While cutting up at an out-of-town bank convention, staid Mr. Mooney flirts (harmlessly, of course) with sexy waitress...
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Director
|
1968
|
After several years of servitude as the secretary of banker Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon), Lucy (Lucille Ball) finally gets the...
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Director
|
1968
|
Sid Caesar pulls double duty in this episode, playing "himself" and his lookalike, Frankie the Forger. Upset that Frankie is...
|
Director
|
1968
|
Joan Crawford makes her TV sitcom debut in this dancin'-and-singin' half hour extravaganze, which also features former Lucy...
|
Director
|
1968
|
'Twixt and 'tween his sitcom-star assignments on F Troop and Mayberry RFD, dancer-comedian Ken Barry does a guest-star turn...
|
Director
|
1968
|
Entertainer Phil Harris capitalizes on his public image (largely fabricated!) as an amiable boozer in the role of alcoholic...
|
Director
|
1968
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) head to a discount store to buy low cost fur for Mrs. Mooney. Before any...
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Director
|
1968
|
Unable to sleep unless her television set is on, Lucy (Lucille Ball) borrows Mr. Mooney's TV while hers is on the blink....
|
Director
|
1968
|
Former Lucy Show regular Vivian Vance makes her second and final guest appearance as Vivian Bagley Bunson, best pal and...
|
Director
|
1968
|
Singer Frankie Avalon guests in this episode as Thomas Cheever, the nephew of Mooney's boss Mr. Cheever (Roy Roberts)....
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Director
|
1967
|
Making her first visit to the local pool hall upon its redecoration, Lucy (Lucille Ball) enters a tournament in hopes of...
|
Director
|
1967
|
In the first episode of a two-part story, Lucy (Lucille Ball) temporarily leaves her bank job to train as a flight attendant...
|
Director
|
1967
|
While working overtime in the home of boss Mooney (Gale Gordon), Lucy (Lucille Ball) falls down and incurs a leg injury. At...
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Director
|
1967
|
Frank McHugh guest stars as Charles Snowden, a homeless hobo whom Lucy (Lucille Ball) invites home for a good hot meal. When...
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Director
|
1967
|
Accidentally tearing up an important letter, Lucy (Lucille Ball) wonders exactly who is planning to pay her a visit. Much to...
|
Director
|
1967
|
To cover up a 48-cent bank shortage, Lucy (Lucille Ball) secretly takes the missing money out of her own pocket....
|
Director
|
1967
|
Totally negating what we were told in the second-season episode "Lucy's College Reunion", Lucy (Lucille Ball) is in danger of...
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Director
|
1967
|
Anticipating a huge bonus, Lucy (Lucille Ball) tries to convince comedian Jack Benny to open an account at the bank....
|
Director
|
1967
|
In this first episode of The Lucy Show's sixth and final season, Lucy (Lucille Ball) has briefly parted company with boss...
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Director
|
1967
|
Jacques Bergerac guests in this episode as international movie idol Jacques Dupres, who shows up at the bank in hopes of...
|
Director
|
1967
|
Singer-comedian Dennis Day guest stars as Cornelius Heatherington Jr. the octogenarian president of the Wesleyan bank. To...
|
Director
|
1967
|
Hoping to attend a sale at Stacy's Department Store, Lucy (Lucille Ball) ducks out of work by fabricating a story about being...
|
Director
|
1967
|
Singer Robert Goulet appears both as himself and as his exact double, truck driver Chuck Willis. When Mooney (Gale Gordon)...
|
Director
|
1967
|
Assault on a Queen is a complex, exciting crime-caper film in which a gang of clever mercenaries try to rob the famous luxury...
|
Director
|
1966
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) win a trip to Las Vegas--but not an all-expense-paid trip. Though their hotel...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Ann Sothern makes the first of several Lucy Show appearances as the Countess Framboise. Although Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) is...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) are dying of curiosity: What did Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) buy Mrs. Mooney for her...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Lucy's old school pal Rosie Hannigan (Ann Sothern), now known as the Countess Framboise, would like to open a charm school in...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) fears for his future when an investment in a health farm turns sour. To help Mooney recoup his...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) accompany their kids to see the latest chiller-diller at the local movie house....
|
Director
|
1965
|
Returning to town after a four-week (and four-episode) absence, Viv (Vivian Vance) is introduced to Lucy's old school chum...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Arthur Godfrey, at one time the most popular (and powerful) personality on radio and TV, makes a guest appearance in this...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) wheedles some extra money out of Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) by claiming she needs some medical treatment....
|
Director
|
1965
|
After receiving a sizeable tax refund, Lucy (Lucille Ball) uses the cash to become a stockholder in the Danfield bank. It is...
