September 8, 1956 (1956-09-08) – March 16, 1957 (1957-03-16) (on CBS) 1958 (first-run syndication)
Hey, Jeannie!, retitled The Jeannie Carson Show during its second season and also during later prime-time reruns, is an American sitcom that aired on CBS during the 1956–57 television season and in first-run syndication during 1958. The series stars Jeannie Carson as a naïve young Scottish woman who emigrates to New York City.
Synopsis
Jeannie MacLennan is a young Scottish woman who emigrates from the United Kingdom to New York City.[1][2] Sweet and naïve, she arrives with no job and no place to stay.[1][2]Taxicab driver Al Murray comes to her assistance[2] and is named as her sponsor. Jeannie moves in with Al and his sister, Liz, in Brooklyn.[1][2] During Season 1, Jeannie moves from job to job — salesgirl in a doughnut shop, golfcaddie, Chinese restaurant manager, executive secretary, taxicab dispatcher, policewoman — and encounters unusual people and situations as she learns about what to her are strange American customs.[2]
In season 2, with the show retitled The Jeannie Carson Show, Jeannie has settled into a career as an airline stewardess and has moved into a new apartment. Her boss at the airline is the chief stewardess, Mabel, and Herbert is a flight engineer who often is part of the crew on Jeannie's flights. Her new landlord is Charlie O'Connell.[citation needed]
Jeannie Carson was performing in her breakout role in the musical Love from Judy at the Saville Theatre in London in 1952–1953 when producer Max Liebman saw her in that production.[3] He signed her to a contract to appear on television in the United States.[3]Hey, Jeannie! gave Carson her first starring role on American television.
Four Star-Tartan and Jeannie Productions produced Hey, Jeannie! and The Jeannie Carson Show. Carson sang a song in most episodes.[citation needed]
Procter & Gamble initially was the program's only sponsor. In January 1957 Chesterfield cigarettes became an alternate week sponsor.[4]
Broadcast history
Hey, Jeannie! premiered on CBS on September 8, 1956.[1][2] CBS cancelled it after a single season, and the last of its 26 original episodes on CBS aired on March 16, 1957. CBS then broadcast reruns of Hey, Jeannie! for another seven weeks, from March 23 to May 4, 1957.[1] The show aired from 9:30 to 10:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Saturdays throughout its CBS run.[1][2]
After CBS cancelled Hey Jeannie!, the show underwent a change in premise and was retitled The Jeannie Carson Show for its second season. Only six episodes were produced for the second season, and they ran in first-run syndication in the United States during 1958.[citation needed]
ABC broadcast reruns of Hey, Jeannie! under the title The Jeannie Carson Show from June 30 to September 22, 1960, as a summer replacement for The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom.[2] The reruns ran on Thursdays at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time.[2]
After Jeannie witnesses a car accident, the attorneys for both drivers contact her and ask her to say that the accident was the other driver's fault — and when the case goes to court, the complete honesty of her testimony backfires on both drivers. During the episode, Jeannie sings "A Wee Doc and Doris." Guest stars: Don Beddoe, Addison Richards, Harry Antrim, and Lester Dorr.
After an eavesdropper misunderstands a conversation between Jeannie and her stockbroker and Jeannie buys one share of stock in a steel corporation, rumors spread that she is fronting for a syndicate which plans to take over the whole corporation — and the rumors eventually reach the head of the steel company.
The pilot for the series. Jeannie reminisces about her first meeting with Al and the good fortune she has had since arriving in New York City. She recalls how upon arriving in the United States, she was so overjoyed that she had stopped traffic on the George Washington Bridge, how the nonplussed Al had come to her assistance — and how he then was named her sponsor. During the episode, Jeannie sings "I Feel a Song Coming On." Guest stars: Jack Albertson, Hugh Sanders, Joe Devlin, Peter Leeds, Dave Appolon, and Dick Wessel.
