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The Great Gildersleeve

The Great Gildersleeve is a radio situation comedy broadcast in the United States from August 31, 1941[1] to 1958.[3] Initially written by Leonard Lewis Levinson,[4] it was one of broadcast history's earliest spin-off programs. The series was built around Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve, a regular character from the radio situation comedy Fibber McGee and Molly. The character was introduced in the October 3, 1939, episode (number 216) of that series. Actor Harold Peary had played a similarly named character, Dr. Gildersleeve, on earlier episodes. The Great Gildersleeve enjoyed its greatest popularity in the 1940s. Peary played the character during its transition from the parent show into the spin-off and later in four feature films released at the height of the show's popularity.

The Great Gildersleeve
Peary in his heyday as the Great Gildersleeve
Running time30 minutes (1941–1954)
15 minutes (1954–1955)
25 minutes (1955–1958)[1]
Country of originUnited States
Language(s)English
Home stationNBC
TV adaptations1955–1956
StarringHarold Peary
Willard Waterman
Walter Tetley
Lurene Tuttle
Louise Erickson
Mary Lee Robb
Lillian Randolph
Richard Crenna
Barbara Whiting
Earle Ross
Richard LeGrand
Arthur Q. Bryan
Shirley Mitchell
Bea Benaderet
Una Merkel
Martha Scott
Cathy Lewis
Gale Gordon
Mel Blanc
Conrad Binyon
Mary Costa
Created byLeonard L. Levinson
Written byJohn Whedon
Leonard L. Levinson
Sam Moore
Paul West
John Elliotte
Andy White
Original releaseAugust 31, 1941 –
June 2, 1954 (30 minute episodes); 1958 (25 minute episodes)
No. of episodes552 (1940–1954)[2]

In Fibber McGee and Molly, Peary's Gildersleeve had been a pompous windbag and antagonist of Fibber McGee. "You're a haa-aa-aa-aard man, McGee!" became a Gildersleeve catchphrase. The character went by several aliases on Fibber McGee and Molly; his middle name was revealed to be "Philharmonic" on October 22, 1940, in episode #258, "Fibber Discovers Gildersleeve's Locked Diary".

"Gildy" grew so popular that Kraft Foods—promoting its Parkay margarine—sponsored a new series featuring Peary's somewhat mellowed and always befuddled Gildersleeve as the head of his own family.

Premiere edit

The Great Gildersleeve premiered on NBC on August 31, 1941. It moves the title character from the McGees' Wistful Vista to Summerfield, where Gildersleeve oversees his late sister and brother-in-law's estate (said to have both been killed in a car accident) and rears his orphaned niece and nephew, Marjorie and Leroy Forrester. The household also includes a cook named Birdie. While Gildersleeve had occasionally mentioned his (silent) wife in some Fibber episodes, in his own series he is a confirmed bachelor.

At the outset of the series, Gildersleeve administers a girdle manufacturing company ("If you want the best of corsets, of course it's Gildersleeve"); later and during the remainder of the show he serves as Summerfield's water commissioner.

Family edit

A key figure in the Gildersleeve home was the cook and housekeeper Birdie Lee Coggins (Lillian Randolph). In the first season, under writer Levinson, Birdie was often portrayed as less than intelligent, but she slowly developed as the real brains and caretaker of the household under John Whedon and other writers.

Marjorie (originally played by Lurene Tuttle, later by Louise Erickson and Mary Lee Robb) matured to a young woman through the 1940s. During the ninth season (September 1949-June 1950) she met and married Walter "Bronco" Thompson (Richard Crenna), star football player at the local college. Look devoted five pages in its May 23, 1950, issue to the wedding. After living in the same household for a few years, the newlyweds moved next door.

Leroy (Walter Tetley), who remained age 10–11 during most of the 1940s, began to grow up in the spring of 1949, establishing relationships with the girls in the Bullard home across the street. He developed interests in driving, playing the drums and dreaming of a musical career.

Neighbors and friends edit

Outside the home, Gildersleeve's closest association was with the executor of his brother-in-law's estate, Judge Horace Hooker (Earle Ross), with whom he had many battles during the first few broadcast seasons. After a change in scriptwriters in January 1943, the confrontations slowly subsided and the two men became friends. During the second season, pharmacist Richard Q. Peavey (Richard LeGrand) and barber Floyd Munson (Mel Blanc for the first year, Arthur Q. Bryan from December 1942 onward) joined Gildersleeve's circle of acquaintances.

