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The Patty Duke Show

The Patty Duke Show is an American television sitcom created by Sidney Sheldon and William Asher. The series ran on ABC from September 18, 1963, to April 27, 1966.

The Patty Duke Show
Season one opening
GenreSitcom
Created by
Starring
Theme music composer
Opening theme"Cousins"
performed by The Skip-Jacks
Composers
  • Sid Ramin
  • Harry Geller
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes104 (list of episodes)
Production
Producers
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time22 mins
Production companies
Original release
NetworkABC
ReleaseSeptember 18, 1963 (1963-09-18) –
April 27, 1966 (1966-04-27)
Related
The Patty Duke Show: Still Rockin' In Brooklyn Heights

The series was developed as a vehicle for teenage star Patty Duke, who had won an Academy Award the previous year. Duke starred in dual roles of "twin cousins" Patty and Cathy Lane. The series co-starred William Schallert, Jean Byron, Paul O'Keefe, and Eddie Applegate.

A total of 104 black-and-white episodes, plus an unaired pilot, were produced by United Artists Television. ABC abruptly cancelled the series after three seasons.

Premise edit

Patty Lane (Duke) is a normal, chatty, rambunctious teenager who (according to the theme song lyrics) lives in the Brooklyn Heights section of New York City. Her father, Martin Lane (William Schallert), is the managing editor of the New York Daily Chronicle; Patty affectionately addresses him as "Poppo." Her "identical paternal cousin," Cathy Lane (also played by Duke), is sophisticated, brainy and demure; her father Kenneth (also played by Schallert) is Martin's identical twin brother. Since the widowed Kenneth is often away as a foreign correspondent for the Chronicle, Cathy moves to the United States to live with Patty's family – which also includes her mother Natalie (Jean Byron) and brother Ross (Paul O'Keefe) – and to attend Brooklyn Heights High School with Patty and her boyfriend Richard (Eddie Applegate).

While the girls are physically identical, their style, tastes and attitudes are nearly opposite, which is responsible for some of the comedic situations on the show. Though the character of "Cathy" received first billing over the character of "Patty" in the show's opening credits, virtually all episodes centered around Patty's misadventures, with Cathy often only playing a minor supporting role. The remarkable physical resemblance that Patty and Cathy share is explained by the fact that their fathers are identical twins. While Patty speaks with a typical American accent, Cathy speaks with a general European accent;[1] not surprisingly, however, both cousins are able to mimic each other's voice. Patty and Cathy have an additional identical cousin, Southern belle Betsy (also played by Duke), featured in the season two episode "The Perfect Hostess."[2]

Episodes edit

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
136September 18, 1963May 20, 1964
236September 16, 1964May 19, 1965
332September 15, 1965April 27, 1966

Cast edit

 
The Lanes (clockwise from bottom left: Patty Duke as Patty Lane, Jean Byron as Natalie Lane, William Schallert as Martin Lane and Paul O'Keefe as Ross Lane)
  • Patty Duke as Patty Lane and Cathy Lane
    • Duke also "guest-starred" as Betsy Lane in the episode "The Perfect Hostess" (1965)
  • William Schallert as Martin Lane
    • Schallert also had a dual role as Kenneth Lane in three season one episodes, and as Uncle Jed in a season three episode
  • Jean Byron as Natalie Lane, Patty's mother
  • Paul O'Keefe as Ross Lane, Patty's brother
  • Eddie Applegate as Richard Harrison, Patty's boyfriend

Rita McLaughlin served as a double for Duke in the third season, but was never credited. In the series' unaired pilot episode, Mark Miller and Charles Herbert played Martin and Ross Lane, respectively.

