With the eleventh episode in the first season of The Doris Day Show (and I’ve got 117 more episodes to go—Gott in Himmel, what have I gotten myself into…), we experience the first of several major cast shake-ups in the sitcom’s five-year history. (Oh, there’s plenty more to come, my friends…) Fran Ryan is sent packing off to Hooterville, and is replaced…
…by actress Naomi Stevens, in the role of Latino domestic Juanita. (That’s it. No last name, no nothing.) If that weren’t enough of an injustice, she’s now second-to-last in the billing (between the kids and the dog—at least Fran followed Denver Pyle’s credit). Which is a shame, because Stevens was a prolific character actress with over 100 film and TV credits on her show business resume, though generally called upon to play many ethnic roles (her characters were invariably Jewish, Italian or Latino). Her best known film role is that of Jack Kruschen’s wife (“Mildred!”) in The Apartment (1960); Kruschen, of course, playing the doctor who lives next door to Jack Lemmon and who attends to Shirley MacLaine when she tries to kill herself swallowing pills. Naomi was also in The Black Orchid (1958), Convicts 4 (1962) and Valley of the Dolls (1967), and did quite a bit of television—with recurring roles on such series as The Flying Nun and My Three Sons. She co-starred as the matriarch of a Italian family in a short-lived 1975 sitcom called The Montefuscos, and appeared in the first season of TV’s Vega$ as Sergeant Bella Archer, a colleague of Lt. David Nelson, detective Dan Tanna’s liaison on the force.
You’ll notice—this is the part that amuses me so, and since
this show strains for laughs I’ll take ‘em where I can find ‘em—that her
credits…
…are similar to that of the departed Aggie’s, which makes me ponder as to whether the minds behind the show were so cynical that they thought: “Eh…one housekeeper is pretty much the same as the other. They’ll never notice the difference.”
This week’s Doris Day(s) installment, “The Job,”
sheds a little more light on the Widow Martin’s shrouded-in-mystery background. We know that she moved back to the country
estate run by her father, Laird Buckley Webb (Denver Pyle), after experiencing
life in the big city with her two sons, Billy (Philip Brown) and Toby (Tod
Starke)…and we know that the boys’ father snuffed it—but are not privy to any
of the specific details (knowing Doris’ propensity for baking desserts,
however, I’m going to speculate that it may have been adult onset diabetes).
But this week we’ll learn that “the big city” was in fact
“the Big Apple,” and as the episode gets underway we look in on Billy and Toby
as they carry firewood into the kitchen of the Family Martin. Doris has called an audible for breakfast,
substituting what was going to be a chocolate torte with some good
old-fashioned flapjacks, which she is a-flippin’ in an attempt to be fancy.
BILLY: Hey, that’s great, Mom!
DORIS: You ain’t seen nothin’ yet!
Yes, Doris channels a little B.T.O. and in her
flapjack-flipping zeal…
…one affixes itself to the ceiling. The boys and Doris find this the height of high hilarity, but that’s because they live on a farm. The pancake eventually falls and Doris catches it on a plate, then directs her brood to the dining table.
Buck and his loyal (if painfully stupid) farmhand, Leroy B. Semple
Simpson (James Hampton), have just finished their breakfast and are getting up
from the table. Doris announces that she
will answer a ringing phone (Buck: “You better…’cause we’re leavin’…”) and on the other end is a
woman informing our heroine she has a telegram.
DORIS (on the phone): I got a
telegram? Whee! Hey…would you hold on a second? (She sits down and tosses Leroy his hat)
Leroy! Okay, now…read it to me, will ya?
NELL (on the other end): Dear
Doris…as usual, it’s crisis time…need you desperately…can you come to New York
for four days? That’s all I
ask…love…signed, Maggie Wells…
DORIS (sighing):
Uh-oh…uh…Nell? Uh…I’d like to send a
wire right back…
NELL: Same person?
DORIS: Uh…yeah, to Maggie
Wells…yeah…same lady…uh…hey—how’s the baby?
