American radio situation comedy series (1950–1951)
Radio show
The Harold Peary Show
Harold Peary (1952)
Other names
The Hal Peary Show Honest Harold
Genre
Situation comedy
Running time
30 minutes
Country of origin
United States
Language(s)
English
Syndicates
CBS
Starring
Harold Peary
Announcer
Bob LeMond
Written by
Harold Peary Gene Stone Bill Danch Jack Robinson
Directed by
Norman Macdonnell
Original release
September 17, 1950 – June 13, 1951
The Harold Peary Show is a radiosituation comedy broadcast in the United States September 17, 1950-June 13, 1951 on CBS.[1] Some sources refer to the program as Honest Harold[2][3] or The Hal Peary Show.[4][5]
Background
The period 1948-1950 brought major changes to network radio, as CBS hired a number of stars from NBC in what some have called "talent raids".[6] Some of the top performers who changed networks were Jack Benny, Red Skelton, Edgar Bergen, and the husband-and-wife duo George Burns and Gracie Allen. One result of the changes was that 12 of the 15 highest-rated radio programs at the end of 1949 were on CBS.[7]
Harold Peary did not find such success, however. Peary switched to CBS, while the program in which he had starred, The Great Gildersleeve, stayed on NBC.[8] Those changes resulted in a new program (The Harold Peary Show) for Peary and a new star (Willard Waterman) for Gildersleeve. Radio historian John Dunning commented that The Harold Peary Show "failed to gain any measure of an audience in its lone season".[2]
Format
The Harold Peary Show featured a radio show within a radio show. The main character, Harold Hemp -- called "Honest Harold," was host of a program called "The Happy Homemaker".[4] As one would expect from a situation comedy, humor arose from Hemp's interaction with other characters in the episodes. They included his mother, his nephew, a marshal, a doctor, the radio station's switchboard operator, and girlfriends.[9]
Problems
Although not an exact duplicate, The Harold Peary Show bore much similarity -- perhaps too much similarity -- to The Great Gildersleeve. Dunning wrote, "Peary tried with Honest Harold to do Gildy all over again."[9] One old-time radio website commented: "The new show also borrowed a few Gildersleeve plot devices, such as running for mayor and engagements to two women. In what was possibly a desperate attempt to recreate the Gildersleeve magic, it even brought in actress Shirley Mitchell, virtually recreating her Gildersleeve role of Leila Ransom, under the name of Florabelle Breckenridge."[10]
The program was knocked in at least two published articles. Dunning wrote about a review in Radio Life magazine that he summarized, in part, as follows: "Waterman was a 'splendid' replacement in a tough situation ... he won over the studio audience ... cast members rooted for him wholeheartedly ... Waterman's own intrinsic thespian integrity contributed to an initial performance that was greeted with enthusiasm. The same review panned Honest Harold as derivative, unexciting, and, in the end, 'just another show.'"[2] Meanwhile, media critic John Crosby commented in a column published March 1, 1951:
Last summer, the intellectual hierarchy at the Columbia Broadcasting System announced triumphantly that they had absconded with one more NBC star, namely Harold Peary who had been "The Great Gildersleve" on NBC since the year two. Mr. Peary, said CBS, had been signed to a seven year contract and would create a new show and a new character for that network. It must have seemed like a bright idea at the time. Events have proved it to be an unqualified disaster both for the network and Mr. Peary.[11]
A newspaper obituary for Peary commented about The Harold Peary Show, "That series, however, never achieved the popularity of Gildersleeve and gradually faded away."[12]
Characters and cast
In addition to Peary as Honest Harold Hemp, the main characters and the actors who played them were as follows:
^ abcTerrace, Vincent (1981), Radio's Golden Years: The Encyclopedia of Radio Programs 1930-1960. A.S. Barnes & Company, Inc. ISBN0-498-02393-1. P. 112.
^Buxton, Frank and Owen, Bill (1972). The Big Broadcast: 1920-1950. The Viking Press. SBN 670-16240-x. P. 106.
^"1948-1952". Radio Reruns. Retrieved 20 June 2014.
^Hilmes, Michele, (ed.) (2007). NBC: America's Network. University of California Press. ISBN978-0-520-25079-6. P. 155.