Major recurring edit

  • Kitty Sullivan as Sue Ellen Turner (seasons 1-2), Patty's frenemy. She was replaced by Roz and Monica Robinson in the third season.
    • Cindy Williams portrayed Sue Ellen in Still Rockin' in Brooklyn Heights when Sullivan was unavailable.
  • John McGiver as J.R. Castle (season 1), Martin's boss at the Chronicle. He is not shown or mentioned after the first season.
  • David Doyle as Jonathan Harrison (seasons 1-2), Richard's father who is a construction engineer.
  • John Spencer as Henry (seasons 1-2), one of Patty's classmates.
  • Kelly Wood as Gloria (season 2), one of Patty's friends.
  • Marcia Strassman as Adeline (season 2), one of Patty's classmates.
  • Robyn Millan as Roz (season 3), one of Patty's classmates.
  • Laura Barton/Kathy Garver as Monica Robinson (season 3), Patty's rival. She replaces the Sue Ellen Turner character.

Notable guest stars edit

Production edit

Origins edit

Following her Academy Award-winning role in The Miracle Worker, ABC became interested in developing a series starring Duke. The network enlisted writer Sidney Sheldon to develop a vehicle for Duke. Sheldon asked Duke to spend a week with his family at their home to generate ideas. During this time, he noticed that Duke had two distinct sides to her personality (later in life she would be diagnosed as manic-depressive),[3]: 287  and so came up with the concept of identical paternal cousins with contrasting personalities.[3]: 115  According to Duke, he successfully captured her personality in the two characters.[1]

In development, Cathy was initially from Scotland. Duke learned a true Scottish burr for the Cathy character. However, Duke's accent was done "so well they couldn't understand me",[1] concerning producers that the viewers would not like or understand her with such a profound accent. Upon going into production for the series, Cathy had a "general European" background and accent.[3]: 120 [1]

The pilot episode was filmed on New Year's Day 1963 at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios in Culver City, California. Several differences in the pilot included the series being set in San Francisco; and Mark Miller and Charles Herbert portraying Martin and Ross Lane, respectively.

Seasons One and Two edit

Even before ordering the series, it was understood that production would shift from Los Angeles to New York City. In the previous decade, New York had dominated national network production. By the early 1960s, new formats and innovations such as coaxial cable service, film and video tape allowed for the industry to move to the West coast with the film industry. By 1963, most scripted programming was based in Hollywood, while New York served production for game shows (What's My Line), soap operas (As The World Turns), and late night shows (The Ed Sullivan Show). However, at 16 years old, Duke fell under California's strict child labor laws (known informally as the Coogan laws named after famed 1920s child actor Jackie Coogan), which curtailed the number of hours that child actors could work. Since New York did not have such stringent laws at the time, and Duke already resided in Manhattan, New York, the network relocated production of the series to Chelsea Studios and moved the series location to Brooklyn Heights.

Upon the series order, Miller declined to move on with the series. Schallert was hired after reading for producers, and reuniting him with his Byron, his co-star from The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (which had ended the season before).[4] Sheldon and Asher wrote and produced the series, with Duke's managers John and Ethel Ross also serving as associate producers. According to Duke and others, the cast and crew members were unaware of their abuse of her.[5]

William Asher initially served as producer. However, before going on the air, he had failed to finish a full-length episode.[6] As a result, ABC assigned Robert Costello to produce, though he only remained until the twenty-fifth episode.[7] Following his departure, frequent director Stanley Prager took over for the remainder of the first season, as well as the second season.

Visual effects edit

 
Duke as both Cathy (left) and Patty Lane.

The dual role for Duke challenged special effects for its time, considering that television special effects were rare in the early 1960s, particularly for a sitcom. In all episodes, Duke appeared as both characters in the same frame through use of a split-screen effect. The technically ambitious traveling matte process was also used from time to time, particularly in the pilot. To complement these effects, child actress Rita McLaughlin was used as Duke's double (almost always seen only from behind).[8] To differentiate the two characters to the viewing public, the character Patty wore a flip-fall hairpiece, while Cathy's character wore a more conservative turn-under hairstyle.

