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| Bachelor Father | |
|---|---|
Noreen Corcoran and John Forsythe, 1961 | |
| Genre | Sitcom |
| Starring | John Forsythe Noreen Corcoran Sammee Tong Jimmy Boyd |
| Theme music composer | Dave Kahn (1957–1958) Melvyn Lenard Gordon (1957–1958) Jeff Alexander (1958–1959) Larry Ornstein (1958–1959) Johnny Williams (1959–1960) Conrad Salinger (1960–62) |
| Opening theme | "Bachelor Father Serenade" (1957–1958) "Bachelor Father Theme" (1958–1959) "Bachelor Father Theme" (1959–1960) "Bentley's Theme" (1960–62) |
| Composer(s) | Stanley Wilson |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language(s) | English |
| No. of seasons | 5 |
| No. of episodes | 157 |
| Production | |
| Producer(s) | Harry Ackerman (1957–1958) Everett Freeman (1958–1962) Robert Sparks |
| Camera setup | Single-camera |
| Running time | 30 mins. |
| Production company(s) | Bachelor Productions Revue Studios |
| Distributor | MCA TV (1963-1965) NBCUniversal Television Distribution |
| Release | |
| Original network | CBS (1957–1959) NBC (1959–1961) ABC (1961–1962) |
| Picture format | Black-and-white |
| Audio format | Monaural |
| Original release | September 15, 1957 – September 25, 1962 |
| Chronology | |
| Related shows | General Electric Theater |
Bachelor Father is an American sitcom starring John Forsythe, Noreen Corcoran and Sammee Tong. The series first premiered on CBS in September 1957 before moving to NBC for the third season in 1959. The series' fifth and final season aired on ABC for the rest of the show's run. A total of 157 episodes were aired. The series was based on "A New Girl in His Life," which aired on General Electric Theater on May 26, 1957. [1]
The United States of America (USA), commonly known as the United States or America, is a country comprising 50 states, a federal district, five major self-governing territories, and various possessions. At 3.8 million square miles, the United States is the world's third or fourth largest country by total area and is slightly smaller than the entire continent of Europe's 3.9 million square miles. With a population of over 327 million people, the U.S. is the third most populous country. The capital is Washington, D.C., and the largest city by population is New York City. Forty-eight states and the capital's federal district are contiguous in North America between Canada and Mexico. The State of Alaska is in the northwest corner of North America, bordered by Canada to the east and across the Bering Strait from Russia to the west. The State of Hawaii is an archipelago in the mid-Pacific Ocean. The U.S. territories are scattered about the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea, stretching across nine official time zones. The extremely diverse geography, climate, and wildlife of the United States make it one of the world's 17 megadiverse countries.
A sitcom, clipping for situational comedy, is a genre of comedy centered on a fixed set of characters who carry over from episode to episode. Sitcoms can be contrasted with sketch comedy, where a troupe may use new characters in each sketch, and stand-up comedy, where a comedian tells jokes and stories to an audience. Sitcoms originated in radio, but today are found mostly on television as one of its dominant narrative forms. This form can also include mockumentaries.
John Forsythe was an American stage, film/television actor, producer, narrator, drama teacher and philanthropist whose career spanned six decades. He also appeared as a guest on several talk and variety shows and as a panelist on numerous game shows.
Bachelor Father is the only primetime series ever to run in consecutive years on the three major television networks (ABC, CBS and NBC). [2]
Bachelor Father follows the adventures of Bentley Gregg, a wealthy bachelor attorney living in Beverly Hills who assumes the responsibility of raising his niece, Kelly (Noreen Corcoran), after her parents died in an automobile accident. [2] Other members of the cast included houseboy Peter Tong (Sammee Tong), teenage neighbor and Kelly's on and off boyfriend, Howard Meechum (Jimmy Boyd), Kelly's best friend, Ginger Farrell (Bernadette Withers) and Jasper, the dog. [2] Withers appeared in 51 episodes from 1957-1962; Boyd in 37 from 1958-1962. Plots center on Bentley's adjustments to his new role as an adoptive parent, his search for the right woman to share his life, [2] Kelly facing the usual problems of adolescence and young adulthood and her ritual of passage from high school to college and Peter's misadventures with his family, love life and financial schemes.