As a reward for selling more doughnuts than any other salesgirl in the doughnut shop where she works, Jeannie wins a trip to Washington, D.C. — and after arriving in Washington, she befuddles a guide with her profound knowledge of American history. During the episode, Jeannie sings "Everytime." Guest stars: Herb Vigran, Jack Mulhall, Jim Cross, Jack Jones, and Phil Arnold.
7
7
"Jeannie in Greenwich Village"
Charles Isaacs
Jack Elinson and Charles Stewart
October 27, 1956 (1956-10-27)
Jeannie decides she costs Al and Liz too much money by living with them, so she leaves to find her own apartment in Greenwich Village, where an eccentric artist gives her a lesson in how to get something to eat even when broke. During the episode, Jeannie sings "When We're Alone." Guest stars: Hans Conried, Isabelle Dwan, Robert F. Shield, and Arlen Stuart.
8
8
"Jeannie, the Caddie"
Les Goodwins
Stanley Shapiro and Fred Fox
November 10, 1956 (1956-11-10)
Wanting to help golf club manufacturer Angus MacDonald reunite with his fiancé of 25 years, Jeannie lands a job as a golf caddie — even though she knows nothing about golf. During the episode, she sings "The Pastures of Your Heart." Guest stars: Tudor Owen, Parley Baer, Frank Wilcox, Frankie Darro, and Joan Sudlow.
A rock and roll musician who is romantically attracted to Jeannie tries to convert her to appreciating his music — and Jeannie finds herself involved in a floorshow at a local nightclub. During the episode, she sings "Don't Ask For More." Guest stars: Jerry Paris, Peggy Maley, and Glenn Turnbull.
After Jeannie buys Al a jacket for his birthday, she loses it before she can give it to him — then discovers that a strange man claimed it at the taxicab company's lost and found department. During the episode, she sings "Who Cares?" Guest stars: Emory Parnell, Dick Ryan, Charles Victor, and Juney Ellis.
After Jeannie applies for United States citizenship, her Italian grocer, Gino, asks her to talk to his teenage son, Joey, who has been spending time with a bad crowd at the local pool room. After she visits the pool room to talk to Joey, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service receives a report that she is involved in illegal gambling, putting her chance of U.S. citizenship in jeopardy — and when she tries to return stolen goods to a department store, she gets arrested for shoplifting. During the episode, she sings "Pick Yourself a Star." Guest stars: Nestor Paiva, Danny Richards, Jr., Eddie Ryder, Tom Brown, and Bob Shield.
17
17
"Jeannie, the Westerner"
Leslie Goodwins
Jack Elinson and Charles Stewart
January 12, 1957 (1957-01-12)
Looking for a fresh angle to write about, a newspaperman takes Jeannie to the rodeo. Jeannie wants everything there to be authentic — but does not think the rodeo star is. During the episode, she sings "Boots and Saddles." Guest stars: Touch Jay Connors, Eddie Wallerf, Harry Lauter, and Emory Parnell.
Jeannie files her income-tax return for the first time, and her complete honesty creates turmoil in the Internal Revenue Department. During the episode, she sings: "Side by Side." Guest stars: Herb Vigran, Larry Blake, Richard Collier, and Tim Murphy.
After Jeannie gets a job as a dispatcher with the taxicab company Al drives for, she discovers that Al has a crush on her fellow dispatcher Gladys. Jeannie arranges for Al to go to her apartment, but on the way back a gangster named Mugsey takes Jeannie hostage while on his way to rob a store. During the episode, Jeannie sings "The Lady's in Love With You." Guest stars: Richard J. Reeves, Vera Marshe, and Howard Negley.
Jeannie tries to get Al and an attractive new neighbor woman romantically interested in each other. During the episode, Jeannie sings "A Girl Like Me." Guest stars: Virginia Christine and Charles Maxwell.
