) and a glass of milk, the two rapscallions head off to the
barn…
…to share their snackage with a tramp in the hayloft. No, don’t be frightened—it’s only Leroy B.
Simpson. (Did you actually think a
homicidal hobo would be written into this story just to do away with these
insufferable kids? As is our mantra here
at TDOY—we simply aren’t that
lucky. And besides, Doris has another
plan to rid herself of these rugrats…but I’m a few seasons ahead of myself here.)
LEROY: Well…it looks mighty fine, boys…much obliged… (After
a pause) Wait a minute…you…you’re sure
this is okay? I mean…you didn’t steal this or anything, did you?
BILLY: Heck no—Mom gave
it to us!
TOBY: Yeah…we’re not allowed
to steal…
LEROY: I bet your daddy’s real proud of you…
TOBY: We don’t have
a daddy…
BILLY: We only have a mom…
And pretty soon you won’t even have that…oh, there I go getting
ahead of things again—sorry about that.
The cheese-loving Toby then pesters Leroy to tell more tales about his
Uncle Buster, who according to the transient “was just about the biggest and
strongest man in Choctaw County.”
Because they are children, the Martin kids soon start bickering among
themselves—fortunately, Leroy shames them into making up after frightening them
with the knowledge that “Uncle Buster” takes a dim view of such activities and
won’t bring them any presents on Redneck Eve.
LEROY: Uncle Buster was real strong on kin…he used to say
there ain’t nothin’ closer than two brothers…he used to say any little fellow
can start an argument—but it takes a big
fellow to say I’m sorry… (He continues to strum his guitar)
BILLY (quietly): I’m sorry…
TOBY: Me, too…
LEROY: That’d make Uncle Buster real proud…
Group hug, everybody!
Well, Leroy entertains the kids with a chorus of Ke-Mo Ki-Mo (The Magic
Song), the tune Doris and the gang
sang during the coda of “The Uniform”—and then Toby gets misty:
TOBY: I wish Leroy could stay
here with us all the time—don’t you, Billy?
BILLY: That’d be super…but you
know Grandpa…Grandpa says there isn’t enough work around here to take on a
hired hand…
LEROY: Oh, that’s all right,
Billy…
“I’ll be murdering
you and your family in your beds by slashing your throats with a bread knife
later on, anyway.”
BILLY: Wait a minute—I got an
idea! You know how sometimes Grandpa
puts things off?
TOBY: Like when he wants to go
fishing?
BILLY: If Leroy could do some of
those things…Grandpa sure would be happy…
TOBY: And he’d hire him!
Because that’s always
the way it works in real life! Leroy
thinks this is a great idea, so he asks the kids “what needs doin’?” Billy tells Leroy that the electric pump
needs looked at because it’s always malfunctioning. “You know about electricity, Leroy?” asks young
Toby.
“Sure—can’t be
nothin’ to fixin’ a little ol’ pump,” brags Leroy. So the repairman and his two charges (sorry
about that) head out of the barn, and the scene shifts to Buck, who is
assembling a scarecrow amidst the crops being filched by the crow
population. Aggie wanders by to ask
where the kids are but finds herself fascinated with the Laird and Master’s
handiwork.
AGGIE: I think you’re too old to be playing with dolls…
BUCK: That’s no doll!
AGGIE: Could have fooled me…
BUCK: Seems like even a city
girl would know a scarecrow when
she sees one…
AGGIE: Would you believe in all the years I lived in New
York I never saw one scarecrow on
Fifth Avenue…?
BUCK: Very funny…very
funny…
Oh—who am I to rain on this man’s parade? As you’ve already guessed, Project Scarecrow
has been designed to rid Buckley of that meddlesome crow that’s responsible for
all the broken windows about the place…but Aggie has issued her no-confidence
veto: “One look at that—that crow will probably laugh itself to death.” (Well, not if he’s watching this episode he
won’t.)
The scene shifts to inside Rancho Webb, where our subplot is
being set up in the form of Doris hunting for a piece of jewelry by turning
over chair cushions—a little gold heart given to her by Billy and Toby. Buck has come into the house looking for a
coat with which to adorn his scarecrow.
