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The Bob Cummings Show

  • TV Series
  • 1955–1959
  • Not Rated
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
509
YOUR RATING
The Bob Cummings Show (1955)
Comedy

The romantic misadventures of Bob Collins, a suave, sophisticated bachelor and photographer operating in Hollywood, California. The show is centered around his womanizing ways with his model... Read allThe romantic misadventures of Bob Collins, a suave, sophisticated bachelor and photographer operating in Hollywood, California. The show is centered around his womanizing ways with his models, and his sister's attempts to make him settle down.The romantic misadventures of Bob Collins, a suave, sophisticated bachelor and photographer operating in Hollywood, California. The show is centered around his womanizing ways with his models, and his sister's attempts to make him settle down.

  • Stars
    • Robert Cummings
    • Ann B. Davis
    • Rosemary DeCamp
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    509
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Robert Cummings
      • Ann B. Davis
      • Rosemary DeCamp
    • 23User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 2 wins & 15 nominations total

    Episodes169

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    Photos18

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    Top cast99+

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    Robert Cummings
    Robert Cummings
    • Bob Collins…
    • 1955–1959
    Ann B. Davis
    Ann B. Davis
    • Charmaine 'Schultzy' Schultz…
    • 1955–1959
    Rosemary DeCamp
    Rosemary DeCamp
    • Margaret MacDonald…
    • 1955–1959
    Dwayne Hickman
    Dwayne Hickman
    • Chuck MacDonald…
    • 1955–1959
    Bill Baldwin
    Bill Baldwin
    • Announcer…
    • 1955–1959
    Joi Lansing
    Joi Lansing
    • Shirley Swanson…
    • 1955–1959
    King Donovan
    King Donovan
    • Harvey Helm
    • 1955–1958
    Lyle Talbot
    Lyle Talbot
    • Paul Fonda
    • 1955–1959
    Lisa Gaye
    Lisa Gaye
    • Collette DuBois…
    • 1955–1959
    Nancy Kulp
    Nancy Kulp
    • Pamela Livingstone…
    • 1955–1959
    Olive Sturgess
    Olive Sturgess
    • Carol Henning…
    • 1956–1959
    Diane Jergens
    Diane Jergens
    • Francine Williams…
    • 1955–1956
    Rose Marie
    Rose Marie
    • Martha Randolph…
    • 1958–1959
    Jeffrey Silver
    • Jimmy Lloyd
    • 1955–1957
    Gloria Marshall
    • Mary Beth Hall…
    • 1955–1958
    Tammy Marihugh
    Tammy Marihugh
    • Tammy Johnson…
    • 1959
    Ingrid Goude
    Ingrid Goude
    • Miss Sweden…
    • 1957–1958
    Mary Lawrence
    Mary Lawrence
    • Ruth Helm
    • 1956–1958
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    7.7509
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    Featured reviews

    rusher-1

    One Of The Slickest, Hippest Comedies of the 1950's

    Bob Cummings' swinging bachelor photographer is the complete antithesis of "Ozzie And Harriet" and "Father Knows Best". Makes whiny, boorish Lucy look, well, whiny and boorish. Excellent writing and supporting cast of Rosemary DeCamp, Dwayne Hickman, Ann B. Davis, and a bevy of the most curvacious cuties of the day. One of the true gems of TV's golden age. Any resemblance between this series and "Mr. Ed", "Gilligan's Island", or the "Brady Bunch" is purely delusional.
    8dcorr123

    One of the brightest sit-com's of the 50's

    I watched this show when it first aired and in many reruns over the following decade. Bob Cummings demonstrated impeccable comic timing while supported by an equally outstanding ensemble. Especially noteworthy for me were Dwayne Hickman, Ann B. Davis, Nancy Kulp and King Donovan. This show has often been criticized as "sexist" whereas it was, in fact, just the opposite. The primary theme of the show centered around Bob's constant womanizing which almost always ended in his getting his comeuppance. Bob often poked fun at himself in this series for example: making fun of health-foods through Nancy Kulp's character even though he was himself a health-food "addict" long before such became fashionable or portraying himself (i.e. Bob Cummings the actor) as an arrogant egotist. I strongly disagree with the "if you liked this" suggestions. This is hardly in the same category as Mr. Ed. Better choices would be Dobie Gillis or the Phil Silvers show.
    rcj5365

