My Favorite Husband

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My Favorite Husband began as a radio sitcom on CBS Radio, with Lucille Ball and Richard Denning as Liz and George Cooper (Liz and George Cugat in a very few early episodes, until bandleader Xavier Cugat was said to be edgy about the radio couple sharing the name). The couple lived at 321 Bundy Drive in the ficticious city of Sheridan Falls, and were billed as "two people who live together and like it." The main sponsor was Jell-O, and an average of 3 "plugs" for Jell-O were made in each episode, including Lucille Ball's usual sign-on, "Jell-O, everybody!" The program ran from 1948 through 1951, throughout which 124 episodes were aired.

The program initially portrayed the couple as being a well-to-do banker and his socially prominent wife, but three new writers---Bob Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Pugh, and Jess Oppenheimer---took over the writing, changed the couple's name to Cooper, and remade them into a middle-class couple, believing average listeners would find them more accessible.

Lucille Ball was asked to do a television version of the show (with Jell-O remaining as sponsor) and CBS insisted on Richard Denning continuing as her co-star---but Ball refused to do a husband-and-wife television show without real-life husband Desi Arnaz playing her on-screen husband. The network reluctantly agreed, reworking the concept into I Love Lucy after Ball and Arnaz took a show on the road to convince the network audiences would respond---but Jell-O dropped out of the show in favour of Philip Morris for television.

On the other hand, Carroll, Pugh, and Oppenheimer agreed to move to the new television show.. However the three radio writers did agree to do the switch to the "I Love Lucy" show. They subsequently reworked a few My Favorite Husband episodes into I Love Lucy episodes, especially early in the TV show's run. For example, the 1948 radio episode entitled "Giveaway Program" inspired the I Love Lucy episode called "Redecorating," with some lines being exactly the same. Many of the actors who had done My Favorite Husband radio show also appeared on I Love Lucy, sometimes in episodes where they reprised their roles using a reworked Husband script.

  • Liz Cooper; happily married housewife
  • George Cooper; Liz's husband, works for Mr. Atterbury
  • Mr. Rudolph Atterbury, played by Gale Gordon; George's boss, friend of the Cooper family, refers to male acquaintances as "boy", as in "George-Boy"
  • Mrs. Iris Atterbury, played by Bea Benaderet; wife of Rudolph and friend of the Cooper family, refers to female acquaintances as "girl", as in "Liz-Girl"
  • Katie, played by Ruth Perrott; the Cooper's maid, presumably enjoys making Jell-O
  • Mrs. Leticia Cooper, played first by Benaderet and in subsequent episodes by Eleanor Audley; George's aristocratic mother, who typically looks down on Liz.

Gale Gordon and Bea Benaderet were both given first consideration for the roles that would become Fred Mertz and Ethel Mertz on "I Love Lucy", but both had contract conflicts that forced them to turn down the roles.

CBS finally brought My Favorite Husband to television in 1953, starring Joan Caulfield and Barry Nelson as Liz and George Cooper. The couple now resembled their earliest radio version, with George Cooper a well-to-do bank executive and plots dealing with the couple's society life. The television version ran two-and-one-half seasons, from 1953 to 1955 and was done live for most of its run, until switching to film for a truncated third season and recasting Liz Cooper with Vanessa Brown.

  • Liz Cooper; the housewife
  • George Cooper; Liz's favorite husband, and bank executive
  • Gilmore Cobb, played by Bob Sweeney; the Cooper's wealthy next-door neighbor (first two seasons)
  • Myra Cobb, played by Alix Talton; Gilmore's social climbing wife (first two seasons)
  • Oliver Shepard, played by Dan Tobin; the Cooper's neighbor in the third season.
  • Myra Shepard, Oliver's wife (third season). Played by the same actress who earlier played Myra Cobb

Though the radio show was never released on its own CD or DVD collections, one episode can be found on each disk from the I Love Lucy DVD releases.

In 2003, two episodes were released together on a CD in the UK.

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