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Get the complete Dick Van Dyke series on DVD
The Dick Van Dyke Show (DVD) Review
By Britt Gillette
In the Fall of 1961, CBS first aired The Dick Van
Dyke Show, one of funniest sitcoms in television history. Similar to I
Love Lucy, but featuring more docile and less eccentric characters, the
show became a mainstay in the top 10 Nielsen ratings for its first four
seasons. When the show's ratings slipped in the fifth season, the
network cancelled the show. But in the four decades since, The Dick Van
Dyke Show has continued to entertain its fans and their children (and
their children's children) via syndicated re-runs…
The Dick Van Dyke Show is centered around the life of
Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke), a family man living in suburban New York. As
the head writer for the fictional "Alan Brady Show," he works with
co-writers Buddy Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam) and Sally Rogers (Rose
Marie). Rob's work life is always interesting given Buddy's constant
wisecracks, Sally's never-ending search for a husband, and the trio's
unified harassment of Alan Brady's brother-in-law, Mel Cooley (Richard
Deacon). At home, Rob's loving yet overly-nervous wife Laura (Mary Tyler
Moore) stays at home with the couple's son Ritchie (Larry Mathews).
Surrounded by all these unique characters, Rob is always embroiled in
someone's scheme, fantasy, or shenanigan…
The Dick Van Dyke Show DVD features a number of
hilarious episodes including the season premiere "The Sick Boy and the
Sitter" in which Rob convinces Laura to go to a party at Alan Brady's
house, despite the fact that their five-year-old son Ritchie is sick.
The two get a babysitter, but Laura's maternal instincts don't
disappear… Other notable episodes from Season 1 include "Jealousy" in
which Laura grows jealous of Rob's work relationship with a beautiful TV
star, and "Where Did I Come From?" in which Ritchie asks Laura and Rob
about his origins, and they struggle to come up with the right answer…
Below is a list of episodes included on The Dick
Van Dyke Show (Season 1) DVD:
Episode 1 (The Sick Boy and the Sitter) Air Date:
10-03-1961
Episode 2 (The Blonde-Haired Brunette) Air Date: 10-10-1961
Episode 3 (Sally and the Lab Technician) Air Date: 10-17-1961
Episode 4 (Washington vs. the Bunny) Air Date: 10-24-1961
Episode 5 (Oh We Met the Night That We Danced) Air Date: 10-31-1961
Episode 6 (Harrison B. Harding of Camp Crowder, Mo.) Air Date:
11-06-1961
Episode 7 (Jealousy!) Air Date: 11-07-1961
Episode 8 (To Tell or Not to Tell) Air Date: 11-14-1961
Episode 9 (The Unwelcome Houseguest) Air Date: 11-21-1961
Episode 10 (The Meershatz Pipe) Air Date: 11-28-1961
Episode 11 (Forty-Four Tickets) Air Date: 12-05-1961
Episode 12 (Empress Carlotta's Necklace) Air Date: 12-12-1961
Episode 13 (Sally is a Girl) Air Date: 12-19-1961
Episode 14 (Buddy, Can You Spare a Job?) Air Date: 12-26-1961
Episode 15 (Where Did I Come From?) Air Date: 01-03-1962
Episode 16 (The Curious Thing About Women) Air Date: 01-10-1962
Episode 17 (Punch Thy Neighbor) Air Date: 01-17-1962
Episode 18 (Who Owes Who What?) Air Date: 01-24-1962
Episode 19 (The Talented Neighborhood) Air Date: 01-31-1962
Episode 20 (A Word a Day) Air Date: 02-07-1962
Episode 21 (The Boarder Incident) Air Date: 02-14-1962
Episode 22 (Father of the Week) Air Date: 02-21-1962
Episode 23 (The Twizzle) Air Date: 02-28-1962
Episode 24 (One Angry Man) Air Date: 03-07-1962
Episode 25 (Where You Been, Fassbinder?) Air Date: 03-14-1962
Episode 26 (I Am My Brother's Keeper) Air Date: 03-21-1962
Episode 27 (The Sleeping Brother) Air Date: 03-28-1962
Episode 28 (The Bad Old Days) Air Date: 04-04-1962
Episode 29 (Sol and the Sponsor) Air Date: 04-11-1962
Episode 30 (The Return of Happy Spangler) Air Date: 04-18-1962
Early life
Van Dyke was born in West Plains, Missouri, and grew up in Danville,
Illinois, the son of Loren Wayne Van Dyke, a traveling salesman for the
Sunshine Biscuit Company with a talent for comedy, and Hazel Vorice
McCord. He attended elementary school in Danville, starting in 1931. In
1938 the Van Dykes, of ancient Dutch origin (originally Van Dijk), moved
to Crawfordsville, Indiana, for two years, and returned to Danville in
1940 where he attended high school. As a child, he was inspired to go into
show business by watching Laurel & Hardy films at the movie theater. After
appearing in many high school plays and community theatre productions, Van
Dyke enlisted in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II.
