5 reviews
Despite what most people would naturally assume, actor Andy Griffith did not at all leave the beloved "The Andy Griffith Show", which was aired eight successful years and seasons, due to how the final three seasons dropped in quality once Don Knotts's Barney Fife left at the end of Season 5. While Barney was a huge part of what made the show successful in his uptight, oversensitive character of the incompetent deputy, ratings remained high after he left, and the popularity the series was as strong as ever (even though the color episodes of those three seasons have a negative connotation when mentioned today). In short, there was no reason for it to end, at least to the average viewer. Except for one thing: Andy Griffith did not desire to be seen as only Sheriff Andy Taylor; he was an actor, and to keep at the show even longer would make it hard to find a new role to fit in future shows. And here was where Griffith made his big mistake: he left the series as it was still going strong, hoping that he could show himself worthy of other, more diverse roles.
However, the damage had already been done, if you want to call it that. Audiences could not imagine seeing him playing someone else; following "The Andy Griffith Show" was a new series starring Griffith entitled "The Headmaster", which ran for only fourteen episodes and featured him in the role of a school headmaster named Andy Thompson. The thing flopped as it was only two years after the other show, and even Griffith admitted it was an embarrassment. Thus, having failed to transfer his persona into a different setting, he tried again with "The New Andy Griffith Show", which ran even shorter.
"The New Andy Griffith Show" attempted to reprise the setup of a small town, this time called Greenwood, where Andy this time portrayed Mayor Andy Sawyer, who is installed just as the series opens. It's obvious the show tries very hard to be similar enough to the original while still remaining original, and perhaps that was the problem: it was close, but not the same. Audiences didn't want a new show, they wanted the old show, and it certainly didn't do to give Andy new family including a wife, a sister-in-law (who sort of replaces Aunt Bee) and two kids Lori and TJ. Initially, it did have a very strong start when the characters of Emmett and Goober from TAGS made an appearance in the first episode (with even Don Knotts playing a character who is practically Barney), but with Andy having a different name than everyone else, it had the feel of an alternative universe. Furthermore, the new character of Buff McKnight didn't cut the cake one bit, and is obviously trying too hard to take the place of better characters from the first show (like Gomer Pyle).
However, the show might have managed to be okay had it been given more of a chance. For starters, the two kids, Lori and TJ, are certainly not bad picks, although they certainly do better separated than when together (and then they just fight). Nora, the sister-in-law, is played for humor, and I could see her getting better overtime, although for the ten episodes we got she's nowhere near perfect. The character of the wife (Lee Sawyer, played by Lee Meriweather) is rather plain, but could have been made more interesting overtime. What it really needed to work was a presence like Barney in there to make things interesting; if Don Knotts hadn't made just that one appearance, the initial excitement wouldn't have fizzled out. Even the first several episodes of the original show were slightly odd compared to the later ones; every show gains momentum as the characters are more developed, and this one never got the chance to. Within months it was cancelled, the second of Griffith's failures, and it would take him another fifteen years or so before he finally managed to pick up a role that stuck when "Matlock" first premiered. It was too early on in 1971 to give him a new character, and while the two episodes I've viewed of this show aren't bad, they lack the charm and quirks that made the first one successful. Mainly worth a look for historical purposes than for seeing anything remotely close to the original.
However, the damage had already been done, if you want to call it that. Audiences could not imagine seeing him playing someone else; following "The Andy Griffith Show" was a new series starring Griffith entitled "The Headmaster", which ran for only fourteen episodes and featured him in the role of a school headmaster named Andy Thompson. The thing flopped as it was only two years after the other show, and even Griffith admitted it was an embarrassment. Thus, having failed to transfer his persona into a different setting, he tried again with "The New Andy Griffith Show", which ran even shorter.