DORIS: I wore it last night when I went to dinner with
Matt…
Matt, eh? And who’s
this Matt when he’s not tending bar? (By
the way, if any of you out there are like me and figured out where the episode
was headed with the introduction of this plot point, please fold your hands and
place them on your desk so as not to disturb everyone else.)
BUCK: Well, maybe it
dropped on the floor of the restaurant…
DORIS: Nope…I called…nobody turned it in…
BUCK: It’s bound to be here somewhere…
DORIS: Oh, I hope so—you know, the boys gave me that…I’d
sure hate to lose it…
BUCK: It’ll show up…
DORIS: Hey, I wonder if I dropped it in the car?
Like in the vicinity of the back seat, you little minx? Doris decides to call this “Matt” to find out
as Buck heads out to the kitchen to make a sandwich. And outside where the electric pump sits,
Billy and Toby watch professional engineer Leroy repair the pump for
Grandpa. There is some crosscutting back
to Buck in the kitchen, preparing his sandwich (by going to that gi-normous
fridge of theirs I like) and then it’s back to Leroy.
LEROY: Oh, yeah…it was just a little ol’ short…and while I
was under there, I did some general rewiring…
“Hi! My name is…”
(Looks at name tag) “Leroy B. Simpson…I was but a mere drifter until I took
classes at The Emmett Clark School of Repair…it literally changed my life…”
LEROY: …I figure that might impress your Grandpa…
BILLY: That’s a good idea, Leroy!
TOBY: Yeah, a good idea!
What are you, a f**king parrot? “Well,” says Leroy, “I guess we’re ready to
turn the juice on.” Toby beams: “Boy, is
Grandpa gonna be surprised!”
You serrit, kiddo.
Muck from the garbage disposal spits out all over Buck inside the
kitchen. The bread for his sandwich
sails out of the toaster. A radio loudly
plays a Sousa march…and Buck’s attempt to unplug it creates this R.F.D.
moment…
Back from commercial, Buck sits in a chair on the front porch and watches through the open kitchen window as Aggie and Doris serve vagabond Leroy some victuals. Lots of victuals. Doris steps outside.
BUCK: That boy is phenomenal!
DORIS: That boy is hungry…
BUCK: He’s like a baby
robin! He’s on his third helping…
DORIS: Well—so…
BUCK: …and after
he tried to electrocute me!
Doris kind of glosses over the fact that Leroy did kinda
sorta try to kill her dad by dismissing it as an accident, but Buck cuts her
off: “That boy is an accident, that’s
what—just lookin’ for someplace to happen!
Well, it’s not gonna happen
here!”
BUCK: A chance to do what? Finish me off?
DORIS: What? Come
on, now…boy, you really aren’t being fair…I’ve never seen you like this…
BUCK (grabbing a chair as he sits down): How’s come all of
a sudden I’ve got to be fair to the likes of him?
DORIS: Leroy is a fine
young man…he needs a family and he needs a job…
BUCK: Not from me, he don’t…
DORIS: You know, the boys thought that you were going to be
so happy about him fixing that pump and you…you…all you did was squawk about
it!
BUCK: So—the boys thought wrong…
“I’ve been meanin’ to tell you, daughter—them kids ain’t too
bright.” Doris, who’s apparently just
finished reading the best-selling help book written by my mother—Guilty! Guilty!
Guilty!—tells her pop the kids will be disappointed “because they like
him…and so do I.” (You know, Dor—you’re
every bit to blame for this situation.
Maybe Matt should come calling more often.)
BUCK: Those boys also love puppies and guppies and birds
and…just about anything else that moves…
Um…yeah.
DORIS: So do I…and so do you…
BUCK: Well… (After a pause) Girl, you don’t know anything
about this boy!
DORIS: All I know is that he is lonely…
BUCK: How do you know he’s not some kind of a…crook?
DORIS: A what?
BUCK: How do you know he
didn’t steal your little gold heart?