Beverly Hills is a city in Los Angeles County, California, United States. Located within 5.7 square miles and surrounded by the cities of Los Angeles and West Hollywood, the City has an estimated population of 35,000.
Noreen M. Corcoran was an American actress, dancer, and singer best known for her co-starring role in the television sitcom Bachelor Father, as the teenager Kelly Gregg, the niece of wealthy attorney Bentley Gregg, played by John Forsythe.

Sammee Tong was an American film and television character actor. One of Tong's more notable roles was that of Peter Tong on the sitcom Bachelor Father, which aired on all three national networks from 1957 to 1962.
The program's final season storylines led to Kelly's impending marriage to Bentley's junior partner Warren Dawson (Aron Kincaid). [3] The two met, became engaged, interacted with other couples and even met Dawson's parents (who flew in from New York on short notice), all in a span of three episodes. Without mention or explanation, Kincaid's character was dropped after four episodes and by the series finale, Kelly is seeing a different man with no marriage plans. Meechum (Boyd) appears in several Season 5 episodes, but he is never developed as a serious romantic interest for Kelly. As the series was canceled after 157 episodes, Bachelor Father did not have a formal series finale.
Aron Kincaid was an American actor and voice actor known for playing Killer Croc on Batman: The Animated Series and Sky Lynx on The Transformers. He also voiced characters for The Smurfs, and DuckTales, among others. In his later years he also had careers as a model and an artist.
According to John Forsythe, the Bentley Gregg character was based on two well-known Beverly Hills bachelors at the time. He combined their names and used it for the character's in the program. Because of the implication in the program of Gregg's aversion to marriage, no serious thoughts were given to casting a 'regular' or steady woman for him. Instead, Gregg is forever dating different women with only a handful ever getting a 'second' date with him.
Forsythe noted that casting the main characters took considerable effort. Then actor (and future California governor and United States president) Ronald Reagan, who hosted General Electric Theater from 1954-1962, suggested Corcoran for the role, believing her to be a 'typical teenager' and closer to what a normal 13-year-old was like, which Forsythe agreed. Corcoran was already an experienced actress with movie and television roles to her credit. She was 18 years old when the program left the air and had virtually 'grown up' into a young woman during the show's run.
The Governor of California is the head of government of the U.S. state of California. The California Governor is the chief executive of the state government and the commander-in-chief of the California National Guard and the California State Military Reserve.
The president of the United States (POTUS) is the head of state and head of government of the United States of America. The president directs the executive branch of the federal government and is the commander-in-chief of the United States Armed Forces.
Ronald Wilson Reagan was an American politician who served as the 40th president of the United States from 1981 to 1989. Prior to his presidency, he was a Hollywood actor and union leader before serving as the 33rd governor of California from 1967 to 1975.
Casting Bentley Gregg's houseboy was difficult as well. Sammee Tong was cast based primarily on his experience as a stand-up comedian. Forsythe believed much of the program's success resulted from the interaction between Tong and himself and that Tong had great comic timing. He also stated that Tong's character was unique for the time and that he was not the "typical" Asian house servant. Forsythe insisted on Tong being a major character on the program. Several of the program plots center around Tong, many dealing with his attempts to improve his position in life. Although none ever pan out (much like Bentley or Kelly) he does develop as a character through the life of the program.
Among the series guest stars were Edgar Bergen, Bill Bixby, Billy Gray, Ryan O'Neal, Frankie Laine, Mary Tyler Moore and singer Patti Page. Eddie Anderson, who portrayed "Rochester" on The Jack Benny Show, reprised his role in the Season 5 episode, "Pinch That Penny." Besides the 'Benny' link, the series had connections to The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show as Harry Von Zell appeared in five season three episodes as Bentley Gregg's friend and next-door neighbor. The Burns' son, Ronnie Burns, appeared on two episodes, as well. Fifteen-year-old Linda Evans also appeared in a guest spot on the series as one of Kelly's friends. Evans and Forsythe later starred in the primetime soap opera Dynasty together. [4]
Edgar John Bergen was an American actor, comedian and radio performer, best known for his proficiency in ventriloquism and his characters Charlie McCarthy and Mortimer Snerd. He was also the father of actress Candice Bergen.