In the fourth season, these three friends, along with Police Chief Donald Gates (Ken Christy), formed the nucleus of the Jolly Boys Club, whose activities revolve around practicing barbershop quartet songs between sips of Coca-Cola.

Several women passed through Gildersleeve's life during the series, including three he almost married before settling into a pattern of casual dating. His friends included Shirley Mitchell (Leila Ranson), Una Merkel (Adaline Fairchild), Bea Benaderet (Eve Goodwin), Martha Scott (Ellen Bullard Knickerbocker) Jeanne Bates (Paula Bullard Winthrop) and Cathy Lewis (Katherine Milford). Another woman in Gildersleeve's life was his inept, milkshake loving secretary Bessie played by Gloria Holiday who became Mrs. Harold Peary in real life.

Decline and fall edit

In 1950, Harold Peary was persuaded to move The Great Gildersleeve to CBS, but sponsor Kraft refused to sanction the move. Peary, now contracted to CBS, was legally unable to appear on NBC as a star performer, but Gildersleeve was still an NBC series. This prompted the hiring of Willard Waterman as Peary's replacement as Gildersleeve. Peary, meanwhile, began a new series on CBS which attempted to reproduce the Gildersleeve show with the names changed. The Harold Peary Show, lasting one season, included a fictitious radio show within the show. This was Honest Harold, hosted by Peary's new character.

As with most radio sitcoms still on the air at the time, The Great Gildersleeve began a slow but massive reformat in the early 1950s. Starting in mid 1952, some of the program's longtime characters (Judge Hooker, Floyd Munson, Marjorie and her husband, Bronco) were missing for months at a time. In their place were a few new ones (Mr. Cooley the Egg Man and Mrs. Potter the hypochondriac) who would last only a month or so. By 1953, Gildersleeve's love life took center stage over his family and friends. His many love interests were constantly shifting, and women came and went with great frequency. In November 1954, after an extended summer hiatus, Gildersleeve was reformatted as a 15-minute daily sitcom. Only Gildersleeve, Leroy and Birdie remained on a continuing basis. All other characters were seldom heard, and gone were Marjorie and her family as well as the studio audience, live orchestra and original scripts. The series finally ended its run in 1958.

Television edit

 
Willard Waterman and Stephanie Griffin in the TV series The Great Gildersleeve, 1955
 
Lillian Randolph as Birdie on the TV version (1955)

As with most radio series, the show suffered from the advent of television. A televised version of the series, produced and syndicated by NBC, also starring Waterman, premiered in 1955, but lasted only 39 episodes. During that year, both the 15-minute radio show and the television show were being produced simultaneously.

On the television series, Gildersleeve was sketched as less lovable, more pompous and a more overt womanizer. Harold Peary stated that the problem with the television series was that "Waterman was a very tall man" and "Gildersleeve was not a tall man, he was a little man, who thought he was a tall man, that was the character." He added, "Willard [Waterman] did a very good job on the radio show" but was "miscast on the television version".[5]

Actress Barbara Stuart landed her first television role on The Great Gildersleeve in the role of Gildersleeve's secretary, Bessie. Child actor Michael Winkelman, later of The Real McCoys, also made his first television appearance on the show in the role of 9-year-old Bruce Fuller.[6] Actor Clegg Hoyt also made his television debut on the series as a carnival barker in "Practice What You Preach" (1955).[7]

Films edit

After joining Jim and Marian Jordan (as Fibber McGee and Molly) and fellow radio favorite Edgar Bergen in Look Who's Laughing (1941) and Here We Go Again (1942), Peary received top billing for a brief series of RKO films. The Great Gildersleeve (1942) also carried Randolph from the radio cast to the screen, with Nancy Gates as Marjorie and Freddie Mercer as Leroy. Walter Tetley, who played Leroy on radio, could not appear on screen as Leroy because he was actually an adult playing a child character.

Gildersleeve's Bad Day (1943) revolved around the mishaps when he is called to jury duty.[8] Gildersleeve on Broadway (1943) centered on Leroy as the odd boy out as everyone around him is falling in love.[9] The fourth and final film in the series, Gildersleeve's Ghost (1944) had Gildersleeve's ancestors, Randolph and Johnson, rise from the dead to help his campaign for police commissioner.[10]

Warner Archives released a DVD collection of all of the Gildersleeve RKO movies in January 2013. This multi-film release includes a fifth film, Seven Days' Leave, a 1942 Lucille Ball/Victor Mature musical comedy in which Peary co-stars as the Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve character.