NELL: It was just colic…she’s fine!
DORIS: Is she?
NELL: Now the telegram…
Yes, Doris—Nell doesn’t have all day to chit-chat with you
about her sick kid. Dodo directs the
telegram to Maggie Wells (Linda Watkins) in care of Ladies’ World magazine, telling her that “much as I would
like to…can’t possibly come back at this time…”
JO: I told you the telegram wouldn’t work…
Now is as good a time as any to meet our two guest stars this week. In the role of Maggie Wells, the pure dagnasty evil editor of the fictional Ladies’ World, is veteran actress Linda Watkins. Watkins is best known for playing Edna Robinson, the pure dagnasty evil mother of Vicky Robinson (Joanna Barnes) in the 1961 Walt Disney comedy The Parent Trap (Vicky was the fiancée of Mitch Evers, played by Brian Keith), and she also appeared a few times on McMillan & Wife as Sally’s mom (Sally being played, of course, by Susan Saint James). Watkins’ film career stretches all the way back to the 1930s, where she appeared in such vehicles as Sob Sister (1931) and Charlie Chan’s Chance (1932)—but she’s probably better known for movies she did later on, like Ten North Frederick (1958), Cash McCall (1959) and Because They’re Young (1960). She also had a fistful of guest appearances on TV series like Thriller (she’s in two classic episodes, “The Cheaters” and “A Wig for Miss Devore”), The Untouchables, Hawaiian Eye and Gunsmoke.
She is also wearing what appears to be an ice bucket on her
head. I tell you this because although
she is a very powerful magazine editor, her taste in millinery leaves much to
be desired.
Her lackey Jo is played by Joanne Miya (also billed as Jo Anne Miya) who, according to the (always reliable) IMDb, left show business to pursue honest work and in 1978 became the artistic director of Great Leap, Inc.—described as “a non-profit arts organization which uses the arts to promote deeper understanding between the diverse cultures of America.” She played Francesca in West Side Story (1961) and was also in The King and I (1956) and the Albert Zugsmith oddity Confessions of an Opium Eater (1962)—her notable small screen work includes Laramie, I Spy and a recurring role on Arrest and Trial (1963-64), a precursor to the mega-popular Law & Order that The Classic TV History Blog’s Stephen Bowie has written about extensively here.
And now…back to the action (such as it is)…
MAGGIE: Regardless…she’s still the only solution to our problem…
JO: I don’t get it, Maggie…if time
is such a factor, why not assign somebody else?
MAGGIE: Because Doris knows these
charity rackets…she’s the only one with the contacts
to wrap up the exposé…in time for the press run…that’s why I want her…
JO: Well, according to that—she
plans to stay on that ranch…
Maggie tents her fingers and smiles: “Just wait until Season
3, my pretty…”
MAGGIE: Then it looks like I’ll
have to go out to…where is it?
JO: Cotina…
I love Cotina, tell
the world I do
I love Cotina, tell
the world I do
I pray at night it'd
like to love me too
Cotina, Cotina
Cotina, Cotina
Cotina, Cotina
I love you so
Oh, yeah baby…I got the X Factor.
MAGGIE: Hmm…and drag her back…so
you’d better book me out on the Tumbleweed Flight…I’m going to pack my spurs…
Would it be catty of me to assume she’s not going by broom
because she needs the frequent flier miles?
“Maggie,” assistant Jo asks as her boss sashays out the door, “why the
persistence?”
“Because once I get Doris Martin off that ranch and into New
York,” she purrs, “I’m going to talk her into stay here permanently.” Hot cookies,
Agnes!™ Just what this show needs to perk up my sagging interest—a
supervillain! Oh, and as Maggie heads
off to do eevill, there’s a close-up on this objet d’art:
Don’t ask me why. The scene shifts to a shot of the Martin Family truckster pulling up in the front yard—Buck, Doris, Leroy, Juanita and the boys have just come back from church…and we’re about to hear Juanita speak for the first time. Doris spots Maggie on the front porch and runs to give her a hug…taking care not to say anything about that hideous thing on her head…
…yeah, you thought I was kidding about the hat thing, weren’t ya? Did the feathers come from that owl we saw earlier? Quien sabe?