Season Three and cancellation edit

Midway through the second season, Duke celebrated her eighteenth birthday and fired the Rosses as her managers.[9] As Duke was now old enough to work longer hours, ABC wanted to shift the show's production to Los Angeles. Duke initially was against the idea, but eventually agreed. With the move came new sets and new exterior shots, the latter of which seemed to place the home in an unnamed suburban neighborhood instead of Brooklyn Heights.[citation needed]

During the second season, Duke had become romantically involved with assistant director Harry Falk, and married him during the third season. He was able to direct one of the final season three episodes – in which Patty and Richard contemplate getting married – which Duke said in hindsight "was not a good idea."[10]

The series was cancelled due to disagreements between ABC and United Artists Television (UATV) over filming the series in color. ABC wanted all of its shows for the upcoming 1966–67 season to be in color, while UATV claimed filming The Patty Duke Show in color would be too expensive.[3]: 166  The series continued airing reruns on ABC in primetime until August 31.

Music edit

The show's theme song, "Cousins,"[11] which has since been parodied many times over in pop culture (including Rocko's Modern Life where it was parodied as the theme song to "The Bloaty and Squirmy Show"), illustrates the two girls' differences: "...where Cathy adores the minuet, the Ballet Russe and crêpes Suzette, our Patty loves her rock 'n' roll, a hot dog makes her lose control..." The song was performed by a five-voice vocal ensemble called "The Skip-Jacks," which featured actress and Playboy model Stella Stevens.

Reception edit

Already a budding star in her own right, Duke was further thrust into the public consciousness through the show. As the series went on, her star power from the series allowed her to enter popular music, appearing on two episodes of Shindig! in 1965 to release a Top Ten single, "Don't Just Stand There," in one of her two appearances on the series.

PopMatters wrote that although the show's episodes are occasionally very predictable, "it's all in good fun".[12]

Ratings edit

Season Timeslot (EDT) Season Premiere Season Finale TV season Rank Nielsen rating Ref
1 Wednesday 8:00 pm September 18, 1963 (1963-09-18) May 20, 1964 (1964-05-20) 1963–64 18 23.9 [13]
2 September 16, 1964 (1964-09-16) May 19, 1965 (1965-05-19) 1964–65 28 22.4 [14]
3 September 15, 1965 (1965-09-15) April 27, 1966 (1966-04-27) 1965–66 ? ? [citation needed]

William Shallert later stated that, in the third season, the series ratings plummeted after being pitted against Lost in Space.

Syndication and home video edit

Repeats of The Patty Duke Show entered local markets as early as September 1966, days after exiting ABC prime time. It remained a mainstay of daytime independent station programming well into the 1970s. A new generation of viewers was introduced to the series by Nick at Nite cable, broadcasting a lengthy five-year prime time run from September 19, 1988, to August 30, 1993. On June 30, 1995, Nick at Nite showed one episode of the series during their 10th anniversary celebration. In 2005, both Nick at Nite and TV Land aired another episode of the series in honor of Nick at Nite's 20th anniversary.

In 2008, This TV began airing The Patty Duke Show as part of an early morning classic TV block. Prior to this, the show had not appeared in national syndication since Nick at Nite dropped it from its lineup in 1993. As of 2019, episodes aired on Saturday and Sunday.

Reruns of The Patty Duke Show were seen on Antenna TV from 2013 until 2015 as part of that channel's regular programming schedule. From November 4, 2013, to April 6, 2014, The Patty Duke Show aired back-to-back episodes every day from 1:00–2:00pm ET; from April 7, 2014, to August 29, 2014, The Patty Duke Show aired back-to-back episodes weekday afternoons from 2:00–3:00pm ET; from September 1, 2014, to April 3, 2015, the show aired back-to-back episodes weekday mornings from 6:00–7:00am ET; from April 6, 2015, to September 11, 2015, it aired back-to-back episodes Monday-Friday from 9:00–10:00am ET. From January 4, 2016, to September 2, 2016, the series aired weekday mornings at 6:00am–6:30am on MeTV.

The show can currently be seen on Circle.

Reunions edit

The Patty Duke Show: Still Rockin' In Brooklyn Heights edit

On April 27, 1999, the thirty-third anniversary of the ABC cancellation of The Patty Duke Show, rival network CBS aired the television film The Patty Duke Show: Still Rockin' In Brooklyn Heights, which reunited Duke, Schallert, Byron (in her final on-screen role before her death in February 2006), O'Keefe and Applegate. The film was meant to be a backdoor pilot to a revival of the series, though these plans never came to fruition.