A 1960 version of Gildersleeve, still played by Peary, appears in the 1944 Warner Bros. film The Shining Future, a promotional film for war bonds.

Legacy edit

The Gildersleeve character was parodied in the 1945 Bugs Bunny cartoon Hare Conditioned, in which the rabbit distracts a menacing taxidermist by telling him that he sounds "just like that guy on the radio, the Great Gildersneeze!" The taxidermist responds with "I do?!" followed by Gildersleeve's chuckle. The Gildersleeve voice in this cartoon was done by comedian Dave Barry. (Earlier, in A Coy Decoy, Daffy Duck used Gildersleeve's "you're a ha-a-ard man!" line in an attempt to divert a wolf that is chasing him.)[11]

His voice was also imitated by actor Kent Rogers in Tex Avery's 1943 cartoon short One Ham's Family.

Elroy Jetson, the son on Hanna-Barbera's 1962 animated series The Jetsons, is named after Leroy Forrester. Elroy is an anagram of Leroy.

Recordings edit

At the height of the show's popularity, Harold Peary recorded three albums as Gildersleeve, reading popular children's stories for Capitol Records in heavy-bookleted four-disc 78rpm record albums. Stories for Children, Told in His Own Way by the Great Gildersleeve, was released in 1945 and was Capitol's first-ever such release for children. With orchestral accompaniment, it featured "Puss in Boots", "Rumpelstiltskin" and "Jack and the Beanstalk".

The second album, Children's Stories as Told by the Great Gildersleeve, in 1946, featured "Hansel and Gretel" and "The Brave Little Tailor", again with orchestral accompaniment. The third and final album in the series, reverting to the title of the first and released in 1947, included "Snow-White and Rose-Red" and "Cinderella", once more with full orchestral accompaniment.

The music was by Robert Emmett Dolan. Capitol Records brought in The Great Gildersleeve's chief writers at the time, Sam Moore and John Whedon, to adapt the stories to Gildersleeve's style.

In 1950, Peary, as "the Great Gildersleeve", narrated a single 78rpm recording for Capitol of Dr Seuss' "Gerald McBoing-Boing" with full orchestration and sound effects.

After Gildersleeve edit

Peary continued his career (often billed as Hal Peary) in films and television well into the 1970s; he was especially active as a voice actor for cartoons produced by Rankin-Bass and Hanna-Barbera, among others. He died of a heart attack in 1985. Waterman, who was a regular supporting character on radio's The Halls of Ivy while doing his version of Gildersleeve, died a decade later.

Comics edit

A Great Gildersleeve story appeared inside of a 1944 edition of Supersnipe comic book.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Revised ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 293–296. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3. Retrieved 2019-08-16.
  2. ^ "Great Gildersleeve .. episodic log". www.otrsite.com. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  3. ^ "Platter Chatter". The Indian Journal. Eufaula, Oklahoma. July 3, 1958. p. 2. The Great Gildersleeve finally fades from radio after 17 years.
  4. ^ Our Neighbors in Wistful Vista
  5. ^ "Interviews: Harold Peary". Speaking of Radio. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  6. ^ "Michael Winkelman (1946-1999)". IMDb. Retrieved August 20, 2011.
  7. ^ "Clegg Hoyt". IMDb. Retrieved August 4, 2014.
  8. ^ . American Film Institute. Archived from the original on April 22, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
  9. ^ . American Film Institute. Archived from the original on April 22, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
  10. ^ . American Film Institute. Archived from the original on April 22, 2014. Retrieved September 11, 2014.
  11. ^ "RADIO ROUND-UP: Fibber McGee and Molly and The Great Gildersleeve -". cartoonresearch.com. 13 September 2017. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  12. ^ "Rolled Up In Leroy's Pocket - Great Gildersleeve - Old Time Radio Show". www.greatgildersleeve.com. Retrieved 16 April 2018.