"The New Andy Griffith Show" attempted to reprise the setup of a small town, this time called Greenwood, where Andy this time portrayed Mayor Andy Sawyer, who is installed just as the series opens. It's obvious the show tries very hard to be similar enough to the original while still remaining original, and perhaps that was the problem: it was close, but not the same. Audiences didn't want a new show, they wanted the old show, and it certainly didn't do to give Andy new family including a wife, a sister-in-law (who sort of replaces Aunt Bee) and two kids Lori and TJ. Initially, it did have a very strong start when the characters of Emmett and Goober from TAGS made an appearance in the first episode (with even Don Knotts playing a character who is practically Barney), but with Andy having a different name than everyone else, it had the feel of an alternative universe. Furthermore, the new character of Buff McKnight didn't cut the cake one bit, and is obviously trying too hard to take the place of better characters from the first show (like Gomer Pyle).
However, the show might have managed to be okay had it been given more of a chance. For starters, the two kids, Lori and TJ, are certainly not bad picks, although they certainly do better separated than when together (and then they just fight). Nora, the sister-in-law, is played for humor, and I could see her getting better overtime, although for the ten episodes we got she's nowhere near perfect. The character of the wife (Lee Sawyer, played by Lee Meriweather) is rather plain, but could have been made more interesting overtime. What it really needed to work was a presence like Barney in there to make things interesting; if Don Knotts hadn't made just that one appearance, the initial excitement wouldn't have fizzled out. Even the first several episodes of the original show were slightly odd compared to the later ones; every show gains momentum as the characters are more developed, and this one never got the chance to. Within months it was cancelled, the second of Griffith's failures, and it would take him another fifteen years or so before he finally managed to pick up a role that stuck when "Matlock" first premiered. It was too early on in 1971 to give him a new character, and while the two episodes I've viewed of this show aren't bad, they lack the charm and quirks that made the first one successful. Mainly worth a look for historical purposes than for seeing anything remotely close to the original.
- Tornado_Sam
- Feb 24, 2021
- Permalink
After his departure from his classic TV series and after the failure of his drama series "The Headmaster" which soon followed, Andy Griffith returned in a comedy which looks all too familiar. When the mayor of a small town announced his retirement, Andy Sawyer (Griffith) returned to his home town to act as temporary mayor along with his wife Lee (Meriwether), 2 kids and a housekeeper. As you may have already guessed the formula is quite familiar to The Andy Griffith show. In fact, in the pilot episode Goober and Emmitt are featured along with a surprise appearance by Don Knotts playing an unnamed character (you know it's Barney, he even calls Andy "Ange") The show had it's funny moments but suffers by falling on the heels of the original, and never really breaks out on it's own. Most of the main characters are only shadows of a show long gone, lacking many of the "quirks" which made the original so memorable. The show only lasted less than 4 months and as far as I know has never been seen in syndication.
The problem with "The New Andy Griffith Show" was pretty obvious; it wasn't the OLD "Andy Griffith Show", which is what people still wanted to see. They wanted to see it so badly that at the time this show came out, "Mayberry R.F.D.", which was a pretty pale continuation/spin off/sequel or whatever you want to call it of the original show was still on, and still in the Nielsen Top 20. Another, related, problem was the continuity or lack thereof. As mentioned previously, Andy's "Mayberry" friends like Barney and Emmett came by to wish him well on being the new mayor of his hometown, so they knew him. How come they didn't see anything wrong with his name now being Andy Sawyer, not Andy Taylor, his having a different wife, Lee, rather than Helen, whom he had finally married at the end of the old show and the beginning of "R.F.D.", and that he wasn't coming home to Mayberry, where he had grown up, but to Greenwood, which was now where he had grown up? I've heard of "retrocon", but this was ridiculous. That having been said, I wonder how this show would have done had it come out five or seven years after the old one went off, rather than two, or how it would have done if it had been the first TV show ever done by Andy Griffith. (It should be noted that "The New Dick Van Dyke Show", even though it ran for three years rather than part of one, was universally regarded as vastly inferior, largely because it was impossible for it to rise consistently to the level of the old one, and not because it was truly abysmal, for it was not, and really, neither was this.)
Lee Meriweather also played Andy Griffith's very pregnant wife two years earlier in 1969's, "Angel In My Pocket."
