This is a list of episodes for The Abbott and Costello Show .
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
1 | 26 | September 1952 | May 1953 | |
2 | 26 | October 1953 | May 1954 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "The Drugstore" | Jean Yarbrough | Eddie Forman | 1952 | |
Bud and Lou find a job in Mr. Fields' brother's drugstore and wreck the place. Includes the "Jonah and the Whale" routine. First Appearances of Lou Costello, Bud Abbott, Joe Besser, Sidney Fields, Gordon "Mike The Cop" Jones and Hillary Brooke | ||||||
2 | 2 | "The Dentist Office" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1952 | |
Lou gets a toothache and he attempts to get arrested so he can receive free treatment while incarcerated. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "Jail" | Jean Yarbrough | Eddie Forman | 1952 | |
Lou damages Mrs. Crumbcake's 79-cent water pail and she drags him into court for damages. In jail, Lou's crazed cellmate becomes enraged whenever he hears "Niagara Falls." | ||||||
4 | 4 | "The Vacation" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1952 | |
Bud and Lou head to the Biltmore Hotel near Phoenix for a vacation. The "Hertz U-Drive" and the "Pack-Unpack" routines are performed. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "The Birthday Party" | Jean Yarbrough | Eddie Forman | 1953 | |
Lou throws a birthday party for himself, but nearly poisons his guests when he puts ant paste on his hors d'oeuvres instead of antipasto. Bud throws him out and Lou consoles himself by ordering a giant decorated cake from Mr. Baggiagalupe. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Alaska" | Jean Yarbrough | Eddie Forman | 1953 | |
Lou is notified that his uncle Tom in Alaska has struck gold, so Bud and Lou plan to help him spend it. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "The Vacuum Cleaner Salesman" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud and Lou visit an employment agency run by Mr. Fields' brother. Lou gets a job selling vacuum cleaners door to door. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "The Army Story" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud and Lou join the Army, where they recreate their routines from the feature film Buck Privates . "7 X 13 = 28", "Drill Routine" and "Dice Game" are performed. | ||||||
9 | 9 | "Pots & Pans" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Lou sells pots and pans door-to-door, and tries to prepare a dinner to show their quality, with disastrous results. | ||||||
10 | 10 | "The Charity Bazaar" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud and Lou participate in Hillary Brooke's charity bazaar raising money with the "shell game." Lou blows his money at the kissing booth. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "The Western Story" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud and Lou accept Hillary's invitation to visit her uncle's ranch in Arizona. | ||||||
12 | 12 | "The Haunted House" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields & Eddie Forman | 1953 | |
Hillary will inherit her uncle's haunted castle if she spends the night there. Bud and Lou come along to protect her. | ||||||
13 | 13 | "Peace & Quiet" | Jean Yarbrough | Eddie Forman | 1953 | |
Lou sleeps all day but can't sleep at night. Bud takes him to see a psychiatrist. Eventually Bud checks him into a sanitarium for a night's rest. "Crazy House" is performed. | ||||||
14 | 14 | "Hungry" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud and Lou visit a couple of restaurants. In one they become involved with twin waitresses. In the other, Lou has a battle with an oyster. Also includes "Alexander 4444." | ||||||
15 | 15 | "The Music Lovers" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Lou takes music lessons in order to try to impress Hillary Brooke and her father with his musical abilities. While pretending to perform, Bud falls asleep and ruins the scheme. | ||||||
16 | 16 | "The Politician" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Lou runs for City Council, and delivers a speech in a neighborhood park that causes quite a disruption. First Appearance of Bingo The Chimp | ||||||
17 | 17 | "The Wrestling Match" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Lou and Stinky agree to settle their differences with a wrestling match. When Stinky becomes ill, his little brother Ivan the Terrible takes his place. While Mike gets a shave, Bud and Lou borrow his uniform to get a free meal at a restaurant. | ||||||
