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IMDbPro

The Goldbergs

  • Série de TV
  • 1949–1957
  • 30 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
237
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Gertrude Berg in The Goldbergs (1949)
Comédia

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaComedy-drama about a Jewish-American family living in New York City.Comedy-drama about a Jewish-American family living in New York City.Comedy-drama about a Jewish-American family living in New York City.

  • Criação
    • Gertrude Berg
  • Artistas
    • Gertrude Berg
    • Arlene McQuade
    • Eli Mintz
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,4/10
    237
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Criação
      • Gertrude Berg
    • Artistas
      • Gertrude Berg
      • Arlene McQuade
      • Eli Mintz
    • 11Avaliações de usuários
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado para 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 indicação no total

    Episódios92

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    Fotos57

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Gertrude Berg
    Gertrude Berg
    • Molly Goldberg
    • 1949–1957
    Arlene McQuade
    • Rosalie Goldberg…
    • 1949–1957
    Eli Mintz
    Eli Mintz
    • Uncle David…
    • 1949–1957
    Robert H. Harris
    Robert H. Harris
    • Jake Goldberg…
    • 1949–1957
    Tom Taylor
    • Sammy Goldberg…
    • 1949–1957
    Philip Loeb
    Philip Loeb
    • Jake Goldberg…
    • 1949–1956
    Dora Weissman
    • Mrs. Herman…
    • 1949–1957
    Susan Steel
    • Daisy Carey…
    • 1955–1956
    Larry Robinson
    • Sammie…
    • 1949–1953
    Ruth Yorke
    • Carrie Barnett…
    • 1949–1956
    Harold J. Stone
    Harold J. Stone
    • Jake Goldberg
    • 1949–1955
    Henry Lascoe
    Henry Lascoe
    • Cousin Simon
    • 1949–1952
    Louis Sorin
    Louis Sorin
    • Simon…
    • 1953–1956
    Paula Trueman
    Paula Trueman
    • Julie Peterson…
    • 1955–1956
    Somar Alberg
    • Jerome Barnett…
    • 1949–1956
    Joseph Buloff
    Joseph Buloff
    • Mr. Pincus…
    • 1954
    Sarah Krohner
    • Elka…
    • 1951–1954
    Lilia Skala
    Lilia Skala
    • Mrs. Albert…
    • 1951–1954
    • Criação
      • Gertrude Berg
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários11

    7,4237
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    Avaliações em destaque

    6coles_notes

    Above Average

    First airing and adapted for television in 1949 and based on its earlier radio broadcast starting in 1929, we have The Goldbergs. Often sited as one of the first sitcoms for both radio and television, it certainly helped define the format as watchers and listeners tuned in each week to hear the latest happenings of the Goldberg family, particularly the matriarch Molly. Created, written, and directed entirely by the star herself, Gertrude Berg, the series was certainly the first series with a female showrunner, and was also the first to depict home life of a Jewish family. Only hearing of the series after reading (listening) to Jennifer Keishin Armstrong's book When Women Invented Television, which I would highly recommend for more on this series, Berg herself, and a few other early women greats in the business, I immediately sought out where I could stream it and was lucky to find many of the extant episodes available on RokuTV. Unfortunately much of the series has been lost to time, but a considerable amount still exists. I must stay to a modern audience the pace is quite slow, and the constant advertisements for Rybutol, a vitamin supplement, were both funny and a fun reminder about how little advertising has changed in over 75 years. Episodes typically follow one or two new family dilemmas, from meeting the new neighbours to one of the kid's new relationships. With no laugh tracks, at the insistence of Berg, the series remains quite lighthearted, for me more a source of chuckles than laughs, but still quite good. Known for her leaning out their apartment window and delivering monologues, ad reads, and chatting with the neighbours, her famous "yoo-hoo" greeting would have been meet by thousands each week tuning into the latest 30 minute episode. To note, there is a more modern series of the same name and similar premise, but interestingly they are completely unrelated, the modern supposedly written without knowledge of the original. All said, unless you're already a fan of slower, black and white, 1950's television I don't know that I'd necessarily recommend, but if that does happen to be you certainly go for it, its a cornerstone of what's made tv today and was fun to have on in the background.
    9lschiff-2

    It was really a television show

    The picture is missing. Roy Neal and the cast of "The Goldbergs" in 1949. (Left to right) Gertrude Berg, Roy Neal, Phillip Loeb and Eli Mintz (Click on the photo to see a larger version) This picture is from the WPTZ broadcast hosted by Roy Neal called, "Open House" which aired Wednesday evenings from 7 to 7:30 pm. Ironic that in a few years, "The Goldbergs" television show would take over that very time period.