|
Director
|
1965
|
A couple's marriage is nearly destroyed by their attempts to save it in this farcical comedy. Dan and Valerie Edwards...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Once again hoping to strike it rich with the least amount of effort, Lucy (Lucille Ball) tries to win an ongoing radio...
|
Director
|
1965
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) want to join the Danfield Art Society, but feel a bit outclassed when they notice...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Inspired by the fact that her son Jerry (Jimmy Garrett) has been given 50 cents for a rare penny, Lucy (Lucille Ball) becomes...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) would like to allow their sons to spend two extra weeks at summer camp, but they...
|
Director
|
1964
|
With her usual air of confidence (which, also as usual, is backed up by nothing!), Lucy (Lucille Ball) promises to get...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) is bursting with pride over being hired as a meter maid--uniform, ticket book and all. Unfortunately, our...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Police school rookie Lucy (Lucille Ball) gets herself assigned to handsome detective Bill Baker (Jack Kelly), who is...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Selling vacuum cleaners door to door, Lucy (Lucille Ball) gives her first demonstration at the home of Mr. Mooney (Gale...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Ever on the lookout for extra money, Lucy (Lucille Ball lands a temp job as a process server. Her first assignment is to...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) rent their spare room to Gordon Bentley (John Williams) and Carter Harrison (Lloyd...
|
Director
|
1964
|
This first episode of The Lucy Show's third season finds Lucy Carmichael (Lucille Ball) endeavoring to become closer with her...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Keith Andes makes a return appearance as Bill King, the hyper-athletic boyfriend of widow Lucy Carmichael (Lucille Ball)....
|
Director
|
1964
|
In dire need of 100 dollars, Lucy (Lucille Ball) is delighted to discover that her pinchpenny banker Mr. Mooney has been...
|
Director
|
1964
|
When Viv (Vivian Vance) casts aspersions on Lucy's cooking, Lucy (Lucille Ball) defiantly enters a big baking contest. Things...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) is campaigning for the office of City Council Comptroller, and Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian...
|
Director
|
1964
|
The local Cub Scouts are prepared to head for a major camporee when one of the boys' fathers is forced to pull out of the...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Too vain to wear glasses, Lucy (Lucille Ball) purchases a pair of contact lenses, which have a propensity for popping out at...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Singer Roberta Sherwood and her real son Robert Lanning guest in this episode as Roberta Schaefer and her "reel" son Bob....
|
Director
|
1964
|
When her son Jerry (Jimmy Garrett) needs money for a new tuba, Lucy (Lucille Ball) wangles a job at the bank. Not...
|
Director
|
1964
|
|
Director
|
1964
|
It's Carmichael vs. Mooney when Lucy (Lucille Ball) issues a complaint about Mr. Mooney's noisy sheepdog, Lord Nelson. When...
|
Director
|
1964
|
In the first episode of a two-part story, Broadway legend Ethel Merman opens an account at the Danfield bank. Realizing what...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Once again, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) dream of untold riches by going into business together; this time...
|
Director
|
1964
|
In the conclusion of a two-part story, Broadway legend Ethel Merman has agreed to perform in the Boy Scout variety show....
|
Director
|
1964
|
Jack Benny guests on this episode as plumber Harry Tuttle, who charges exorbitant fees because he can't get much work--all...
|
Director
|
1964
|
While strolling around an art store, Lucy (Lucille Ball) bumps into handsome John Brooks III (played by Robert Alda, the...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) goes ga-ga over handsome Italian millionaire Umberto Fabriani (Cesare Danova). Alas, Fabriani speaks no...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Widow Lucy (Lucille Ball) volunteers to accompany her boy Jerry (Jimmy Garrett) on a father-son camping trip. This being a...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Michael J. Pollard, best known to film buffs as the moronic "C.W. Moss" in Bonnie and Clyde, makes his one-and-only Lucy Show...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Ever trying to get in good with banker Mooney (Gale Gordon), Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) agree to babysit for...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) needs to have a check signed on behalf of daughter Chris (Candy Moore). Unfortunately, the only person...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Gary Morton, the real-life husband of Lucille Ball, makes a rare Lucy Show appearance as Gary Stewart, the current boyfriend...
|
Director
|
1964
|
Every time Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) embark on a double date with Harry (Dick Martin) and Eddie (Don...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Once again hoping to further their education, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) sign up for a night-school chemistry...
|
Director
|
1963
|
In this reworking of a standard I Love Lucy plotline, Lucy (Lucille Ball) gets a brilliant idea when she hears Eddie Collins...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Lucy's daughter Chris (Candy Moore) needs 40 dollars to purchase a majorette costume, so she lands a job at Wilbur's Ice...
|
Director
|
1963
|
The all-female Danville Volunteer Fire Department needs new uniforms, but there's no money in the treasury. Hoping to raise...