Further reading edit

  • The Great Gildersleeve by Charles Stumpf and Ben Ohmart, 157 pp, illustrated, ISBN 0-9714570-0-X. Albany GA: BearManor Media
  • Tuning In The Great Gildersleeve: The Episodes and Cast of Radio's First Spinoff Show, 1941–1957 by Clair Schulz, 236 pp, ISBN 978-0-7864-7336-6, McFarland & Co. Inc. Pub.
  • Gildy's Scrapbook. Albany: BearManor Media

External links edit

  • The Great Gildersleeve (TV series) at IMDb
Audio
  • The Gildersleeve Project (includes over 500 shows)
  • The Great Gildersleeve old time radio show
  • The Great Gildersleeve on Old Time Radio Outlaws
Video
  • All entries for “Gildersleeve” videos, including the TV series on the Internet Archive

great, gildersleeve, 1942, film, film, radio, situation, comedy, broadcast, united, states, from, august, 1941, 1958, initially, written, leonard, lewis, levinson, broadcast, history, earliest, spin, programs, series, built, around, throckmorton, gildersleeve,. For the 1942 film see The Great Gildersleeve film The Great Gildersleeve is a radio situation comedy broadcast in the United States from August 31 1941 1 to 1958 3 Initially written by Leonard Lewis Levinson 4 it was one of broadcast history s earliest spin off programs The series was built around Throckmorton P Gildersleeve a regular character from the radio situation comedy Fibber McGee and Molly The character was introduced in the October 3 1939 episode number 216 of that series Actor Harold Peary had played a similarly named character Dr Gildersleeve on earlier episodes The Great Gildersleeve enjoyed its greatest popularity in the 1940s Peary played the character during its transition from the parent show into the spin off and later in four feature films released at the height of the show s popularity The Great GildersleevePeary in his heyday as the Great GildersleeveRunning time30 minutes 1941 1954 15 minutes 1954 1955 25 minutes 1955 1958 1 Country of originUnited StatesLanguage s EnglishHome stationNBCTV adaptations1955 1956StarringHarold PearyWillard WatermanWalter TetleyLurene TuttleLouise EricksonMary Lee RobbLillian RandolphRichard CrennaBarbara WhitingEarle RossRichard LeGrandArthur Q Bryan Shirley MitchellBea BenaderetUna MerkelMartha Scott Cathy LewisGale GordonMel BlancConrad BinyonMary CostaCreated byLeonard L LevinsonWritten byJohn WhedonLeonard L LevinsonSam MoorePaul WestJohn ElliotteAndy WhiteOriginal releaseAugust 31 1941 June 2 1954 30 minute episodes 1958 25 minute episodes No of episodes552 1940 1954 2 In Fibber McGee and Molly Peary s Gildersleeve had been a pompous windbag and antagonist of Fibber McGee You re a haa aa aa aard man McGee became a Gildersleeve catchphrase The character went by several aliases on Fibber McGee and Molly his middle name was revealed to be Philharmonic on October 22 1940 in episode 258 Fibber Discovers Gildersleeve s Locked Diary Gildy grew so popular that Kraft Foods promoting its Parkay margarine sponsored a new series featuring Peary s somewhat mellowed and always befuddled Gildersleeve as the head of his own family Contents 1 Premiere 2 Family 3 Neighbors and friends 4 Decline and fall 5 Television 6 Films 7 Legacy 8 Recordings 9 After Gildersleeve 10 Comics 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksPremiere editThe Great Gildersleeve premiered on NBC on August 31 1941 It moves the title character from the McGees Wistful Vista to Summerfield where Gildersleeve oversees his late sister and brother in law s estate said to have both been killed in a car accident and rears his orphaned niece and nephew Marjorie and Leroy Forrester The household also includes a cook named Birdie While Gildersleeve had occasionally mentioned his silent wife in some Fibber episodes in his own series he is a confirmed bachelor At the outset of the series Gildersleeve administers a girdle manufacturing company If you want the best of corsets of course it s Gildersleeve later and during the remainder of the show he serves as Summerfield s water commissioner Family editA key figure in the Gildersleeve home was the cook and housekeeper Birdie Lee Coggins Lillian Randolph In the first season under writer Levinson Birdie was often portrayed as less than intelligent but she slowly developed as the real brains and caretaker of the household under John Whedon and other writers Marjorie originally played by Lurene Tuttle later by Louise Erickson and Mary Lee Robb matured to a young woman through the 1940s During the ninth season September 1949 June 1950 she met and married Walter Bronco Thompson Richard Crenna star football player at the local college Look devoted five pages in its May 23 1950 issue to the wedding After living in the same household for a few years the newlyweds moved next door Leroy Walter Tetley who remained age 10 11 during most of the 1940s began to grow up in the spring of 1949 establishing relationships with the girls in the Bullard home across the street He developed interests in driving