The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour
- Serie de TV
- 1957–1960
- 1h
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaFollow-up to Te quiero, Lucy (1951), Lucy Ricardo continues her wacky schemes as she travels with her husband, Ricky and their friends Ethel and Fred to various locations and meeting celebri... Leer todoFollow-up to Te quiero, Lucy (1951), Lucy Ricardo continues her wacky schemes as she travels with her husband, Ricky and their friends Ethel and Fred to various locations and meeting celebrities.Follow-up to Te quiero, Lucy (1951), Lucy Ricardo continues her wacky schemes as she travels with her husband, Ricky and their friends Ethel and Fred to various locations and meeting celebrities.
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
Reseñas destacadas
The episode with Fred MacMurray and the prospecting had me laughing pretty hard. When Ethel is behind the wheel of the runaway junk car with Fred chasing her and Ricky says 'Look! She's even trying to leave Fred!', it was a hoot.
Or the scene in 'Lucy Goes to Havana' and she and Ann Southern are drunk in a cell and Ann Southern puts a glass of (unknown to them) spiked water in her purse and says 'I wan' my mudder to taste this' (an improvised spot), it's funnier than the stupid so-called comedies of today.
And the last episode, Lucy Meets the Mustache. Where Edie Adams sings 'That's All', a song about everlasting love, it's so heartbreaking, knowing the back story about Lucy and Desi. Edie said that Lucy's eyes were red all the time though Edie and Ernie Kovacs didn't know the complete situation.
Is there anything on today that can move an audience like that? I don't think so.
This would be Lucille Ball's first of many mediocre sitcoms that followed "I Love Lucy" that had her doing the same tricks over and over. From "The Lucy Show" to "Here's Lucy" and "Life With Lucy", the Comedy Hours began a 2 decade period of Lucy's attempt to hang on to a formula that is out of place and exhausted--especially in the 70's and 80's when other brands of comedy and humor have exceeded.
There are very little--even FEW moments in this series that made me laugh. The reason is because the writing is tired. The jokes are flat. The audiences seems to eat it all up because frankly they are giddy that they're in the same room as these wonderful actors. I'd be giddy too if I was in the same room as Lucy, Desi, Vivian and William. But that's no reason to keep a show on the air.
Each show has the cast in a specific situation or place that lasts the entire hour. They range from being in Mexico, the Alps and even Tokyo. The change in "scenery" may perk ears up but the delivery of jokes and recreating the magic that has begun to fade--immediately flattens your curiosity.
If you're a huge Lucy fan this is probably something you should get because you probably want anything and everything with Lucy in it. I'm a huge fan and that's why I got it. I was intrigued by the idea of this show. After reading many biographies and reading ABOUT this show--I was desperate to see it. And I began to buy these tapes about 10 years ago.
A lot of scenes seem to drag on and instead of having that feeling of "Oh wow, the show's over?? That went by too fast!" It's really.."When is this over?" I may sound like I'm completely bashing it but you can see for yourself. The pacing of the show is slower, they are obviously trying too hard to make it work.
You can force yourself to laugh at all these shows but you have to realize why. Is it because you really think it's funny or because it's Lucy and your brain assumes she's always hilarious? If you seem to have to force yourself to laugh at something...then it's probably not that funny. "I Love Lucy" never had you do that. These shows will.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe last filmed episode of Lucy Meets the Mustache (1960) was the last time Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz would work together. Immediately after filming, Lucille Ball filed for divorce. This episode - and the background drama of these 2 - had been subsequently talked about. (Edie Adams discussed in detail that during the filming - and especially whilst she was singing, Lucy's eyes were visibly red... from crying. Though Ms Adams says no one on the set discussed, or even knew exactly what was going on).
- Citas
Lucy Ricardo: But how's Ricky ever going to find out who took the pearls?
Ethel Mertz: He'll ask me and I'll confess.
Lucy Ricardo: Why?
Ethel Mertz: Because while he's asking me, he'll have his fingers around my throat!
- Versiones alternativasA crucial scene from The Celebrity Next Door (1957) has been omitted on TV broadcasts as well as from the video version, even from the so-called complete prints titled "We Love Lucy". Fred gets splattered with strawberry pie, he retreats to the kitchen with Ethel, and Lucy says how humiliated she is. Tallulah Bankhead quickly & personally said "Oh, forget it darling. This is my lucky night, I'm allergic to strawberries. They give me hives!" Lucy and Tallulah then banter back and forth for a moment. The tail end of this scene is missing in recent prints, where Ricky asks if Tallulah would like some coffee. This brief missing scene sets up what happens among the final scenes, where Tallulah Bankhead broke out in hives.
- ConexionesFeatured in CBS Salutes Lucy: The First 25 Years (1976)
Selecciones populares
- How many seasons does The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- The Ford Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1