Jack1000
01-30-2004, 05:40 PM
Guys,
Some have posted that there is a discussion. (or several discussions) that indicate that Jerry and Hugh did not get along well in Frank Bank's LITB book (i.e Call Me Lumpy ) Can anyone site specific examples from the book where this took place?
Jack
MikeZ
01-30-2004, 06:20 PM
I haven't read the book, but seeing this thread makes me want to go get it!
junecleaver
01-30-2004, 08:59 PM
Frank stated that the difference between Jerry and Hugh was like Oil and water. he said they didn't always get along too well, and when there was supposed to be tension between the two characters on the show, it wasn't always acting. and Hugh was obviously much older than jerry...so i guess all this pretty much took place during the run of the show
Jack1000
06-11-2004, 07:35 PM
Originally posted by junecleaver
Frank stated that the difference between Jerry and Hugh was like Oil and water. he said they didn't always get along too well, and when there was supposed to be tension between the two characters on the show, it wasn't always acting. and Hugh was obviously much older than jerry...so i guess all this pretty much took place during the run of the show
Hello June,
Can you (or anybody) list any specific examples that Frank talked about in his book where this took place?
Jack
comet97
06-11-2004, 11:39 PM
Originally posted by Jack1000
Guys,
Some have posted that there is a discussion. (or several discussions) that indicate that Jerry and Hugh did not get along well in Frank Bank's LITB book (i.e Call Me Lumpy ) Can anyone site specific examples from the book where this took place?
Jack
I found this bit of info.
:wave: :eek:
Non Fiction Book Reviews #56
CALL ME LUMPY:
MY LEAVE IT TO BEAVER DAYS AND OTHER WILD HOLLYWOOD LIFE
by Frank Bank & Gib Twyman
Frank Bank was the guy who played lunkhead Lumpy Rutherford on Leave It to Beaver and he describes what it was like to appear on the show, what the actors on the show were like, what it was like to be a child star, what it was like to be a young man in the sixties and seventies, and to be a broker during the Reagan/Bush era. A self indulgent memoir that allows Frank Bank to brag about his sexual and financial exploits and vent his spleen. Frank got his first acting job in the movie Cargo to Capetown where he got $150 fro one day of work. Not bad for a eight-year-old boy! After that he made two movies with Will Rogers, Jr. and then on radio on The Jack Benny Show and since he was a fat kid he got roles as bullies and dullards, and mad a good living. At fifteen in November of 1957 he went over to Republic Studios to appear in an episode of Leave It to Beaver. Satisfied with his work, the producers decided to make Frank Bank part of the cast. He found Barbara Billingsley, who was "flat-out" gorgeous, to have a heart of gold. Hugh Beaumont was a good director, a nice man who was a perfect counterpart to Barbara, but, for some reason, had conflicts with Jerry Mathers. With Tony Dow and Ken Osmond he explored the other sets, pulling pranks, and racing cars. Since Jerry Mathers was younger than the rest, Frank had very little to do with him. In 1963 Leave It to Beaver ended and at the age of 21 Frank had the role of Archie in the pilot Life With Archie. But after six years Frank was typecast and decided to go onto other things. What follows is an account of excessive sex and greed. A self-indulgent memoir that is a waste of a read.