Wilfred Bailey Everett "Bill" Bixby III was an American actor, director, producer, and frequent game-show panelist. His career spanned more than three decades, including appearances on stage, in films, and on television series. He is known for his roles as Tim O'Hara in the CBS sitcom My Favorite Martian, Tom Corbett in the ABC sitcom The Courtship of Eddie's Father, and stage illusionist Anthony Blake in the NBC crime drama series The Magician, but is perhaps best known for his role as scientist Dr. David Banner in the CBS science-fiction drama series The Incredible Hulk.
William Thomas Gray is an American former actor known primarily for his role as James "Bud" Anderson, Jr., in 193 episodes of the situation comedy Father Knows Best, which aired between 1954 and 1960 on both NBC and CBS. A motorcycle aficionado, Gray maintains a large collection of the vehicles.
Other guest stars include:
The series' pilot episode, "A New Girl in His Life", originally aired on General Electric Theater on May 26, 1957. [1] The series was first telecast on CBS on September 15, 1957. [2] It originally aired on Sunday evenings on alternating weeks with The Jack Benny Program (Benny guest starred on one episode) opposite NBC's Sally and ABC's Maverick. [5] The show moved to NBC as a weekly series on Thursday nights in June 1959 (the Summer 1959 run on NBC were reruns of previous CBS episodes) and concluded its run on that network in September 1961. [6] The series then moved on to ABC on Tuesday nights in 1961 for its final season. The last "first run" episode (the 157th unique episode) aired on June 26, 1962, with the remainder of the summer being reruns. [2]
Bachelor Father is the only series to ever run in consecutive seasons on all three major TV networks of the time (ABC, CBS and NBC).
This section needs a plot summary.(February 2019) |
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | "Bentley and the P.T.A." | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | September 15, 1957 |
| 2 | 2 | "Bentley Versus the Girl Scouts" | Jerry Hopper | Jerry Davis & Howard Leeds | September 29, 1957 |
| 3 | 3 | "Uncle Bentley and the Lady Doctor" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | October 13, 1957 |
| 4 | 4 | "A Date with Kelly" | Jerry Hopper | Jerry Davis & Howard Leeds | October 27, 1957 |
| 5 | 5 | "Uncle Bentley and the Aunts" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | November 10, 1957 |
| 6 | 6 | "Bentley and the Revolving Housekeepers" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | November 24, 1957 |
| 7 | 7 | "Uncle Bentley Keeps His Promise" | Jerry Hopper | Don Nelson & John Forsythe | December 8, 1957 |
| 8 | 8 | "Bentley and the Baby Sitter" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | December 22, 1957 |
| 9 | 9 | "Bentley and the Talent Contest" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | January 5, 1958 |
| 10 | 10 | "Bentley, the Homemaker" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | January 19, 1958 |
| 11 | 11 | "Bentley and His Junior Image" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | February 2, 1958 |
| 12 | 12 | "Uncle Bentley Loans Out Peter" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | February 16, 1958 |
| 13 | 13 | "Bentley and the Social Worker" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | March 2, 1958 |
| 14 | 14 | "A Sister for Kelly" | Andrew McCullough | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | March 16, 1958 |
| 15 | 15 | "Waiting Up for Kelly" | Jerry Hopper | Phil Leslie | March 30, 1958 |
| 16 | 16 | "Woman of the House" | Andrew McCullough | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | April 13, 1958 |
| 17 | 17 | "Peter Falls in Love" | Don Taylor | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | April 27, 1958 |
| 18 | 18 | "Bentley's Prospective Son-In-Law" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | May 11, 1958 |
| 19 | 19 | "Bentley's Clubhouse" | David Butler | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | May 25, 1958 |
| 20 | 20 | "Uncle Bentley and the Matchmaker" | Jerry Hopper | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | June 8, 1958 |