    The television program, "The Goldbergs," was based on the life of one Molly Goldberg and her family. It was based on the long running radio show. "The Rise of the Goldbergs" (later "The Goldbergs"), was created by lead actress, Gertrude Berg. It evolved from skits her produced at her family's hotel in the Catskills Mountains of New York. Its TV life started in 1949 on CBS-TV and was aired live.

    The Goldbergs live in Apartment 3-B of 1030 East Tremont Avenue in the Bronx. Residents included the Parents, Molly and Jake and their children Rosalie and Sammy and, of course, Uncle David (played by Eli Mintz). During its life on CBS-TV, the program aired on Monday evenings in three different time periods. The show disappeared in June of 1951 and resurfaced in February of the next year on another network, NBC-TV. In only ran to July and aired Mondays, Wednesdays and Friday from 7:15 to 7:30 pm. The format didn't work and the show again went away and reappeared a year later as a Friday evening half-hour weekly broadcast, again on NBC. It lasted only a couple of months and the next spring (April of 1954), the struggling DuMont network picked it up as a Tuesday evening half-hour program. It went off the air that fall and resurfaced as a first-run filmed, syndicated program (called "Molly") during the 1955-1956 television season.

    Molly Goldberg's husband was initially portrayed on television by actor Phillip Loeb. He's the reason the show went off the air in 1951. Loeb was a victim of McCarthyism and was labeled a communist. Loeb had always denied the charged but the network and sponsors demanded that he be dropped from the cast and replaced. When Berg didn't cave in, the network dropped the broadcast. When the show returned to television a year later, Loeb was gone and replaced by Harold J. Stone. But the publicity hurt the program so much that it never really recovered from the bad press.

    In 1955, depressed and out of work, Loeb killed himself. Less than 10% of the shows exist today. Contracts between the networks and the producers demanded that any kinescopes (filmed recording shot off a television screen) be destroyed three months after the initial airing. Few of the "live" shows survived into the 21st century. Only the filmed syndicated program exist intact today but none on the original 35mm masters

    Larry Schiff, a visitor to our website e-mailed: ...My brother came across the story of Roy Neal's Open House show on WPTZ concerning The Goldbergs.

    I'll try to make this as short as I can - we're originally from the Bronx and one day during either March or April 1950 during lunch break, a kid came into the school yard telling us the cast from The Goldbergs were at a party in an apartment building nearby.

    He told us to follow him and he took off with a bunch of us following closely - I lucked out being one of the fast runners and stood next to the kid at an apartment door while he knocked - someone answered the knock and invited a few of us in - later we found it was a ploy to get a bunch of kids to run around making noise in back of the building while movies were being taken. Meanwhile a few of us that were in front at the door were invited in - we had cake and got autographs (if I look hard enough I think I still have them). The show aired the following Monday I believe. I appeared for a second or two in the upper right hand corner of the screen.

    The premise of that show was a neighbor of the Goldbergs was annoyed at all the noise in the neighborhood (the show opened with a construction worker using a jack-hammer and eventually showed the film of all the kids running around making a lot of noise).

    We were all late and because someone told their teacher I was probably the leader I got called down to the Principal's Office and I thought I was in for it, but Gertrude Berg was there with a photographer who took some pictures. Miss Berg convinced the Principal it was not the kid's fault and promised if no punishment was given they would mention our school on the show..., which they did - our school was P.S. 94.

    It's too bad that less than 10% of the kinescopes have survived - it would be neat to be able to see it again.