In the film, Patty and Richard married after graduating high school, and had a son Michael (Alain Goulem) before an amicable divorce after nearly 27 years of marriage. Michael is married with a teenage daughter Molly (Jane McGregor). Patty works as the drama teacher at Brooklyn Heights High School. Cathy is widowed and living in Scotland with her teenage son Liam McAllister (Kent Riley). Martin and Natalie moved to Florida after Martin retired from The New York Daily Chronicle.

The film revolves around a Lane family reunion, where the family bands together against the plans of Sue Ellen Caldwell (portrayed present-day by Cindy Williams, since original portrayer Kitty Sullivan was unavailable) to tear down the high school for a shopping center. Patty and Richard also confront their continued feelings post-divorce, reconciling by the end of the film.

Several clips of the original series were shown as flashbacks. Kitty Sullivan is shown in one of these flashbacks.

Social Security campaigns edit

In 2009, Duke reprised her dual roles from the show in a public service announcement (PSA) for the Social Security Administration, in which Patty asked Cathy about where she got her information about how to get Social Security benefits and other questions, such as how to apply online. The PSA was targeted toward baby boomers who were born or who grew up in the 1960s. In 2010, the surviving cast reprised their respective roles in a series of PSAs, again for the Social Security Administration.

DVD releases edit

Shout! Factory has released all three seasons of The Patty Duke Show on DVD in Region 1.

DVD Name Ep # Release Date
The Complete First Season 37 September 29, 2009
The Complete Second Season 36 February 9, 2010
The Complete Third and Final Season 32 August 24, 2010

See also: similar shows and films edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Patty Duke on the origins of "The Patty Duke Show" on YouTube
  2. ^ The Patty Duke Show S2E18 The Perfect Hostess on YouTube
  3. ^ a b c d Duke, Patty (April 13, 2011). Call Me Anna: The Autobiography of Patty Duke. Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 9780553272055.
  4. ^ "William Schallert Interview Part 2 of 4 - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG". YouTube. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  5. ^ "Patty Duke Interview Part 2 of 3 - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG". YouTube. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  6. ^ "Sidney Sheldon Interview 2 of 5 - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG". YouTube. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  7. ^ "Bob Costello Interview Part 6 of 8 - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG". YouTube. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  8. ^ MeTV Staff (December 15, 2015). "10 fascinating factoids about 'The Patty Duke Show'". MeTV. Retrieved February 9, 2020.
  9. ^ "Patty Duke Interview Part 2 of 3 - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG". YouTube. 2014-01-17. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  10. ^ "Patty Duke Interview Part 2 of 3 - EMMYTVLEGENDS.ORG". YouTube. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  11. ^ Patty Duke Show, The (Intro) S1 (1963) on YouTube
  12. ^ "The Patty Duke Show, PopMatters". 28 September 2009.
  13. ^ "The TV Ratings Guide: 1963-64 Ratings History".
  14. ^ "The TV Ratings Guide: 1964-65 TV Ratings".

External links edit

  • The Patty Duke Show at IMDb
  • The Patty Duke Show at epguides.com
  • Season 1 DVD review and production notes