DORIS: What a surprise! How’d you find us?
MAGGIE: Local cab…who informed me everybody in Cotina’s in church…
“Because that’s all there is to do in this burg on a
Sunday.” Doris prepares to introduce
Maggie to the family, but first tells her ixnay on entioningmay the elegramtay,
because she didn’t say anything to the group.
MAGGIE: Ohh…you’ve got to be Buck!
BUCK: That’s right, ma’am…
MAGGIE: Because I know those little
ones don’t have beards…
(Everyone laughs)
DORIS: Oh, I don’t know…this is
Billy…
BILLY: Hi…
DORIS: …and Toby…
“I like cheese!”
BUCK (indicating Leroy): This is
Leroy…Doris’ oldest boy…
Okay, I am ashamed to admit I did laugh at this. And Doris punctuates the gag by elbowing Buck
in the ribs.
MAGGIE (laughing): Nice to know
you, Leroy…
DORIS: …and Juanita!
JUANITA: How do you do?
MAGGIE: Juanita…I’m so glad to know
you…I’ve heard so much about you and your fabulous cooking!
JUANITA: Oh!
DORIS (patting Buck’s stomach): And
he can prove it!
What the…front yard?
She’s been on the freaking show for only four minutes and already she’s
got a reputation for exquisite cuisine that’s the toast of New York. (Ay caramba.)
Juanita scoots along inside to make coffee for everyone, and a
syndicated edit finds Doris helping Maggie get muy comfortable in the guest room.
MAGGIE: Why did you want me to cool
the telegram in front of the family?
DORIS: Because I hadn’t discussed it with them, Maggie…I mean, I
had decided not to go to New York and so…um…there was no sense in telling them
about it…
MAGGIE: Mm-hmm…but…uh…you know how persistent I am…
DORIS: You’re here, aren’t you?
Maggie cackles, scaring the neighborhood children two miles
away, and then tells Dor the reason for her visit.
MAGGIE: Look…all I’m asking you to do is come back with me…for just four days…you know that story you did two years ago with Senator Rivers…on charity frauds?
DORIS: Yep…
MAGGIE: Well…Mac McCauley…dropped out on me…and you’re the only
one who can get the job done for me…
“Plus we need one more for the coven. No—wait!
Forget I said ‘coven’…”
DORIS: Oh, Maggie…
MAGGIE: We’ll contact Senator
Rivers…and line up appointments with Congressmen Piper and Figaro…
DORIS: What about the art? Is that all in?
MAGGIE: Every bit of it…all we need
is to wrap up…
“…a newborn baby for the sacrifice. Damn it!”
MAGGIE: …that, you’ll supply…
DORIS: Well…I would have to go to,
uh, Washington to see the Senator…and that would mean…hey, wait a minute! Don’t
you do that!
MAGGIE: What?
DORIS: You know darn well
what! You’ve got a nice little role
going here, and I fell right in…just beautifully…
MAGGIE: I need you…
“You’re the only one who can correctly pronounce the Latin incantations!”
MAGGIE: Doris, do you think I would
have come all the way out here to this cowboy-and-Indian country if I weren’t desperate?
DORIS: I know, Mag…but…I’m just
going to have to discuss it with my father and the boys…now, that’s all…
MAGGIE: I’m sure they can get along
without you for a few days…
DORIS: Well, I’m not…they depend on
me for everything around
here…look…I’ll tell you what I’ll do…I’ll have a talk with them…and see how
they feel…and then I’ll decide…is that okay?
MAGGIE (smiling): Fair enough…
Well, for a family that depends on Doris for “everything around here,” we find in the next scene (Buck and the boys are currying a pony—something you rarely saw on the “farm” sitcom Mayberry R.F.D., I hasten to add) that they really don’t give a flying frog’s ass what she does. Okay, maybe I’ve shortened that a little for the sake of brevity, but the gist of it is that Buck thinks it’s a fine idea, suggesting that Juanita will take care of him and the boys and they’ll get along great. Billy gives his thumbs up as well, and all little Toby wants to know is “What are you gonna bring us?”
