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The Jimmy Stewart Show

  • TV Series
  • 1971–1972
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
277
YOUR RATING
The Jimmy Stewart Show (1971)
The Jimmy Stewart Show
Play trailer0:46
1 Video
2 Photos
Comedy

Beloved film legend James Stewart made his much-anticipated, highly-publicized series TV debut in this domestic comedy about the frequently chaotic home and professional lives of a small-tow... Read allBeloved film legend James Stewart made his much-anticipated, highly-publicized series TV debut in this domestic comedy about the frequently chaotic home and professional lives of a small-town college professor.Beloved film legend James Stewart made his much-anticipated, highly-publicized series TV debut in this domestic comedy about the frequently chaotic home and professional lives of a small-town college professor.

  • Creator
    • Hal Kanter
  • Stars
    • James Stewart
    • Julie Adams
    • Jonathan Daly
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    277
    YOUR RATING
    • Creator
      • Hal Kanter
    • Stars
      • James Stewart
      • Julie Adams
      • Jonathan Daly
    • 6User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes24

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Videos1

    The Jimmy Stewart Show
    Trailer 0:46
    The Jimmy Stewart Show

    Photos1

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    Top cast92

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    James Stewart
    James Stewart
    • Prof. James K. Howard…
    • 1971–1972
    Julie Adams
    Julie Adams
    • Martha Howard
    • 1971–1972
    Jonathan Daly
    Jonathan Daly
    • Peter Howard
    • 1971–1972
    Ellen Geer
    Ellen Geer
    • Wendy Howard
    • 1971–1972
    Dennis Larson
    • Teddy Howard
    • 1971–1972
    Kirby Furlong
    • Jake Howard
    • 1971–1972
    John McGiver
    John McGiver
    • Dr. Luther Quince
    • 1971–1972
    Mary Wickes
    Mary Wickes
    • Mrs. Bullard
    • 1971
    Richard Annis
    • Karpopolis
    • 1971–1972
    Jeff Donnell
    Jeff Donnell
    • Agatha Dwiggins…
    • 1971–1972
    Lou Manor
    • Lansworth…
    • 1971
    Cesar Romero
    Cesar Romero
    • Admiral Decker…
    • 1971–1972
    Jack Soo
    Jack Soo
    • Woodrow Yamada
    • 1971
    Chanin Hale
    Chanin Hale
    • Candy Jar…
    • 1972
    Michael Audley
    • Harris…
    • 1971–1972
    Kate Jackson
    Kate Jackson
    • Janice Morton
    • 1971
    Melissa Newman
    Melissa Newman
    • Ida Levin
    • 1971
    Rickie Layne
    • Fred Shimmel
    • 1971
    • Creator
      • Hal Kanter
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews6

    7.2277
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    Featured reviews

    9jamesjustice-92

    One of a kind

    James Stewart is a legend. Although he has done some mediocre movies throughout his career he has never given a bad performance and this little TV show is surely no exception.

    The Jimmy Stewart show is a type of family comedy that's relatable, warm, witty and a little quirky and it is easily one of the best sitcoms out there. It doesn't even have a laughtrack (which I think is not bad per se) but in the concept of this show it fits perfectly. Judging by the number of votes on the show here this can also be characterized as hidden gem, one that was simply forgotten behind much greater and bigger pictures of older days that Jim had done but it is not less entertaing for sure.

    The story revolves around Howard family with James playing the head of it and many funny and touching stories that happened to it over the period of (sadly) one season and 24 episodes. The show is unique in a way that every episode is introduced by Stewart personally as himself (not the character) and sometimes throughout the episodes he could just turn to the camera and talk to us, the viewers, which makes his family think he is talking to himself. I don't believe I have ever seen such a thing done on television before which should make one even more eager to watch it - I sure am to rewatch it again!

    So until I find another show that's as gorgeously sophisticated and immeasurably funny I wish you all peace, and love, and laughter.
    big_bellied_geezer

    Have another look and think.....