patty, duke, show, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Patty Duke Show news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Patty Duke Show is an American television sitcom created by Sidney Sheldon and William Asher The series ran on ABC from September 18 1963 to April 27 1966 The Patty Duke ShowSeason one openingGenreSitcomCreated bySidney Sheldon William AsherStarringPatty Duke William Schallert Jean Byron Paul O Keefe Eddie ApplegateTheme music composerSid Ramin Robert WellsOpening theme Cousins performed by The Skip JacksComposersSid Ramin Harry GellerCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons3No of episodes104 list of episodes ProductionProducersWilliam Asher episodes 1 10 Robert Costello episodes 11 25 Stanley Prager episodes 26 72 Bob Sweeney season 3 Camera setupSingle cameraRunning time22 minsProduction companiesChrislaw Productions Cottage Industries Inc 1965 1966 United Artists TelevisionOriginal releaseNetworkABCReleaseSeptember 18 1963 1963 09 18 April 27 1966 1966 04 27 RelatedThe Patty Duke Show Still Rockin In Brooklyn HeightsThe series was developed as a vehicle for teenage star Patty Duke who had won an Academy Award the previous year Duke starred in dual roles of twin cousins Patty and Cathy Lane The series co starred William Schallert Jean Byron Paul O Keefe and Eddie Applegate A total of 104 black and white episodes plus an unaired pilot were produced by United Artists Television ABC abruptly cancelled the series after three seasons Contents 1 Premise 2 Episodes 3 Cast 3 1 Major recurring 3 2 Notable guest stars 4 Production 4 1 Origins 4 2 Seasons One and Two 4 3 Visual effects 4 4 Season Three and cancellation 4 5 Music 5 Reception 5 1 Ratings 5 2 Syndication and home video 6 Reunions 6 1 The Patty Duke Show Still Rockin In Brooklyn Heights 6 2 Social Security campaigns 6 3 DVD releases 7 See also similar shows and films 8 References 9 External linksPremise editPatty Lane Duke is a normal chatty rambunctious teenager who according to the theme song lyrics lives in the Brooklyn Heights section of New York City Her father Martin Lane William Schallert is the managing editor of the New York Daily Chronicle Patty affectionately addresses him as Poppo Her identical paternal cousin Cathy Lane also played by Duke is sophisticated brainy and demure her father Kenneth also played by Schallert is Martin s identical twin brother Since the widowed Kenneth is often away as a foreign correspondent for the Chronicle Cathy moves to the United States to live with Patty s family which also includes her mother Natalie Jean Byron and brother Ross Paul O Keefe and to attend Brooklyn Heights High School with Patty and her boyfriend Richard Eddie Applegate While the girls are physically identical their style tastes and attitudes are nearly opposite which is responsible for some of the comedic situations on the show Though the character of Cathy received first billing over the character of Patty in the show s opening credits virtually all episodes centered around Patty s misadventures with Cathy often only playing a minor supporting role The remarkable physical resemblance that Patty and Cathy share is explained by the fact that their fathers are identical twins While Patty speaks with a typical American accent Cathy speaks with a general European accent 1 not surprisingly however both cousins are able to mimic each other s voice Patty and Cathy have an additional identical cousin Southern belle Betsy also played by Duke featured in the season two episode The Perfect Hostess 2 Episodes editMain article List of The Patty Duke Show episodes SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired136September 18 1963May 20 1964236September 16 1964May 19 1965332September 15 1965April 27 1966Cast edit nbsp The Lanes clockwise from bottom left Patty Duke as Patty Lane Jean Byron as Natalie Lane William Schallert as Martin Lane and Paul O Keefe as Ross Lane Patty Duke as Patty Lane and Cathy Lane Duke also guest starred as Betsy Lane in the episode The Perfect Hostess 1965 William Schallert as Martin Lane Schallert also had a dual role as Kenneth Lane in three season one episodes and as Uncle Jed in a season three episode Jean Byron as Natalie Lane Patty s mother Paul O Keefe as Ross Lane Patty s brother Eddie Applegate as Richard Harrison Patty s boyfriendRita McLaughlin served as a double for Duke in the third season but was never credited In the series unaired pilot episode Mark Miller and Charles Herbert played Martin and Ross Lane respectively Major recurring edit Kitty Sullivan as Sue Ellen Turner seasons 1 2 Patty s frenemy She was replaced by Roz and Monica Robinson in the third season Cindy Williams portrayed Sue