    The Bob Cummings Show:A Classic Comedy from the golden days of 1950's television

    The Bob Cummings Show(also known as Love That Bob) was the first-ever series to debut as a midseason replacement premiered on NBC-TV on January 25, 1955 and was originally sponsored by R.J. Reynolds-Winston Cigarettes and Salem Cigarettes. The program began with a half-season run on NBC,and then in mid-1955 went to CBS-TV where it stayed for two full seasons until 1957,and returned to NBC for its final two seasons ending on September 15, 1959. A total of 173 episodes were produced during its five-year run,all in classic black and white. This was one of the funniest sitcoms to ever grace the golden age of television during the 1950's. Bob Cummings demonstrated impeccable comic timing while having great support from an equally outstanding ensemble which made this show a must see. Bob Cummings' character Bob Collins was a veteran of World War II who was living and supporting his war-widowed sister(Rosemary De Camp),and her college student son,Chuck(Dwayne Hickman). Bob Cummings portrayal of a dashing young "Hollywood" photographer,Air Force reserve officer and ladies man was mirrored to Cummings' own in real life. Cummings' portrayal of a womanizer who had a beau of beautiful women in his photography studio,was not only shameless but downright hilariously funny in some of the episodes while being a mentor and role model to his nephew Chuck. In just about every episode,Bob would become the Playboy Beverly Hills photographer who couldn't keep his eyes of the women who were always in his office and in his studio. Chaos ensues when Bob stumbles into one situation after another.

    "The Bob Cummings Show" was ahead of its time,representative of its time,and influential in its own right. The series was important in the development of several careers. It's creator,producer,and head writer Paul Henning,the later producer of such major 1960's hits as "The Beverly Hillbillies","Petticoat Junction",and "Green Acres" was the major force behind the success of this series. Henning was also one of the executive producers of this series,along with George Burns(who is not credited here),and Al Simon. Others that were involved with this series also were the driving force behind some of Paul Henning's later shows. Among them are the writing team of Dick Wesson,Phil Shuken,William Cowley,Shirley Gordon,and Bill Manhoff;the production team of Joesph Depew and Edward Rubin and George King;photographer and cameraman Harry Wild;editor Guy Scarpitta,and script supervisor Ulla Bourne.

    Another reason why "The Bob Cummings Show" was such a major hit was the casting....you had the debut of three of the funniest ladies on television who would go on to bigger and better things in their careers among them Ann B. Davis(later of "The Brady Bunch"),Nancy Kulp(the future Jane Hathaway on "The Beverly Hillbillies"),and Rose Marie(the future Sally Rodgers on "The Dick Van Dyke Show"). Ann B. Davis who played Bob's resourceful assistant "Schultzy" who two Emmys for her work on the show,and her character would get more advancement and development for her character than she ever would during her role as Alice on "The Brady Bunch". Also, Nancy Kulp,who played boy-crazy cougar Pamela Livingstone,would be cast alongside actress Joi Lansing in which Henning apparently put on his most famous show "The Beverly Hillbillies",where Miss Kulp as Jane Hathaway(secretary to banker Milburn Drysdale-a character to which she played similar to the one she appeared as "Pamela Livingstone" on Cummings' show)while Miss Lansing portrayed assistant secretary Gladys.