“Because he’s already stolen my real one. It’s been so long, Dad…” She’s gonna have him busting up a chifferobe
before this thing is over. The two of
them go a couple of rounds on whether or not the vagrant is a thief, and Buck
finally concedes defeat in the face of Doris’s ‘he-isn’t-I-just-know-it”
defense:
BUCK: You’re the spittin’ image of your momma…every time
she couldn’t find a reason for
something, she just knew…all right…all right…but I think you’re makin’ a big mistake… (Doris gives him a kiss on the cheek) Give
him a message for me—just tell him to keep his hands plumb away from my
machinery!
Well…whatever works for ya, big guy. A scene shift finds Buck sneaking out of the
barn holding a pair of field glasses as his two grandsons look on in
curiosity. Buck makes his way to a
fence, where he focuses in on Leroy toiling away hammering fence posts.
BUCK: Well…what makes you think I was watchin’ him?
TOBY: It looked
like you was watchin’ him…
BUCK: Well…I was…uh…weren’t you two supposed to cleaning
out the chicken house?
BILLY: Yes, sir…we already did it…
Anything I hate it’s a polite kid. So Buck asks them if they’d like to go down
to the pond and watch the ducks “hatch out.”
As they get ready to go, young Toby has a question: “Grandpa…why were
you watchin’ Leroy B. Simpson?” (Look,
if anyone ever tells you that Seinfeld is a show about nothing you
need to call bullsh*t on that—this is
a show about nothing.)
"I wonder if Merry Maids is hiring...?" |
“We didn’t do anything,” pleads Toby, to which his mom
replies: “I’ll bet you didn’t.” (Okay, I did laugh at Day’s delivery of this
line.) Doris goes back into the house to
find out what Aggie’s problem is.
DORIS: I hear you got a mood…Billy said, “Boy, Aggie sure
has got a mood this morning…”
AGGIE: They don’t miss much, do they?
Only when you leave the toilet seat down. (Honestly, you people make it too easy
sometimes.)
DORIS: Uh-uh…what’s the matter?
AGGIE: Oh, nothing…I’ll get your coffee…
DORIS: Look, old buddy…
“Old buddy”? She’s
out of here in three more episodes.
Friendship can be so fickle.
DORIS: …I know you long and I know you good and I know
something’s wrong…now what’s the matter?
“It’s called ‘menopause,’
Do…perhaps you’ll experience it someday.”
Aggie is upset because one of her silver earrings is missing, and when
Doris asks where she lost it Agnes is firm—“I didn’t say I lost it…I said it was missing.” She hasn’t worn them in months, and when her
employer inquires as to whether she’s given her room a good going-over Aggie
replies in the affirmative.
DORIS: Well, now look…we know an earring can’t just walk out of the house—don’t we? And the boys certainly wouldn’t want it…
“They already have their own…”
DORIS: …I mean…there isn’t anybody else around here who
would…
A ‘ding’ sound appears on the soundtrack as Aggie turns to
face Doris with a Kaye Ballard “Oh, really?” look on her mug.
DORIS: Aggie…
AGGIE: Well, do you think Buck could be right about Leroy?
DORIS: No, I don’t think Buck could be right about Leroy…I don’t think Leroy is a thief…
“He’s just not that bright!”
Doris tells Aggie that she help look for the earring—but asks her not to
mention it in front of Buck. She won’t
have to—from the top of the stairs, Buck is bellowing for his daughter and when
she enters the living room she learns that her dad’s lodge ring has also
vanished. Another “ding” can be heard on
the soundtrack.
AGGIE (looking at Doris): Tell him…
DORIS: Nothing…Aggie misplaced an earring and we were just
coming up to look for it…
BUCK: Well, that tears
it…
“Shouldn’t have never let you hire that tramp in the first
place,” Buck mutters as he comes downstairs and grabs the telephone. He’s going to call the sheriff on Leroy, so
if he did glom onto that jewelry he’d best make tracks for the county line.
DORIS (slamming down the receiver): Buck Webb, don’t you dare do that! You don’t know for sure that he did it…
BUCK: What’s he gotta do before you come to your senses?
DORIS: Dad, you can’t accuse Leroy without proof!
All you have is circumstantial evidence—now isn’t a man innocent until proven guilty?
BUCK: What do you want me to do?