26
26
"Three's a Crowd"
Leslie Goodwins
Nate Monaster
March 16, 1957 (1957-03-16)
After Al and Liz decide Jeannie needs a boyfriend, they each arrange dates for her. Dressed as Martha Washington, Jeannie is to attend a costume ball and meet her date, who will be dressed as George Washington. At the ball, she finds three young men dressed as George Washington. During the episode, Jeannie sings "'S Wonderful." Guest stars: Glenn Turnbull, Stanley Adams, and Tod Griffin.
Jeannie has taken a job as an airline stewardess and moves to a new apartment. When she meets her new landlord, Charlie O'Connell, she discovers that he dislikes pets, leaving her wondering what to do with the dog she picked up on her first flight and the cat that two neighborhood boys bring to the apartment. During the episode, she sings "Happiness Is a Thing Called Joe" and "Poor Johnny One Note." Guest stars: Will Wright, John Wilder, David Whorf, Ron Hargrave, Donald Losby, and Brian Corcoran.
Jeannie decides to promote Mother Flanagan's jam by getting all of the airline stewardesses to request that their passengers ask their local supermarkets to stock it — but it turns out that Mother Flanagan is buying supermarket jam and putting her own labels on the bottles. Guest stars: John Litel, Mary Young, and Jonathan Hole.
During a flight from San Francisco to New York City with a group of Korean orphans aboard, one of the orphans takes a liking to Jeannie when she mentions that she is a big baseball fan. After the flight lands in New York, the young boy heads for Jeannie's apartment instead of his adoptive parents' home — and Jeannie gets in big trouble. Guest stars: Warren Hsieh, Frank Wilcox, Ray Montgomery, and Frank Sully.
Millionaire playboy Buck Matthews hires an entire plane for himself to fly from Boston to New York City. Jeannie is the stewardess on the flight. After the plane lands in New York, Buck invites her to join him for a wild night in the nightclubs of New York — and Jeannie tries to prove to Buck that money isn't everything by showing that she can go an entire day without spending any money. Guest stars: Chuck Connors, Fritz Feld, William Benedict, and Clegg Hoyt.
Mr. O'Connell is displeased that the city plans to build a highway right through Jeannie's apartment building, so Jeannie decides to prove that the ground under the building is not safe to build a highway. Guest stars: John Eldredge, James Seay, Lewis Martin, and Jimmy Cross.
After Mike Flying Eagle, the chief of the Cheyenne, finishes a visit to Washington, D.C., in which he has asked the United States Government for drought relief, he boards a flight Jeannie is working, explains to her that there has been no rain in the Cheyenne's lands for many months, and tells her that the tribe will perform a rain dance the following day. After the flight lands, Jeannie and Herbert decide to help the tribe, so they hire a light plane and seed the clouds with ice while the tribe performs the dance. A downpour ensues, and the grateful chief makes Jeannie his daughter, giving her the name Little Rain Cloud. The rain also washes the grain that the Pawnee had just planted out of the ground, however, and the angry Pawnee have the local police arrest Jeannie. The Cheyenne stage a jail break for Jeannie, and the Pawnee chief declares war on the Cheyenne. A United States Department of Defense official arrives and meets with Jeannie, Flying Eagle, the Pawnee chief, and the local police chief to determine what to do. After Flying Eagle agrees to pay for the Pawnee's losses out of the money the Cheyenne get for their harvest, war is averted, and the police drop the charges against Jeannie. Guest stars: Robert Warwick, Monte Blue, James Burke, Douglass Dumbrille, Bob Bice. and David Alper.
References
^ abcdefMcNeil, Alex, Total Television: The Comprehensive Guide to Programming From 1948 to the Present, Fourth Edition, New York: Penguin Books, 1996, ISBN0 14 02 4916 8, p. 375.
^ abcdefghiBrooks, Tim, and Earle Marsh, The Complete Directory to Prime-Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present (Sixth Edition), New York: Ballantine Books, 1995, ISBN0-345-39736-3, p. 458.