    As of this message, these curious shows are being ran again on TV. It is worth a look for more than just fans of Jimmy Stewart because they are a curious and mostly successful attempt at what I felt was a thinking person's comedy. If taken in the context of the times it was made, the show rightly asked for more attention and engagement from the viewer while watching, something that was mostly unheard of from most TV comedies of the time and perhaps even now. You can't walk off while watching and come back a few minutes later and "catch up with the story" like most comedies, this show doesn't work that way. I think this came mostly from the writing, each 30 minute episode was filled to the brim with details enough to fit in most hour long shows. All actors in their roles gave decent to great performances including Mr. Stewart who did his usual great job of acting while being "Jimmy Stewart"!

    So why didn't the show last longer than it did? I'm not really sure myself but I'm willing to guess. Perhaps it's one, none, or a combination of these ideas.......

    1. Longtime Jimmy Stewart fans at the time were expecting something different, perhaps a version of a typical classic Jimmy Stewart movie and what they got was a bit too much of a take of modern life forced upon them with too many details to follow for some of these viewers just to see a glimpse of their favorite star. Better to stay with their old memories perhaps?

    2. In the early 1970's, a lot of the younger generation of TV watchers had a pre-conceived notion that watching a "Jimmy Stewart" show was a bit "corny" because he was older and these viewers didn't give it a fair chance?

    3. The emergence of an exciting new era of radically different popular comedies in the early nineteen seventies like "All In The Family" "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" diverted much needed viewers away. A case of bad timing?

    4. As I mentioned earlier, perhaps it was too much show for the average viewer to pay attention to. The show demanded too much of their attention. No matter how decent or good a show is, most TV viewers(then and now) tend to only want TV to lull them and not to think too much.

    5. Perhaps Jimmy Stewart got bored with the project after awhile because he secretly didn't enjoy the grind of a weekly TV show. He like many was a very busy man in his career as well as his private life. Jimmy Stewart was and had been in the USAF Reserves as a high ranking Officer by this time. His Military record of service was and is a legend among many! Perhaps after awhile it became a matter of what was more important to the actor?

    Watch the show, enjoy it and be patient. It is just one part of a great actor's career and not bad even on it's own. You should be pleased! Feel free to comment on this post directly to my e-mail or here. Thank you.
    F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Second-greatest theme tune ever!

    'The Jimmy Stewart Show' was an extremely well-produced series that fell between two stools: it wasn't funny enough to be a comedy, and it wasn't gripping enough to be a drama. It was just an 'Aw, shucks' show which tried to make viewers feel good without stirring them much. Veteran actor James Stewart gave an ingratiating, folksy performance that didn't seem to involve much effort.

    This show had one of the very best theme tunes I've ever heard, only a notch below 'Hennesey', which is the greatest tv theme tune ever written. In the opening credits, Stewart rides a bicycle along a country road while the soundtrack plays a gentle leisurely instrumental theme with one triumphant crescendo during the bridge. It's the perfect music for bicycle-riding; to this day, whenever I ride my bicycle through the hill roads of North Wales, I whistle Jimmy Stewart's theme tune.

    An American tv producer gave me some old reels of this tv series. Every episode begins with the announcer intoning: "[sponsor of the week] PROUDLY presents ... Mister JAMES Stewart". So why is this series called 'The JIMMY Stewart Show'?

    Stewart plays a science teacher at a community college, approaching retirement age. Despite their age, Jim's wife gave birth to their second son, Teddy, only about 10 years ago. Recently, Jim's older son has moved back home (with his wife Wendy and their own son, also about 10 years old). So there are two annoyingly cute little boys under the same roof, and one boy is the other boy's uncle! The uncle had a more dominant personality, and he was usually able to pressure Teddy into committing mischief by saying: 'I'm your uncle, so you have to do what I tell you.' Much comic byplay was hung from this slender hook, but very little of it succeeded. Actress Ellen Geer, as Jim's daughter-in-law Wendy, was cross-eyed and had a bizarre semi-Latina accent: I could never figure out whether or not her character was meant to be Mexican.

