The Courtship of Eddie's Father
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Courtship of Eddie's Father is a 1963 comedy film directed by Vincente Minnelli. It tells the story of a widower played by Glenn Ford, with a young son played by Ron Howard who believes his father should marry but disapproves of the women his father is interested in. It also stars Shirley Jones, Stella Stevens, Dina Merrill and Jerry Van Dyke.
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| The Courtship of Eddie's Father | |
|---|---|
The Courtship of Eddie's Father Cast photo |
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| Genre | Sitcom, Family |
| Creator(s) | James Komack |
| Starring | Bill Bixby Brandon Cruz Miyoshi Umeki James Komack Kristina Holland |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of episodes | 73 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 30 minutes (per episode) |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | ABC |
| Original run | September 17, 1969 – March 1, 1972 |
| Links | |
The Courtship of Eddie's Father is an American television sitcom based on the popular 1963 movie of the same name that had gained some respect in theaters, and it was also based on a book written by Mark Toby. It debuted on September 17, 1969 until it was last broadcasted March 1, 1972 on ABC, replacing the short-lived Here Come the Brides series. The ABC television network had acquired the rights to do a weekly television dramedy, dealing with a young, single father, trying to raise a young son while pursuing a social life. The show gained in popularity during its first two seasons, as had other hit comedies that dealt with widowed single parents, such as, Beulah, The Andy Griffith Show, My Three Sons, Family Affair, Julia & The Doris Day Show. This show also set the tone for five other 1970s comedies that dealt with widowhood and/or traditional family values: The Brady Bunch, (which debuted just 9 days after Courtship), The Partridge Family, Sanford And Son, Alice and Eight is Enough.
Veteran comedy producer and one-time My Favorite Martian writer, James Komack also served as both the creator and the executive producer of the show. The television show's theme song, "Best Friend", was written and performed by Harry Nilsson, and was played over opening credits showing Bixby and Cruz in various happy moments. The song has often been used since as an iconic indication of father-son bonding.
The show centered around Tom Corbett (Bill Bixby), a handsome, thirtyish-year-old, magazine publisher and widower from Los Angeles who had shouldered the responsibility of raising his freckled-faced, six-year-old son, Eddie (Brandon Cruz), who often cleverly manipulated his father about getting a new wife. Eddie's popularity grew, when he persuaded his own father to start dating women, being lovingly connected with prosperous brides, and even started having a charisma with other women. Tom's domestic arrangements were managed, highly competently, by his wonderful housekeeper, Mrs. Livingston (Miyoshi Umeki), who was very diplomatic and full of sage advice (compare to handyman, Dwayne Schneider on the long-running dramedy show, One Day At A Time). At work, Tom would usually work with Tina Rickles (Kristina Holland), who was his secretary at a magazine company. And very often, Norman Tinker (James Komack), who was the head of another family, worked as a radical photographer at the same company that both Tom & Tina worked in.
Starting in 1970, Bill Bixby made his debut as a director, directing several episodes of the show.
Many familiar and/or unfamiliar actors who guest-starred on the show went on to become successful stars: Sally Struthers, Pat Harrington Jr., Diana Muldaur, Willie Aames, Pat Morita, Suzanne Pleshette, Tippi Hedren, Pat Delaney, Alan Oppenheimer, Lou Jacobi, Jodie Foster, Bill Dana, Jerry Stiller, Anne Meara, Ron Ely, Carol Lawrence, George Takei, among many others. Famous comedian and dancer Sammy Davis Jr. made a cameo appearance where he played an insurance man who turned out to be an outsider.
The most beloved show was eventually cancelled in 1972 when Bixby had a falling out with producer James Komack on the direction of the show. Many of the later episodes focused on both Komack's & Bixby's character, Norman Tinker & Tom Corbett, rather than on the relationship between Tom Corbett and his son, Eddie.
- Bill Bixby as: Tom Corbett
- Brandon Cruz as: Eddie Corbett
- Miyoshi Umeki as: Mrs. Livingston
- Kristina Holland as: Tina Rickles
- James Komack as: Norman Tinker
In 2003, filming began on a new television pilot which starred Ken Marino and Josh Hutcherson, but it didn't get ordered to series. The child star of the previous series, Brandon Cruz, played a supporting role.
- Bill Bixby & Brandon Cruz became friends in real-life after the series had ended. On an episode of The Incredible Hulk, Cruz guest-starred with Bixby on which David and the teenaged boy, Kevin try to land the jetliner. Later, after Bixby's son, Christopher died, Cruz confided in Bixby about this and stayed connected.
- On one episode, Brenda Benet played Bixby's girlfriend, in real-life, she was married to Bill Bixby, before the final season started. The couple divorced in 1979.
- Tom's middle name is: Bailey, in real-life, Bill Bixby's middle name is also Bailey.
- The movie Now and Then was referenced to The Courtship of Eddie's Father.
- Succeeded by The Andy Griffith Show, Tom taught Eddie a lesson, when he inadvertently applied it to a comedic situation and Tom had no choice other than to confront the dillemmas of living up to phrases.
- The opening and closing montages were called "peanuts" by the cast and crew and often related to them in their real lives.
- On one episode, Brandon Cruz began wearing glasses in an episode, which featured him wearing his glasses in a "peanuts" segment. He often wore them behind-the-scenes and in school on-the-set, but not on the show.
- Mike Lookinland auditioned for the role of Eddie, but ultimately turned the role down in favor of The Brady Bunch, which debuted nine days later after Courtship.
- The show of the same name was a reference to a 1991 episode of Roseanne titled, The Courtship of Eddie, Dan's Father.
- On the animated TV series Family Guy, Peter and baby Stewie bond with a parody of the opening of The Courtship of Eddie's Father.