Ellen in Still Rockin in Brooklyn Heights when Sullivan was unavailable John McGiver as J R Castle season 1 Martin s boss at the Chronicle He is not shown or mentioned after the first season David Doyle as Jonathan Harrison seasons 1 2 Richard s father who is a construction engineer John Spencer as Henry seasons 1 2 one of Patty s classmates Kelly Wood as Gloria season 2 one of Patty s friends Marcia Strassman as Adeline season 2 one of Patty s classmates Robyn Millan as Roz season 3 one of Patty s classmates Laura Barton Kathy Garver as Monica Robinson season 3 Patty s rival She replaces the Sue Ellen Turner character Notable guest stars edit Jean Pierre Aumont The French Teacher 1963 Ilka Chase The House Guest 1963 Alan Mowbray The Actress 1963 Joan Copeland Are Mothers People 1964 Susan Anspach as Susan Cathy the Rebel and Will the Real Sammy Davis Please Hang Up 1965 Frankie Avalon How to Be Popular 1963 A Foggy Day in Brooklyn Heights 1965 Kaye Ballard The Perfect Teenager 1964 James Brolin Patty Meets the Great Outdoors 1965 Roger C Carmel Author Author 1964 Kim Carnes Patty Meets the Great Outdoors 1965 Jeremy Clyde Patty Pits Wits Two Brits Hits 1965 Sammy Davis Jr Will the Real Sammy Davis Please Hang Up 1965 Jimmy Dean The Songwriters 1964 Troy Donahue Operation Tonsils 1965 Dick Gautier Anywhere I Hang My Horn Is Home 1966 George Gaynes The Perfect Hostess 1965 Robert Goulet Don t Monkey with Mendel 1965 Margaret Hamilton as Maid Double Date 1963 Let Em Eat Cake 1964 George S Irving Let Em Eat Cake 1964 Peter Lawford Will the Real Sammy Davis Please Hang Up 1965 Paul Lynde The Genius 1963 Sal Mineo Patty Meets a Celebrity 1965 Estelle Parsons The Con Artist 1964 Neva Patterson as Miss Mason The Tycoons 1964 and Miss Moore My Cousin the Heroine 1965 Charles Nelson Reilly The Conquering Hero 1963 Sara Seegar The Greatest Speaker in the Whole Wide World 1966 Frank Sinatra Jr Every Girl Should Be Married 1965 Jean Stapleton The Raffle 1965 Chad Stuart Patty Pits Wits Two Brits Hits 1965 Daniel J Travanti Block That Statue 1964 Bobby Vinton Patty and The Newspaper Game 1965 Production editOrigins edit Following her Academy Award winning role in The Miracle Worker ABC became interested in developing a series starring Duke The network enlisted writer Sidney Sheldon to develop a vehicle for Duke Sheldon asked Duke to spend a week with his family at their home to generate ideas During this time he noticed that Duke had two distinct sides to her personality later in life she would be diagnosed as manic depressive 3 287 and so came up with the concept of identical paternal cousins with contrasting personalities 3 115 According to Duke he successfully captured her personality in the two characters 1 In development Cathy was initially from Scotland Duke learned a true Scottish burr for the Cathy character However Duke s accent was done so well they couldn t understand me 1 concerning producers that the viewers would not like or understand her with such a profound accent Upon going into production for the series Cathy had a general European background and accent 3 120 1 The pilot episode was filmed on New Year s Day 1963 at the Metro Goldwyn Mayer Studios in Culver City California Several differences in the pilot included the series being set in San Francisco and Mark Miller and Charles Herbert portraying Martin and Ross Lane respectively Seasons One and Two edit Even before ordering the series it was understood that production would shift from Los Angeles to New York City In the previous decade New York had dominated national network production By the early 1960s new formats and innovations such as coaxial cable service film and video tape allowed for the industry to move to the West coast with the film industry By 1963 most scripted programming was based in Hollywood while New York served production for game shows What s My Line soap operas As The World Turns and late night shows The Ed Sullivan Show However at 16 years old Duke fell under California s strict child labor laws known informally as the Coogan laws named after famed 1920s child actor Jackie Coogan which curtailed the number of hours that child actors could work Since New York did not have such stringent laws at the time and Duke already resided in Manhattan New York the network relocated production of the series to Chelsea Studios and moved the series location to Brooklyn Heights Upon the series order Miller declined to move on with the series Schallert was hired after reading for producers and reuniting him with his Byron his co star from The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis which had ended the season before 4 Sheldon and Asher wrote and produced the series with Duke s