Nanny and the Professor
Nanny and the Professor | |
---|---|
Genre | Situation comedy |
Created by |
AJ Carothers Thomas L. Miller |
Starring |
Juliet Mills Richard Long David Doremus Trent Lehman Kim Richards |
Opening theme | "Nanny", written and sung by The Addrisi Brothers |
Composer(s) |
Charles Fox Arthur Morton |
Country of origin | US |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 54 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Charles B. Fitzsimons |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 30 min. |
Production company(s) | 20th Century Fox Television |
Distributor | 20th Television |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Audio format | Monaural |
Original release | January 21, 1970 – December 27, 1971 |
Nanny and the Professor is an American fantasy situation comedy created by AJ Carothers and Thomas L. Miller for 20th Century Fox Television. During pre-production, the proposed title was Nanny Will Do.[1]
Premise
Playing upon the popular successes of Mary Poppins and other magical nannies of literature, this TV series posited another ostensibly magical British nanny taking care of a family in need of direction. Unlike the candid "magicality" of its forebears, this Nanny's paranormal nature was less overt and only implied. The Nanny's young wards, as well as the audience, were left intentionally unsure of the nature of Nanny's "powers", if any.
The series starred Juliet Mills as Nanny Phoebe Figalilly, Richard Long as Professor Harold Everett, and in season 3 Elsa Lanchester in the recurring role of Aunt Henrietta. Figalilly was apparently psychic, and had regular flashes of what was often more than intuition; she frequently knew who was at the door before the doorbell even rang. There was the vague suggestion that she may have been at least several hundred years old and more than human, which the children thought they discovered in an episode after they saw a photo of Phoebe that looked like it was taken a century earlier. In character, Mills sometimes wore a navy blue Inverness cape and cap that resembled a deerstalker; the program's opening titles showed animations of both.
Figalilly watched over Professor Everett and his three children: Hal, the intellectual tinkerer, played by David Doremus; Butch, the middle child, played by Trent Lehman; and Prudence, the youngest, played by Kim Richards. Patsy Garrett had the recurring role of nosy neighbor Mrs. Fowler, whose daughter Francine had a crush on Hal. Midway through the brief first season a yellow 1930 Model A Ford, "Arabella", was added to the series, but for some reason the car's radio can only pick up radio broadcasts from 1930.
The location of the series remained unclear; though in the season 2 episode "The Art of Relationships" it is mentioned that Everett is a professor at Collier University, there are multiple colleges in several different states that bear that name.
In 1972/73 two animated adaptations of the series (Nanny and the Professor and Nanny and the Professor and the Phantom of the Circus) aired as part of "The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie". Members of the original cast provided voices for their respective characters.
Main Characters
- "Nanny" Phoebe Figalilly (Juliet Mills), a beautiful young British woman who shows up unannounced at the Everett household to look after the Professor's children. Though she gives no references, Everett affords Phoebe the customary six-week probationary period to see what she can do; at first her antics seem strange to the family, especially Hal, who calls her a "weirdo", but she soon endears herself to the three kids and, to a lesser extent, Everett himself. Phoebe (who prefers to be called "Nanny") claims to be neither clairvoyant nor magical, but appears to have a sixth sense about many things (accented by a tinkling musical sound whenever her senses assert themselves), including knowing the names of people she has never met, communicating with animals, and especially knowing someone is at the front door before they ring the bell.
- Professor Harold Everett (Richard Long), a widower and mathematics teacher at Collier University. Everett's three children are so rambunctious that he cannot retain a nanny to take care of them; In the first episode they have gone through five different au pairs in less than a year before Nanny's arrival. Though he admits Nanny is already doing a very good job, his skepticism and Nanny's lack of references maintain his doubts as to whether it will work out, added to which the sheer implausibility of the many strange things that have happened since Nanny's arrival contradict Everett's discipline of practicality. Initially he spends most of his time working, but with Nanny's subtle prompting he begins to spend more and more time with his family. As the series progressed there were increasingly prevalent hints of a romantic interest between Everett and Nanny.
- Harold "Hal" Everett, Jr. (David Doremus), the oldest of the Everett kids, Hal is of above average intelligence and takes after his father's practical and skeptical persona; the two often play chess together. Hal is also a tinkerer and inventor, though most of his experiments explode on him; one of his inventions is a prototype of what would later become known as The Clapper.
- Bentley "Butch" Everett (Trent Lehman), the middle child and Hal's younger brother, who hates his real name and, when he's not eating, enjoys sports and is an occasional prankster; he unsuccessfully attempts to frighten Nanny by hiding his pet guinea pig in her bag. Butch harbors a jealousy of Hal and has a penchant for following in his footsteps whenever Hal takes up a new career choice, though in one episode the tables are briefly turned when, after he mimics Hal's stargazing, he happens to find a new comet and the Bureau of Astronomics decide to name the comet after him.
- Prudence Everett (Kim Richards), the youngest of the Everett kids and the Professor's only daughter. Prudence immediately takes a liking to Nanny when she first arrives.
