Main Cast: Dick Van Dyke, Mary Tyler Moore, Rose Marie, Morey Amsterdam, Larry Mathews
Release Year: 1961
Country: US
Run Time: 30 minutes
Plot
It is now part of TV folklore that the classic sitcom The Dick Van Dyke Show was originally conceived as a starring vehicle for the series' creator, Carl Reiner. In the pilot episode "Head of the Family," filmed in New York in 1959, Reiner played TV comedy writer Rob Petrie (then pronounced "pea-tree"), who divided his time between his job as a head writer on "The Alan Sturdy Show" with co-workers Buddy Sorrell (Morty Gunty) and Sally Rogers (Sylvia Miles) and his home life in New Rochelle with his wife, Laura (Barbara Britton) and son, Ritchie (Gary Morgan). Potential sponsors and networks liked the premise but not the cast...or to be more blunt, no one wanted to buy a series with Carl Reiner as star. Swallowing his pride, Reiner limited himself to the jobs of producer, director, and writer. He retooled "Head of the Family," and recast the property with Dick Van Dyke as Rob, Mary Tyler Moore as Laura, Larry Mathews as Ritchie, Morey Amsterdam as Buddy, and Rose Marie as Sally; the rest, as they say, is history.
Debuting October 3, 1961, on CBS, The Dick Van Dyke Show, as mentioned, top-billed the titular star as Rob Petrie, who was now head writer for "The Alan Brady Show" During the series' first few seasons, Alan Brady (a brash, dictatorial character reportedly inspired by Reiner's former boss and colleague Sid Caesar) was seldom seen -- and when he was, it was only from the back. It was an open secret that Carl Reiner himself played Brady, though he did not take screen billing. Only in the series' fourth season was Brady's face actually seen, and only then was Reiner credited on-screen as the actor playing the part. Other recurring characters included Richard Deacon as Alan Brady's producer (and beleaguered brother-in-law) Mel Cooley, Jerry Paris and Ann Morgan Guilbert as the Petries' next-door neighbors Jerry and Millie Helper (he was a dentist, she was Laura's best friend), future director Bill Idelson as Sally Rogers' erstwhile boyfriend, Herman Glimpshire, and Joan Shawlee as Buddy's ex-showgirl wife, Pickles.
Although the series was distinguished by the high level of wit in its writing and its wonderful physical-comedy set pieces, the strong suit of The Dick Van Dyke Show was the warm rapport among its principal players. Indeed, only a handful of TV sitcoms have been so perfectly cast, making one wonder how the series would have fared with its original cast members. Incredible though it may seem today, The Dick Van Dyke Show was not an instantaneous hit. Indeed, the series fared so poorly opposite its first season competition, Bachelor Father and Laramie, that CBS canceled the show outright, sending out notices to the cast members on the last day of shooting. The series might have been just another one season wonder had not one of its sponsors picked it up for a second season, insisting that CBS find a better time slot than Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m. Thus, the show was moved to Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m. -- fortuitously right after CBS's biggest success of the 1962-1963 season, The Beverly Hillbillies.