managers John and Ethel Ross also serving as associate producers According to Duke and others the cast and crew members were unaware of their abuse of her 5 William Asher initially served as producer However before going on the air he had failed to finish a full length episode 6 As a result ABC assigned Robert Costello to produce though he only remained until the twenty fifth episode 7 Following his departure frequent director Stanley Prager took over for the remainder of the first season as well as the second season Visual effects edit nbsp Duke as both Cathy left and Patty Lane The dual role for Duke challenged special effects for its time considering that television special effects were rare in the early 1960s particularly for a sitcom In all episodes Duke appeared as both characters in the same frame through use of a split screen effect The technically ambitious traveling matte process was also used from time to time particularly in the pilot To complement these effects child actress Rita McLaughlin was used as Duke s double almost always seen only from behind 8 To differentiate the two characters to the viewing public the character Patty wore a flip fall hairpiece while Cathy s character wore a more conservative turn under hairstyle Season Three and cancellation edit Midway through the second season Duke celebrated her eighteenth birthday and fired the Rosses as her managers 9 As Duke was now old enough to work longer hours ABC wanted to shift the show s production to Los Angeles Duke initially was against the idea but eventually agreed With the move came new sets and new exterior shots the latter of which seemed to place the home in an unnamed suburban neighborhood instead of Brooklyn Heights citation needed During the second season Duke had become romantically involved with assistant director Harry Falk and married him during the third season He was able to direct one of the final season three episodes in which Patty and Richard contemplate getting married which Duke said in hindsight was not a good idea 10 The series was cancelled due to disagreements between ABC and United Artists Television UATV over filming the series in color ABC wanted all of its shows for the upcoming 1966 67 season to be in color while UATV claimed filming The Patty Duke Show in color would be too expensive 3 166 The series continued airing reruns on ABC in primetime until August 31 Music edit The show s theme song Cousins 11 which has since been parodied many times over in pop culture including Rocko s Modern Life where it was parodied as the theme song to The Bloaty and Squirmy Show illustrates the two girls differences where Cathy adores the minuet the Ballet Russe and crepes Suzette our Patty loves her rock n roll a hot dog makes her lose control The song was performed by a five voice vocal ensemble called The Skip Jacks which featured actress and Playboy model Stella Stevens Reception editAlready a budding star in her own right Duke was further thrust into the public consciousness through the show As the series went on her star power from the series allowed her to enter popular music appearing on two episodes of Shindig in 1965 to release a Top Ten single Don t Just Stand There in one of her two appearances on the series PopMatters wrote that although the show s episodes are occasionally very predictable it s all in good fun 12 Ratings edit Season Timeslot EDT Season Premiere Season Finale TV season Rank Nielsen rating Ref1 Wednesday 8 00 pm September 18 1963 1963 09 18 May 20 1964 1964 05 20 1963 64 18 23 9 13 2 September 16 1964 1964 09 16 May 19 1965 1965 05 19 1964 65 28 22 4 14 3 September 15 1965 1965 09 15 April 27 1966 1966 04 27 1965 66 citation needed William Shallert later stated that in the third season the series ratings plummeted after being pitted against Lost in Space Syndication and home video edit Repeats of The Patty Duke Show entered local markets as early as September 1966 days after exiting ABC prime time It remained a mainstay of daytime independent station programming well into the 1970s A new generation of viewers was introduced to the series by Nick at Nite cable broadcasting a lengthy five year prime time run from September 19 1988 to August 30 1993 On June 30 1995 Nick at Nite showed one episode of the series during their 10th anniversary celebration In 2005 both Nick at Nite and TV Land aired another episode of the series in honor of Nick at Nite s 20th anniversary In 2008 This TV began airing The Patty Duke Show as part of an early morning classic TV block Prior to this the show had not appeared in national syndication since Nick at Nite dropped it from its lineup in 1993 As of 2019 episodes aired on Saturday and Sunday Reruns of The Patty