18 | 18 | "Getting a Job" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
The "Loafing" routine is performed. Lou is hired to deliver hats to the Susquehanna Hat Company on Floogle Street and encounters several lunatics on the way. Stinky and Lou get into a hitting match. Bud and Lou visit Mr. Fields' employment agency. | ||||||
19 | 19 | "Bingo" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Mike the Cop tells Lou that he must have a license for his pet chimp. But Lou accidentally applies for a marriage license. | ||||||
20 | 20 | "Hillary's Birthday" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
While shopping for Hillary Brooke's birthday present, Lou nearly destroys a grocery store. Later, at her party, Mr. Fields becomes upset about the noise. | ||||||
21 | 21 | "Television" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Lou is a contestant on a TV quiz show where he wins a pack of bubblegum. A neighbor slips on a piece of gum and takes Mr. Fields to court where Bud and Lou testify as witnesses. | ||||||
22 | 22 | "Las Vegas" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud and Lou pay $90 for a car and head for Las Vegas, where Lou takes part in a violent game of billiards. The "mudder/fodder" routine is performed. | ||||||
23 | 23 | "Little Old Lady" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud and Lou attempt to help an old lady who has been evicted. They raise $300 and she uses the money to bet on a racehorse. | ||||||
24 | 24 | "The Actors' Home" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Bud is taken away to an old actors' home where he and Lou perform their famous "Who's on First?" routine. Final Appearance of Joe "Stinky" Besser | ||||||
25 | 25 | "Police Rookies" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Mike the Cop helps Bud and Lou enroll in the police academy. Lou blows up the gym playing with a hand grenade. | ||||||
26 | 26 | "Safari" | Jean Yarbrough | Sidney Fields | 1953 | |
Hillary takes care of Bingo, who is sick. The whole gang travels to the Belgian Congo to find Bingo's parents. Lou tangles with a gorilla. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
27 | 1 | "The Paper Hangers" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman & Sidney Fields | Fall 1953 | |
Mr. Fields hires Bud and Lou to wallpaper an apartment because they owe rent. Later, as waiters in a restaurant, they brawl with hoodlums. | ||||||
28 | 2 | "Uncle Bozzo's Visit" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Fall 1953 | |
Lou's eccentric opera-singing uncle Bozzo comes from Italy to stay with the boys for a couple of months. | ||||||
29 | 3 | "In Society" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Fall 1953 | |
A wealthy society matron pays Bud to attend a formal reception and impersonate the Duke of Gluten. Lou comes along pretending to be his cousin, the Earl of Waldo. Final Appearance of Hillary Brooke | ||||||
30 | 4 | "Life Insurance" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman & Sidney Fields | Fall 1953 | |
Mr. Fields takes out an insurance policy on Lou. Later, when Bud takes Lou on a hunting trip so he can get some rest, he suspects Bud and Mr. Fields want to kill him for the insurance money. | ||||||
31 | 5 | "Pest Exterminators" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Fall 1953 | |
Bud and Lou are pest exterminators who are mistaken for psychiatrists when they attend to Mrs. Featherton's "aunts." | ||||||
32 | 6 | "Killer's Wife" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Fall 1953 | |
A heavyweight prize fighter named Killer thinks that Lou is having an affair with his beautiful wife. Bud attempts to get Lou trained and fit in a gym. Guest Star Max Baer | ||||||
33 | 7 | "Cheap Skates" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Fall 1953 | |
Bud and Lou accidentally buy a crate of rollerskates, not knowing that they have stolen diamonds hidden inside. Final Appearance of Bingo The Chimp | ||||||
34 | 8 | "South of Dixie" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Fall 1953 | |
Lou falls in love with a counter girl, and lands himself and Bud roles in a Civil War melodrama with her. | ||||||
35 | 9 | "From Bed to Worse" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Fall 1953 | |
Bud and Lou attempt to plant a backyard garden in order to win a cash prize offered by a civic group. | ||||||
36 | 10 | "$1000 TV Prize" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Winter 1954 | |