Although The Dick Van Dyke Show's somewhat higher ratings still did not set the world on fire, the series received a great deal of word-of-mouth buzz during its second season, and its audience grew steadily throughout the remainder of its run. The fact that the series picked up several Emmy Awards along the way was the icing on the cake. After five seasons, star Dick Van Dyke and producer Carl Reiner opted to quit while they were ahead -- a rare move in the mid-'60s (and even rarer four decades later). Thus, The Dick Van Dyke Show concluded its nighttime run on September 7, 1966, though reruns continued to air on CBS's daytime schedule until 1969. Thereafter, the series entered off-network syndication, where its has continued to flourish mightily well into the 21st century. And in 2003, the surviving cast members were reunited for a two-hour special, The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 01 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 02 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 03 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 04 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Season 05 The Dick Van Dyke Show: 100 Terrible Hours The Dick Van Dyke Show: 4.5 The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Bird in the Head Hurts The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Day in the Life of Alan Brady The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Farewell to Writing The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Man's Teeth Are Not His Own The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Nice, Friendly Game of Cards The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Show of Hands The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Surprise Surprise Is a Surprise The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Vigilante Ripped My Sports Coat The Dick Van Dyke Show: A Word a Day The Dick Van Dyke Show: All About Eavesdropping The Dick Van Dyke Show: Anthony Stone The Dick Van Dyke Show: Baby Fat The Dick Van Dyke Show: Bad Reception in Albany The Dick Van Dyke Show: Bank Book 6565696 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Big Max Calvada The Dick Van Dyke Show: Body and Sol The Dick Van Dyke Show: Boy #1, Boy #2 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Br-rooom, Br-rooom The Dick Van Dyke Show: Brother, Can You Spare $2500? The Dick Van Dyke Show: Buddy Sorrell, Man and Boy The Dick Van Dyke Show: Buddy, Can You Spare a Job? The Dick Van Dyke Show: Bupkis The Dick Van Dyke Show: Coast-to-Coast Big Mouth The Dick Van Dyke Show: Dear Mrs. Petrie, Your Husband Is in Jail The Dick Van Dyke Show: Dear Sally Rogers The Dick Van Dyke Show: Divorce The Dick Van Dyke Show: Don't Trip Over That Mountain The Dick Van Dyke Show: Draw Me a Pear The Dick Van Dyke Show: Empress Carlotta's Necklace The Dick Van Dyke Show: Father of the Week The Dick Van Dyke Show: Fifty-Two, Forty-Five or Work The Dick Van Dyke Show: Forty-Four Tickets The Dick Van Dyke Show: Gesundheit, Darling The Dick Van Dyke Show: Girls Will Be Boys The Dick Van Dyke Show: Give Me Your Walls! The Dick Van Dyke Show: Go Tell the Birds and Bees The Dick Van Dyke Show: Happy Birthday and Too Many More The Dick Van Dyke Show: Harrison B. Harding of Camp Crowder, Mo. The Dick Van Dyke Show: Honeymoons Are for the Lucky The Dick Van Dyke Show: How to Spank a Star The Dick Van Dyke Show: Hustling the Hustler The Dick Van Dyke Show: I Am My Brother's Keeper The Dick Van Dyke Show: I Do Not Choose to Run The Dick Van Dyke Show: I Was a Teenage Head Writer The Dick Van Dyke Show: I'd Rather Be Bald Than Have No Head at All The Dick Van Dyke Show: I'm No Henry Walden! The Dick Van Dyke Show: It May Look Like a Walnut! The Dick Van Dyke Show: It Wouldn't Hurt Them to Give Us a Raise The Dick Van Dyke Show: It's a Shame She Married Me The Dick Van Dyke Show: Jealousy! The Dick Van Dyke Show: Jilting the Jilter The Dick Van Dyke Show: Laura's Little Lie The Dick Van Dyke Show: Like a Sister The Dick Van Dyke Show: Long Night's Journey into Day The Dick Van Dyke Show: Love Thy Other Neighbor The Dick Van Dyke Show: My Husband Is a Check-Grabber The Dick Van Dyke Show: My Husband Is Not a Drunk The Dick Van Dyke Show: My Husband is the Best One The Dick Van Dyke Show: My Mother Can Beat Up My Father The Dick Van Dyke Show: My Neighbor's Husband's Other Life The Dick Van Dyke Show: My Part-Time Wife The Dick Van Dyke Show: My Two Show-Offs and Me The Dick Van Dyke Show: Never Bathe on Saturday The Dick Van Dyke Show: Never Name a Duck The Dick Van Dyke Show: No Rice at My Wedding The Dick Van Dyke Show: Obnoxious, Offensive, Egomaniac, Etc. The Dick Van Dyke Show: October Eve The Dick Van Dyke Show: Odd But True The Dick Van Dyke Show: Oh How We Met the Night That We Danced The Dick Van Dyke Show: One Angry Man The Dick Van Dyke Show: Pink Pills and Purple Parents The Dick Van Dyke Show: Punch Thy Neighbor The Dick Van Dyke Show: Racy Tracy Rattigan The Dick Van Dyke Show: Ray Murdock's X-Ray The Dick Van Dyke Show: Remember the Alimony The Dick Van Dyke Show: Romances, Roses, and Rye Bread The Dick Van Dyke Show: Sally and the Lab Technician The Dick Van Dyke Show: Sally Is a Girl The Dick Van Dyke Show: Scratch My Car and Die The Dick Van Dyke Show: See Rob Write, Write Rob, Write The Dick Van Dyke Show: Sol and the Sponsor The Dick Van Dyke Show: Somebody Has to Play Cleopatra The Dick Van Dyke Show: Stacey Petrie, Part 1 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Stacey Petrie, Part 2 The Dick Van Dyke Show: Stretch Petrie vs. Kid Schenk The Dick Van