    Perhaps the biggest career boost was received by Dwayne Hickman as Bob's nephew and college student,Chuck. Hickman,after this series ended went on to bigger and better things in his career as the lead favorite in "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis",which premiered in 1959 and last four years on the air for CBS. The program represented the height of Cummings' career for the five seasons that it was on the air on two major television networks(both NBC and CBS). When the series ended in 1959,"The Bob Cummings Show" was seen in repeats during the 1960's(when ABC put it onto its daytime schedule from 1961-1963) and early 1970's(when it was in syndicated repeats). During the 1980's,the series was back in repeats for the CBN(Christian Broadcasting Network)Cable Network that lasted way into the early 1990's(when CBN Cable became the Family Channel and later on ABC Family)where it hasn't been seen until recently or smaller stations and independent networks today.
    dougdoepke

    Lively Fun

    Lively series that could occasionally sparkle with comedy and high spirits. This is a role the handsome, slightly smug Cummings was born to play. As a high-fashion photographer, there was always a parade of shapely girls passing through his studio each week. I'm guessing teen- age boys like me made up a lot of his steady audience. But that's not to say glamour was the only draw. The scripts, by and large, were surprisingly good, usually centering around a romantic predicament Bob would then have to fast talk his way out of. Maybe secretary Schultzy (Davis) or sister Margaret (DeCamp) would help. More likely, they would standby amused, while Bob was getting some kind of minor comeuppance. And what a fine supporting cast they were, including a pre-Dobie Dwayne Hickman. Nothing special or substantive here, just solid light-hearted entertainment that wears surprisingly well.
    jeffhill1

    The Bob Cummings Show had it all

    The "Bob Commings Show" (retitled for syndication, "Love That Bob") had eroticism, patriotism, and family values. The character of Bob Collins was a World War II veteran who was living with and supporting his war-widowed sister and her college student son, Chuck. Bob Collins was both a shameless, one could say addicted, womanizer, and an admirable role model and mentor for his nephew Chuck, played by Dwayne Hickman. "The Bob Cummings Show" was ahead of its time, representative of its time, and influential on its time. It was especially influential on a lot of subsequent shows. "The Dobbie Gillis Show", for instance was almost a direct rip-off of the "Bob Cummings Show" with Dwayne Hickman doing a recreation of his Chuck character with a lot of Bob Collins mixed in. In the "Bob Cummings Show" Dwayne Hickman as Chuck would try to date one of Uncle Bob's models, such as the French bombshell Collette duBois, played by Debra Paget's sister, Lisa Gaye. Collette would consult Bob, asking him about the idea of accepting a date with college student Chuck, "Don't you think it would be like you Americans say, 'stealing the bed?'. " A bit stunned at the expression, Bob would do one of his "takes" and then gasp, "You mean 'robbing the cradle?'" In "Dobbie Gillis" Dwayne Hickman got an awful lot of mileage out of using the same Bob Commings type gasp to yell, "That's Dobbie! With a B!" every time some character called him "Dopie." And Hickman as Dobbie was forever doing a take and responding with some gasp in response to some remark made by either Maynard G. Krebs or Zelda. Zelda, of course, was a rip-off of the Shultzy character on the "Bob Commings Show." Part of the charm of the Commings series was in its predictability of situation and the way the characters played off of one another. College student Chuck would periodically stop by Uncle Bob's photo studio, become ga-ga at the string of gorgeous models parading in and out of the studio in various stages of undress, and stutter, "Ah, ah, Uncle Bob, I feel guilty using your money to go to college. I think it is time I learned a trade. Like, ah, photography." To this, Uncle Bob would chuckle and respond, "No, Chuck, you need to get an education so that you don't end up a tradesman like your uncle. You continue in school and become a doctor." Whether he realizes it or not, I think the American who most of all refined and capitalized on the "take" and on characters playing off one another as influenced by the Commings show was Johnny Carson who captivated the American night audience for 25 years with jokes, takes, and character banter which to me, all seemed to originate on "The Bob Cummings Show."

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Four decades later, Ann B. Davis reprised the role of Schultzy for a cameo in La Tribu Brady (1995).
    • Quotes

      [at the opening of the series.]

      Bob: Hold it! I think you're gonna like this picture!

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert Holiday Gift Guide (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      A Romantic Guy, I
      (uncredited)

      (theme song)

      Written by Frank Stanton, Del Sharbutt and Richard R. Uhl

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 2, 1955 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Love That Bob!
    • Filming locations
      • General Service Studios - 1040 N. Las Palmas, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Laurel Productions
      • McCadden Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      30 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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