Lou wins a $1000 TV quiz prize when he answers the phone in Mr. Fields' apartment, then has to get Mr. Fields out of the way so he can collect it. | ||||||
37 | 11 | "Amnesia" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Winter 1954 | |
Lou is in love with a girl he has never met. As a gag, Bud and his friends convince him that he has already married the girl. The woman who poses as his wife then makes his existence miserable. | ||||||
38 | 12 | "Efficiency Experts" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Winter 1954 | |
Bud and Lou are hired to restrain a wealthy man's daughters from spending money. The girls then turn the tables on them. | ||||||
39 | 13 | "Car Trouble" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Winter 1954 | |
Lou wins a car. But Bud sells it to buy a cheaper one. Using the profits, they go on a vacation to Flint, Michigan. | ||||||
40 | 14 | "Wife Wanted" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Winter 1954 | |
Lou will inherit $10,000 from his grandfather in Alaska if he is married. He wants to marry a former girlfriend who is dating a man named Bonebender Brodsky. | ||||||
41 | 15 | "Uncle from New Jersey" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Winter 1954 | |
Mr. Fields is about to evict the boys. Bud convinces Mr. Fields that Lou's Uncle Ruppert is a millionaire and Lou is the sole heir. Lou impersonates the visiting uncle. Mike the Cop begins to believe that the visiting uncle (Who had died 15 years earlier) has been murdered. | ||||||
42 | 16 | "Private Eye" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Winter 1954 | |
Lou receives his diploma from the Watchdog Correspondence School. He helps a neighbor in the rooming house locate $50,000 in bonds in a haunted house. | ||||||
43 | 17 | "The Tax Return" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Winter 1954 | |
Lou receives a tax refund check for one million dollars and thirteen cents. He takes the check to a bank and demands cash, and is followed by crooks. | ||||||
44 | 18 | "Public Enemies" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Winter 1954 | |
Lou is mistaken for a crook named Dapper Dan and is forced to take part in a safecracking job. | ||||||
45 | 19 | "Bank Holdup" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Winter 1954 | |
Bud and Lou unwittingly take jobs as armed bodyguards for a couple of hoodlums and assist in a bank robbery. They use their share of money to pay their rent, then later try to get it back from Mr. Fields' safe. | ||||||
46 | 20 | "Well Oiled" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Winter 1954 | |
Bud and Lou help Mr. Fields, who is being threatened with a lawsuit. Lou poses as a Texas millionaire to help discredit the woman. Final Appearance of Gordon "Mike The Cop" Jones | ||||||
47 | 21 | "The Pigeon" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Spring 1954 | |
Bud and Lou's beautiful next door neighbor uses Lou as a decoy to help break up with her mobster boyfriend. | ||||||
48 | 22 | "Honeymoon House" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Spring 1954 | |
Bud and Mr. Fields help Lou put together a prefab house in order to impress his fiancée and her parents. A jealous former boyfriend sabotages their work. | ||||||
49 | 23 | "Fencing Master" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Spring 1954 | |
Lou insults a neighbor, who is a fencing champion, and Bud gets him involved in an experiment of a mad scientist who convinces Lou that he is indestructible. | ||||||
50 | 24 | "Beauty Contest Story" | Jean Yarbrough | Jack Townley | Spring 1954 | |
Bud and Lou judge a beauty contest and pressure is applied to sway their votes. | ||||||
51 | 25 | "Fall Guy" | Jean Yarbrough | Clyde Bruckman | Spring 1954 | |
Bud and Lou want to take two sisters on a date but their father convinces the boys to put an antenna on his roof. | ||||||
52 | 26 | "Barber Lou" | Jean Yarbrough | Lou Costello & Sidney Fields | 1954 | |
Lou tries to give Bud a rubdown following instructions from a radio show, but he's tuned into a program explaining how to paint a car at home. |
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein is a 1948 American horror comedy film directed by Charles Barton. The film features Count Dracula who has become partners with Dr. Sandra Mornay, as Dracula requires a "simple, pliable" brain to reactivate Frankenstein's monster. Dracula discovers that the "ideal" brain belongs to Wilbur Grey who is wooed by Mornay to the operating table, despite the warnings of Lawrence Talbot.