There he participated in stage shows and worked as a radio DJ.
Television career
After hosting local comedy television shows in Atlanta and New Orleans,
Van Dyke signed a contract with CBS in 1956. His first network assignment
was as the host of the CBS Morning Show[1], followed by hosting duties on
the first network prime-time cartoon show, The CBS Cartoon Theater, which
aired for 12 episodes during the summer of 1956. He appeared on numerous
CBS game shows and talk shows, either as host or guest. He made his acting
debut in an episode of The Phil Silvers Show.
Van Dyke with his co-star on The Dick Van Dyke Show, Mary Tyler MooreVan
Dyke then left CBS for the Broadway stage. In 1960, he starred in the
Broadway musical Bye Bye Birdie opposite Chita Rivera. The show was a
box-office success and he won a Tony Award. Carl Reiner saw Van Dyke in
Bye Bye Birdie and cast him in the role of Rob Petrie in the highly-rated
and critically acclaimed CBS sitcom, The Dick Van Dyke Show. The show was
about a staff of writers for The Alan Brady Show, a fictional TV variety
show conceptually based on the 1950s hit, Your Show of Shows. The show
divided its time between the office and home, making a star of a young
Mary Tyler Moore as his wife, Laura. Reiner originally planned to star as
Rob Petrie but after filming a pilot he realized he was wrong for the
role. Reiner instead opted to play Alan Brady, the role loosely based on
Sid Caesar. For the role of Rob Petrie, Van Dyke won three Emmy Awards.
The Dick Van Dyke Show ran for five seasons, ending its successful run
while it was still in the top 10 of the Nielsen Ratings. This unusual move
kept the program fresh instead of allowing it to deteriorate.
Film career
Van Dyke as Bert (left, behind) in Mary Poppins.Van Dyke began his film
career by reprising his stage role in the film version of Bye Bye Birdie
in 1963. Although Van Dyke was unhappy with the adaptation because the
focus was shifted to Ann-Margret's character, the film was a major
success. He followed that up with Walt Disney's Mary Poppins in 1964, in
which he played Bert, a Cockney chimney sweep, and also, in heavy
disguise, the bank's elderly chairman. Van Dyke's attempt at a cockney
accent (lapsing out of it at times) was nonetheless widely ridiculed and
is still frequently parodied. It is still often cited as one of the worst
attempts at a British accent by an American actor,[1] a fact acknowledged
with good humour by Van Dyke himself on the 2004 DVD release of the film.
But the film was very popular and innovative and also showed his
versatility as a singer and dancer. One of his showcase songs, Chim Chim
Cher-ee, won the Oscar for the Sherman Brothers, the film's songwriting
team.
Van Dyke made several more comedy movies throughout the 1960s including
What a Way to Go!, Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N., Fitzwilly, The Art of Love,
Never a Dull Moment, and Divorce American Style. Although most of his
movies from this era were relatively unsuccessful, the film Chitty Chitty
Bang Bang was a worldwide success and is still fondly remembered today. In
later years, Van Dyke would complain that he had "never made a good
movie".
Dramatic roles and career comeback
Van Dyke as Caractacus Potts in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang with Sally Ann
Howes as Truly ScrumptiousIn 1969, Van Dyke appeared in the comedy-drama
The Comic, which was written and directed by Carl Reiner. Van Dyke plays a
silent-film era comedian who struggles with alcoholism and depression.
Reiner wrote the film especially for Van Dyke, who would often talk of his
admiration for silent film era comedians such as Charlie Chaplin, Buster
Keaton, Ben Turpin and his hero, Stan Laurel. He also began starring in a
series of commercials as a spokesperson for Kodak.
In 1971, Van Dyke starred with Hope Lange in another sitcom called The New
Dick Van Dyke Show. In it, he played Dick Preston, a local talk show host
in Phoenix, Arizona. Van Dyke was living in Arizona at the time and the
show was filmed there. Despite airing for three seasons, the show was not
as popular as his previous series had been[citation needed].
In 1973, Van Dyke voiced his animated likeness for the October 27, 1973
installment of Hanna-Barbera's The New Scooby-Doo Movies, "Scooby-Doo
Meets Dick Van Dyke" (aka "The Haunted Carnival"), the series' final first
run episode.
In 1974, Van Dyke received wide acclaim and an Emmy nomination for his
role as an alcoholic businessman in the television movie The Morning
After. Regarded by many as the most realistic television film ever made
dealing with alcoholism, it is sometimes shown at treatment centers. The
final scene in particular is regarded by many as chilling and
unforgettable. It was at this time that Van Dyke admitted he had recently
overcome a real-life drinking problem.
