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Encyclopedia > The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet
The Nelson family
The Nelson family

The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, an American radio and television series, was once the longest-running, live-action situation comedy on American television, having aired on ABC from 1952 to 1966 after a ten-year run on radio. Starring former bandleader Ozzie Nelson and his wife, vocalist Harriet, the show's sober, gentle humor captured a large, sustaining audience, even if later critics tended to dismiss it as fostering a slightly unrealistic picture of post-World War II American family life. www. ... www. ... A television program is the content of television broadcasting. ... The examples and perspective in this article do not represent a worldwide view. ... The American Broadcasting Company (ABC) is a television and radio network in the United States. ... 1952 (MCMLII) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ... 1966 (MCMLXVI) was a common year starting on Saturday (link goes to calendar) // Events January January 1 - In a coup, Colonel Jean-Bédel Bokassa ousts president David Dacko and takes over the Central African Republic. ... A big band is a large musical ensemble that plays jazz music. ... Harriet Hilliard Nelson, born Peggy Lou Snyder, was an American singer and actress. ... Combatants Allied Powers Axis Powers Commanders {{{commander1}}} {{{commander2}}} Strength {{{strength1}}} {{{strength2}}} Casualties 17 million military deaths 7 million military deaths World War II, also known as the Second World War, was a mid-20th century conflict that engulfed much of the globe and is accepted as the largest and deadliest...


In the early 1930s, a booking at the Glen Island Casino landed Ozzie Nelson's orchestra national network radio exposure. After three years together with the orchestra, Ozzie and Harriet signed to appear regularly on The Baker's Broadcast (1933-1938), hosted first by Joe Penner, then by Robert L. Ripley and finally by cartoonist Feg Murray. The couple married (October 8, 1935) during this series run, and finally joined the cast of The Red Skelton Show in 1941, staying with that NBC series for three years. When Skelton was drafted, Ozzie Nelson was prompted to create his own family situation comedy. The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet launched on CBS October 8, 1944, making a mid-season switch to NBC in 1949. The final years of the radio series were on ABC (the former NBC Blue Network) from October 14, 1949, to June 18, 1954. Ripleys Believe It or Not! deals in bizarre events and items so strange and unusual that readers might question the claims. ... Red Skelton Bernard Richard Red Skelton (July 18, 1913 – September 17, 1997) was an American comedian born in Vincennes, Indiana who started in vaudeville as a teenager, worked his way up to Broadway shows, secondary roles in MGM movies, radio performances and finally popularity in the early days of... The National Broadcasting Company or NBC is an American television broadcasting company based in New York Citys Rockefeller Center. ... CBS (formerly an acronym for Columbia Broadcasting System) is a major television network and radio broadcaster in the United States. ...


Also featured in the show were their two sons, David and Ricky. On radio, prior to April 1949, David was portrayed by Joel Davis (1944-45) and Tommy Bernard, and Ricky was played by Henry Blair. In due course, and thanks in part to public demand, the actual Nelson sons joined the radio show, remaining in the cast for the TV series. David Nelson was the son of famed bandleader/TV actor Ozzie Nelson and singer Harriet Hilliard. ... Ricky Nelson Ricky Nelson can also mean Ricky Nelson (wrestler) or Ricky Lee Nelson, baseball player. ...


In 1952 the Nelsons starred with Rock Hudson in a feature film, Here Come the Nelsons, which among other things depicted Ozzie as an advertising executive assigned to a campaign promoting women's underwear. That was a considerable difference from the radio and later television series, which never made it clear exactly what Ozzie did for a living. (Another popular radio show featuring a bandleader and his wife, the more sardonic Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show, made it very clear that this was a radio-performing singing bandleader, his singing wife, and their children.) Rock Hudson Rock Hudson (November 17, 1925 – October 2, 1985) was an American actor, famous for his rugged good looks. ... The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show is an old-time radio situation comedy which ran from 1948 to 1954 on the NBC radio network. ...