DORIS: Nothing! At
least not until I find out more about it…
Yeah, old man! Doris
is gonna get the birdseye lowdown on this caper! And so as Dragnet
March-music accompanies her out to the tool shed where Mr. Simpson’s humble
lodgings are located, she finds…
LEROY: Gosh…jewels!
Where’d they come from?
DORIS: Don’t you know?
“From the looks of ‘em…my first guess would be a claw
machine…”
DORIS (after awkward silence): Leroy…I’d like you to do me
a favor…whoever put these here…may come back and we’d like to know who it is…so
will you stand and guard them while I go and get my father?
LEROY: I don’t know, Miz Martin…they look pretty valuable…
DORIS: They are, Leroy…they really are…and that’s why I want you to guard them…’cause I really trust you…
LEROY: Don’t you worry none ‘bout them jewels, Miz
Martin…I’ll guard them…
Doris runs inside the house, calling for her father…who’s
downstairs in the cellar. She tells him
that she’s recovered the jewelry, and when he wants to know where it was she
explains it was in the tool shed. Because
the shed also happens to be the swinging bachelor pad of their new handyman, Buck
is certain that Leroy is responsible, and he can’t believe his daughter left
the loot in Leroy’s care. But Doris
trusts Leroy, and so when they go back to the shed…
I’ll bet Leroy is tooling down some side road, shaking his head: “I can’t believe she left me alone with that stash of jewelry…that woman’s stupider than I am!” No, I’m just having you on—even though Buck is ready to do the “Told-You-So” dance, the two of them can hear Leroy psssting from over near the garden. The three of them look over to see…
...oh, like you hadn't figured this one out yet. Yes, it's our old friend Buzzy the Crow, hopping around with Buck’s watch in his beak.
DORIS: How’d you know what to look for, Leroy?
LEROY: Well…I got to thinkin’…
“I’m warning you,
Dobbs…”
LEROY: …I knew nobody ‘round here would be doin’ any
stealin’…and I remember seein’ that old crow…
“The bird, not the bottle your Pa keeps in the chicken
house…”
LEROY: Crows like anything shiny, you know…
DORIS: Yeah, I know…
LEROY: So I snuck over here to watch the house…and pretty
soon here he come with Mr. Webb’s watch…
Poor Buck. Not only
has a crow made a fool out of him, but so has a bigger fool who answers to “Mr.
Simpson.” Doris trills merrily how about
how she wasn’t the slightest bit worried when she came back to find Leroy and
the jewelry gone, and so Buck is forced to eat (oh, I am shamed about this one) crow.
LEROY: Oh, yes, sir…some…we had quite a few of them back
home in Choctaw County…
Isn’t there a bridge in that area where some idiot jumped to
his death? I seem to recall hearing a
song about that…
LEROY: …I had quite a job keepin’ ‘em out of the garden,
too…
BUCK (after Doris gives him the stinkeye): Uh…Leroy…uh…how’d
you like to…work here permanently? Help me around the place?
LEROY: Yes, sir, Mr. Webb—I’d like that!
BUCK: Well…uh…consider yourself hired, then…
DORIS (shaking his hand): Welcome to the family, Leroy!
BUCK: One thing…keep your hands off of my machinery…
He’s on about that again.
Well, Leroy is so punchy pleased to have a steady job, three hots and a
cot, and a loving family that he…
…trips over the woodpile! He’s incorrigible, that one! “I’m gonna regret this,” says Buck sadly. “I just know it.”
Well, the coda goes to show that Buck did not speak with
forked tongue. Doris and the boys are
digging up weeds in the garden, and from their conversation Billy is apparently
angling for a new suit:
Yes, I thought the same thing you did—you dirty minded
people—but Doris clarifies this by telling Toby “You’re going to get a new
suit—your brother’s new suit.”
Buck has been looking for eggs around the farm and he asks
Doris and her crew how the weed pulling is going. She tells him it’s hard work but he assures
her that it will pay off because “Them vegetables are going to taste good.”