In 1975, he played another atypical role as a murdering photographer in an
episode of the popular series Columbo. He also began doing public service
announcements for the National Fire Protection Agency through 1984. Van
Dyke returned to comedy in 1976 with the sketch comedy show Van Dyke and
Company which also starred Andy Kaufman and Super Dave Osborne. Despite
being cancelled after only three months, the show won the Emmy for
Outstanding Comedy-Variety Series, beating Saturday Night Live. In 1977,
Van Dyke then joined the cast of The Carol Burnett Show after Harvey
Korman left the show. Unfortunately, his comedy style did not work as well
with Burnett's, and he left the show after three months. For the next
decade, he appeared mainly in low-rated TV movies. One exception was
another atypical role as a murdering judge on the first episode of the TV
series Matlock in 1986 starring Andy Griffith. In 1988, Van Dyke returned
with another sitcom called The Van Dyke Show which co-starred his son,
Barry. The show was cancelled after just five episodes.
Van Dyke as Dr. Mark Sloan.His career seemed essentially over by 1989 when
Dick Van Dyke started a career comeback. First, he took a guest starring
role on NBC's hit TV series The Golden Girls playing Dorothy's (Bea
Arthur's) beau, who decides to give up being a lawyer to become a circus
clown. The role earned him his first Emmy nomination since 1977. In 1990,
Van Dyke, whose usual role had been the amiable hero, took a small but
villainous turn as the crooked D.A Fletcher in Warren Beatty's movie Dick
Tracy. The reviews he received for Tracy led him to star in a series of TV
movies on CBS that became the foundation for his popular television drama,
Diagnosis: Murder, which ran from 1993 to 2001. (He first played the
character, Dr. Mark Sloan, in an episode of Jake and the Fatman.) He
continued to find television work after the show ended, including a
dramatically and critically successful performance of The Gin Game,
produced for television in 2003 that reunited him with Mary Tyler Moore, a
2004 on Scrubs, where he played a doctor who could not keep up with the
changing ways of medical care, and a starring role as Dr. Jonathan Maxwell
in a made-for-TV movie in 2006. In 2004, he reunited with Moore once again
as he reprised the role of Rob Petrie for a Carl Reiner-produced TV
special The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited.
Van Dyke returned to motion pictures in the 2006 film Curious George as
Mr. Bloomsberry. His most recent role is Cecil in the Ben Stiller film
Night at the Museum, released in December 2006. In January 2007 Van Dyke
reprised his role as Dr. Jonathan Maxwell in Murder 101: College Can Be
Murder for the Hallmark Channel . In an interview included on the DVD
release of Night at the Museum, Van Dyke jokes that he keeps trying to
retire but something seems to always come up. Van Dyke's latest Murder 101
movie is set to air in August 2007.
Other work
Van Dyke was a great admirer of Stan Laurel and even gave the eulogy at
his funeral. He also produced a TV special soon afterward, A Salute to
Stan Laurel. He once met Laurel and told him he had copied a great deal
from him. He said Laurel only laughed and said, "I've noticed that." Van
Dyke once did a sketch on his sitcom in which he imitated Laurel. After
the show aired, he phoned Laurel to ask what he thought of it. To Van
Dyke's surprise, Laurel said he still owned one of "Stanley's" bowler hats
and would have lent it to Van Dyke for the sketch if he had only asked.
Van Dyke received a Grammy Award for his performance on the soundtrack to
Mary Poppins.
One of Van Dyke's modern passions is producing 3D computer graphics. He
created many of the 3D rendered effects shown in Diagnosis: Murder, and
continues to work with LightWave 3D.[2]
Personal life
He married Margie Willett in 1948, with whom he had four children:
Christian, Barry, Carrie Beth and Stacy. They divorced in 1984 after a
long separation. Van Dyke's son Barry Van Dyke and grandson Carey Van Dyke
are also actors; both, along with other Van Dyke relations and
grandchildren, appeared in various episodes of the long-running Diagnosis:
Murder series. All of Van Dyke's children are married, and he has seven
grandchildren. He currently resides with girlfriend, Michelle Triola.
During The Dick Van Dyke Show, he fought alcoholism, which he successfully
conquered. He has also served as an elder in the Presbyterian Church.
In 1970, he published Faith, Hope and Hilarity: a Child's Eye View of
Religion, a book of humorous anecdotes based largely on his experiences as
a Sunday School teacher.
Van Dyke is a computer animation enthusiast and has displayed some of his
CGI work at trade shows. This interest is referred to in the 2004 TV movie
The Dick Van Dyke Show Revisited, which shows that Rob Petrie has also
become a CGI hobbyist
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