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | 1 | "Bentley and the Finishing School" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | September 14, 1958 |
| 22 | 2 | "Parent's Night" | John Newland | Jerry Davis & Alfred Lewis Levitt* | September 28, 1958 |
| 23 | 3 | "Bentley Leads a Dog's Life" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg (s/t) & Nate Monaster (s) & Ben Starr (t) | October 12, 1958 |
| 24 | 4 | "Bentley and the Teenage Siren" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | October 26, 1958 |
| 25 | 5 | "Bentley & Peter's Teacher" | Sidney Lanfield | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | November 9, 1958 |
| 26 | 6 | "Bentley and the Wedding Bells" | Sidney Miller | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | November 23, 1958 |
| 27 | 7 | "Kelly's Mad Crush" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr | December 7, 1958 |
| 28 | 8 | "Bentley's Big Case" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | December 21, 1958 |
| 29 | 9 | "Bentley's Economy Wave" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | January 4, 1959 |
| 30 | 10 | "Decisions, Decisions" | John Newland | Jerry Davis & Alfred Lewis Levitt* (t) Bill Freedman & Larry Rhine (s) | January 18, 1959 |
| 31 | 11 | "Bentley and the Kleptomaniac" | John Newland | Laurence Marks & Milton Pascal | February 1, 1959 |
| 32 | 12 | "A Phone for Kelly" | Bretaigne Windust | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr | February 15, 1959 |
| 33 | 13 | "Bentley, the Star Maker" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Nate Monaster | March 1, 1959 |
| 34 | 14 | "Bentley the Proud Father" | Earl Bellamy | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr | March 15, 1959 |
| 35 | 15 | "Bentley's Aunt Caroline" | John Newland | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr | March 29, 1959 |
| 36 | 16 | "Bentley, Man of Steel" | Earl Bellamy | Jerry Davis & Alfred Lewis Levitt* | April 12, 1959 |
| 37 | 17 | "Bentley and the Motorcycle" | Don Taylor | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr | April 26, 1959 |
| 38 | 18 | "Bentley, the Organizer" | Don Taylor | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr | May 10, 1959 |
| 39 | 19 | "Bentley and the Beauty Contest" | Bretaigne Windust | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr (s) Jerry Davis (t) | May 24, 1959 |
| 40 | 20 | "Bentley, the Hero" | Don Taylor | Arthur Alsberg & Ben Starr | June 7, 1959 |
* Because of the Hollywood Blacklist, Alfred Lewis Levitt was credited at "Tom August."
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 41 | 1 | "Peter Meets His Match" | Sidney Lanfield | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | September 17, 1959 |
| 42 | 2 | "Bentley and the Dog Trainer" | Bretaigne Windust | Everett Freeman & William Raynor | September 24, 1959 |
| 43 | 3 | "The Case Against Gisele" | Sidney Lanfield | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | October 1, 1959 |
| 44 | 4 | "Bentley and the Gullible Guitarist" | Sidney Lanfield | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | October 8, 1959 |
| 45 | 5 | "Kelly's Idol" | Bretaigne Windust | Laurence Marks & William Raynor | October 15, 1959 |
| 46 | 6 | "East Meets West" | Sidney Lanfield | Jerry Davis & David R. Schwartz | October 22, 1959 |
| 47 | 7 | "Bentley and Grandpa Ling" | Sidney Lanfield | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | October 29, 1959 |
| 48 | 8 | "Kelly: The Golddigger" | Norman Abbott | Mel Diamond & John Kohn | November 5, 1959 |
| 49 | 9 | "The Rescue of Rufus" | Sidney Lanfield | Cynthia Lindsay & Leo Townsend | November 12, 1959 |
| 50 | 10 | "A Key for Kelly" | Sidney Lanfield | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | November 19, 1959 |
| 51 | 11 | "Bentley's Double Play" | Sidney Lanfield | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | November 26, 1959 |
| 52 | 12 | "Bentley and the Brainy Beauty" | Sidney Lanfield | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | December 3, 1959 |