Dyke Show: Talk to the Snail The Dick Van Dyke Show: Teacher's Petrie The Dick Van Dyke Show: That's My Boy? The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Alan Brady Show Goes to Jail The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Alan Brady Show Presents The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Attempted Marriage The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Bad Old Days The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Ballad of the Betty Lou The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Blonde-Haired Brunette The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Boarder Incident The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Bottom of Mel Cooley's Heart The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Brave and the Backache The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Case of the Pillow The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Cat Burglar The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Curious Thing About Women The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Curse of the Petrie People The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Death of the Party The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Foul Weather Girl The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Ghost of A. Chantz The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Great Petrie Fortune The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Gunslinger The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Impractical Joke The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Lady and the Babysitter The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Lady and the Tiger and the Lawyer The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Last Chapter The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Life and Love of Joe Coogan The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Making of a Councilman The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Man From Emperor The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Man from My Uncle The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Masterpiece The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Meershatz Pipe The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Night the Roof Fell In The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Pen is Mightier Than the Mouth The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Plots Thicken The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Redcoats Are Coming The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Return of Edwin Carp The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Return of Happy Spangler The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Sam Pomerantz Scandals The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Secret Life of Buddy and Sally The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Sick Boy and the Sitter The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Sleeping Brother The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Sound of Trumpets of Conscience Falls Deafly on a Brain That Holds ... The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Square Triangle The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Talented Neighborhood The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Third One from the Left The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Twizzle The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Two Faces of Rob The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Ugliest Dog in the World The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Unwelcome Houseguest The Dick Van Dyke Show: There's No Sale Like Wholesale The Dick Van Dyke Show: Three Letters from One Wife The Dick Van Dyke Show: To Tell or Not to Tell The Dick Van Dyke Show: Too Many Stars The Dick Van Dyke Show: Turtles, Ties, and Toreadors The Dick Van Dyke Show: Uhny Uftz The Dick Van Dyke Show: Uncle George The Dick Van Dyke Show: Very Old Shoes, Very Old Rice The Dick Van Dyke Show: Viva Petrie The Dick Van Dyke Show: Washington vs. the Bunny The Dick Van Dyke Show: What's in a Middle Name? The Dick Van Dyke Show: When a Bowling Pin Talks, Listen The Dick Van Dyke Show: Where You Been, Fassbinder? The Dick Van Dyke Show: Who and Where Was Antonio Stradivarius? The Dick Van Dyke Show: Who Owes Who What? The Dick Van Dyke Show: Who Stole My Watch? The Dick Van Dyke Show: Will You Two Be My Wife? The Dick Van Dyke Show: You Ought to Be in Pictures The Dick Van Dyke Show: You're Under Arrest The Dick Van Dyke Show: Young Man With a Shoehorn The Dick Van Dyke Show: Your Home Sweet Home is My Home Sweet Home
The Dick Van Dyke Show is an Americantelevision sitcom which initially aired on CBS from October 3, 1961 and ran until June 1, 1966. The show was created by Carl Reiner and starred Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore. A three-camera/studio audience format was used during production. The series was primarily sponsored by Procter & Gamble and, as an "alternate sponsor" beginning with the second season, Lorillard Tobacco Company (Kent cigarettes). The cast sometimes appeared in "integrated commercials" for their sponsors at the end of the show.
The show was also produced by Reiner, who wrote many episodes and played the role of Alan Brady. Reiner based the main character on himself and the Brady character on his former boss Sid Caesar. Many of the show's plots were inspired by Reiner's experiences as a writer for Your Show of Shows (which starred Caesar). The Dick Van Dyke Show won 15 Emmy Awards.