SYNOPSIS: Andy Sawyer had been working in a government capacity in the state capital when he was informed that the mayor of his hometown of Greenwood was retiring and looking for someone to take over the unexpired portion of his current term. Andy moved home,with his wife,Lee,and his two small children,to take the job. Greenwood was a small,rural Southern town and the role of mayor star Andy Griffith the opportunity to return to the type of gentle,homespun comedy that had made the original "The Andy Griffith Show" so very popular. This was on the heels of his failure in the much different title role that Griffith had in the short-lived series "The Headmaster",but it only lasted one season.
After eight seasons as Andy Taylor on the very popular "The Andy Griffith Show"(CBS-TV,1960-1968),audiences could not see him as Andy Sawyer,and here's the reasons why....For one it was pretty obvious since it wasn't the original "Andy Griffith Show" at all,much less being a disappointed to one of the worst shows the came out during the 1970-1971 season. Never the less,"The New Andy Griffith Show",which lasted one season on CBS-TV from the premiere episode on January 8, 1971 until its demise on May 21,1971 produced less than 20 episodes,all under the supervision of Danny Thomas and Sheldon Leonard (who again return as the executive producers of the series along with Andy Griffith himself,who was the executive in charge of production)along with Ronald Jacobs and also Richard O. Linke,as one of the producers of the show. Sheldon Leonard,who was one of the producers was also behind the original series also. In all aspects,Andy Griffith's new sitcom series was just as bad as it was-a train wreck waiting to happen and it did just that within one season. Another was when Andy Griffith's new sitcom comedy series came out,audiences who wanted to see it so badly and to see is this another reincarnation of Mayberry were it for quite a surprise. And a surprise it was. This was not like Mayberry at all,and for one the town of Greenwood was just similar to the likeness Mayberry,but with one expectation. This was a pretty pale continuation of another spin-off or sequel to cash in on the success of the "Andy Griffith Show",but this time around the magic that made the original series a bonafide hit and also made it one of the most beloved television shows of all time was gone in this one it really shows. At the time this show premiered in January of 1971,the spin-off "Mayberry R.F.D.",was closing in on its three-year run and also was the focus of the CBS'decision to terminated some of its rural programming which included other rural type country shows like "The Beverly Hillbillies","Green Acres",and "Petticoat Junction" and not to mention the musical country variety show "Hee Haw". While the new show was just starting out however,the original version of the "Andy Griffith Show" at the time was still in syndicated repeated episodes(and still is to this day)and it was still reaping in television profits,but not the new version which sucked.
Another reason why audiences didn't like Andy Sawyer because for one having a different wife was totally wrong. In the original,Andy Taylor at the end of the series' run of "The Andy Griffith Show",and during the premiered episode of its spin-off "Mayberry,RFD", Andy Taylor finally married the girl of his dreams,Helen Crump,and announced during that episode that he wasn't coming home to Mayberry,where he had grown up and also become the Sheriff of the town leaving his beloved Aunt Bee and son Opie behind. But to Greenwood? Where he is now and where he had grown up? Greenwood was nowhere like Mayberry and this was a shock. This was totally unacceptable and it was a total insult to his beloved fans of the original series too. This was ridiculous and way out of line. It was an atrocious revolting disgrace of the original "The Andy Griffith Show". In other words,it was an insult to begin with leaving Helen Crump behind for a different wife. His new wife Lee Sawyer(Lee Meriwether,a former Miss America-1955,an actress of several TV shows, and also later on of Barnaby Jones fame)was in fact no Helen Crump. The two kids,daughter Lori(Lori Rutherford),and son T.J.(Marty McCall)were cutting board material with the son T.J. for instance was nowhere near the cuteness of Opie Taylor from the original series. What really made it suck was in some of the episodes,some of Andy's "Mayberry" friends from the original series like Barney Fife(Don Knotts),Emmett Clark(Paul Hartman),Goober Pyle(George Lindsey),and not to mention other regulars from the original show like Goober's cousin,Gomer Pyle,who in one episode by the way comes back home from military service in the Marines(Jim Nabors)came by to wish him well on being the new mayor of his hometown. What??? Why all of these characters were back in this fiasco is beyond me. Even one of his co-stars,his administrative secretary Nora(Ann Morgan Guilbert-aka Millie Helper from the original Dick Van Dyke Show from the 1960's)was seen in several episodes by that didn't help save it. None even were some of the musical guests that came on board either,one episode featured country music artist Glen Campbell. It was truly absymal and it was a failure for the start.
