Headmaster (TV series) explained

Runtime:30 minutes
Creator:Aaron Ruben
Executive Producer:Richard O. Linke
Producer:Aaron Ruben
Starring:Andy Griffith
Jerry Van Dyke
Claudette Nevins
Parker Fennelly
Theme Music Composer:Patrick Williams
Kelly Gordon
Opentheme:"Only A Man", sung by Linda Ronstadt
Composer:Patrick Williams
Company:ADA Productions
Country:United States
Network:CBS
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:14

Headmaster is an American half-hour television comedy-drama starring Andy Griffith and broadcast by CBS in the United States during the 1970–71 season.

Griffith returns to TV

Headmaster marked the return to series television of Griffith, whose previous eponymous show had been one of CBS's major hits of the 1960s prior to his voluntary departure and a program which was still in production (as Mayberry R.F.D.), when Headmaster was launched. Griffith had just signed a three-picture deal with Universal Pictures but was so disappointed with the first film in the contract, the rural comedy Angel in My Pocket, that the two parties never made the other two films and he quickly returned to television.

With Headmaster, Griffith fulfilled his desire to be cast in a television series as something other than a rural bumpkin dispensing folksy wisdom; here his character, Andy Thompson, was the headmaster of a prestigious California private school, the Concord School. His wife, Margaret (Claudette Nevins), was an English teacher. Two other cast members from Angel in My Pocket joined Griffith on Headmaster: Parker Fennelly essentially reprised his role as a caretaker, here named Mr. Purdy, and Jerry Van Dyke played the role of athletic coach Jerry Brownell, Thompson's best friend. The show's theme song was performed by Linda Ronstadt.

Reception

Headmaster was given a favorable time slot, Friday at 8:30 p.m. Eastern Time, which had most recently been occupied by the hit sitcom Hogan's Heroes—but the program proved to be, by Griffith's own admission, "a very bad show" and was routinely beaten in the Nielsen ratings by both The Partridge Family on ABC and The Name of the Game on NBC. Production of the show was terminated after just 14 episodes, with the last first-run episode being broadcast January 1, 1971.

CBS (and sponsor Bristol-Myers) had spent some $3.5 million (roughly $25 million in 2022 money) to bring Andy Griffith back to television, and expected a whole season's worth of episodes, so Headmaster was hurriedly replaced by a new situation comedy, The New Andy Griffith Show. The "new" program was practically a carbon copy of Griffith's old one, complete with a North Carolina setting and even guest appearances by Andy Griffith Show regulars Don Knotts, George Lindsey and Paul Hartman in the first episode. However, it met with little more success than Headmaster, and it was cancelled after only ten airings, the last on May 21, 1971. (Also cashiered by CBS were former staples The Beverly Hillbillies, Green Acres and Hee-Haw, as part of the network's infamous "rural purge".) In June, Headmaster returned to the time slot in reruns for the summer, with the last repeat episode being aired on September 10, 1971.[1]

Availability

Viewing this series now is a rarity, despite the big-name lead. It is not on YouTube (other than its opening credits that are often posted due to featuring an otherwise-unreleased Linda Ronstadt performance), has had no DVD release, did not show up in syndication, and seldom is available with private collectors. One episode, "One for the Gipper," is archived in the collection at the Paley Center for Media.

Episode list

TitleOriginal air date

References

Brooks, Tim and Marsh, Earle, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows

External links

Notes and References

  1. TV Guide Guide to TV. Barnes & Noble. 2004. p. 280. .