Mary Kay and Johnny

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Mary Kay and Johnny
Genre Sitcom
Creator(s) Mary Kay Stearns and Johnny Stearns
Starring Mary Kay Stearns
Johnny Stearns
Howard Thomas
Nydia Westman
Christopher William Stearns
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
No. of episodes About 300
Production
Running time 15 minutes per episode (1947-1948, 1949)
30 minutes per episode (1948-1949, 1950)
Broadcast
Original channel DuMont, CBS, NBC
Original run November 18, 1947March 11, 1950
Links
IMDb profile

Mary Kay and Johnny was probably the first situation comedy broadcast on television in the United States. It debuted on the DuMont Television Network in the USA on Tuesday, November 18, 1947. The fifteen-minute-long weekly sitcom starred real-life married couple Mary Kay Stearns and Johnny Stearns. The Stearnses created and wrote all the scripts for the show. The program was broadcast live, most of the action taking place on a set representing the New York City apartment of the title characters, a young married couple.

After a year on DuMont the show moved to CBS for half a year (much of the time being broadcast every weeknight), and then ran for one more year each Saturday night on NBC, which broadcast the final episode on March 11, 1950.

In 1948 Mary Kay became pregnant, and after unsuccessfully trying to hide it, the show's producers wrote her pregnancy into the show. On New Year's Eve 1948 their son Christopher appeared on the show and became a character. He was less than one month old at his first appearance and thus one of the youngest "actors" ever to appear on television.

Prior to 1948 the sitcom was shown live and not recorded but early on in 1948 it began recording episodes onto kinescopes so that they could be shown on the Pacific Coast. The entire series from then until 1950 was recorded this way (as pre recording did not exist yet). Many episodes survived in full as late as 1975 and the show was in syndication on many NBC and CBS affilites (especically on the West Coast). In the late 1970s, all of the former DuMont programs were junked by ABC (most by dumping into New York Bay). CBS trashed a lot of the now grainy kinescopes during the late 1970's. The fate of the NBC episodes is unknown, but fragments of the shows last few episodes survive, most on grainy 16 mm film reels. These are not commercally available, but TV Land used a clip in an episode of Inside TV Land called Taboo TV.

Contents

  • This was the first TV show to show a couple sharing a bed
  • A clip of a later episode can be seen on the TV Land show Inside TV Land
  • Featured TV's first-on screen pregnancy

  • Brooks, Tim; and Earle Marsh (2003). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946–Present, 8th ed., New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-45542-8. 

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