The Doris Day Show

The Doris Day Show

First season DVD cover
Created by James Fritzell
Starring
Music by William Loose (1968-1969)
Jimmie Haskell (1969-1973)
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 5
No. of episodes 128 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Terry Melcher (1968-1972)
Don Genson (1971)
Doris Day (1972-1973)
Producer(s) Dick Dorso (1968-1969)
Bob Sweeney (1968-1969)
Jack Elinson (1969-1971)
Norman Paul (1969-1971)
Edward H. Feldman (1971-1973)
Running time 2224 minutes
Production company(s) Arwin Productions
Distributor Worldvision Enterprises
(?-1999)
Paramount Television
(1999-2006)
CBS Paramount Television (2006-07)
CBS Television Distribution (2007-present)
Release
Original network CBS
Audio format Monaural
Original release September 24, 1968 (1968-09-24) – March 12, 1973 (1973-03-12)

The Doris Day Show is an American sitcom that was originally broadcast on the CBS Television network from September 1968 until March 1973, remaining on the air for five seasons and 128 episodes.[1] The Doris Day Show was also the title of her radio show which aired from Hollywood in 1952, with "It's Magic" as the theme song.

In addition to showcasing actress-singer Doris Day, whose successful two-decade movie career was ending, the series is remembered for its multiple format and cast changes over the course of its five-year run. The show is also remembered for Day's statement, in her autobiography Doris Day: Her Own Story (1975), that her husband Martin Melcher had signed her to do the series without her knowledge, a fact she only discovered when Melcher died of heart disease on April 20, 1968 (he also received credit on the series as "executive producer" during its initial season). The show premiered on Tuesday, September 24, 1968.[2]

Series run

Season 1 (19681969)

Day portrays Doris Martin, a widow and mother of two young sons, Billy and Toby (played by Philip Brown and Todd Starke), who, when the series premieres, have all just moved back to her father's rural ranch in Cotina in Mill Valley, north of San Francisco, California, after living in New York City for most of her adult life.[3]

Other characters during this initial phase of the program include Doris' father Buck Webb (played by Denver Pyle) and their naive hired ranch hand, LeRoy B. Simpson (played by James Hampton). Their housekeeper initially is Aggie Thompson, portrayed by Fran Ryan, who left after the first 10 episodes to replace Barbara Pepper in Green Acres as Doris Ziffel. The character left without any explanation and is replaced by Juanita, played by Naomi Stevens. Lord Nelson is also included in the opening credits cast, playing Lord Nelson, the family's big and friendly sheepdog.

Season 2 (19691970)

Doris begins to commute from the ranch to San Francisco, where she starts working as an executive secretary at Today's World magazine. New workplace characters are added: McLean Stevenson (who would later leave the series to star in M*A*S*H) plays her boss, Today's World editor Michael Nicholson, who is often referred to as 'Nick' by the other magazine executives; Rose Marie plays a fellow secretary at the magazine and Doris' friend, Myrna Gibbons; Paul Smith portrays Ron Harvey, the magazine's assistant editor and Myrna's boss. Pyle, Brown and Starke remain regular cast members, while Hampton appears in only one episode (his character now married and owning a gas station in Mill Valley). Lord Nelson, while no longer among the opening credits cast list, still appears uncredited as the family sheepdog in most episodes this season. There is no longer any character of a housekeeper at the ranch, and no ranch hand was hired to replace LeRoy.[2]

Season 3 (19701971)

Having gotten tired of the commute between her work and the ranch, Doris, her sons, and the family sheepdog move to San Francisco, where they rent an apartment above an Italian restaurant owned and operated by married couple Louie and Angie Pallucci (played by Bernie Kopell and Kaye Ballard, respectively). Louie is at first angry with Angie for renting the apartment to a widow with children and a big pet, but he eventually cherishes their new tenants after Billy and Toby praise his pizza. Angie also becomes one of Doris' best friends. Doris begins writing articles for the magazine under the auspices of Mr. Harvey, the assistant editor, but is still mainly a secretary. All of the regular characters from the previous season remain, with the exception of Buck played by Pyle, who appears in only two episodes as none of the episodes from Seasons 3 onward ever take place on the ranch where Buck still lives. Hampton's character, LeRoy, appears in only one episode, he now living in Montana, but who travels the rodeo circuit in an effort to raise money to buy his own ranch. In this season, Doris' nemesis, Willard Jarvis (played by Billy De Wolfe), moves in next door, causing trouble for her and her family in a few episodes. Lord Nelson again is not included in the opening credits cast list, but appears uncredited in a handful of episodes this season.[2]

Seasons 45 (19711973)

