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  • Member

The twins' relationship kind of irked me as until the first swimming scene I thought they were a couple. blink.png But both were very attractive and likable.

I love that Hilda had to hop the fence with Bill turned away.

However, the beginning narration was an odd choice. I guess they were still in the radio mindset.

Edited by Bright Eyes

  • Author
  • Member

I know what you mean about the twins. The lady was Eva Marie Saint.

I loved the feel of this episode - a lazy family outing, yet with real life problems still under the surface. It just felt so natural.

I had to laugh when they were called "the best dressed" show on TV. I don't know what that is supposed to mean.

  • Member

Thanks to Carl and Bright Eyes for watching. Sometimes I feel no one will watch some of the material I upload. It is nice to know that it is viewed and appreciated.

Carl, I believe that the "best dressed show' originated from the fact that many early programs required actors to wear their own clothes. One Man's Family was one of the first to have its wardrobe provided by a boutique. In this case, Lord and Taylor exclusively dressed the cast.

  • Author
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I wondered what that was about. It was just kind of ironic considering the way the characters were dressed.

The show seems a lot different than most of the other soaps I've seen from this time period. They would probably say, "We're a family drama."

It's too bad more isn't written about the show's success and why it didn't last on TV.

Was Eva Marie Saint there for the entire TV run?

  • 7 months later...
  • 2 years later...
  • Member

Going through down memory lane on old posts here in cancelled soaps now that I have access again to an old computer makes it more fun. 

 

I've used Matt P. Smith's Soap Opera History write-ups for other soaps both short-lived and long-lived but noticed I hadn't shared one for this soap: 

premiered
(prime time television)
November 4, 1949
last telecast
(prime time television)
June 21, 1952
premiered
(daytime television)
March 1, 1954
last telecast
(daytime television)
April 1, 1955
setting
Sea Cliff, San Francisco, California
created by
Carlton E. Morse
network
NBC
production company
???
broadcast history
Fri
8pm - 8:30pm
(11/4/49-1/50)
Thu
8:30pm - 9pm
(1/50-5/50)
Sat
7:30pm - 8pm
(6/50-6/21/52)
Mon-Fri
10:30am - 10:45am 
(3/1/54-7/2/54)
3pm - 3:15pm 
(7/4/54-8/27/54)
3:30pm - 3:45pm 

3:30pm - 3:45pm 
(8/30/54-4/1/55

Still wanting a soap block that would rival CBS's lunch-time block in popularity (as well as that network's up-and-coming late afternoon block), NBC decided to follow the lead set by CBS's The Guiding Light and move one of radio's most successful series ever to daytime television.  Truth be told, this wasn't even the first time One Man's Family had appeared on television.  Earlier, the series had aired for several years as a 30 minute prime-time soap opera on NBC (11/4/49-6/21/52).  Premiering the daytime version in the slot immediately before the faltering Three Steps to Heaven (the only one of NBC's previous attempts at a soap block, other than Hawkins Falls which had moved to a later time, that was still on the air).  Both The Bennetts and Follow Your Heart had ended 2 months earlier.  Unfortunately, NBC made the same mistake in daytime with OMF as it had in prime-time -- it completely started the series over from the very beginning!  This was especially confusing for long-time radio listeners and fans of the series considering the radio version was still on the air.  Now, this might not seem like that big of a deal, but when you consider it was 1954 and the radio series began in 1932, you get the idea.

 

OMF focused on the Barbour family in the San Francisco suburb of Sea Cliff.  There were parents Henry & Fanny Barbour and their brood of children Paul, Hazel, Claudia & Cliff (twins), and Jack.  Adding confusion to viewers was the fact that the actress who played Claudia on television played her own character's grown daughter on radio!  Another thing that hurt the series' daytime TV run was that it changed timeslots 3 times during the show's year-long run.

 

A few months after the premiere, it was replaced in its mid-morning timeslot by new soap A Time to Live and moved to a late-afternoon slot and paired with newcomer Golden Windows in a clear attempt by NBC to start a late-afternoon block of soaps.  Unfortunately, NBC continued to fiddle with the line-up and moved the series yet again to an even later timeslot, replacing the faltering First Love.  Finally, the network decided to simply cut their losses and cancelled the series, replacing it by moving the also faltering The Greatest Gift into its timeslot.  Despite it's television failures, OMF continued to have great success on radio and was broadcast until 1959, during the waning years of network radio, making its 1932-1959 run the longest run of any soap opera in radio history.  Even so, OMF just didn't seem quite willing to give up the ghost.

