The Real McCoys

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Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Other uses Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox television

Walter Brennan as Amos McCoy
Kathleen Nolan and Richard Crenna as Kate and Luke McCoy
Joan Blondell and Andy Clyde

The Real McCoys is an American sitcom starring Walter Brennan, Richard Crenna, and Kathleen Nolan. Co-produced by Danny Thomas's Marterto Productions in association with Walter Brennan and Irving Pincus's Westgate Company, it was broadcast for six seasons: five by the ABC-TV network, from 1957 to 1962; and a final season by CBS, 1962–1963. Set in California's San Fernando Valley, it was filmed at Desilu studios in Hollywood.

Synopsis

The Real McCoys concerns the lives of a family originally from the Appalachian Mountains of West Virginia, from a fictional place named Smokey Corners. They relocated to California to live and work on a farm they inherited from Ben McCoy, brother to patriarch Amos McCoy. The family included Grandpa Amos (Walter Brennan), his grandson Luke (Richard Crenna), Luke's new wife Kate (Kathleen Nolan), Luke's teenage sister Tallahassie "Hassie" (Lydia Reed), and her 11-year-old brother "Little Luke" (Michael Winkelman). The double naming of the brothers is explained in the first full episode ("Californy, Here We Come"), when the elder Luke introduces Little Luke to Pepino Garcia (Tony Martinez) and says, "Well, you see, in the excitement of having him, Ma and Pa plum forgot they already had me."<ref>"The Real McCoys - Season 1 Pilot Episode 1" titled "Californy, Here We Come " (S01E01), The Real McCoys; full episode available on YouTube, a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., Mountain View, California; originally posted by Gregg Tate, November 22, 2014. Retrieved March 14, 2018.</ref> Only Crenna appeared in all 225 episodes.

The former West Virginians join the Grange farm association and hire Pepino when he informs them he was Ben's foreman. In the episode broadcast January 8, 1962, Pepino becomes an American citizen and assumes the surname "McCoy." The McMichaels, a brother and sister played by Andy Clyde and Madge Blake in 29 and 21 episodes, respectively, lived on the hill near the McCoys. Amos McCoy and George McMichael, both crotchety old men, sometimes quarreled, often about their games of checkers and horseshoes. Kate is friendly with Flora McMichael, George's sister, and becomes involved with life in the community.

Although still in her 20s, Kate serves as a mother figure for Luke's younger siblings, Hassie and Little Luke. Many episodes have a moral theme consistent with the conservative opinions of Walter Brennan.<ref>Episode Guides, http://epguides.com/RealMcCoys/</ref><ref name=imdb>Template:Cite web</ref>

On February 23, 1961, while working on The Real McCoys, Kathleen Nolan was thrown from a horse and seriously injured. Her character of Kate was off the series for several months.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Hassie left home to attend college, and Little Luke joined the United States Army. For the final season Hassie appeared only in the first episode; Little Luke was never seen again. Amos McCoy did not appear in the last eleven episodes; he was said to be back visiting family in West Virginia. Luke was a widower, and many of the stories concerned Grandpa trying to find him a new wife. This nearly succeeded when Luke met Louise Howard, portrayed by Janet De Gore, a widow with a young son, Greg, played by Butch Patrick, later of CBS's series The Munsters, a relationship which continued through the end of the series.

Guest stars

Jon Lormer was cast seven times as an actor for The Real McCoys during 1959 and 1960, six as the character Sam Watkins. Joan Blondell appeared three times near the end of the series as Aunt Win. Marjorie Bennett was cast three times as Amanda Comstock. Pat Buttram and Howard McNear also appeared three times; they were subsequently cast as Eustace Haney on CBS's Green Acres and as Floyd the Barber on CBS's The Andy Griffith Show. Olin Howland and Willard Waterman appeared five times each as Charley Perkins and Mac Maginnis, respectively.<ref name=imdb/>

Early in the series, Charles Lane, who often appeared in a character role on I Love Lucy, was cast twice as Harry Poulson, a fast-talking egg salesman; Hassie McCoy has an interest in Harry's son. During 1963, Jack Oakie appeared three times in the role of Uncle Rightly. Dick Elliott was cast twice as Doc Thornton, and Lurene Tuttle appeared twice as Gladys Purvis, the widowed mother of series character Kate McCoy, with Jay Novello in one of those appearances as Gladys' intended second husband, a retired photographer from Fresno.<ref name=imdb/>

Malcolm Cassell appeared several times as Hassie McCoy's boyfriend, Tommy. Edward Everett Horton (the narrator of Fractured Fairy Tales) played J. Luther Medwick, the grandfather of Hassie's other boyfriend, Jerry; Medwick and Amos soon clash. Verna Felton, a member of the December Bride cast, appeared once as Cousin Naomi Vesper. Jesse White, known later as the actor portraying the Maytag repairman for television commercials and subsequently a cast member of CBS's The Ann Sothern Show, portrayed a used car salesman named "San Fernando Harry" who clashes with Amos in "The New Car" (October 2, 1958). On June 1, 1961, Amos, Luke, and Kate return to West Virginia for the 100th-birthday gathering of "Grandmother McCoy", played by Jane Darwell. In one episode, Lee Van Cleef played an Air Force Security Guard; in another Tom Skerritt appeared as a letter carrier.<ref name=imdb/>

The episode "The Tycoon" (August 30, 1960) four years later coincidentally shared the title of Brennan's next ABC sitcom, The Tycoon, with his co-actor Van Williams.<ref name=imdb/> Barbara Stanwyck made a cameo appearance in the 1959 episode "The McCoys Go To Hollywood", which also features Dorothy Provine. In 1961, Fay Wray is featured in the episode "Theatre in the Barn", as herself. She volunteers to direct a local amateur production to raise money for the Grange. Template:Clear

Episodes

Template:Main List of The Real McCoys episodes

Home media

Infinity Entertainment released the first four seasons of The Real McCoys on DVD between 2007 and 2010.

On May 7, 2012, it was announced that Inception Media Group (IMG) had acquired the rights to the series. IMG subsequently re-released the first two seasons on DVD.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

On June 4, 2012, IMG announced that it would be releasing a complete series set, featuring all 224 remastered episodes.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Release of this set never happened, and the rights to the series' home videos later moved to SFM Entertainment, which released The Real McCoys: The Complete Series on August 29, 2017 in Region 1.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This is a manufacture-on-demand (MOD) release, available exclusively from Amazon.com.

DVD name Template:Abbr of
episodes
Release date
Complete Season 1 39 July 24, 2007
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Complete Season 2 39 October 30, 2007
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Complete Season 3 39 June 17, 2008
Template:Small<ref name="Archived copy">Template:Cite web</ref>
Complete Season 4 39 June 29, 2010
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Complete Season 5 29 August 26, 2014<ref name="Archived copy"/>
Complete Season 6 39 August 26, 2014<ref name="Archived copy"/>
The Complete Series 224 August 29, 2017<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ratings

Season Time slot (ET) Rank Rating
1957–1958 Thursday at 8:30–9:00 p.m. #30 26.6 (Tied with The Loretta Young Show and Zorro)
1958–1959 #8 30.1
1959–1960 #11 28.2
1960–1961 #5 27.7
1961–1962 #14 24.2
1962–1963 Sunday at 9:00–9:30 p.m. colspan="2" Template:N/a

References

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