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IMDbPro

Lucy Calls the President

  • TV Movie
  • 1977
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
153
YOUR RATING
Lucille Ball, Gale Gordon, and Vivian Vance in Lucy Calls the President (1977)
Comedy

After Indiana housewife Lucy Whittaker (Lucille Ball) calls the White House to discuss a housing project, she finds herself making preparations for the President to visit her home for dinner... Read allAfter Indiana housewife Lucy Whittaker (Lucille Ball) calls the White House to discuss a housing project, she finds herself making preparations for the President to visit her home for dinner. Calamity and comedy follows as Lucy frantically prepares for the momentous event with th... Read allAfter Indiana housewife Lucy Whittaker (Lucille Ball) calls the White House to discuss a housing project, she finds herself making preparations for the President to visit her home for dinner. Calamity and comedy follows as Lucy frantically prepares for the momentous event with the eager support of family, friends and neighbors. The special is capped with a surprise ca... Read all

  • Director
    • Marc Daniels
  • Writers
    • Bob Carroll Jr.
    • Madelyn Davis
  • Stars
    • Lucille Ball
    • Vivian Vance
    • Gale Gordon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    153
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marc Daniels
    • Writers
      • Bob Carroll Jr.
      • Madelyn Davis
    • Stars
      • Lucille Ball
      • Vivian Vance
      • Gale Gordon
    • 9User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast13

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    Lucille Ball
    Lucille Ball
    • Lucy Whittaker
    Vivian Vance
    Vivian Vance
    • Viv
    Gale Gordon
    Gale Gordon
    • Omar Whittaker
    Mary Wickes
    Mary Wickes
    • Millie Baker
    Mary Jane Croft
    Mary Jane Croft
    • Midge Bowser
    James Brodhead
    • Mayor Wally Bowser
    • (as James E. Broadhead)
    Steve Allen
    Steve Allen
    • Self
    Lillian Carter
    Lillian Carter
    • Self (President Jimmy Carter's Mother)
    Joey Forman
    Joey Forman
    • Secret Service Agent Thatcher
    Ed McMahon
    Ed McMahon
    • Floyd Whittaker
    Stack Pierce
    Stack Pierce
    • Secret Service Agent Stockley
    John William Young
    • TV Director
    • (as John Young)
    Roy Rowan
    Roy Rowan
    • Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Marc Daniels
    • Writers
      • Bob Carroll Jr.
      • Madelyn Davis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.7153
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    Featured reviews

    joserus

    I remember this

    I do remember this TV movie just a little. Commenting on the other reviewer, on thing that I do remember about this show is the joke about the hors d'oeuvres. Mary Jane's character had made 50 deviled eggs that she was setting out for the president who was coming over. Vivian Vance went up to the tray and ate one as Mary Jane panicked and told her that each one represented a state and she had just eaten Kansas. Vivian Vance replied "for heaven's sake, I just ate my home state!" I didn't really get most of the jokes being just ten years old, but I do remember my grandmother laughing a lot.
    10mike-2691

    Lucy Calls the President and Creates Reunion Show!

    This CBS special starring Lucille Ball is a treat for audiences and a treasure for any Lucy fan. Lucy plays 'Lucy Whittaker' a Bundy, Indian resident who calls the then President Jimmy Carter during his weekly radio show to state her concerns about the new low-cost housing project that the federal government plans to build on the outskirts of her town. If the new housing project goes through as planned it will destroy Camp Sunny Slope for under-privileged children. "How would you feel Mr. President if someone tore down Amy's tree house?", asks Lucy. Then covering the phone she exclaims to others in the room, "I've struck a nerve!" So, President Carter agrees to stop by her house the next day when he is in her area for a fund-raiser. With the President coming to dinner, everyone and their brother wants to attend! Good friend Viv chimes in, "Lucille, I'm gonna have to get my hair fixed, buy a new dress and loose twenty pounds by tomorrow!"

    Penned by the original 'I Love Lucy' writers Madelyn Davis, and Bob Carroll Jr., "Lucy Calls The President" is ever-so fun to watch and co-stars several huge television personalities including Vivian Vance, Gale Gordon, Mary Wicks, Steve Allen, Mary Jane Croft and Ed McMahon.

    Vivian Vance, recently diagnosed with cancer and recovering from a Bells Palsy episode, gives her usual excellent performance despite the slight paralysis in her face. She plays, Lucy's next door neighbor and best friend. (Go figure!) Playing her feisty Republican father-in-law, Gale Gordon turns in a strong performance that drums up visions of Mr. Mooney from Ball's second series, The Lucy Show. Ed McMahon, plays Lucy's husband, and it's the first time Lucille Ball plays a wife since cavorting on the screen in the late 50's with then real life hubby Desi Aranz. As always Mary Wicks as 'Aunt Mary' is flawless with excellent timing. Steve Allen is very funny as himself and Mary Jane Croft, joins the old friends too and gives an admirable and classy performance.

    This appears to be the "Big Finale" for these tried and true "Lucy" players - even Marc Daniels, returns reuniting with Lucille Ball for the first time in 25 years to serve as director. Gary Morton, Lucy's second-husband, produces this funny, fast-paced vehicle for Ball along with Co-producers, Madelyn Davis and Bob Carroll, Jr. It is the only 'Lucy Special' to be shot on video tape instead of film - so the performers look a little harsher here without the advantage of "film" make-up and lighting. Vance, Croft and Wicks work with Lucille Ball for the last time in this comedic venture. Sadly it is Vivian Vance's last public performance.