    I guess that was my 15 minutes of fame.
    gcatelli

    simply the finest sitcom every made

    i don't watch television entertainments (other than SNL occasionally). but, one night at about 2am, while channel-surfing the UHF band i stumbled onto an episode of "The Goldbergs".

    the contrast between this show and today's dreck literally brought tears to my eyes. in this particular episode, a couple who were friends of the Goldbergs had just separated. it seems that they did not 'communicate' openly and honestly with each other during their marriage.

    in discussing this, the Goldbergs started to become increasingly candid with each other about mutual disappointments from the past. as they did so, the emotional air became more and more acrid.

    the point was that there is no easy answer to the question of how much to 'confront' and how much to sweep under the carpet. but, there was no hitting below the belt, no potty humor, no double (or mono) entendres. just two decent people discussing a universal domestic problem with a leavening of humor.

    i haven't been able to find it again, but i wish it would go into syndication locally.
    8bkoganbing

    The Goldbergs Of The Grand Concourse

    In the early days of television there was a lot of free program timing and what to do to fill it. Simply take the best from medium you are supplanting, radio. The first years of television simply had radio shows be it Jack Benny, Burns&Allen, the Lone Ranger, etc. simply come over from radio and before when you only could imagine what the characters looked like, now they had to fulfill expectations of what you came to expect.

    The Goldbergs were filmed live originally, no canned laugh soundtrack, the laughs Gertrude Berg and her cast got were real. But Gertrude Berg was no stranger to live audiences, she honed her acting talent and the material that she and her husband Lewis wrote at the Borscht Belt Jewish club in the Catskills. From the skits of Jewish life she wrote for her club act, Ms. Berg created the adventures of the lovable and philosophical Molly Goldberg and her family which consisted of husband Jake, Philip Loeb, children Arlene McQuade and Larry Robinson and Uncle David played by Eli Mintz. They and others who replaced them among the older generation were all veterans of the Yiddish Theater and the Borscht Belt nightclubs of the Catskills.

    Though many folks succeeded the other cast members, particularly Philip Loeb who was blacklisted, only Gertrude Berg was with it all the way. As the creative force of the show, it could not have worked with anyone else. It'a also the only television show I can think of besides Car 54 Where Are You that was centered in the Bronx.

    The Jewish Champs Elysees of the time, better known as the Grand Concourse has changed considerably over half a century. Molly Goldberg wouldn't recognize the place now. From where she dispensed her wisdom from out her apartment window or in the living room, she'd more than likely have to do it in Spanish today.

    Yet take out the Jewish character and humor, what you've got with The Goldbergs are the bare bones of a gazillion family comedies that have come through television since then. Family situations are universal and is George Lopez's Show speaking of Molly dispensing wisdom in Spanish all that different from The Goldbergs.

    Gertrude Berg was a real pioneer in nightclub, on radio, and finally on television. Molly, you were a Yiddishe sage.
    10dweilermg-1

    The Goldbergs 1949 was a slice of life

    As a Jewish child living in a brownstone walk-up apartment in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood I enjoyed The Goldbergs because it was a show about people like us, the likes of which has never been seen again. Sadly today a wonderful heartwarming show like The Goldbergs might be considered "too stereotypical" or "politically incorrect" but we all loved it years ago. Also it's great to see guest appearances by then unknown but future stars of TV and movies an that show including Beatrice Pons (Lucille Toody on Car 54 Where Are You?) and Frank Sutton (Sgt. Carter on Gomer Pyle USMC) among others. The acting on this show was superb, making the characters truly believable. A great under-rated show for sure. ☺

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The final broadcast (over DuMont) was on 19 October 1954, and then the series went into syndication.
    • Citações

      Molly Goldberg: Yoo-hoo, Mrs. Bloom!

    • Conexões
      Edited into Molly: The Goldbergs (1983)

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How many seasons does The Goldbergs have?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 17 de janeiro de 1949 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Molly
    • Locações de filme
      • Liederkranz Hall, East 58th St New York City, Nova Iorque, EUA(sound stage)
    • Empresas de produção
      • CBS
      • DuMont Television Network
      • Guild Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      30 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.33 : 1

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