playing the drums and dreaming of a musical career Neighbors and friends editOutside the home Gildersleeve s closest association was with the executor of his brother in law s estate Judge Horace Hooker Earle Ross with whom he had many battles during the first few broadcast seasons After a change in scriptwriters in January 1943 the confrontations slowly subsided and the two men became friends During the second season pharmacist Richard Q Peavey Richard LeGrand and barber Floyd Munson Mel Blanc for the first year Arthur Q Bryan from December 1942 onward joined Gildersleeve s circle of acquaintances In the fourth season these three friends along with Police Chief Donald Gates Ken Christy formed the nucleus of the Jolly Boys Club whose activities revolve around practicing barbershop quartet songs between sips of Coca Cola Several women passed through Gildersleeve s life during the series including three he almost married before settling into a pattern of casual dating His friends included Shirley Mitchell Leila Ranson Una Merkel Adaline Fairchild Bea Benaderet Eve Goodwin Martha Scott Ellen Bullard Knickerbocker Jeanne Bates Paula Bullard Winthrop and Cathy Lewis Katherine Milford Another woman in Gildersleeve s life was his inept milkshake loving secretary Bessie played by Gloria Holiday who became Mrs Harold Peary in real life Decline and fall editIn 1950 Harold Peary was persuaded to move The Great Gildersleeve to CBS but sponsor Kraft refused to sanction the move Peary now contracted to CBS was legally unable to appear on NBC as a star performer but Gildersleeve was still an NBC series This prompted the hiring of Willard Waterman as Peary s replacement as Gildersleeve Peary meanwhile began a new series on CBS which attempted to reproduce the Gildersleeve show with the names changed The Harold Peary Show lasting one season included a fictitious radio show within the show This was Honest Harold hosted by Peary s new character As with most radio sitcoms still on the air at the time The Great Gildersleeve began a slow but massive reformat in the early 1950s Starting in mid 1952 some of the program s longtime characters Judge Hooker Floyd Munson Marjorie and her husband Bronco were missing for months at a time In their place were a few new ones Mr Cooley the Egg Man and Mrs Potter the hypochondriac who would last only a month or so By 1953 Gildersleeve s love life took center stage over his family and friends His many love interests were constantly shifting and women came and went with great frequency In November 1954 after an extended summer hiatus Gildersleeve was reformatted as a 15 minute daily sitcom Only Gildersleeve Leroy and Birdie remained on a continuing basis All other characters were seldom heard and gone were Marjorie and her family as well as the studio audience live orchestra and original scripts The series finally ended its run in 1958 Television edit nbsp Willard Waterman and Stephanie Griffin in the TV series The Great Gildersleeve 1955 nbsp Lillian Randolph as Birdie on the TV version 1955 As with most radio series the show suffered from the advent of television A televised version of the series produced and syndicated by NBC also starring Waterman premiered in 1955 but lasted only 39 episodes During that year both the 15 minute radio show and the television show were being produced simultaneously On the television series Gildersleeve was sketched as less lovable more pompous and a more overt womanizer Harold Peary stated that the problem with the television series was that Waterman was a very tall man and Gildersleeve was not a tall man he was a little man who thought he was a tall man that was the character He added Willard Waterman did a very good job on the radio show but was miscast on the television version 5 Actress Barbara Stuart landed her first television role on The Great Gildersleeve in the role of Gildersleeve s secretary Bessie Child actor Michael Winkelman later of The Real McCoys also made his first television appearance on the show in the role of 9 year old Bruce Fuller 6 Actor Clegg Hoyt also made his television debut on the series as a carnival barker in Practice What You Preach 1955 7 Films editAfter joining Jim and Marian Jordan as Fibber McGee and Molly and fellow radio favorite Edgar Bergen in Look Who s Laughing 1941 and Here We Go Again 1942 Peary received top billing for a brief series of RKO films The Great Gildersleeve 1942 also carried Randolph from the radio cast to the screen with Nancy Gates as Marjorie and Freddie Mercer as Leroy Walter Tetley who played Leroy on radio could not appear on screen as Leroy because he was actually an adult playing a child character Gildersleeve s Bad Day 1943 revolved around the mishaps when he is called to jury duty 8 Gildersleeve on Broadway 1943 centered on Leroy as the odd boy out as everyone around him is falling in love 9 The fourth and final film in the series Gildersleeve s Ghost 1944 had Gildersleeve s