The storylines gave viewers an "inside look" at how a TV show (The Alan Brady Show) was run and written. Storylines dealt with Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke) and his two coworkers, Buddy Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam) and Sally Rogers (Rose Marie), who wrote material for the TV show. Mel Cooley, a balding straight man (and recipient of numerous insulting one-liners from Buddy), was the show's producer and the brother-in-law of Alan Brady, the show's seldom-seen star. As Rob, Buddy, and Sally write for a comedy show, the premise provides a built-in forum for them to "be funny." Other stories focused on the home life of Rob and his wife Laura Petrie (Mary Tyler Moore), who live at 148 Bonnie Meadow Road in suburban New Rochelle, New York. Frequently seen is their young son, Ritchie, as well as their neighbors, Jerry and Millie Helper.
Influence
The show was an excellent vehicle for Van Dyke's physical comedy and sight gags. The classic example is the scene in the opening titles, in which Van Dyke enters through the front door and trips over the ottoman. (This opening was added beginning in the second season of the series. The first season's opening credits were a composite of promotion stills and screen grabs from the pilot episode.) Producers filmed three versions: one in which Van Dyke trips over the ottoman, one in which he steps around it, and a rarely seen third variation in which Van Dyke avoids the ottoman and then trips on the carpet.
The series was considered a trailblazer for its comparatively realistic portrayal of relationships — although the Petries slept in separate beds — and caused some mild controversy because of Mary Tyler Moore's decision to wear capri slacks in an era when most sitcom wives wore dresses and skirts, even though Lucille Ball had previously worn capri slacks on I Love Lucy. The show would also lampoon current cultural trends of the times, like a new dance craze called the Twizzle. One of the most popular episodes, "It May Look Like a Walnut", spoofed The Twilight Zone and low budget sci-fi films, especially Invasion of the Body Snatchers. When the British Invasion led by The Beatles came, real life British singing duo Chad and Jeremy guest starred portraying the fictional Redcoats. Curiously, The Beatles were never mentioned by name and there were very few references to current events during the show's five-year run. Carl Reiner was also adamant about avoiding the use of any 1960s slang.
Carl Reiner originally planned to produce and star in the series, which was going to be titled Head of the Family. A pilot episode was produced in New York, and telecast in July 1960, but it was unsuccessful. Executive producer Sheldon Leonard liked Reiner's concept but felt that Reiner was miscast. Leonard cast Dick van Dyke as Rob Petrie, and Reiner was recast to better effect as Alan Brady (a character called "Alan Sturdy" in Reiner's unsuccessful pilot), the egotistical television star for whom Rob works. In the early episodes, Reiner was only heard, or shown with his head turned away from the camera. His voice would also be heard in many commercial announcements when the characters were watching TV or as a radio DJ. Both Leonard and business partner Danny Thomas also appeared on the show in guest roles.
During its run The Dick Van Dyke Show overpowered many competitors. In 1964, it quickly eclipsed Mickey Rooney's sitcom Mickey, which aired on ABC in the same time slot. In 1969, Van Dyke and Moore reunited for a one hour variety special called Dick Van Dyke and the Other Woman which included a never before seen alternate take from one of the show's episodes where Van Dyke breaks down and cries after being dismissed from a film role instead of just being disappointed.
Reiner always maintained that he never intended for the series to run more than five seasons, making this one of the first successful American TV series to end on its own accord rather than through cancellation. It has done extremely well in syndicated reruns, most notably on Nick at Nite from 1991 to 2000, then on its sister cable network TV Land from 2000 to 2007 and on MeTV. The first two seasons of the series can currently be seen in the United States on the popular video-on-demand website Hulu. Several seasons are also available for instant viewing through Netflix.
Cast
Main:
Robert "Rob" Simpson Petrie (Dick Van Dyke), the head comedy writer for a fictional New York TV variety series called The Alan Brady Show. The role of Rob Petrie was almost given to Johnny Carson, but Sheldon Leonard, the show's executive producer, suggested Van Dyke.