| 53 | 13 | "Bentley Plays Cupid" | Sidney Lanfield | Jerry Davis & Howard Leeds | December 10, 1959 |
| 54 | 14 | "Kelly's Secret" | Bretaigne Windust | Martin Ragaway | December 17, 1959 |
| 55 | 15 | "Bentley Goes to Washington" | Bretaigne Windust | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | December 24, 1959 |
| 56 | 16 | "Kelly, the Politician" | Bretaigne Windust | Henry Sharp | December 31, 1959 |
| 57 | 17 | "Bentley: The Gentleman Farmer" | Bretaigne Windust | Arthur Alsberg & William Raynor | January 7, 1960 |
| 58 | 18 | "Bentley and the Combo" | Sidney Miller | Phil Davis, Laurence Marks & William Raynor | January 14, 1960 |
| 59 | 19 | "Bentley and the Bartered Bride" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher, James Hong, Alan Lipscott & Eleanor Middleton (s) | January 21, 1960 |
| 60 | 20 | "The Blonde Issue" | Sidney Miller | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | January 28, 1960 |
| 61 | 21 | "Bentley and the Majorette" | Sidney Miller | Keith Fowler (t) & David R. Schwartz (s/t) | February 4, 1960 |
| 62 | 22 | "Bentley, the Model Citizen" | Sidney Miller | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | February 18, 1960 |
| 63 | 23 | "The Fishing Trip" | Richard Kinon | Arthur Alsberg & Mel Diamond | February 25, 1960 |
| 64 | 24 | "The Fortune Cookie Caper" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | March 3, 1960 |
| 65 | 25 | "Kelly and the College Man" | Ezra Stone | Arthur Alsberg & Mel Diamond | March 10, 1960 |
| 66 | 26 | "Kelly: The Career Woman" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | March 17, 1960 |
| 67 | 27 | "Bentley's New House" | Bretaigne Windust | Arthur Alsberg & Joseph Quillan | March 24, 1960 |
| 68 | 28 | "Bentley, the Stage Mother" | Norman Abbott | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | April 7, 1960 |
| 69 | 29 | "The Woman's Angle" | Earl Bellamy | Arthur Alsberg, Keith Fowler & Joseph Quillan | April 14, 1960 |
| 70 | 30 | "Bentley Meets the Perfect Woman" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | April 21, 1960 |
| 71 | 31 | "Bentley and the Travel Agent" | Earl Bellamy | Arthur Alsberg & Mel Diamond | April 28, 1960 |
| 72 | 32 | "The Very Friendly Witness" | Norman Abbott | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | May 5, 1960 |
| 73 | 33 | "Bentley and the Blood Bank" | Earl Bellamy | Arthur Alsberg, Mel Diamond & Joseph Quillan | May 12, 1960 |
| 74 | 34 | "A Man of Importance" | Earl Bellamy | Arthur Alsberg & Mel Diamond | May 19, 1960 |
| 75 | 35 | "Bentley and the Beach Bum" | Earl Bellamy | Arthur Alsberg & Mel Diamond | May 26, 1960 |
| 76 | 36 | "Where There's a Will" | Bretaigne Windust | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | June 2, 1960 |
| 77 | 37 | "Bentley's Birthday Gift" | Earl Bellamy | Everett Freeman & Sam Locke | June 9, 1960 |
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 78 | 1 | "Jasper the Second" | Earl Bellamy | Everett Freeman | September 15, 1960 |
| 79 | 2 | "Kelly Learns to Drive" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | September 22, 1960 |
| 80 | 3 | "Trial Separation" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | September 29, 1960 |
| 81 | 4 | "Mystery Witness" | Earl Bellamy | Lou Derman | October 6, 1960 |
| 82 | 5 | "A Crush on Bentley" | Earl Bellamy | Everett Freeman | October 13, 1960 |
| 83 | 6 | "Peter Gets Jury Notice" | Earl Bellamy | Everett Freeman & Danny Simon | October 20, 1960 |
| 84 | 7 | "Hilda the Jewel" | Earl Bellamy | Lou Derman & Mel Diamond | October 27, 1960 |
| 85 | 8 | "It Happens in November" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose (t) Helen Mandel (s) | November 3, 1960 |
| 86 | 9 | "How to Catch a Man" | Earl Bellamy | Mel Diamond & Mel Tolkin | November 10, 1960 |
| 87 | 10 | "Kelly, the Matchmaker" | Earl Bellamy | Arthur Alsberg & Mel Diamond | November 17, 1960 |
| 88 | 11 | "Bentley Cracks the Whip" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | November 24, 1960 |
| 89 | 12 | "Bentley and the Big Board" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | December 1, 1960 |
| 90 | 13 | "Dear Bentley" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | December 15, 1960 |