Duke Show were seen on Antenna TV from 2013 until 2015 as part of that channel s regular programming schedule From November 4 2013 to April 6 2014 The Patty Duke Show aired back to back episodes every day from 1 00 2 00pm ET from April 7 2014 to August 29 2014 The Patty Duke Show aired back to back episodes weekday afternoons from 2 00 3 00pm ET from September 1 2014 to April 3 2015 the show aired back to back episodes weekday mornings from 6 00 7 00am ET from April 6 2015 to September 11 2015 it aired back to back episodes Monday Friday from 9 00 10 00am ET From January 4 2016 to September 2 2016 the series aired weekday mornings at 6 00am 6 30am on MeTV The show can currently be seen on Circle Reunions editThe Patty Duke Show Still Rockin In Brooklyn Heights edit On April 27 1999 the thirty third anniversary of the ABC cancellation of The Patty Duke Show rival network CBS aired the television film The Patty Duke Show Still Rockin In Brooklyn Heights which reunited Duke Schallert Byron in her final on screen role before her death in February 2006 O Keefe and Applegate The film was meant to be a backdoor pilot to a revival of the series though these plans never came to fruition In the film Patty and Richard married after graduating high school and had a son Michael Alain Goulem before an amicable divorce after nearly 27 years of marriage Michael is married with a teenage daughter Molly Jane McGregor Patty works as the drama teacher at Brooklyn Heights High School Cathy is widowed and living in Scotland with her teenage son Liam McAllister Kent Riley Martin and Natalie moved to Florida after Martin retired from The New York Daily Chronicle The film revolves around a Lane family reunion where the family bands together against the plans of Sue Ellen Caldwell portrayed present day by Cindy Williams since original portrayer Kitty Sullivan was unavailable to tear down the high school for a shopping center Patty and Richard also confront their continued feelings post divorce reconciling by the end of the film Several clips of the original series were shown as flashbacks Kitty Sullivan is shown in one of these flashbacks Social Security campaigns edit In 2009 Duke reprised her dual roles from the show in a public service announcement PSA for the Social Security Administration in which Patty asked Cathy about where she got her information about how to get Social Security benefits and other questions such as how to apply online The PSA was targeted toward baby boomers who were born or who grew up in the 1960s In 2010 the surviving cast reprised their respective roles in a series of PSAs again for the Social Security Administration DVD releases edit Shout Factory has released all three seasons of The Patty Duke Show on DVD in Region 1 DVD Name Ep Release DateThe Complete First Season 37 September 29 2009The Complete Second Season 36 February 9 2010The Complete Third and Final Season 32 August 24 2010See also similar shows and films editThe Parent Trap 1961 film starring Hayley Mills remade in 1998 with Lindsay Lohan a film that where Mills and later Lohan also played double roles Liv and Maddie Disney Channel sitcom starring Dove Cameron as twins Duke made her final acting appearance in a season three episode playing the title characters grandmother and great auntReferences edit a b c d Patty Duke on the origins of The Patty Duke Show on YouTube The Patty Duke Show S2E18 The Perfect Hostess on YouTube a b c d Duke Patty April 13 2011 Call Me Anna The Autobiography of Patty Duke Random House Publishing Group ISBN 9780553272055 William Schallert Interview Part 2 of 4 EMMYTVLEGENDS ORG YouTube Retrieved 2022 08 27 Patty Duke Interview Part 2 of 3 EMMYTVLEGENDS ORG YouTube Retrieved 2022 08 27 Sidney Sheldon Interview 2 of 5 EMMYTVLEGENDS ORG YouTube Retrieved 2022 08 27 Bob Costello Interview Part 6 of 8 EMMYTVLEGENDS ORG YouTube Retrieved 2022 08 27 MeTV Staff December 15 2015 10 fascinating factoids about The Patty Duke Show MeTV Retrieved February 9 2020 Patty Duke Interview Part 2 of 3 EMMYTVLEGENDS ORG YouTube 2014 01 17 Retrieved 2022 08 27 Patty Duke Interview Part 2 of 3 EMMYTVLEGENDS ORG YouTube Retrieved 2022 08 27 Patty Duke Show The Intro S1 1963 on YouTube The Patty Duke Show PopMatters 28 September 2009 The TV Ratings Guide 1963 64 Ratings History The TV Ratings Guide 1964 65 TV Ratings External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Patty Duke Show The Patty Duke Show at IMDb The Patty Duke Show at epguides com Season 1 DVD review and production notes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Patty Duke Show amp oldid 1179715049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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