William Alexander "Bud" Abbott was an American comedian, actor and producer. He was best known as the straight man half of the comedy duo Abbott and Costello.
Louis Francis Cristillo, professionally known as Lou Costello, was an American comedian, actor and producer. He was best known for his double act with straight man Bud Abbott and their routine "Who's on First?".
Abbott and Costello were an American comedy duo composed of comedians Bud Abbott and Lou Costello, whose work in radio, film, and television made them the most popular comedy team of the 1940s and 1950s, and the highest-paid entertainers in the world during the Second World War. Their patter routine "Who's on First?" is considered one of the greatest comedy routines of all time.
"Who's on First?" is a comedy routine made famous by American comedy duo Abbott and Costello. The premise of the sketch is that Abbott is identifying the players on a baseball team for Costello. However, the players' names can simultaneously serve as the basis for questions and responses, leading to repeated misinterpretations and growing frustration between the performers.
Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy is a 1955 American horror comedy film directed by Charles Lamont and starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello. It is the 28th and final Abbott and Costello film produced by Universal-International.
The Abbott and Costello Show is an American television sitcom starring the comedy team of Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. The program premiered in syndication in the fall of 1952 and ran two seasons to the spring of 1954. Each season ran 26 episodes.
The Naughty Nineties is a 1945 American film starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello. The film is noteworthy for containing a filmed version of the duo's famous "Who's on First?" routine. This version is shown at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York.
Hit the Ice is a 1943 film starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello and their first film directed by Charles Lamont. Lamont later directed the team's last few films in the 1950s.
In the Navy is a 1941 film starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello. It was the second service comedy based on the peacetime draft of 1940. The comedy team appeared in two other service comedies in 1941, before the United States entered the war: Buck Privates released in January and Keep 'Em Flying released in November.
Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff is a 1949 horror comedy film directed by Charles Barton and starring Abbott and Costello and Boris Karloff.
Rio Rita is a 1942 American comedy film directed by S. Sylvan Simon and starring Abbott and Costello. It was based upon the 1927 Flo Ziegfeld Broadway musical, which was previously made into a 1929 film also titled Rio Rita that starred the comedy team of Wheeler & Woolsey. Kathryn Grayson and John Carroll replace the 1929 version's Bebe Daniels and John Boles.
Who Done It? is a 1942 American comedy-mystery film directed by Erle C. Kenton and starring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. It is noteworthy as their first feature that contains no musical numbers.
Lost in a Harem is a 1944 American comedy film directed by Charles Reisner and starring the team of Abbott and Costello alongside Marilyn Maxwell.
The Time of Their Lives is a 1946 American fantasy-comedy film starring the comedic duo Abbott and Costello and directed by Charles Barton.
Abbott and Costello in the Foreign Legion is a black and white 1950 American comedy film directed by Charles Lamont and starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello.
Dance with Me, Henry is a 1956 film starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello. It is the final film that they starred in together, although Costello starred in one more film before his death, The 30 Foot Bride of Candy Rock.
Martin Ragaway was an American comedy writer.
The Abbott and Costello Cartoon Show is an American half-hour animated series of the famous comedy duo that aired in syndication from September 9, 1967 to June 1, 1968. Each of the 39 individual episodes consisted of four five-minute cartoons. The cartoons were created jointly by Hanna-Barbera, RKO General and Jomar Productions between 1965 and 1967. The series was syndicated by Gold Key Entertainment and King World Productions, with the rights now owned by Warner Bros. Television Distribution.
The Abbott and Costello Show is a comedy program from the era of old-time radio in the United States. It was broadcast first on NBC and later on ABC, beginning on July 3, 1940 and ending on June 9, 1949.