| 91 | 14 | "Bentley and the Lost Chord" | Earl Bellamy | Danny Simon | December 22, 1960 |
| 92 | 15 | "Ginger's Big Romance" | Earl Bellamy | Keith Fowler & Ralph Goodman | December 29, 1960 |
| 93 | 16 | "Bentley the Angel" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | January 5, 1961 |
| 94 | 17 | "Bentley and the Woodpecker" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | January 12, 1961 |
| 95 | 18 | "Bentley Goes to Europe" | Earl Bellamy | Keith Fowler & Everett Freeman | January 19, 1961 |
| 96 | 19 | "The Greggs in Rome" | Earl Bellamy | Keith Fowler & Everett Freeman | January 26, 1961 |
| 97 | 20 | "The Greggs in London" | Earl Bellamy | William Raynor & Myles Wilder | February 2, 1961 |
| 98 | 21 | "The Greggs in Paris" | Earl Bellamy | Howard Leeds | February 16, 1961 |
| 99 | 22 | "Encore in Paris" | Earl Bellamy | Robert Pirosh | February 23, 1961 |
| 100 | 23 | "There's No Place Like Home" | Earl Bellamy | William Raynor & Myles Wilder | March 2, 1961 |
| 101 | 24 | "Bentley Swims Upstream" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | March 9, 1961 |
| 102 | 25 | "A Man Among Men" | Earl Bellamy | William Raynor & Myles Wilder | March 16, 1961 |
| 103 | 26 | "Peter's China Doll" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | March 23, 1961 |
| 104 | 27 | "Bentley and the Counterspy" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | March 30, 1961 |
| 105 | 28 | "Peter Plays Cupid" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | April 6, 1961 |
| 106 | 29 | "Bentley and the Great Debate" | Earl Bellamy | Charles R. Marion | April 13, 1961 |
| 107 | 30 | "Bentley and the Nature Girl" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | April 20, 1961 |
| 108 | 31 | "Bentley's Mad Friends" | Earl Bellamy | Keith Fowler & Everett Freeman | April 27, 1961 |
| 109 | 32 | "Hilda Rides Again" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | May 4, 1961 |
| 110 | 33 | "Kelly's Charge Account" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | May 11, 1961 |
| 111 | 34 | "Bentley Builds a Pool" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | May 18, 1961 |
| 112 | 35 | "Bentley Slays a Dragon" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | May 25, 1961 |
| 113 | 36 | "A Favor for Bentley" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | June 1, 1961 |
| 114 | 37 | "Kelly Gets a Job" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | June 8, 1961 |
| 115 | 28 | "Kelly's Tangled Web" | Earl Bellamy | John Elliotte (s/t) & Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott (t) | June 15, 1961 |
| 116 | 29 | "Bentley's Barbecue" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | June 22, 1961 |
| 117 | 30 | "Drop That Calorie" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | July 6, 1961 |
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 118 | 1 | "Kelly's Graduation" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | September 21, 1961 |
| 119 | 2 | "The King's English" | Earl Bellamy | Dan Beaumont | October 3, 1961 |
| 120 | 3 | "Rush Week" | Greg Garrison | Jess Carneol & Kay Lenard | October 10, 1961 |
| 121 | 4 | "Kelly and the Freethinker" | John Newland | Sheridan Gibney | October 17, 1961 |
| 122 | 5 | "A Party for Peter" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | October 24, 1961 |
| 123 | 6 | "Never Steal an Owl" | Earl Bellamy | George Carleton Brown & Frank Gill Jr. | October 31, 1961 |
| 124 | 7 | "Bentley's Catered Affair" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | November 7, 1961 |
| 125 | 8 | "The House at Smuggler's Cove" | Earl Bellamy | Calvin Clements Sr. (t) Dick Conway & Roland MacLane (s/t) | November 14, 1961 |
| 126 | 9 | "Peter's Punctured Wedding" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | November 21, 1961 |
| 127 | 10 | "Star Light, Star Not So Bright" | Earl Bellamy | Jim Allen & R.S. Allen | November 28, 1961 |
| 128 | 11 | "Bentley and the Timeclock" | Earl Bellamy | Jim Allen & R.S. Allen (t) Elroy Schwartz (s/t) & Glenn Wheaton (s/t) | December 5, 1961 |
