Gloom, despair, and agony on me . . .
Well, it is the place to be.
I put Stan Lee and Jack Kirby up there with Shakespeare, too.
I’d argue that only in the mildest terms. But there’s more genuine artistry in any page of a good Spiderman or X-Men book than in the whole run of GA.
Well, looks like we got ourselves a * reedah*.
/BHicks
she was good, too. and I truly believe them as a couple. whatever goofy thing was going on I felt that they loved each other. it was very sweet, frequently.
don’t care
get your own thread.
zactly
I always got a kick out of Mr. Kimble. He contradicted everything he said.
“Hi Mr. Douglas. Nice day today… Well, kind of nice… There’s a few clouds on the horizon… Might get a little rain today… Maybe a thunderstorm…Everybody take cover there’s going to be a hurricane!”
She was getting a little long in the tooth to play the role - 46 when the show started, pas 50 when it ended. Not exactly ingenue-wife age, for the time.
Rumor hath it that her elaborate hairstyles were wigs (almost certainly) used in part to cover “rubber band” facelift appliances.
Don’t understand the complaint, she looked young next to her TV husband and she was 13 years his junior in real life. They weren’t suppose to be young were they? I thought they were a successful middle-age couple in the show?
I can’t bring up any substantiation, but I recall Lisa as being presented as much younger than Oliver - a late marriage, implications of a first wife? Maybe not.
Like the “mari-ju-ana from Tia-ju-ana” – oh, wait, the smugglers were busted because they put the tomatoes under the false bottom and the “mari-ju-ana from Tia-ju-ana” on top.
Season 6, Episode 11. "Raise your glass to Clarkwell/Where you study through the mail!’
A friend described Mr. Kimble as sounding like he swallowed a bottle of correction fluid.
Well, that just proves the saying “to each his own”. And “beauty is in the eye of the beholder”. I couldn’t disagree more, though.
There is one episode where they meet in World War II when Oliver’s plane is shot down and Lisa is in the Hungarian resistance. At one point the radio in London advises Oliver to find Colonel Hogan if he ends up in Stalag 13.
One (of the few) good things about creator Paul Henning is he felt that veteran actors who paid their dues, such as Abe’s Bendaret, deserved a chance to star in their own series.
Yeah, other people’s nostalgia can be embarrassing, however, I’m not buying that scenario regarding Green Acres.
I haven’t rewatched the show, but when it originally aired I couldn’t understand why it didn’t get more praise. It seemed in a different category (inspiration-wise) than Gilligan, Beverly, Munsters, Petticoat, etc. And Get Smart (which had some funny shticks, but ran them into the ground faster.) And the Addams Family (which had some funny weirdness, but again repeated too much).
I did get tired of Oliver’s speeches, but loved the general surrealism for several seasons.
I suppose I’ll have to do some rewatching.
One thing about the show, I think there were three episodes with flashbacks to how Oliver and Lisa met, and they all contradicted each other.
Hated the show, but watched it, as Miss Gabor made my teenage self horny.
I didn’t spend any time on a farm, but I grew up mainly in small towns and/or the middle of nowhere in Texas and Arkansas before hitting the big city of Wichita Kansas. I liked GA, didn’t love it.
I never thought of the Hooterville gang as stupid, that was just Oliver’s perception of them. Many of the episodes, IIRC, ended up with the city-slicker being outsmarted or,at least, worn down by them. I wouldn’t have used the term surreal, but I won’t say (looking back) it doesn’t apply.
Hee Haw=Saturday Night Live for people who had to plan “trips to town” to do all their shopping.
I think Lisa liked to present herself as being much younger than Oliver, but was closer in age then she cared to admit.
Complex metaphors for Gilligan? nah but I will say…Jim Backus has excellent timing and delivery. Alan Hale Jr. does a nice slow burn, and for some reason I only just now realized he breaks the fourth wall a lot.
The plots were colorful* and I won’t even play devil’s advocate for the dream sequences. I flat out loved those.
*I could probably name 20 or so eps by plot…and only 10 or Brady Bunch episodes. If that.
I couldn’t name one Green Acres though I know all the characters when they’ve been mentioned in the thread.