- Waldo, the family dog, an Old English Sheepdog
Episode list
Season 1, 1970
- "Nanny Will Do" (1970-01-21)
- "The Wiblet Will Get You If You Don't Watch Out" (1970-01-28)
- "The New Butch" (1970-02-04)
- "The Scientific Approach" (1970-02-11)
- "The Astronomers" (1970-02-18)
- "Spring, Sweet Spring" (1970-02-25)
- "Nanny on Wheels" (1970-03-04)
- "Strictly for the Birds" (1970-03-11)
- "The Tyrannosaurus Tibia" (1970-03-18)
- "I Think That I Shall Never See a Tree" (1970-03-25)
- "The Games Families Play" (1970-04-01)
- "An Element of Risk" (1970-04-08)
- "The Philosopher's Stone" (1970-04-15)
- "A Fowl Episode" (1970-04-22)
- "Nanny and the Smoke-Filled Room" (1970-04-29)
Season 2, 1970–71
- "The Human Element" (1970-09-25)
- "The Haunted House" (1970-10-02)
- "Star Bright" (1970-10-09)
- "E.S. Putt" (1970-10-16)
- "Back to Nature" (1970-10-23)
- "A Letter for Nanny" (1970-10-30)
- "The Great Broadcast of 1936" (1970-11-06)
- "The Masculine-Feminine Mystique" (1970-11-13)
- "The India Queen" (1970-11-20)
- "The Visitor" (1970-12-04)
- "My Son, the Sitter" (1970-12-11)
- "From Butch, with Love" (1970-12-18)
- "The Humanization of Herbert T. Peabody" (1970-12-25)
- "A Diller, a Dollar" (1971-01-08)
- "Separate Rooms" (1971-01-15)
- "The Human Fly" (1971-01-22)
- "The Man Who Came to Pasta" (1971-01-29)
- "The Art of Relationships" (1971-02-05)
- "The Balloon Ladies" (1971-02-12)
- "The Prodigy" (1971-02-19)
- "How Many Candles?" (1971-02-26)
- "The Unknown Factor" (1971-03-05)
- "Kid Stuff" (1971-03-12)
- "The Communication Gap" (1971-03-26)
Season 3, 1971
- "Oh, What a Tangled Web" (1971-09-13)
- "The Flower Children" (1971-09-20)
- "Sunday's Hero" (1971-09-27)
- "South Sea Island Sweetheart" (1971-10-04)
- "Aunt Henrietta's Premonition" (1971-10-11)
- "Cholmondeley Featherstonehaugh" (1971-10-18)
- "Aunt Henrietta and the Jinx" (1971-10-25)
- "Nanny and Her Witch's Brew" (1971-11-01)
- "The Conversion of Brother Ben" (1971-11-08)
- "Aunt Henrietta and the Poltergeist" (1971-11-15)
- "Professor Pygmalion Plays Golf" (1971-11-22)
- "The Great Debate" (1971-11-29)
- "One for the Road" (1971-12-06)
- "Good-bye, Arabella, Hello" (1971-12-13)
- "Whatever Happened to Felicity?" (1971-12-27)
The Nanny's relatives
From time to time, some of the Nanny's relatives dropped by the Everett home for a visit. They include:
- Uncle Alfred (portrayed by John Mills, Juliet Mills's father), an eccentric who enthralls the Everett children with his wonderful stories and human flying act in his visit in "The Human Fly".
- Aunt Justine (portrayed by Ida Lupino) and Aunt Agatha (portrayed by Marjorie Bennett), two of the Nanny's loveable aunts who draw a mob of reporters, tourists and "Flem Libbers" when they descend on the Everetts, quite literally, in a balloon in "The Balloon Ladies".
- Uncle Horace (portrayed by Ray Bolger), the Nanny's roguish uncle, an old charmer, just back from the South seas, finds himself in great demand as rainmaker in Nanny's drought-stricken town during his visit in "South Sea Island Sweetheart".
- Aunt Henrietta (portrayed by Elsa Lanchester), an eccentric grand dame who arrives in town with her circus and a disturbing premonition that the Nanny is about to be carried off by a mustachioed stranger in "Aunt Henrietta's Premonition." She later appeared in "Aunt Henrietta and the Jinx" during a battle between reason and superstition and returned again in "Aunt Henrietta and the Poltergeist" helping to get rid of a ghost.
- Aunt Arabella, the Nanny's aunt and the inspiration for the nickname of the Nanny's antique 1930 Model A automobile in "Nanny on Wheels".
- The Nanny had a lookalike great-aunt (never seen) who lived to a ripe old age (she was born in October - a Libra).
- During the Nanny's wedding to Cholmondeley Featherstonehaugh (pronounced "Chumley Fanshaw"), she found a note from her mother tucked in her great-great-great grandmother's wedding gown that told her to only marry if she was truly in love. She took the advice of the note and called off the wedding.
Ratings and cancellation
The series first aired as a mid-season replacement on January 21, 1970, on ABC, and was last telecast on December 27, 1971. The series enjoyed initial success due to its Friday night timeslot when it was scheduled between The Brady Bunch and The Partridge Family, which were similar shows, aimed largely at young children and pre-teens. Ratings suffered in the third season when ABC moved the series to Monday night opposite Gunsmoke and Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. After it was canceled, the show had a brief run in syndication. It was also one of the first shows rerun on FX Network in 1994. The show was added to getTV's lineup in May 2016.
The first two seasons are presently available for viewing on Hulu, but three episodes of season two are not included. 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, which produced the show, has not released the series on DVD.
References
External links
- Phoebe Figalilly's bio at TV Acres
- Nanny & The Professor Website
- Nanny & The Professor at Hulu
- Nanny & The Professor at the Internet Movie Database
- Nanny & The Professor YouTube fan video