| 129 | 12 | "Birth of a Song" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | December 12, 1961 |
| 130 | 13 | "Deck the Halls" | Stanley Z. Cherry | Jim Allen & R.S. Allen | December 19, 1961 |
| 131 | 14 | "The Law and Kelly Gregg" | Stanley Z. Cherry | Jim Allen & R.S. Allen | December 26, 1961 |
| 132 | 15 | "How to Throw Your Voice" | Earl Bellamy | Shirley Gordon | January 2, 1962 |
| 133 | 16 | "Kelly the Yes Man" | Stanley Z. Cherry | Dan Beaumont & Ben Starr | January 9, 1962 |
| 134 | 17 | "Gold in Them Hills" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | January 16, 1962 |
| 135 | 18 | "How Howard Won His C" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | January 23, 1962 |
| 136 | 19 | "Pinch That Penny" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | January 30, 1962 |
| 137 | 20 | "Blossom Comes to Visit" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | February 6, 1962 |
| 138 | 21 | "Bentley and the Homebody" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | February 13, 1962 |
| 139 | 22 | "Summer Romance" | Earl Bellamy | Sheridan Gibney | February 20, 1962 |
| 140 | 23 | "The Hong Kong Suit" | Earl Bellamy | Hannibal Coons & Charles R. Marion | February 27, 1962 |
| 141 | 24 | "Will Success Spoil Jasper?" | Hollingsworth Morse | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | March 6, 1962 |
| 142 | 25 | "Strictly Business" | Earl Bellamy | Dan Beaumont, Larry Williams & Maggie Williams | March 13, 1962 |
| 143 | 26 | "On the Old Camp Ground" | Abby Berlin | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | March 20, 1962 |
| 144 | 27 | "A Visit to the Bergens" | Earl Bellamy | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | March 27, 1962 |
| 145 | 28 | "The Richest Cat" | Earl Bellamy | Sloan Nibley | April 3, 1962 |
| 146 | 29 | "The Twain Shall Meet" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | April 10, 1962 |
| 147 | 30 | "Bentley Goes to Bat" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | April 17, 1962 |
| 148 | 31 | "Kelly's Engagement" | Earl Bellamy | William Raynor & Myles Wilder | April 24, 1962 |
| 149 | 32 | "Kelly, the Home Executive" | Earl Bellamy | Jim Allen, R.S. Allen & Mel Diamond | May 1, 1962 |
| 150 | 33 | "Blossom Time at the Greggs" | Hollingsworth Morse | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | May 8, 1962 |
| 151 | 34 | "What Men Don't Know" | Hollingsworth Morse | George Carleton Brown & Frank Gill Jr. | May 15, 1962 |
| 152 | 35 | "Marry Thy Neighbor" | Hollingsworth Morse | Seaman Jacobs & Si Rose | May 22, 1962 |
| 153 | 36 | "Bentley Takes It Easy" | Earl Bellamy | Mel Diamond (t) & Seaman Jacobs (s/t) & Si Rose (s/t) | May 29, 1962 |
| 154 | 37 | "Boys Will Be" | Earl Bellamy | Jess Carneol (s/t) & Kay Lenard (s/t) & Larry Rhine (t) | June 5, 1962 |
| 155 | 38 | "Divided House" | Earl Bellamy | Mel Diamond | June 12, 1962 |
| 156 | 39 | "Peter, the Medicine Man" | Earl Bellamy | Everett Freeman & Larry Rhine | June 19, 1962 |
| 157 | 40 | "Curfew Shall Not Ring Tonight" | Earl Bellamy | Bob Fisher & Alan Lipscott | June 26, 1962 |
Bachelor Father was filmed at Revue Studios. It was primarily sponsored by American Tobacco (Tareyton cigarettes) and American Home Products Corporation (Anacin, Dristan and Chef Boyardee) throughout its original run. [6] The series was produced by Forsythe's "Bachelor Productions" in association with MCA's Revue Studios. [7] Bachelor Father pilot and broadcast season were produced by Harry Ackerman, who left Revue/MCA after the first season to produce other sitcoms like Hazel , Bewitched and I Dream of Jeannie for Screen Gems/Columbia. He was later replaced by Everett Freeman for the rest of the show's run. [8]
Reruns of Bachelor Father were syndicated on the Retro Television Network until October 2011. The show then began airing on Antenna TV where it remained on the schedule until January 2015.
This was the television schedule on all three United States television networks for the fall season beginning in September 1976. All times are Eastern and Pacific, with a few exceptions, such as Monday Night Football.

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