DORIS: Hey, buddy boy…you know, you promised to fix that
faucet in the kitchen…
BUCK: Oh…yeah…well, I’ll…I’ll get to that…
DORIS: Yeah, about three
weeks ago you said it…
BUCK: Well, a little dripping’s
not gonna hurt nobody…
Billy tells Grandpap he doesn’t have to worry and his
younger brother adds that Leroy has the situation well in hand. Buck then goes from zero to sixty sprinting
across the grounds and into the kitchen where he finds his new employee
underneath the sink. “I told you to keep
your hands off of my machinery!” he bellows.
“Get ‘em off!” Buck yells, and…
…ba-zinga! The old water in the face gag. “This ain’t machinery,” returns Leroy after dousing Buck. “This is plumbing!” He hits Buck with more H2O, and Buck calls him—apparently for the first but certainly not the last time—a nincompoop. He is then hit in the face again as James Hampton channels his inner Jerry Lewis…
Oy, that was a painful experience. Next time on Doris Day(s)—well, this
one won’t be quite so horrible; I actually enjoyed this next episode, which brings
back two characters from a previous appearance and was penned by a veteran OTR
scribe who made Phil Harris and Alice Faye’s sitcom so consistently
hilarious. (And best of all—Leroy’s not
in this one.) Don’t forget to join us!
7 comments:
Ah Doris -- the eternal virgin! My Dad had a giant crush on her during her early singing days. She was a doll, wasn't she?
Well, not if he’s watching this episode he won’t
HA! Hahaha awesome.
Workin' blue with the Paula Deen jokes today, I see. My mom used to eat butter and sugar sandwiches, which I, despite being a human being composed of 60% water and 40% sugar, thought was too sweet.
I had no idea Aggie was from NYC. How she ended up here is a mystery.
She’s gonna have him busting up a chifferobe before this thing is over.
Ivan, your Doris Days posts are always funny, but this one is the best so far, hands down. Laughed like a loon the whole time, I did.
Another great "examination" and far funnier than the episode in question. Wish you'd been around to write the scripts for that first season.
I was about 14 when the first season was broadcast and remember, even at that age, groaning every time Leroy made an appearance.
Paul Brogan
Becko rapped the podium for attention:
Ah Doris -- the eternal virgin! My Dad had a giant crush on her during her early singing days. She was a doll, wasn't she?
These DVD sets containing the episodes also feature the occasional interview with people from the series (Rose Marie, Kaye Ballard, etc.) and not one of them has a bad thing to say about Dodo. And I'm not trying to start a fight or anything; I just find it hard to believe that there's not someone out there with a bone to pick with the woman. (Fran Ryan passed away before the idea of the show coming to DVD was hatched, unfortunately.)
"I knew Doris before she was a virgin..." -- Oscar Levant
My mom used to eat butter and sugar sandwiches, which I, despite being a human being composed of 60% water and 40% sugar, thought was too sweet.
Butter and sugar both together on bread - I just can't seem to wrap my mind around it. My BFF The Duchess used to like brown cinnamon sugar Pop Tarts slathered in butter. I would just shake my head watching her.
Paul cleared his throat:
I was about 14 when the first season was broadcast and remember, even at that age, groaning every time Leroy made an appearance.
I bow to no one in my admiration for Jimmy Hampton (well, it comes from being an F Troop fan) but his Leroy is pretty intolerable (the episode after next is a Leroy-centric one, and I'm dreading it like the West Nile virus). Don't tell Andrew Leal this, but I'm starting to miss Goober Pyle.
I met Fran Ryan (Aggie) in the late 80's, around the time she made a very memorable appearance in the film, "Chances Are". Twenty years after "The Doris Day Show", she gushed with admiration and respect for Doris, noting that they periodically chatted on the phone. You would find it hard to find someone who didn't like Doris. She was professional - always prepared, knew her lines and didn't create on-set drama - her late husband Marty Melcher usually did that. She was extremely nice to the crew, knew all their names and family member names and would ask about them regularly. She didn't subscribe to the "Hollywood scene" preferring a Lakers or Dodgers home game and genuinely loved animals. I was friends with the late Sydney Guilaroff whose name appears on the credits for more than 1200 films and he noted once that when Doris was announced as doing a film at MGM (his home studio), crew members would fight to work on the picture.
Paul Brogan
Post a Comment