Leave It to Beaver

American sitcom (1957–1963)
(Learn how and when to remove this template message)

Hugh Beaumont
Barbara Billingsley
Tony Dow
Jerry Mathers
Theme music composerDavid Kahn
Melvyn Leonard
Mort GreeneOpening theme"The Toy Parade"ComposersPete Rugolo (1957–62)
Paul Smith (1962–63)Country of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo. of seasons6No. of episodes234 (list of episodes)ProductionProducersJoe Connelly
Bob MosherProduction locationsRepublic Studios
Universal Studios
Los AngelesCamera setupSingle-cameraRunning time30 minutesProduction companiesRevue Studios
MCA TV
Gomalco Productions
(1957–1961)
(seasons 1–4)
Kayro Productions
(1961–1963)
(seasons 5–6)Original releaseNetworkCBSReleaseOctober 4, 1957 (1957-10-04) –
July 16, 1958 (1958-07-16)NetworkABCReleaseOctober 2, 1958 (1958-10-02) –
June 20, 1963 (1963-06-20)RelatedStill the Beaver
The New Leave It to Beaver
Leave It to Beaver (1997 film)

Leave It to Beaver is an American television situation comedy that follows the misadventures of a suburban boy, his family and his friends. It stars Barbara Billingsley, Hugh Beaumont, Tony Dow and Jerry Mathers ("as The Beaver", as the opening credits put it).

CBS first broadcast the show on October 4, 1957, but dropped it after one season. ABC picked it up and aired it for another five years, from October 2, 1958, to June 20, 1963. It proved to be a scheduling challenge for both networks, moving through four time slots (Wednesday through Saturday evenings) over the course of its run.[1] The series was produced by Gomalco Productions from 1957 to 1961, and then by Kayro Productions from 1961 to 1963. It was distributed by Revue Studios.

Leave It to Beaver never broke into the Nielsen Ratings top 30 in its six-season run. However, it proved to be much more popular in reruns. It also led to an unsuccessful 1997 film of the same name.

Premise

The show is built around young Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver (Jerry Mathers) and the trouble he gets himself into while navigating an often-incomprehensible, sometimes illogical world. Supposedly, when he was a baby, his older brother Wallace "Wally" (Tony Dow) mispronounced "Theodore" as "Tweedor". Their firm-but-loving parents, Ward (Hugh Beaumont) and June Cleaver (Barbara Billingsley), felt "Beaver" sounded better. Conversely, Mathers has said that the real reason for the name "Beaver" is that one of the show's writers, Joe Connelly, had a shipmate named "The Beaver" in World War II; from that came the family's name, "Cleaver."[2]

Beaver's friends include the perpetually apple-munching Larry Mondello (Rusty Stevens) in the early seasons, and, later, Gilbert Bates (Stephen Talbot), as well as the old fireman, Gus (Burt Mustin). His sweet-natured-but-no-nonsense elementary school teachers are Miss Canfield (to whom Beaver declares his love in the episode entitled "Beaver's Crush") (Diane Brewster), Miss Landers (Sue Randall) and Mrs. Rayburn (Doris Packer), the school's principal. In the early seasons, Beaver's nemesis in class is Judy Hensler (Jeri Weil).

In its first season, Beaver's brother Wally was in eighth grade and 13 years old, while Beaver was 7 and in second grade—a six-year age difference; in real life, the two actors were only three years apart. By the series' end, the boys were inexplicably only four years apart, with Wally graduating from high school and Beaver graduating from grammar school. Wally is popular with both peers and adults, getting into trouble much less frequently than some of the other characters. He letters in three sports. He has little difficulty attracting girlfriends, among them Mary Ellen Rogers (Pamela Baird) and Julie Foster (Cheryl Holdridge). His pals include the awkward Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford (Frank Bank) and smart aleck Eddie Haskell (Ken Osmond), the archetype of the two-faced wise guy, a braggart among his peers and an obsequious yes man to the adults he mocks behind their backs. Eddie often picks on the Beaver.

The family lives in the fictional town of Mayfield. Beaver attends Grant Ave. Grammar School, and Wally, Mayfield High School (after graduating from Grant Ave. in season one).

Cast

The Cleaver family

Main characters

Supporting characters

Episodes

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
PilotApril 23, 1957
139October 4, 1957July 16, 1958
239October 2, 1958June 25, 1959
339October 3, 1959June 25, 1960
439October 1, 1960June 24, 1961
539September 30, 1961June 30, 1962
639September 27, 1962June 20, 1963

The pilot, titled "It's a Small World", aired on April 23, 1957.[4][5] It featured Max Showalter (credited as Casey Adams) as Ward Cleaver, and Paul Sullivan as Wally Cleaver. TBS re-aired the pilot on October 4, 1987, to commemorate the show's 30th anniversary. TV Land re-aired it on October 6, 2007, as part of their twenty-four-hour marathon to commemorate the show's 50th anniversary.[6] It is also available as a bonus episode on the season-one DVD; 234 episodes followed.