After finishing with the pony, Buck and his grandsons hook
him up to a tiny wagon so that the boys can…oh, hell—tool around the vast estate,
I guess. They exit stage left, but then Buck
then runs back to Doris…
BUCK: Look…just because we think you oughta go doesn’t mean we won’t miss ya… (He runs back off in the direction of the wagon)
DORIS (yelling after him): Yeah, I
noticed how you all fell apart!
And so there’s a dissolve to the Webb front porch, as Leroy
carries Doris’ valises out to the station wagon and she bids her family a
tearful goodbye…
DORIS: Don’t forget now—if you need me for anything, I’m either at Maggie’s apartment or the magazine…got that? (She opens the car door, then turns around) Hey—did I give you the number?
JUANITA (pulling a slip of paper
out of her apron): Oh—I got it right here, Doris…
BILLY (also holding a slip of
paper): I got it!
TOBY (likewise): I got it, too!
BUCK (helping Doris into the car):
You also left one with me…
LEROY (climbing into the driver’s
seat): I got one, too!
DORIS (sheepishly, to Maggie): I’m
a mother…
And here’s the biggest mother of them all…
Sorry about that…just wanted to see if you were still with me. As Leroy drives off with Doris and Maggie, Doris yells out the car window at Juanita to keep Buck on his diet. “Fat chance with you out of town!” crows Buck, demonstrating a love of puns. Doris also tells the little ones to remember to brush their teeth—which is the same thing she told them as they were headed off for their trek into the woods in last week’s “The Camping Trip.”
A shift in scene finds Doris in Maggie’s office at Ladies’ World; she’s on the phone
with Senator Claghorn—I say, Claghorn’s the name—nailing down the details of
“the big story.”
“Doris Martin?!! How
in the hell did you get the number of this whorehouse?!!”
DORIS: …sorry to bother you…but I
spoke with Congressman Piper…and he said his bill will be out of committee in
about a week…
DORIS: …will that help you? (After a pause) I thought so…good…yes, sir—I’m leaving in the
morning…yes, I’ll have a good flight…I hope to see you soon…goodbye…
Now…I am not a professional journalist—although I did play
one briefly in a sitcom pilot, Press the Meat—but she seems a bit
cozy with Senator Bloat there. Be that
as it may, Maggie is beaming because Doris Martin gets results, baby!
DORIS (as she hangs up the
receiver): What a nice man…he’s been
such a help…by the way—you know he’s starting the public hearings with the
subcommittee in about one month…so what my research doesn’t tell you, his
investigation will…for your follow-up, okay?
I’m sorry…I’m…it’s just that you so rarely see that kind of
productive legislative activity today.
You can definitely tell this is television make-believe.
DORIS (gathering up her files):
Well…I guess that about does it, old dear… (She smiles at Maggie) And…I thought
that now I might go down and…uh…see the girls and have some coffee…I want to
say goodbye to them…see you in a minute…
“Jo! Release the
flying monkeys! She must not be allowed
to escape!”
MAGGIE: Now my work begins…
JO (shaking her head): You’ll never do it…you heard what she said—she
can’t wait to get home!
MAGGIE: Why don’t you and I make a
little bet?
Dun-dun-DUN!!! A
shift in scenery finds Doris looking at a breathtaking view from Maggie’s
cast…er, penthouse apartment. The two
women are downing a couple of hemlock cocktails and enjoying the view.
MAGGIE: Let’s get serious for a minute…it’s cards on the table time…I’m hereby offering you a permanent job with a marvelous salary…and an unlimited future…
“Plus all the children you can eat—where are you going to
find a benefits package like that?”
DORIS (smiling): Oh, Mag…thank
you…thank you so much, I’m…I’m very flattered…but I…I can’t possibly say yes…
Do…she just offered you a job…it’s not an Indecent Proposal kind of thing.