ancestors Randolph and Johnson rise from the dead to help his campaign for police commissioner 10 Warner Archives released a DVD collection of all of the Gildersleeve RKO movies in January 2013 This multi film release includes a fifth film Seven Days Leave a 1942 Lucille Ball Victor Mature musical comedy in which Peary co stars as the Throckmorton P Gildersleeve character A 1960 version of Gildersleeve still played by Peary appears in the 1944 Warner Bros film The Shining Future a promotional film for war bonds Legacy editThe Gildersleeve character was parodied in the 1945 Bugs Bunny cartoon Hare Conditioned in which the rabbit distracts a menacing taxidermist by telling him that he sounds just like that guy on the radio the Great Gildersneeze The taxidermist responds with I do followed by Gildersleeve s chuckle The Gildersleeve voice in this cartoon was done by comedian Dave Barry Earlier in A Coy Decoy Daffy Duck used Gildersleeve s you re a ha a ard man line in an attempt to divert a wolf that is chasing him 11 His voice was also imitated by actor Kent Rogers in Tex Avery s 1943 cartoon short One Ham s Family Elroy Jetson the son on Hanna Barbera s 1962 animated series The Jetsons is named after Leroy Forrester Elroy is an anagram of Leroy Recordings editAt the height of the show s popularity Harold Peary recorded three albums as Gildersleeve reading popular children s stories for Capitol Records in heavy bookleted four disc 78rpm record albums Stories for Children Told in His Own Way by the Great Gildersleeve was released in 1945 and was Capitol s first ever such release for children With orchestral accompaniment it featured Puss in Boots Rumpelstiltskin and Jack and the Beanstalk The second album Children s Stories as Told by the Great Gildersleeve in 1946 featured Hansel and Gretel and The Brave Little Tailor again with orchestral accompaniment The third and final album in the series reverting to the title of the first and released in 1947 included Snow White and Rose Red and Cinderella once more with full orchestral accompaniment The music was by Robert Emmett Dolan Capitol Records brought in The Great Gildersleeve s chief writers at the time Sam Moore and John Whedon to adapt the stories to Gildersleeve s style In 1950 Peary as the Great Gildersleeve narrated a single 78rpm recording for Capitol of Dr Seuss Gerald McBoing Boing with full orchestration and sound effects After Gildersleeve editPeary continued his career often billed as Hal Peary in films and television well into the 1970s he was especially active as a voice actor for cartoons produced by Rankin Bass and Hanna Barbera among others He died of a heart attack in 1985 Waterman who was a regular supporting character on radio s The Halls of Ivy while doing his version of Gildersleeve died a decade later Comics editA Great Gildersleeve story appeared inside of a 1944 edition of Supersnipe comic book 12 References edit a b Dunning John 1998 On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio Revised ed New York NY Oxford University Press pp 293 296 ISBN 978 0 19 507678 3 Retrieved 2019 08 16 Great Gildersleeve episodic log www otrsite com Retrieved 16 April 2018 Platter Chatter The Indian Journal Eufaula Oklahoma July 3 1958 p 2 The Great Gildersleeve finally fades from radio after 17 years Our Neighbors in Wistful Vista Interviews Harold Peary Speaking of Radio Retrieved 16 April 2018 Michael Winkelman 1946 1999 IMDb Retrieved August 20 2011 Clegg Hoyt IMDb Retrieved August 4 2014 Gildersleeve s Bad Day Detail View American Film Institute Archived from the original on April 22 2014 Retrieved September 19 2014 Gildersleeve on Broadway Detail View American Film Institute Archived from the original on April 22 2014 Retrieved September 19 2014 Gildersleeve s Ghost Detail View American Film Institute Archived from the original on April 22 2014 Retrieved September 11 2014 RADIO ROUND UP Fibber McGee and Molly and The Great Gildersleeve cartoonresearch com 13 September 2017 Retrieved 17 December 2020 Rolled Up In Leroy s Pocket Great Gildersleeve Old Time Radio Show www greatgildersleeve com Retrieved 16 April 2018 Further reading editThe Great Gildersleeve by Charles Stumpf and Ben Ohmart 157 pp illustrated ISBN 0 9714570 0 X Albany GA BearManor Media Tuning In The Great Gildersleeve The Episodes and Cast of Radio s First Spinoff Show 1941 1957 by Clair Schulz 236 pp ISBN 978 0 7864 7336 6 McFarland amp Co Inc Pub Gildy s Scrapbook Albany BearManor MediaExternal links editThe Great Gildersleeve TV series at IMDbAudioThe Gildersleeve Project includes over 500 shows The Great Gildersleeve old time radio show The Great Gildersleeve on Old Time Radio OutlawsVideoAll entries for Gildersleeve videos including the TV series on the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Great Gildersleeve amp oldid 1171037774 Television, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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