The Egg and I is an American comedy television serial that was broadcast on CBS from September 3, 1951, to August 1, 1952. [1]
Based on Betty MacDonald's book, The Egg and I , the series focused on MacDonald's adventures with her chicken-farmer husband [1] after they sold their home in Manhattan and moved [2] to upstate New York. [3] John Craven portrayed Bob MacDonald, and Patricia Kirkland initially portrayed Betty MacDonald. [1] Claudette Colbert had been originally planned for that role, which she had played in the film based on the novel. Betty Lynn replaced Kirkland effective March 10, 1952, [4] because of Kirkland's pregnancy. [5] Some of the show's characters were carried over from the book and film, while others were new. [6] Ma and Pa Kettle were the MacDonalds' neighbors, and Jed Simmons was the couple's farmhand. Ed Peabody owned the general store. [4] The Egg and I differed from most serials in that each episode was self-contained; story lines did not continue from one episode to another. [7]
Montgomery Ford was the producer; Jack Gage [8] and Judson Whiting were the directors. Mel Goldberg, [4] Manya Starr and Robert Soderberg were the writers. The program was broadcast Monday - Friday from noon to 12:15 p.m. Eastern Time, [8] live, with no laugh track. [4] Originating from WCBS-TV, [9] the show initially was sustaining. [10] Later, Colgate was the sponsor on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, while Procter & Gamble sponsored it on Tuesdays and Thursdays. [4] The production budget was $15,000 per week. [11]
The Egg and I was the only TV show of its time that used barnyard livestock. The foxhound "was picked up at the Bide-A-Wee Home". The cow, rented from a riding academy, was brought to the studio in a van daily along with a stableman and two helpers. Chickens varied from day to day. Each day the studio received 50 chickens delivered from a market. After the episode they were returned to the market, from which they were sold to butcher shops and restaurants. [7]
A review in the trade publication Billboard described The Egg and I as "gentle, humorous, and heartwarming". [10] The review commended Starr's writing and noted that the casting had been done "superlatively in all its roles". [10]
Time magazine's brief review said, "Betty MacDonald’s saga of a city couple on a chicken farm is inspirational in tone, concerned with small problems, and played to the hilt by the cast, notably by a breathless actress named Pat Kirkland." [12]
Planning a 30-minute series, by 1951 CBS had bought the rights to The Egg and I and made a pilot film with William Prince and Diana Lynn in the leading roles. [11] (Another source says that Eddie Albert was the male lead and that the characters' names were Jim Blake and Betty Blake. [13] )