DORIS: I have…you know, a family to
think of…and…
MAGGIE: Let’s face it…writing is your world…
A Ladies’ World.
MAGGIE: …that article you just
finished for us…you should be proud…
DORIS: I am proud of that…it
was…uh…very satisfying…
MAGGIE: If you have a talent for
writing…then it’s wrong not to use
it, and you have to place your energies where they’ll do the most good…you
can’t afford to sit on a ranch…with
your talent, you must contribute…
DORIS: Maggie Wells, when I came
home from church and found you sitting on the front porch I knew that you were
going to get around to that very dialogue… (Laughing) I knew it!
MAGGIE: Honey, look…
“Look into my eyes…deeper…deeper…” Okay, that’s just
me having fun—Maggie tells her to go back home and talk it over with the
family, to find out how they feel. “I’ll
even go with you,” she purrs. “I
wouldn’t mind getting away for a few days myself.” (Doris!
It’s a trap!)
“Oh, boy,” Doris hems and haws. She hasn’t said yes—“but what surprises me is I haven’t said no.” What surprises me is, all of a sudden Doris is freaking Jane Mayer…and in “The Songwriter” she couldn’t even string coherent song lyrics together. But it’s time for a commercial…
At the start of Act 2, we find Doris and Maggie arriving
back at Rancho Webb—I’m assuming that Buck was driving the station wagon, since
Leroy is on hand to greet Doris along with Juanita and the boys. Her sons ask her to close her eyes as they
direct her into the house, and when she opens them…
“Surprise, Mom! We had a bitchin’ kegger while you were gone!” No, I’m only kidding—they welcome the prodigal mother back with open arms, and have prepared the fatted apple turnovers for her arrival.
MAGGIE: Doris…why don’t you show
Toby and Billy their surprises?
“Yes…my…mistress…”
Doris starts to take the boys upstairs and up to their room, and Buck
interrupts, suggesting that she might want to lie down after her trip. But Doris insists she’s fresh as a daisy, and
in fact has something she wants to discuss with him when she comes back
down. Which means Maggie had better put
Operation Coven into high gear…
BUCK: I wonder what she wants to
talk to us about…
MAGGIE (after a pause): The same
thing I want to talk to you about…
(She walks over to the couch and seats herself) Please…sit down for a few
minutes?
BUCK (warily making his way over to
where Maggie is sitting): Hey…this is beginnin’ to sound serious…
MAGGIE: First…I want to ask you…how
you’d feel about Doris moving to New York? (Quickly) And before you say ‘no’…
BUCK (with a hand up): I’m not
sayin’ ‘no’…now you asked me to listen…I’m
listenin’…
Look away from her eyes, Buck…for God’s sake, look away!
MAGGIE: Well, Doris doesn’t know
I’m saying anything about this…but I’ve offered her a permanent job in New
York…an important job!
BUCK: There are a lot of viewpoints
on…what makes a job important…you
see, out here we think that…uh…runnin’ a ranch…raisin’ two boys on a farm…we
think that’s important…
MAGGIE: Well, I…I respect your kind
of life, Mr. Webb…and I can understand why you think so much of it…but…
“I haven’t forgotten that you Webbs are just simple farmers…that
you’re people of the land…the common clay of the new West…you know…morons…”
BUCK: Miss Wells…I’ve got a feelin’
you’ve got somethin’ to say about this job on your own…otherwise you’d let Doris tell us, so…why don’t you get right
to point?
So Maggie gushes to Buck about the amazing talent that is
his daughter, how she “glowed” while working her assignment (though that could
have been a spell cast by Jo) and how it would be criminal to deny the world
Doris’ writing skills. Plus, his
grandsons would be “given a fantastic opportunity to travel,” even though it’s
likely that when they re-visit their grandfather they’ll start poking fun at
his lifestyle in the same manner that I do in these write-ups.