|
Director
|
1963
|
A prowler has been reported in the neighborhood, so Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) decide to learn how to defend...
|
Director
|
1963
|
When the Danfield fire department is rezoned to another community, Lucy (Lucille Ball) angrily demands to the city council...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Strapped for cash as usual, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) cook up yet another get-rich-quick scheme. This time,...
|
Director
|
1963
|
In the conclusion of a two-part story, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) are freed from the bank vault in...
|
Director
|
1963
|
The first episode of The Lucy Show's second season (though technically not the first one filmed) is a gentle spoof of the...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Viv (Vivian Vance) suggests that she and Lucy (Lucille Ball) make a concerted effort to share the interests of their boy...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Janet Waldo, best known to TV fans as the voice of Judy Jetson, guests in this episode as Marge, the sister of Lucy...
|
Director
|
1963
|
The all-female Danville Volunteer Fire Department organizes a softball team, with Lucy (Lucille Ball) appointing herself...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Gale Gordon makes his first series appearance as Theodore J. Mooney, the new banker in charge of Lucy's trust fund. Hoping to...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Den mothers Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) are slated to escort their Cub Scout pack on a trip to Washington....
|
Director
|
1963
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) decides that it is time to redecorate her house, but such an undertaking requires money. The trick is to...
|
Director
|
1963
|
There is an unexplained shortage at the bank, and banker Theodore Mooney (Gale Gordon) has been spending money like a sailor....
|
Director
|
1963
|
Lucy's son Jerry (Jimmy Garrett) has begun his first year at military school, where the parents of the students are not...
|
Director
|
1963
|
In this classic episode, Wally Cox guest stars as Viv's cousin Harold, who has just landed a job as percussionist in a...
|
Director, Conductor
|
1963
|
Viv's son Sherman (Ralph Hart) accidentally causes the bathtub to overflow, collapsing the ceiling and obliging Viv (Vivian...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) attends her college reunion, bringing Viv (Vivian Vance) along for the ride. In a fit of nostalgia, the...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Ever in need of extra money, Lucy (Lucille Ball bluffs herself into a job as society columnist for the local newspaper. After...
|
Director
|
1963
|
While Lucy (Lucille Ball) is helping her son Jerry (Jimmy Carmichael) mount his butterfly collection, one of the colorful...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball wants to sing in Viv's Barbershop Quartet, but Viv (Vivian Vance) has reservations about her roommate's...
|
Director
|
1963
|
There just isn't enough space in a single bathroom for the five members of the Carmichael-Bagley household, thus Lucy...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Having determined that they will spend the summer at a nearby lake, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) invest in a...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Stingy Mr. Mooney (Gale Gordon) refuses to provide funds for the Danville Volunteer Fire Department, arguing that fire...
|
Director
|
1963
|
It's no secret that Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) are the loudest and most demonstrative fans of the Little...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Rather than come off as old fogies, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) really try to "mix in" while chaperoning a...
|
Director
|
1963
|
Chris (Candy Moore) demands that her mom Lucy (Lucille Ball) not interfere with her planned New Year's Eve Party. Reluctantly...
|
Director
|
1962
|
With no one else available, Lucy (Lucille Ball) volunteers to referee a football game involving her son Jerry (Jimmy Garrett)...
|
Director
|
1962
|
When she trips on one of Jerry's toys, Vivian (Vivian Vance) sustains a slight injury. She is willing to forget her pain...
|
Director
|
1962
|
The Carmichaels and the Bagleys prepare to spend their first Christmas together, a festive occasion slated to be topped off...
|
Director
|
1962
|
Charles Lane makes his first series appearance as Mr. Barnsdahl, the banker in charge of Lucy's account. After an argument...
|
Director
|
1962
|
While attending a WAVE reunion, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) inadvertently volunteer to spend 24 hours in a...
|
Director
|
1962
|
Having passed along a blind date to Viv (Vivian Vance), Lucy (Lucille Ball) changes her mind when she meets the fellow, a...
|
Director
|
1962
|
When she can't find anyone to mow her lawn, Lucy (Lucille Ball) acts upon a suggestion made by Viv's son Sheman (Ralph Hart)...
|
Director
|
1962
|
When their TV antenna is blown off their roof in a storm, Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) decide to get another...
|
Director
|
1962
|
Hoping to raise money to purchase a bike for her son Jerry (Jimmy Garrett), Lucy (Lucille Ball) takes a temporary clerical...
|
Director
|
1962
|
Though Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) had promised each other that they would go out to entertain their...
|
Director
|
1962
|
Lucy (Lucille Ball) and Viv (Vivian Vance) would like to go out on a date with a couple of eligible bachelors, but no one...