The fourth season sees a radical change in the series. Day's character suddenly becomes a swinging single career woman (going by Miss instead of Mrs.). The entire cast from previous seasons, other than Day herself, and occasionally the Palluccis, are gone; even Doris Martin's two sons are no longer in the cast, with no explanation given, and are never referred to again. Doris Martin, still working for Today's World, now has a new editor, Cy Bennett, played by character actor John Dehner, and she is no longer a secretary, but rather a full-time staff writer, and later an associate editor. Doris is now depicted as though she has always been a journalist, no reference made to her having been a secretary. Jackie Joseph joins the cast as Doris' friend and Cy's secretary at the magazine, Jackie Parker. Doris still lives in the same apartment and the Palluccis, Angie in particular, are still on hand in the fourth season. In season 5, there is no mention of the Palluccis owning the building; the estate of the owner, an elderly man named Mr. Carter, sells the building after Carter's passing to Doris' sometimes-nemesis, Mr. Jarvis, which initially alarms Doris, but she and the other tenants nevertheless eventually accept him. In Season 4, Doris begins a romance with Dr. Peter Lawrence (played by Peter Lawford), which lasts until late into Season 5. That relationship is followed by one with old boyfriend Jonathan Rusk, played by Patrick O'Neal. The series continued with this format until it was canceled in 1973.[2]

Change in premise

The Doris Day Show was a family-based sitcom for its first three seasons. The drastic premise change for season four in 1971 may be attributed to the overall change in CBS' programming philosophy, with the network cancelling many rural based and family programs, and replacing them with more urban, sophisticated, adult oriented programs.

Cast

Main cast

Other notable cast

A number of other actors appeared in notable storylines covering several episodes sometimes over multiple seasons.

Opening title and credits

The opening sequence features Day singing the Livingston & Evans classic, "Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)." The song had been introduced by Day in the 1956 Alfred Hitchcock suspense film The Man Who Knew Too Much, in which she co-starred with James Stewart. Despite the opening montage of images changing from season to season, Day singing the song off screen during the opening is the one constant over the entire course of the series, with a more family-oriented version (including a children's chorus) in Season 1 and a more adult contemporary version (with a stronger beat) in Seasons 4 and 5.[2]

In the Season 1 opening title and credits, the cast members are seen in an outdoor, family styled environment. Beyond the cast credits, which shows each cast member individually (including Lord Nelson, the sheepdog), the sequence features primarily Doris' family frolicking together in a sunny lakeside meadow.

In the Season 2 opening title and credits, Doris is seen wearing a bright yellow overcoat and matching rain hat leaving the ranch in her red convertible - Buck and the boys seeing her off - as she drives into San Francisco to go to work, which includes the show title displayed as she drives along a country highway, followed by her driving over the Golden Gate Bridge. It then moves into a sequence of her first driving down one of the hilly streets of the city, followed by general shots of the city (some including Doris), then the cast credits, where Buck and the boys are shown in an outdoor farm environment (Lord Nelson is no longer included), while the Today's World staff members are seen in the office. The opening credits do not include Smith, despite he being a frequent cast member this season. The opening sequence ends with Doris as a pedestrian out on the city streets supposedly rushing off to work. This is interspersed with a sequence of Doris getting off a San Francisco cable car followed by her hopping across an intersection crosswalk (the cable car and hopping sequence is not part of this specific commute as she is wearing a red raincoat during it instead).

In the Season 3 opening title and credits, Doris is first seen running down the spiral staircase in her apartment, followed by a long shot of San Francisco itself over the show title. Much of the rest of the opening sequence is in the same style as Season 2, with the Today's World staff members now credited before Doris' sons, who are seen playing in an urban playground instead of on the ranch. Smith is now included in the opening credits, and despite being frequent cast members, Kopell, Ballard and De Wolfe are not.

In the Seasons 4 and 5 opening title and credits, the first half up to the cast credits is in much the same style as Season 3, with the exceptions of the fact that there are no more children among the cast (only Day, Dehner and Joseph are credited among the cast in the opening) and the cable car and hopping montage moved before the cast credits. The end of the opening, following the cast credits, features Doris in a fashion show, modeling different clothes.[2]

Nielsen ratings

Season Time slot Rank Rating Households
(in millions)
1) 19681969 Tuesday at 9:30pm #30 20.4 11.9
2) 19691970 Monday at 9:30pm #10 22.8 13.3
3) 19701971 #20 20.7 12.4
4) 19711972 #23 21.2 13.2
5) 19721973 Not in the Top 30

DVD releases

MPI Home Video has released all five seasons of The Doris Day Show on DVD in Region 1. Each DVD release contains extensive special features. In Region 2, Turbine Medien has released all eighteen available German episodes of the first and seccond season on DVD in Germany contains extensive special features. In Region 4, Umbrella Entertainment has released all five seasons on DVD in Australia. In 2009, all five seasons were re-released with slimmer packaging.

DVD Name Ep # Release Date
Region 1 Region 4
Season 1 28 June 28, 2005 November 11, 2005
Season 2 26 October 25, 2005 April 10, 2006
Season 3 26 May 30, 2006 November 6, 2006
Season 4 24 February 27, 2007 April 2, 2007
Season 5 24 November 20, 2007 January 12, 2008
The Complete Series 128 November 25, 2008 N/A

Further reading

References

External links

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