Besides the greatness of Rick Nelson, The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet
is best remembered for its astonishing longevity (14 seasons, 435
episodes!) and for the equally astonishing moribund irrelevance of its
later years (1960 and beyond). At its best, however, it was great. Under
the total creative control of Ozzie Nelson (who it's said made Otto
Preminger seem like a pussycat on set), it was the original "show about
nothing." Ozzie never had a job, seemed to have no plans for the day,
was considered a boob by everyone, and was surrounded by friends,
relatives, and neighbors who also had pointless, jobless lives. (What a
refreshing change from the CV-obsessed garbage of modern television!)
Yet everyone was happy, warm, relaxed, and gentle -- without a hint of
smarm or calculation.
One of the wackiest early episodes is called "The Orchid and the
Violet," from April of '53. Oz is mistaken for a bum (as he should be)
by a florist and his wife, hysterically played by the great Alan Mowbray
and by Orson Welles's own Jeanette Nolan, reprising her role here as
Lady Macbeth.
Crazy, man!