    It is reported that Miss Ball stops the taping of the first scene in front of the live studio audience. It seems she became quite emotional, when she realizes for the first time in her television career, her deceased mother, DeDe, is not in the audience. Luckily, Lucy's long-time friend Eve Arden is in the audience and she seeks solace from her. But, like a true professional pulls herself together and delivers a tremendous performance.

    You can imagine the hilarity that breaks out as these "quirky" television characters prepare dinner and await the arrival of the First Family. Nostalgia runs rampant in "Lucy Calls The President" with Vivian and Lucy performing a traditional vaudevillian turn when they get in a western style cake-icing fight! It is great to see these two comedy legends working together again along with the supporting cast of "Lucy" stars. The comedy is top-drawer! I give it 3 out of 4 stars! ***
    7bkoganbing

    Almost like a pilot

    If I didn't know any better I would have sworn that this was a pilot for yet another Lucille Ball series. Might have been a good one. But I doubt that the White House would have put its imprimatur on a TV series, a special but not a TV series by having a first family member appear.

    I also don't think that Ed McMahon would have left the Tonight Show and Johnny Carson to do a series either.

    McMahon and Lucy are a married couple in a small Indiana town. Ed's father Gale Gordon lives with them and Ed owns a bowling alley. Lucy on a national call-in show speaks to President Carter about a community problem and he decides to drop in as he's speaking in Indianapolis the next day.

    The rest of the show is devoted to her frantic preparations for the presidential visit. Such Lucy friends as Mary Jane Croft, Mary Wickes, and Vivian Vance are also in this which features the usual Lucy schemes and situations.

    Lucy fans and others will love it.
    7slackline70

    An interesting window into the early part of Jimmy Carter's presidency

    I think I was 7 or 8 when this was on TV - so honestly I'm only giving it a 7 because I remember my parents thought it was good. My brother and I thought it lacked the zaniness of Lucy's previous sitcoms - but in retrospect I suspect she was eschewing the more slapstick-oriented style of the sitcoms for more sophisticated humor.

    What I remember most, though, is how it presented a view Jimmy Carter's presidency early on in his first and only term that has largely been lost to history.

    Believe it or not, people were actually kind of excited about Jimmy Carter at the beginning of his presidency. After Vietnam and Watergate, America wanted a nice, normal-guy kind of president - and Jimmy Carter fit the bill perfectly. And although people mostly remember Carter mostly for out-of-control inflation and his inability to handle the Iran hostage crisis - he actually set some landmark precedents for how US presidents conduct themselves. For starters - he was the first US president to ask to be called by his nickname throughout his candidacy and presidency.

    Richard Nixon was Dick Nixon to his friends and 'Tricky Dick' to his enemies - but was always Richard Nixon in any official capacity. And I'm pretty certain it never crossed Lucille Ball's mind to do a TV movie in which she invited him over for dinner.

    Whatever his limitations as a president, Jimmy Carter was always just Jimmy to his friends, his enemies, and to the country as a whole. And one of the very few Lucy and the rest of us would be happy to have for dinner.
    9MyMovieTVRomance

    Lucy and Viv make my heart go boom-boom!!

    Lucy and Viv are my favorite couple ever!! Ever since I was a little girl, long before I acknowledged myself as being sapphic and long before I ever really understood lesbianism or romance at all, Lucy and Viv still somehow struck a chord with me. They always made me feel all warm and fuzzy inside, and somehow, I knew that I wanted what they had with each-other. They are my ideal pair and always have been!

    Looking back, it's no wonder "The Lucy Show" was unofficially referred to as "Two Dykes In Danfield" by the writers and crew in the early years when Lucy and Viv were featured living together! As a kid, I hated knowing this bit of trivia, as I thought it was an insult. But now that I am a sexually developed woman and no longer a sexually shy child, I totally appreciate that secondary title, whether it was given with sincerity or not, because the fact that the writers and crew even thought of it proves that I'm not alone in sensing a certain deliciously lovely lesbian energy between Lucy and Viv!💜💜💜💜💕

    This here may not be the best TV movie in general, but we get great Lucy-Viv screentime, and that makes it so special! These two women, though supposedly straight in real-life, have an on-screen chemistry that turns me on and resonates with me on a more personal level than any other! They never kissed on the lips or had a sex scene, yet every touch of the hand, every sly remark, every inside joke, gives me all the warm fuzzies as though they had- now THAT'S chemistry!!

    They really should have made a movie together, just the two of them! It would have given all the official lesbian films a run for the money and even put some to shame!

    Lucy & Viv 4ever!!! 💌💜💜💜💜💜💕

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This was the last time Lucille Ball and Vivian Vance appeared on screen together. During filming, Vance was already suffering from the cancer that would lead to her death two years later.
    • Goofs
      When Lucy tires to remove her noisy necklaces during the interview with Steve Allen, the letters on the chains are "L" and "M" for Lucille Morton (Ball's married name).
    • Quotes

      Lucy Whittaker: [on the phone with President Carter] How would you feel if somebody tore down Amy's tree house?

    • Connections
      Featured in Dinah!: Dinah and the First Ladies (1977)
    • Soundtracks
      Sweet Georgia Brown
      Written by Ben Bernie and Maceo Pinkard

      Performed by Vivian Vance and Ed McMahon

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 21, 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lach' mit Lucille Ball: Ein ganz besonderer Gast zum Dinner
    • Production company
      • Lucille Ball Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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