Los acontecimientos del día a día en la vida de una pareja de recién casados. Cada episodio consta de tres breves bocetos no relacionados en los que los personajes a menudo rompen la cuarta ... Leer todoLos acontecimientos del día a día en la vida de una pareja de recién casados. Cada episodio consta de tres breves bocetos no relacionados en los que los personajes a menudo rompen la cuarta pared imaginaria.Los acontecimientos del día a día en la vida de una pareja de recién casados. Cada episodio consta de tres breves bocetos no relacionados en los que los personajes a menudo rompen la cuarta pared imaginaria.
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Not the funniest show I've ever seen, but pleasant enough. The scripts are often silly, so-so at best but the star of the show is what makes it shine--Betty White, a real "sweetheart" presented here as a young, newlywed, rather impish version of Gracie Allen. The announcer introduces each episode, even speaks directly to Betty, and at the end prompts the cast to say "Good night." (Attention game show fans: the announcer, who appears on camera a lot, is none other than legendary game show host Jack Narz of "Concentration" and "Now You See It" fame, at the dawn of his career.) At least one video dealer is selling this for a dollar apiece and marketing it as "The Betty White Show," with a synopsis on the back of her short-lived 1977 sitcom that has nothing to do with this 1953-55 first-run syndicated effort.
This is a classic sitcom. The characters are limited in number, and the plot is always simple, but the acting and writing are very good. Most of the episodes revolve around Elizabeth's sense of humor. Her husband is the straight man usually. It is worth watching, unlike many shows today. Some of the characters are never seen including:
* the nosy next door neighbor who watches Elizabeth and Alvin from over the fence.
* Elizabeth's obese mother.
Main characters: Elizabeth: Housewife who is almost always in a good mood. Alvin: Husband who puts up with his wife's constant practical jokes.
Some of the best skits:
Elizabeth buys a lobster, but doesn't have the heart to kill it. Together they release it back into the wild.
Elizabeth schemes to get a new vacuum. She convinces Alvin that the door to door salesman is afraid they are going to kill him, so he buys a vacuum.
Elizabeth agrees to babysit a neighborhood boy, sight unseen. When he arrives he is a college student with a serious crush on Elizabeth.
An old schoolmate drops by making Alvin jealous.
Alvin is out practicing his golf swing in his front yard. He accidentally hits it through a neighbor's car windshield.
Elizabeth makes the local gopher into her pet.
Elizabeth gives Alvin a women's magazine test only to find he fails it. She is worried she is married to a dunce. Turns out Alvin has a trick up his sleeve.
* the nosy next door neighbor who watches Elizabeth and Alvin from over the fence.
* Elizabeth's obese mother.
Main characters: Elizabeth: Housewife who is almost always in a good mood. Alvin: Husband who puts up with his wife's constant practical jokes.
Some of the best skits:
Elizabeth buys a lobster, but doesn't have the heart to kill it. Together they release it back into the wild.
Elizabeth schemes to get a new vacuum. She convinces Alvin that the door to door salesman is afraid they are going to kill him, so he buys a vacuum.
Elizabeth agrees to babysit a neighborhood boy, sight unseen. When he arrives he is a college student with a serious crush on Elizabeth.
An old schoolmate drops by making Alvin jealous.
Alvin is out practicing his golf swing in his front yard. He accidentally hits it through a neighbor's car windshield.
Elizabeth makes the local gopher into her pet.
Elizabeth gives Alvin a women's magazine test only to find he fails it. She is worried she is married to a dunce. Turns out Alvin has a trick up his sleeve.
This show felt like it was just a step ahead of the times when it was filmed. A bit slow at times but Betty and Dels wit brings it up. With then breaking the fourth wall, something not seen in those days and her not acting like the nimrod some housewives did on tv back then, I feel like she was pushing boundaries. Not to mention she helped create and produce it like a true Maverick she was. And a respectful note to the person who said without her current icon status no one would know about Golden Girls; in 1985, that was the favorite show in our town in our childhood. And you must've missed Mary Tyler Moore show as well. She had a career most only dream of with non-stop fun and creative roles!
Elizabeth appeared to be an ordinary, everyday housewife of her time(the early 50s), and so she was . . . er, aside from the fact that an off-camera announcer regularly led forays to check into the goings-on around her house, of course. And then, come to think of it, she wasn't exactly the docile, unassuming "little woman" that husband Alvin always hoped (against all reason) she'd turn out to be, either.
In a word, she was an imp. She delighted in puncturing Alvin's pomposity, always lovingly, but invariably disastrously.
Introduced each week by harp music, which gave a deceptively tranquil lead-in to what was to follow, "Life With Elizabeth" wasn't a 'situation comedy' -- indeed, that concept had barely been formed at the time; instead, it was a comedy of situations, usually two to each show, individual and unrelated, each of them introduced by the off-camera announcer who then just let events unfold. Once chaos had yet again been firmly established as the order of the day, his voice would be again heard, this time presumably as her conscience: "Elizabeth!" (pause) "Aren't you ashamed?"
She usually gave it a moment's thought before shaking her head impishly.
As with the harp music, the show itself was deceptive in its simplicity, the writing, production and, not least of all, the performances of Betty White and Del Moore who were letter-perfect. Produced by a local Los Angeles TV station (at which White and Moore had been staffers), "Life With Elizabeth" seems to have lived its entire life in syndication.
And Elizabeth kept life from ever becoming dull!
In a word, she was an imp. She delighted in puncturing Alvin's pomposity, always lovingly, but invariably disastrously.
Introduced each week by harp music, which gave a deceptively tranquil lead-in to what was to follow, "Life With Elizabeth" wasn't a 'situation comedy' -- indeed, that concept had barely been formed at the time; instead, it was a comedy of situations, usually two to each show, individual and unrelated, each of them introduced by the off-camera announcer who then just let events unfold. Once chaos had yet again been firmly established as the order of the day, his voice would be again heard, this time presumably as her conscience: "Elizabeth!" (pause) "Aren't you ashamed?"
She usually gave it a moment's thought before shaking her head impishly.
As with the harp music, the show itself was deceptive in its simplicity, the writing, production and, not least of all, the performances of Betty White and Del Moore who were letter-perfect. Produced by a local Los Angeles TV station (at which White and Moore had been staffers), "Life With Elizabeth" seems to have lived its entire life in syndication.
And Elizabeth kept life from ever becoming dull!
This was basically a sitcom, told in brief vignettes rather than a full regular sitcom style. There was some similarity to the Jack Benny Program, with an announcer and Betty White talking to the audience at the end of the show. The story was about Elizabeth (White), her husband Alvin, and a few friends and coworkers. The stories were simple, mostly domestic tales, but the tone was rather silly, with much of the comedy centered on certain characters' stupidity. If you see it now, you're unlikely to be bowled over by comedic genius, but it's nice to see a young Betty White.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThroughout this series, as well as her previous pioneering talk show and her subsequent Date With the Angels, Betty appeared with her natural brunette hair. Her blonde persona came about with the Mary Tyler Moore Show and '70s appearances on game shows. Her early persona was also completely different than her Sue Ann Nivens character.
- ConexionesFeatured in Cansada de buscar marido (2009)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- A Vida com Elizabeth
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución30 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was Life with Elizabeth (1952) officially released in India in English?
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