A voice-over by Hugh Beaumont precedes each episode in the first season, providing a background to that episode's theme, though these are omitted in airings on TV Land.

Opening titles

Season one: The characters are not shown. A drawing of a street, viewed from above, displays the credits in wet concrete.

Season two: Ward and June, standing at the bottom of the stairs, see the boys off to school as they come down the stairs and exit the front door.

Season three: Ward and June enter the boys' bedroom to wake them.

Season four: Ward and June open the front door and stand on the stoop. As Wally, followed by Beaver, leave for school, June hands them their lunches; Ward gives them their jackets.

Season five: June takes refreshments to the men in the front yard.

Season six: June, carrying a picnic basket, walks from the front door towards the car. Ward, carrying a thermos jug for the picnic, is next, followed in quick succession by Wally. Beaver, lagging behind, runs out, slamming the door behind him. Ward, with June in the passenger seat and the boys in back, then reverses toward the camera.

Musical theme

The show's playfully-bouncy theme tune, which became as much of a show trademark as Beaver's baseball cap or Eddie Haskell's false obsequiousness, was "The Toy Parade," composed by David Kahn, Melvyn Leonard, and Mort Greene. For the final season, however, the song was given a jazz-like arrangement by veteran composer/arranger Pete Rugolo.

Syndication

Reruns of the show became part of CBS affiliates' lineups in the mornings for several years. TBS aired the show for many years in the late 1980s. TV Land began airing it in July 1998, and MeTV in May 2013. Today, NBC Universal Television owns the syndication rights and all properties related to the series.

Spinoffs

A made-for-television reunion movie, Still the Beaver, appeared in 1983. The main original cast appeared, except for Beaumont, who had died the previous year. Ward Cleaver was still a presence, however: the film's story used numerous flashbacks to the original show, as it followed young-adult Beaver's struggle to reconcile divorce and newly minted single fatherhood, straining to cope with what his father might or might not have done, as he faces the possibility of his widowed mother selling their childhood home. June Cleaver is later elected to the Mayfield City Council.

Its reception led to a new first-run, made-for-cable series, The New Leave It to Beaver (1984–1989), with Beaver and Lumpy Rutherford running Ward's old firm (where Lumpy's pompous, demanding father — played by Richard Deacon in the original series — had been the senior partner), Wally as a practicing attorney and expectant father, June having sold the old house to Beaver himself but living with him as a doting grandmother to Beaver's two young sons. Eddie Haskell runs his own contracting business and has a son, Freddie, who is every inch his father's son — right down to the dual-personality.

Feature film

1997's movie adaptation of the series starred Christopher McDonald as Ward, Janine Turner as June, Erik von Detten as Wally, and Cameron Finley as Beaver. It was panned by many critics, except for Roger Ebert, who gave it a three-star rating. It performed poorly at the box office, earning only $10,925,060 against a budget of $15 million.[7] Barbara Billingsley, Ken Osmond and Frank Bank made cameo appearances in the film.

Other media

Books

Beverly Cleary wrote three novels based on the show:[8]

Juvenile books

There was also a novelization of the 1997 film:

House

The Cleavers moved from 485 Mapleton Drive to 211 Pine Street, both in Mayfield, for the start of season three. In 1969, the house was reused for another Universal-produced television hit, Marcus Welby, M.D. This house can still be seen at Universal Studios, though the original façade was replaced in 1988 for the following year's The 'Burbs and sits in storage elsewhere on the Universal lot. The façade was replaced again for the 1996 Leave It to Beaver movie.

Home media

Universal Studios released the first two seasons of Leave It to Beaver on DVD in Region 1 in 2005/2006.

On January 26, 2010, it was announced that Shout! Factory had acquired the rights to the series (under license from Universal). They subsequently released the remaining seasons on DVD as well as a complete series box set.[15]

On January 31, 2012, Shout! Factory released a 20 episode best-of set titled Leave It to Beaver: 20 Timeless Episodes.[16]

Universal Pictures Home Entertainment announced a release of the complete series on Blu-ray scheduled for November 14, 2023.[17]

DVD name Ep # Release date Ref(s)
The Complete First Season 39 November 22, 2005 [18]
The Complete Second Season 39 May 2, 2006 [19]
Season Three 39 June 15, 2010 [20]
Season Four 39 September 14, 2010 [21]
Season Five 39 December 14, 2010 [22]
Season Six 39 March 1, 2011 [23]
The Complete Series 234 June 29, 2010 [24]