 

In the mid-1960s, there was talk of reviving the series, yet again (still on NBC, no less).  However, the network decided to go, instead, with another series about parents with a brood of grown children who had a slew of problems.  That series?  Days of our Lives.

 

  • Member

Someone posted on IMDB stating that this soap was reran on one of their local channels as late as 2002-2003 ?

  • Member

I'd believe it given some local channels have often aired forgotten public domain from the early 50's for years (see "I Married Joan" or "My Little Margie" as the best examples). 

  • 4 years later...
  • Author
  • Member

An episode I don't think I've seen floating around. 

 

 

This one has been around for a while, in various places.

 

 

  • 6 months later...
  • Author
  • Member

I can't remember if this one has been around before or not. 

 

@slick jones if it hasn't, this one has a cast crawl that might help you.

 

 

  • 1 year later...
  • 3 months later...
  • Member

This review is of the primetime version. 

Detroit Free Press Detroit, Michigan 28 Mar 1950,

Watch Out, Hazel! He's Up To No Good

As radio .serials go, "One Man's Family" is as quiet as a country churchyard. That is to say the Barbour family, whose lives have ljeen chronicled in "One Man's Family" for 18 long years, is less than ordinarily afflicted by murder, disease, bankruptcy, embezzlement, illegitimate children, lnsanity, illicit passion, and insanity the normal lot of  most soap-opera families.  But soap-opera standards are rather different from any other standards. The fact that the Barbours are less lurid than other radio serial families doesn't mean that nothing ever HAPPENS to them.

Let's see now: Clifford Barbour has lost two wives one in childbirth, another in an automotive accident, Claudia nad Hazel Barbour have had a couple or husbands apiece. I'm rather confused about Hazel it's not easy to keep her matrimonial affairs straight here but I think Hazel is now on her way to a third husband or a Fate Worse Than Death. (Matters were still up in the air when I left Hazel last week.) CLAUDIA'S first husband, who was Joan's father, died of pneumonia. Hazel's first husband was an amnesia victim of the first World War and died years ago. During the Second World War, Claudia and her second husband, Nicholas, and their two youngest children were torpedoed at sea. They were picked up by a German submarine and landed in a concentration camp where their youngest child died. So, you see, life isn't precisely torpid around the Barbour household.

Last fall, "One Man's Family" Father and Mother Barbour, and Paul, Hazel, Claudia, Clifford and Jack, started existence reasonably afresh on television. I'll bring you up to date on Claudia and Hazel, but you'll have to do your own research on the rest of the mob. I haven't space. ' . CLAUDIA NOW has a new husband named Johnny, who finds the Barbour clan overpowering. (And I don't blame him.) Johnny is carrying on with a babe named Judith Richardson, who is up to no good. And Claudia, poor child, is expecting a baby she doesn't want because she fears it will drive her husband right into Judith s waiting arms. (Johnny wants to be free. Free, I tell you!)

And Hazel? Well, Hazel is on a ship on her way to Honolulu. Last time I saw her, she was being powerfully attracted to a tall, dark and handsome character. I don't trust him. He wreathes white flowers into her hair and murmurs into her ear that no man can get anywhere with a woman until he understands her emotional, problems. Also, he's an artist. And you know those people.  Watch your step, Hazel. Don't ask me what happened to the second husbands of Hazel and Claudia. I don't know and I don't care.

FRANKLY, I find the Barbour family extremely tiresome. The program's merits on radio were never more than relative. On television the threadbare people, the threadbare situations, are glaring examples of how not to write television drama. The action and the direction are conducted on a note of sustained hysteria that passed fairly unnoticed in radio, but seems totally out of place in television. The most exasperating of all the Barbours, and conceivably the most irritating character ever created is Paul Barbour. It has been Paul's duty these 18 years to comfort the Barbours, to observe that a girl must be brave in periods of stress, that honesty is a good thing and that stealing is wrong.

So much for the Barbours. I'm going out to get drunk as a form of social protest. And don't you go lecturing me about the evils of drink, Paul Barbour. I know more about the evils of drink than all seven of you Barbours.

  • 1 year later...

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