After eight seasons as Andy Taylor on the very popular "The Andy Griffith Show"(CBS-TV,1960-1968),audiences could not see him as Andy Sawyer,and here's the reasons why....For one it was pretty obvious since it wasn't the original "Andy Griffith Show" at all,much less being a disappointed to one of the worst shows the came out during the 1970-1971 season. Never the less,"The New Andy Griffith Show",which lasted one season on CBS-TV from the premiere episode on January 8, 1971 until its demise on May 21,1971 produced less than 20 episodes,all under the supervision of Danny Thomas and Sheldon Leonard (who again return as the executive producers of the series along with Andy Griffith himself,who was the executive in charge of production)along with Ronald Jacobs and also Richard O. Linke,as one of the producers of the show. Sheldon Leonard,who was one of the producers was also behind the original series also. In all aspects,Andy Griffith's new sitcom series was just as bad as it was-a train wreck waiting to happen and it did just that within one season. Another was when Andy Griffith's new sitcom comedy series came out,audiences who wanted to see it so badly and to see is this another reincarnation of Mayberry were it for quite a surprise. And a surprise it was. This was not like Mayberry at all,and for one the town of Greenwood was just similar to the likeness Mayberry,but with one expectation. This was a pretty pale continuation of another spin-off or sequel to cash in on the success of the "Andy Griffith Show",but this time around the magic that made the original series a bonafide hit and also made it one of the most beloved television shows of all time was gone in this one it really shows. At the time this show premiered in January of 1971,the spin-off "Mayberry R.F.D.",was closing in on its three-year run and also was the focus of the CBS'decision to terminated some of its rural programming which included other rural type country shows like "The Beverly Hillbillies","Green Acres",and "Petticoat Junction" and not to mention the musical country variety show "Hee Haw". While the new show was just starting out however,the original version of the "Andy Griffith Show" at the time was still in syndicated repeated episodes(and still is to this day)and it was still reaping in television profits,but not the new version which sucked.
Another reason why audiences didn't like Andy Sawyer because for one having a different wife was totally wrong. In the original,Andy Taylor at the end of the series' run of "The Andy Griffith Show",and during the premiered episode of its spin-off "Mayberry,RFD", Andy Taylor finally married the girl of his dreams,Helen Crump,and announced during that episode that he wasn't coming home to Mayberry,where he had grown up and also become the Sheriff of the town leaving his beloved Aunt Bee and son Opie behind. But to Greenwood? Where he is now and where he had grown up? Greenwood was nowhere like Mayberry and this was a shock. This was totally unacceptable and it was a total insult to his beloved fans of the original series too. This was ridiculous and way out of line. It was an atrocious revolting disgrace of the original "The Andy Griffith Show". In other words,it was an insult to begin with leaving Helen Crump behind for a different wife. His new wife Lee Sawyer(Lee Meriwether,a former Miss America-1955,an actress of several TV shows, and also later on of Barnaby Jones fame)was in fact no Helen Crump. The two kids,daughter Lori(Lori Rutherford),and son T.J.(Marty McCall)were cutting board material with the son T.J. for instance was nowhere near the cuteness of Opie Taylor from the original series. What really made it suck was in some of the episodes,some of Andy's "Mayberry" friends from the original series like Barney Fife(Don Knotts),Emmett Clark(Paul Hartman),Goober Pyle(George Lindsey),and not to mention other regulars from the original show like Goober's cousin,Gomer Pyle,who in one episode by the way comes back home from military service in the Marines(Jim Nabors)came by to wish him well on being the new mayor of his hometown. What??? Why all of these characters were back in this fiasco is beyond me. Even one of his co-stars,his administrative secretary Nora(Ann Morgan Guilbert-aka Millie Helper from the original Dick Van Dyke Show from the 1960's)was seen in several episodes by that didn't help save it. None even were some of the musical guests that came on board either,one episode featured country music artist Glen Campbell. It was truly absymal and it was a failure for the start.