Urban legends

In the mid-1970s, Mathers appeared on The Tomorrow Show hosted by Tom Snyder. Snyder pointed out that Mathers had not worked for a long time and that there was rumor going around that he had been killed "in the war in Southeast Asia". Mathers replied that he heard that rumor and he had no idea how it started. The earliest appearance of the story in print was in a student newspaper at the University of Kansas in 1972. The author later admitted she only heard the story from someone who heard it at a party in Omaha, Nebraska earlier that year. The paper printed a retraction, but by then the story had spread throughout the U.S. The story was later attributed to a member of a defunct Omaha comedy improv group whose hobby was concocting outrageous stories and then convincing people they were true. "Beaver died in Vietnam" was a classic urban legend, memorable for its juxtaposition of idyllic 1950s imagery with the chaos and violence of the late 1960s.[25]

Another urban legend was that actor Ken Osmond (Eddie Haskell) became porn star John Holmes. Holmes took Osmond's name and did several movies satirically under the name "Eddie Haskell". It started because there was some facial resemblance between the two men, which porn distributors exploited by using the name Eddie Haskell in advertising Holmes's films. "It was a pain in my butt for eleven years," says Osmond,[26] who brought a $25 million defamation suit against porn houses, producers and distributors. The suit went all the way to the California Supreme Court. The court ruled for Holmes, saying the name was protected as a satire. This case set a precedent in the matter, and is still referred to in other cases in California today.[27]

Notes

  1. ^ "Leave It to Beaver". TV.com. Archived from the original on December 27, 2008. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
  2. ^ a b "'I've Had a Charmed Life'". Parade. Archived from the original on March 24, 2009. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
  3. ^ "GMA Time Machine - "Leave It to Beaver" is 50 (5 min. 36 sec. video clip)". ABC News. October 4, 2007.
  4. ^ Orlick, Peter. Leave It to Beaver (Archived February 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine). Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved April 15, 2008.
  5. ^ Mathers, Jerry (1998). ...and Jerry Mathers as The Beaver. Berkley Boulevard Books. ISBN 0425163709.
  6. ^ "Episodes of Leave It to Beaver Marathon - TV Land.com". Archived from the original on November 11, 2007. Retrieved December 15, 2022.
  7. ^ Leave It to Beaver at Box Office Mojo
  8. ^ Leave It to Beaver Series
  9. ^ Leave it to Beaver
  10. ^ Here's Beaver!
  11. ^ Beaver and Wally
  12. ^ Leave It to Beaver
  13. ^ texts Leave It to Beaver
  14. ^ Leave it to Beaver
  15. ^ "Leave It to Beaver DVD news: Date Change for Leave It to Beaver - The Complete Series". tvshowsondvd.com. Archived from the original on March 7, 2010.
  16. ^ "Leave It to Beaver DVD news: Box Art for Leave It to Beaver - 20 Timeless Episodes". tvshowsondvd.com. Archived from the original on January 14, 2012.
  17. ^ "Leave It to Beaver: The Complete Series Blu-ray". blu-ray.com. October 13, 2023. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
  18. ^ "Leave It To Beaver: The Complete First Season (DVD 1957) - DVD Empire".
  19. ^ "Leave It To Beaver: The Complete Second Season (DVD 1958) - DVD Empire".
  20. ^ "Leave It To Beaver: Season Three (DVD 1959) - DVD Empire".
  21. ^ "Leave It To Beaver: Season Four (DVD 1960) - DVD Empire".
  22. ^ "Leave It To Beaver: Season Five (DVD 1961) - DVD Empire".
  23. ^ "Leave It To Beaver: Season Six (DVD 1962) - DVD Empire".
  24. ^ "Leave It To Beaver: The Complete Series (DVD 2010) - DVD Empire".
  25. ^ "Jerry 'Beaver' Mathers Killed in Vietnam?". Snopes.com. April 11, 1999. Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 15, 2022.
  26. ^ Barnes, Mike (May 18, 2020). "Ken Osmond, the Mischievous Eddie Haskell on 'Leave It to Beaver,' Dies at 76". www.hollywoodreporter.com.
  27. ^ "Osmond v. EWAP, Inc". Court of Appeal, Second District, Division 3, California. March 28, 1984.
General

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leave It to Beaver.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Leave It to Beaver
Characters
Episodes
Related
  • v
  • t
  • e
Henry Huggins
Ramona Quimby
Ralph S. Mouse
Ellen & Otis
Leigh Botts
Leave It to Beaver
  • Leave It to Beaver
  • Here's Beaver!
  • Beaver and Wally
Other fiction
Memoirs
Characters
Adaptations
Portals:
  •  1950s
  •  1960s
  • icon Television
  • flag United States
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
National
  • United States