MAGGIE: Now…I’ll tell you what I
think, Mr. Webb…I think she’d love to
accept my offer…but she’s thinking of you and the boys…not of herself…one
negative word from any of you and as much as she’d really like to take the
job…I know she’s going to turn it
down…
BUCK: She was…uh…she was that happy
in New York?
MAGGIE: I’ve never seen her happier…
“When you awake…you will be a pathetic but pliable
being…willing to do my bidding at my slightest gesture…” There is an incredibly awkward pause as Buck
gets up and walks over to another part of the living room, contemplating what
Maggie has manipulated him into. He then
lights his pipe. “All right, Miss
Wells…we’ll do it your way,” he tells her quietly.
MAGGIE: Mr. Webb…I know how difficult this is for you…but
you won’t be sorry…it may be a little
hard to explain to the boys…
BUCK: Don’t worry about the boys…
“I’ll beat some approval into them…”
BUCK: …once they hear it’ll make
their mother happy they’ll do the same thing I’m doin’…
And that would be…smoking a pipe? Buck walks away, still in deep thought, and
Maggie resists the urge to strip down naked and dance around a suddenly
materialized cauldron. There is then a
scene shift to the Webb family front porch, as Buck tries to convince his
grandsons that neither he nor Doris has been manipulated by a woman who’d bake
them both into kid pies at the blink of a raven’s eye.
“I like being beaten up by the kids here!”
BILLY: It would make Mom happy,
Tobe…
TOBY (sadly): Yeah…yeah, I know…
Maggie ventures out onto the porch and greets Buck and the
boys, then admires the grandeur of the Western sky (there’s even a shot of a shooting
star). “Why is it they’re never this
bright in the city?” she asks, and I’m going to assume she’s talking about
stars and not Buck’s grandkids.
“Maybe they are,” Buck philosophizes. “People are just too busy lookin’ down.” (Wow…that’s just…wow…) Doris enters the porch
area, and Buck asks her if she’s about ready to discuss what she alluded to
earlier. Maggie excuses herself because
she has some frogs to de-wart. “Don’t
forget, you two,” she says to the boys as she leaves, “you’re going to show me
the lake tomorrow.” (I don’t like the
sound of that.)
DORIS: Look, I…I don’t mean to…have
this sound like the big mystery, you know…it isn’t that at all…but…it is
something that…affects us, and…uh…so I’ll tell you what it is…and we can
discuss it…and then we’ll make a decision, okay?
BUCK: Okay!
DORIS: Maggie offered me a fantastic job on the magazine…which
would mean living in New York…
BUCK: Well?
DORIS (after a pause): Well?
You know it would mean leaving you alone here if I took it…
BUCK: Well, sure…New York ain’t
exactly commutin’ distance, you know…
DORIS: And for the boys…it would
mean…going to school in New York…it would be a lot different than it is
here…and you wouldn’t have your bikes…and you wouldn’t have your horses…
BUCK: Well…couldn’t they go to the
park for those things?
I’m with Buck…I’m pretty sure I’ve seen bikes and horses in
New York a time or two. “Sounds like
fun,” replies Billy, and his little brother weighs in with an echo: “Yeah,
fun!”
Doris is a little nonplussed at the cavalier attitude of her
family on this big move thing, and protests that they really haven’t discussed
every little detail…while Buck counters (because he’s under Maggie’s control):
“It seems to me that’s just what we discussed.”
“You don’t just…rush into something in three minutes time
that may affect our whole lives!” argues Doris, displaying precious little
insight into just how sitcoms work.
“If we think that this is a good move,” he explains, “have
you got anything against it?” Doris is
hard-pressed to come up with a coherent response, so Buck excuses himself and
the boys, as they have things to do in the barn. It’s not until three o’clock in the a.m.…
…that Doris starts to hear voices in her head. She rises and shines and races down to where Maggie is sleeping: “Maggie Wells—I want to talk to you!” Doris has realized the true malevolent power of Maggie’s magic, and she calls her family down to the living room to continue the discussion on whether she should go to New York. There’s no sense in rehashing all of this folderol—Doris is not going to go.