Laura Meeker/Meehan Petrie (Mary Tyler Moore), Rob's wife. A stay-at-home mom and former dancer in the U.S.O. (where she met Rob). The role of Laura proved to be the most difficult to cast. About 60 actresses auditioned for the part before Moore was signed, and she almost didn't go to the audition. Her original maiden name was Meeker, acknowledging Moore's then-husband Dick Meeker. After Moore and Meeker divorced, Laura's maiden name was changed to Meehan.
Moshe Selig "Buddy" Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam) - an energetic (and at times facetious) "human joke machine" (as was Amsterdam himself), one of the comedy writers; he's constantly making fun of Mel Cooley (the show's producer) for being bald (and dull). His character is loosely based on Mel Brooks who also wrote for Your Show of Shows. He makes frequent jokes about his marriage to his wife "Pickles". On several occasions it is shown he is Jewish. He owns a large German Shepherd named Larry, and plays the cello. He was identified as "Moshe Selig" when he had his belated bar mitzvah in "Buddy Sorrell - Man and Boy." In "My Two Showoffs and Me" he introduced himself as "Maurice," but in a situation where he could have made it up. Amsterdam was recommended by Rose Marie as soon as she had signed on.
Sally Rogers (Rose Marie), another of the comedy writers (and the comedy trio's designated typist), who is always on the lookout for a husband. The character was loosely based on Selma Diamond, another writer for Your Show of Shows. She never drinks and quotes frequently from her aunt Agnes (though she always gets the quotes wrong). She has an on again off again relationship with her boyfriend Herman Glimscher, who seems to be too much of a mommy's boy to get married. She frequently scares men off with her sense of humor.
Supporting:
Richard "Ritchie" Rosebud Petrie (Larry Mathews), Rob's and Laura's son. (His middle name is an acronym for "Robert Oscar Samuel Edward Benjamin Ulysses David" from his grandparents and great-grandfather's names, and whom they admired.)
Melvin "Mel" Cooley (Richard Deacon), the balding producer of The Alan Brady Show (and Brady's brother-in-law), who is constantly at odds with Buddy, who often makes insulting comments about Mel's baldness, to which Mel ofttimes responds with a simple "Yechh!"
Jerry (Jerry Paris) and Mildred "Millie" Krumbermacher Helper (Ann Morgan Guilbert), the Petries' next-door neighbors. Two children have been named from the Helper family, Ellen, and Freddie.
Secondary characters:
Alan Brady (Carl Reiner), the egocentric, toupee-wearing star of The Alan Brady Show. Originally an offscreen character, then shown only with his back to the camera or only in voice, Brady began to make full-face appearances in the fourth season.
Stacey Petrie (Jerry Van Dyke), Rob's brother, banjo player, and one-time sleepwalker, played by Dick Van Dyke's real-life brother.
Fiona "Pickles" Sorrell (Barbara Perry/Joan Shawlee), Buddy's slightly nutty wife. She would become an offscreen character after Season 2.
Herman Glimscher (Bill Idelson), Sally's occasional and "nerdy" boyfriend. In the 2004 Reunion Special, Sally and Herman had been married for years. (In an early episode Sally referred to him as Woodrow)
The pilot episode ("Head of the Family," July 19, 1960) starred Carl Reiner as Robert Petrie, who was later replaced by Dick Van Dyke in the final casting. Carl Reiner stayed on the show as Robert Petrie's boss, Alan Brady. Throughout the series Rob is shown working on his memoirs, a retelling of his life after he met his wife Laura. In the series finale, Rob finishes the book and submits it for publication. When he is rejected, Alan Brady offers to produce it as a television series, starring Alan Brady as Robert Petrie. This brings the series full circle, as the pilot episode featured Carl Reiner as Robert Petrie.
For reasons that are unclear, six episodes from the second season (and one from the third) have lapsed into the public domain, and as a result are widely available at Wal-Mart and 'dollar stores' for $1–$2 per DVD or VHS tape.
Image Entertainment has released all 5 Seasons of The Dick Van Dyke Show on DVD in Region 1. Season sets were released between October 2003 - June 2004. Also, on May 24, 2005, Image Entertainment released a 25-disc boxset of the entire series.