Granby's Green Acres featured a former banker "who knew little about farming and proved it every week".[2]
Characters and cast
Three of the main characters on Granby's Green Acres were much like those heard on many other situation comedies on radio: a husband, his "somewhat addled and impractical" wife, and "their breathless teenage daughter".[3] Radio historian John Dunning wrote that the husband and wife were "inspired by characters heard on the Lucille Ball show, My Favorite Husband."[3] In fact, radio regulars Gale Gordon and Bea Benaderet (who played John and Martha Granby) also played Mr. and Mrs. Atterbury on My Favorite Husband.[3] Dunning noted, "The names were changed, but the basic characters remained the same."[1]
Granby's Green Acres was Benaderet's "one and only full-fledged starring role on radio".[4] Two other regulars were also familiar to radio listeners. Louise Erickson played Janice, the Granbys' daughter, and Parley Baer played Eb, the farm's hired hand.[5] The storekeeper, Will Kimble, was played by Howard McNear in the first episode and by Horace Murphy in subsequent broadcasts.[2]
A review in the trade publication Variety called Granby's Green Acres "a brave but futile effort to put together a situation comedy around Gale Gordon".[6] It said that the episode reviewed had "a tepid script" and that the actors "couldn't improve the show's mediocrity."[6]
CBS asked Henning to create a third show. To avoid the stress of running three shows at once, Henning asked Petticoat writer Jay Sommers to create and produce this new program. Sommers proposed reviving Granby's Green Acres, changing the farmer's name and shortening the title. This meant that Benaderet's old radio show had become a spinoff of her television show.[4]
History
In 1948, Granby's Green Acres was auditioned for a slot on ABC radio with Hanley Stafford originally set to star.[7]
The show's creator, Jay Sommers, based its concept on memories of time he spent as a boy on a farm near Greendale, New York. His stepfather went broke trying to make the farm successful.[8]
Of the eight episodes that aired in 1950, five remain in existence, as does the unaired pilot episode.