|
Director
|
1962
|
The debut episode of The Lucy Show finds widow Lucy Carmichael (Lucille Ball) wide awake in the middle of the night,...
|
Director
|
1962
|
Tired of Viv's complaints about her lumpy mattress, Lucy decides to surprise her friend by purchasing a new electric mattress...
|
Director
|
1962
|
This second film adaptation of the Victor Herbert operetta Babes in Toyland was producer Walt Disney's Christmas offering for...
|
Director
|
1961
|
Lucky Me is a mixed-bag musical from Warner Bros., adhering to a tried-and-true formula that was wearing just a bit thin in...
|
Director
|
1954
|
Doris Day looks no more like the real Calamity Jane than you or I do, but this 1953 film is intended as a lighthearted...
|
Choreography
|
1953
|
|
Choreography
|
1953
|
This formula Esther Williams musical casts the star as Midwestern carnival swimmer Christine Duncan, in love with bandleader...
|
Choreography
|
1950
|
|
Director
|
1950
|
|
Director
|
1950
|
|
Choreography
|
1949
|
MGM circumvented the censorship that would otherwise have prevented a film version of Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary by...
|
Choreography
|
1949
|
The title of this MGM musical alone should tip you to the fact that Esther Williams is the star. In this one, she plays a...
|
Choreography
|
1948
|
Filmed entirely on location in New York, Close-Up affords a rare starring role for character actor Alan Baxter. While on...
|
Director, Screenwriter
|
1948
|
It Happened in Brooklyn was released at a time when the mere mention of the eponymous New York borough elicited loud laughter...
|
Choreography, Musical Direction/Supervision
|
1947
|
Janet Leigh made an impressive film-debut in MGM's The Romance of Rosy Ridge. Though the title suggests a lighthearted...
|
Choreography
|
1947
|
By 1946, MGM's musical output was in the hands of two men: the incisive, progressive Arthur Freed, and the sentimental,...
|
Choreography
|
1946
|
This Technicolor musical remake of the 1936 comedy classic Libeled Lady isn't quite up to the standards of the original, but...
|
Choreography
|
1946
|
MGM's musical extravaganza Meet the People top-bills two future powerful TV executives: Dick Powell and Lucille Ball. Ball...
|
Choreography
|
1944
|
In this romantic musical, a chipper radio crooner does everything she can and is still unable to get a break. Later her...
|
Choreography
|
1943
|
Very much a product of its times, Priorities on Parade was disliked by everyone but the public when it was first released in...
|
Choreography
|
1942
|
In this, the third screen adaptation of the musical revue Sailor Beware, William Holden plays Casey Kirby, a shy sailor who...
|
Choreography
|
1942
|
British musical comedy star Gracie Fields made a bid for stardom in the U. S. with this lighthearted story. Music hall...
|
Denis
|
1938
|
Raoul Walsh, best remembered for his rough-and-tumble action pictures, made this film on a rare loan-out to a British studio....
|
|
1937
|
|
Choreography
|
1937
|
Teddington Studios, Warner Bros.' British production arm, was responsible for the entertaining quota-quickie Mayfair Melody....
|
Choreography
|
1937
|
Two American radio commentators (comedians in disguise) host a series of popular acts from movies and radio in this musical...
|
|
1937
|
In this British musical, a riveter finds his attention riveted on a pretty tap dancer causing him to fall from a skyscraper...
|
Screenwriter
|
1936
|
Previously filmed as a vehicle for Baby Peggy Montgomery in 1922, Laura E. Richard's Captain January was warmed up as a...
|
Choreography
|
1936
|
Bebe Daniels, all of 34, portrays an ageing movie star who refuses to admit she's too old for the ingenue role in an upcoming...
|
Choreography
|
1935
|
A best-selling nonfictional book of the 1920s provided the title for this Will Rogers vehicle. Rogers plays a small town...
|
Choreography
|
1935
|
Dressed to Thrill was a brave but foredoomed attempt to transform Russian musical favorite Tutta Rolf into a Hollywood movie...
|
Choreography
|
1935
|
|
Choreography
|
1935
|
In this western-style musical, a rakish gaucho rides off across the Argentine pampas to Buenos Aires in search of his stolen...
|
Choreography
|
1935
|
|
Choreography
|
1934
|
Lucille Ball proves that her two-year absence from network television has not in any way blunted her comic expertise as...
|
Producer
|
|
Season three of The Lucy Show is something of a watershed for the series. To be sure, most of the episodes adhere to the...
|
Producer
|
|
|
Producer
|
|
|
Producer
|
|
The Lucy Show undergoes a number of major changes as the series enters it fourth season. For one thing, the show is now...
|
Producer
|
|
Although actress/producer Lucille Ball had gone through her usual song and dance with CBS by insisting that the...
|
Producer
|
|