Early episodes of The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet found humor in family and parenting dilemmas. As the two boys grew up, many plots focused on their love lives and aspirations. The premiered on ABC television October 10, 1952, staying until September 3, 1966.


It also made a singing star out of Rick Nelson: unlike many American parents (many of whom enjoyed The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet), Ozzie Nelson actually liked rock and roll and encouraged his younger son's obvious talent, finally bringing it into the show itself. Rick first sang in the April 10, 1957, episode, "Rick the Drummer," and episodes after his million-seller "Be-Bop Baby" in the fall of 1957 usually featured a Rick Nelson song number, while Rick himself became one of the nation's top rock and roll stars and one of the few late-1950s hitmaking teen idols who actually had sustainable musical ability. (It didn't hurt that his lead guitarist, James Burton, was one of the most respected musicians of his breed.) When David and Rick married in 1961 and 1963, their wives joined the cast. Rock and roll (also spelled Rock n Roll, especially in its first decade), also called rock, is a form of popular music, usually featuring vocals (often with vocal harmony), electric guitars and a strong back beat; other instruments, such as the saxophone, are common in some styles. ... James Burton (born August 21, 1939 in Minden, Louisiana) is a legendary American guitarist and member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. ...


David Nelson produced a short-lived syndicated sequel, Ozzie's Girls (1973), in which the Nelsons rented the boys' old room to two college girls, portrayed by Susan Sennett and Brenda Sykes. Rick Nelson, after a lull through most of the 1960s, returned in an impressive musical comeback in the early 1970s, with a well respected country-rock band, the Stone Canyon Boys, and a classic hit single, "Garden Party," a none-too-nostalgic look back at his former career, hooked around his appearance at a rock and roll revival concert. The song could have been his epitaph ("You can't please everyone, so you've got to please yourself"); ten years after his father's death in 1975, Rick Nelson was killed in an airplane crash (December 31, 1985) en route a New Year's Eve concert; he has since been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. 1975 (MCMLXXV) was a common year starting on Wednesday (the link is to a full 1975 calendar). ... The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, showing Lake Erie in the foreground The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum is a museum and institution in Cleveland, Ohio, United States, dedicated, as the name suggests, to recording the history of some of the best-known and most influential...


Harriet Nelson died in 1985. Ozzie, Harriet, and Rick have been interred together in Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles, California. David Nelson is still a producer of low-budget feature films and television commercials. This article is about the year. ... Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery is located at 6300 Forest Lawn Drive in Los Angeles, California, on the south edge of the San Fernando Valley by Burbank (and on the north side of the Santa Monica Mountains from Hollywood). ... The City of Los Angeles (from Spanish; Los Ángeles) is the second-largest city in the United States in terms of population, as well as one of the worlds most important economic, cultural, and entertainment centers. ...


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  Results from FactBites:
 
The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (719 words)
Ozzie and Harriet Nelson and their sons David and Ricky (16 and 13 respectively at the time of the program's debut) portrayed fictional versions of themselves on the program.
Ozzie and Harriet started out on radio, a medium to which bandleader Ozzie Nelson and his singer/actress wife Harriet Hilliard had gravitated in the late 1930s, hoping to spend more time together than their conflicting careers would permit.
The genial, bumbling Ozzie was the narrative linchpin of Ozzie and Harriet, attempting to steer his young sons into the proper paths (usually rather ineffectually) and attempting to assert his ego in a household in which he was often ill at ease.
BreakTV.com - Ozzie & Harriet (140 words)
Harriet Hilliard Nelson was born Peggy Lou Snyder in Des Moines, Iowa in 1909.
Harriet recorded such classics as “I Don’t Want to Set the World on Fire,” “Breathless,” and “Dust Off That Old Pianna.” In 1944, she and Ozzie made the jump to radio with “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet.” The radio show was quite a bit zanier than the television show that followed.
Harriet went on, of course, to star in fourteen years of “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet” on television.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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