    So far my review has been negative, but this series really had some strong merits. I especially savour one episode guest-starring Cesar Romero as a local businessman whose builders had just dug a foundation for his new business property. Before Romero pours the building's foundation, Professor Jim got permission for his archaeology class to go fossicking in the work pit, just to get some experience and maybe find a few arrowheads. To everyone's surprise, they discovered some genuinely significant relics of prehistoric man, and now Jim had to forestall the construction work until the entire site could be searched for artefacts. Romero's character was all business, and he didn't understand why these archaeologists couldn't just dig somewhere else and let him pour his foundation. The scriptwriters came up with an intelligent and believable ending for this episode, which is also one of the very few times I've seen scientific fieldwork depicted accurately in fiction.

    Another episode featured a very Capra-esque running gag, in which Jimmy Stewart kept balancing pencils on the edge of his desk and then using one finger to flick them across the room. This doesn't sound funny, but Stewart performed it in a very endearing way.

    The opening credits bill actor John McGiver as appearing 'very often' in the role of Luther Quince. (Great name!) McGiver played a recurring role (in most but not all episodes) as one of Jimmy Stewart's fellow professors. McGiver was an actor of narrow range but he was brilliant within that range, and he's excellent here (with poor material) with his cantankerous delivery.

    All in all, I'll rate 'The Jimmy Stewart Show' 8 points out of 10. I enjoyed watching it and it gave me a good feeling, and I suppose that this was the producers' original intention.
    1Jack_1515

    Best part of the show was John McGiver

    I caught the show when it ran on a retro TV channel and loving Jimmy Stewart and curious about it, I gave it a try, but with boring characters and boring scripts it's easy to understand why the show only lasted one season.

    The age difference between Stewart and Julie Adams is too wide to ignore. Although just 18 years apart, Stweart looks much older than his 62 years and Adams in her 40s could easily pass for 10 years younger.

    For a college setting in the early 70s the campus seems to be completely detached from the concerns of times. The lone Black faculty member played by Hal Williams disappeared after one episode. Series producer Hal Kanter in James Stewart: A Biography by Donald Dewey reported that Stewart protested against having a regular African American cast member as a faculty member in a position higher than Stewart's character because it would alienate Southern viewers. The character was dropped after one episode.

    The best part of the show was John McGiver whose over-the-top performance also showed moments of vulnerability (at least in one episode where his character is rejected by an infatuation). A young Kate Jackson also made her mark in a few episodes as a student.

    As a curiosity, it might be worth checking out an episode or two for serious retro TV fans, beyond that, there is not much to recommend.
    1retrodiscogamer

    Utterly outdated for the 1970s. Could have been filmed in 1961!

    Utterly ridiculous. This show could have been filmed in 1961, considering the atrocious fashions and music and Jimmy Stewart's childish acting. I assume Jimmy Stewart insisted on this since I have never seen a TV show from 1971 that looks so outdated. It is no wonder it was cancelled. It's a miracle that so many episodes were made. Who was the target audience? People at the old folks home? Every male has such ultra short outmoded haircuts that people would have literally starred at them in 1971 wondering where they had come from... Apparently Jimmy Stewart was living in a dream world in the 1970s.

    If you are a fan of early 1960s conservative humor then you will probably like this nonsense.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      After each week's show, James Stewart would take a moment before the credits rolled to speak directly to the television audience. He'd conclude his remarks by saying, "And, as always, my family and I wish you peace and love and laughter." Some felt the reference to peace was ironic as Stewart supported the Vietnam War.
    • Crazy credits
      In the opening credits, actor John McGiver is credited as appearing "quite often".
    • Connections
      Featured in You Don't Know Jack: The Jack Soo Story (2009)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 19, 1971 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Alle meine Lieben
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • JK-Ablidon Productions
      • Warner Bros. Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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