Awwww…group hugs, everyone! “Boy…this would have been a lonely place without the three of you,” Buck observes. (You might want to bail by Season Three, big fella.)
Okay, let’s slap a coda on this and call it a day. Doris and her family resist the urge to burn
Maggie for her treachery, and instead the family escorts out to the station
wagon, with Leroy driving her back to the airport.
DORIS: Well…don’t feel bad, Mag…any
of those four-day emergencies come up again, I’m your girl…
MAGGIE: I may manufacture a few emergencies…
DORIS: I’m sure…
“All I need is some bat wing…and the clavicle of a small,
cheese-eating boy…”
MAGGIE (to Buck): I hope you don’t
hold my little plot against me…
BUCK: Oh no, ma’am…you’re a career
woman—and career women have to do things like that…
MAGGIE: That’s right…they do…
Remember that time on That Girl when Ann Marie changed her
boyfriend into a hideous gargoyle just to get a part in a TV commercial? (It’s not easy for a working gal.) As Maggie and Leroy get set to motor, she
calls Doris over to the car. “I want to
tell you something,” she confides. “And
if you ever quote me, I’ll deny it.”
“I won’t,” promises Doris.
“What?”
“You’d have been a darn
fool to leave this place,” she continues.
“That’s what I thought,” finishes Doris with a “toodle-oo!” Leroy drives off with the witch, and the
family soon comes down with a plague of festering boils.
“The Job” is one of the most interesting episodes in the Doris
Day(s) canon…not because it’s entertaining (because goodness knows it
is not), but because its history will end up being negated in future
seasons. Eventually, Doris decides that
living on a ranch is strictly déclassé, and she will move to a San Francisco
apartment in the third season with her kids, scarcely worrying then about their
damn bikes or horses. Then in the fourth
season…well, she doesn’t even have the
kids to worry about.
In the season prior to the big move (Season Two), Doris
lands a job in the city that made Rice-a-Roni a treat, working for a magazine
called Today’s World…but
strangely enough, the record of her previous writing skills vanishes in a
sitcom mist—she toils as a mere secretary to the magazine’s editor, played by
McLean Stevenson, and her best bud is another administrative assistant played
by Rose Marie. In the fourth season,
both McLean and Ro are gone, and she has a new boss in Mister John Dehner and sidekick in Facebook chum Jackie Joseph
(Lawrence). (By the way—Jackie Joseph
was once married to Ken Berry, proving that it always comes back to R.F.D.) Doris’ writing talents have returned by then,
though she is not held in the reverent regard that she received in this episode—in
fact, Dehner’s character frequently exploits her and takes her for
granted. (But that’s a long way off…assuming
I survive that long.)
“The Job” was written by future Oscar-winning director-writer James L. Brooks, who before creating and/or co-creating TV classics like Room 222, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Rhoda, Lou Grant and Taxi, toiled in TV’s vineyards scripting for the likes of My Mother the Car and Hey, Landlord. (You may remember that J.L. was responsible for one of the worst episodes of Mayberry R.F.D., “Youth Takes Over.”) Brooks is solid evidence of the dictum (posited by OTR laureate Norman Corwin) that a writer has to have the freedom to churn out dreck before he gets good.
Next time on Doris Day(s)…if you thought the
mating habits of handyman Leroy were disturbing, then you won’t know what to
make of what happens when Buck gets designs on a woman who’s played by the series’
dialogue coach (for the first season, anyway)…and his rival is an old friend of
ours from our Serial Saturdays presentation of Don Winslow in the Navy (1942).
I do hope you’ll join me.
Toodle-oo!
1 comment:
Press the Meat
!!!
Between the hats and the Faye Dunaway I about had a heart attack reading this recap. I guess in the days before home recording devices, they figured people would only vaguely remember something about Doris working in the industry and her move to San Fran wouldn't seem so odd. Doesn't explain the kids disappearing. Will be interested to see if the stolen dog disappears, too.
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