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Film Glance Forum

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  3. I know of the following:

I know of the following:

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    Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Classic TV: The 40s


    Thor-Delta — 13 years ago(July 13, 2012 06:08 PM)

    I know of the following:
    "Pinwright's Progress" (1946-1947, BBC) - No surviving episodes (ability to record live TV did not exist at the time)
    "Mary Kay and Johnny" (1947-1950, DuMont, then CBS, then NBC) - At least 1 surviving episode
    "The Laytons" (1948-1949, DuMont) - No surviving episodes
    "The Growing Paynes" (1948-1949, DuMont) - at least 2 surviving episodes, maybe 4
    "The Life of Riley" (1949-1950, NBC) - Complete run survives of this early filmed series
    What other sitcoms aired in the 1940s?
    What is the oldest surviving British sitcom episode? Would I be correct to presume it comes from the 1950s?
    Du Mont is always stimulated by Milton Berle's horizontal resolution, if not his jokes

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      stranddan — 13 years ago(July 14, 2012 06:00 AM)

      We got our first TV in 1949, the tail end of the decade. I remember a sitcom with Stu Irwin and (I think) his wife. Harry Von Zell may have been the neighbor, unless I'm thinking of the wrong sitcom. I don't recall other sitcoms my mind has retained Kukla, Fran & Ollie, Milton Berle, and Ted Mack.

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        stranddan — 13 years ago(July 14, 2012 06:06 AM)

        I should have looked this up before I posted. Harry von Zell was the neighbor in the Burns & Allen Show, not Stu Erwin's. And Erwin's show is listed as 1950. Sorry 'bout that!

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          Thor-Delta — 13 years ago(July 14, 2012 10:27 AM)

          Stu Erwin's show may have started in 1950.but in any case, it is a very underrated series! One of the first filmed sitcoms to use neither laugh-track or studio audience.
          Du Mont is always stimulated by Milton Berle's horizontal resolution, if not his jokes

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            Patricia91 — 13 years ago(July 14, 2012 08:58 AM)

            The Goldbergs (1949-50)
            The Aldrich Family (1949-53)
            Mama (1949-57) aka I Remember Mama

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              Thor-Delta — 13 years ago(July 14, 2012 10:25 AM)

              Damn! How could I forget "The Goldbergs" and "Mama"? Thanks for reminding me!
              I was recently watching the "Ultimate Goldsbergs" DVD set. Seems that there are 5 surviving 1949-era episodes.
              I don't know if any of the 1949 "Mama" episodes survive, but it seems unlikely.
              I think "The Ruggles" has a surviving episode from 1949 (along with a much large number of 1950 and 1951 episodes).
              The TV version of "The Aldrich Family" seems to have vanished off the face of the earth. UCLA archive has one episode circa 1950-1951, and a 1953 episode is held by the Paley Center for Media. The Library of Congress and Musuem of Broadcast Communications don't seem to have any episodes at all.
              Du Mont is always stimulated by Milton Berle's horizontal resolution, if not his jokes

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                Patricia91 — 13 years ago(July 14, 2012 11:58 AM)

                I remember Henry Aldrich from radio. Very funny.

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                  Thor-Delta — 13 years ago(July 14, 2012 04:52 PM)

                  You probably already know this, but over 70 episodes seem to survive of the radio show.
                  Du Mont is always stimulated by Milton Berle's horizontal resolution, if not his jokes

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                    thextguy — 13 years ago(March 01, 2013 07:59 PM)

                    I have one episode of the TV series 'The Aldrich Family' from June 18, 1950 broadcast on NBC. It's posted it on youtube in two parts (file size limited to 15 min. so I had to post it in two parts.)
                    It is about Henry Aldrich going to a costume party. Henry's father (Sam) and his pal Homer are played by the same actors as on the radio series (but Henry himself, his mom and sister are played by different actors on the TV series).

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                      Thor-Delta — 13 years ago(March 19, 2013 06:23 PM)

                      To partially-answer my own question, an episode recently turned up of the 1949 DuMont television version of "Easy Aces".
                      I haven't been playing dead! You know that, right, Kankuro?

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