Leave It to Beaver characters

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This is a list of characters featured in the American television series Leave It to Beaver, which was broadcast from 1957 through 1963.

Main characters and cast

The show's four main characters appeared in all 234 episodes. In the opening sequence they were introduced in the following order:

The Cleavers-from left: Hugh Beaumont (Ward), Tony Dow (Wally), Barbara Billingsley (June), Jerry Mathers (Theodore AKA "Beaver").
  • June Evelyn Bronson Cleaver (Barbara Billingsley) is the wife of Ward Cleaver and the mother of two sons, Wallace (Wally) and Theodore (Beaver, the series' main character). She grew up in the Mayfield area and spent summers in Riverside, a community a few hours away, with her Aunt Martha Bronson, whom she says "practically raised her."[1] June attended boarding school, dated Ward in her teens, and attended college. When Beaver asks her about her life, she doesn't mention holding down any full-time jobs; she merely indicates that she had a part-time job she was dismissed from when she messed up her books too badly. When the show opens, she is a full-time homemaker and mother, often seen tidying the house, preparing meals in the kitchen, or tending her family. Her outside interests include social events such as weddings and her sons' school events. Many of the later episodes feature brief "after-school scenes" in which Wally breezes through the back door and regales his mother with a short teen-speak recital of his school day, the camera zooms in on June's amusingly-mystified countenance as Wally trots away with a snack in his hand. June has several housekeepers including Minerva,[2] Mrs. Manners (Beaver says she smells like gingerbread), Mrs. Manners' teen daughter Margie (who becomes a romantic interest for Wally),[3] and other unnamed women. Actress Barbara Billingsley appeared in the pilot, every episode of the series, and in the show's spin-offs. Throughout the series' run, she wore either a necklace or a dress with a high collar, jabot, or scarf to hide a surgery-inflicted hollow in her neck which would have caused on-screen shadows.
  • Ward Cleaver (Hugh Beaumont) is June's husband and the father of Wally and Beaver. He is a farmer's son who grew up on a farm near Shaker Heights, near Mayfield. It's never stated Ward went to the same prep school as June, but it is established that they dated in high school and he majored in Philosophy at college. He was an engineer in the Seabees during World War II, and during the show's run he works in an unspecified white collar office job. Co-worker Fred Rutherford is also his friend and the two men socialize outside the workplace. Though Ward speaks of his father and siblings when recalling his childhood, viewers only meet his globe-trotting Uncle Billy. Ward drives a Plymouth throughout most of the series—usually a top-of-the-line four-door hardtop sedan—and plays golf at a country club. Ward and June sleep in twin beds and have a portable television set in their bedroom—the only TV in the house until the last few episodes, during which a rarely-used console TV stands in Ward's first-floor den. In one episode,[4] Beaver allows a tramp to bathe in his parents' bathroom; the man absconds wearing one of Ward's suits and a pair of his shoes. Ward is a good-natured, understanding man who is often called upon to give his sons some moral instruction regarding their choices and behavior. Actor Hugh Beaumont often played villains and heavies in film and television before capturing his signature role as Ward Cleaver. Just before beginning filming a new season for Leave It to Beaver, Beaumont flew from his home in Minnesota to Hollywood while his wife, son, and mother-in-law drove. An accident on the road killed his mother-in-law and severely injured his son. Jerry Mathers later stated that Beaumont's entire participation in the production was seriously impaired by the tragic accident, with Beaumont often walking through his part.[5] Beaumont wrote the story for one episode from the second season, "A Horse Named Nick", and directed a number of episodes in the last two seasons, including the final, retrospective "Family Scrapbook". The character of Ward was portrayed by Max Showalter (credited as Casey Adams) in the pilot episode, "It's a Small World".
  • Wally Cleaver (Tony Dow) is June and Ward's son and Beaver's older brother. When the show opens, Wally is 12 and in eighth grade at Grant Avenue Grammar School. He is an above-average student and a top-notch athlete, eventually lettering in three sports. Wally is popular with his peers as well as adults and has little difficulty attracting girlfriends, among them Mary Ellen Rogers and Julie Foster. The girls referred to Wally as "the absolute most." His pals include Tooey Brown, Chester Anderson, the awkward Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford, and smart-aleck Eddie Haskell. Wally comes down hard on both Lumpy and Eddie when they pick on Beaver. Wally acts as a bridge in the show between his parents and his brother, often translating parental communications into kidspeak for Beaver's benefit and keeping Ward and June informed of Beaver's feelings, plans, and whereabouts. Leave It to Beaver was actor Tony Dow's first dramatic experience. He would later play the role in spin-offs. The character Wally was portrayed by Paul Sullivan in the pilot episode.
  • Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver (Jerry Mathers) is June and Ward Cleaver's younger son and Wally's brother. When the show opens, Beaver is seven years old ("almost eight") and in second grade at Grant Avenue Grammar School. Beaver is all-boy with baseball, carnivals, comic books, money-making schemes, and animals of all kinds high on his list of interests, while very proper ladies,[6] dance lessons, bathing, and homework test his patience to the limit. Through the series' entire six-season run, Beaver shares a bedroom and adjoining bath with Wally. In one episode, he moves into the guest room after a spat with Wally, but when shadows spook him, he returns to the safety of his old bedroom.[7] Beaver is not the athlete his brother is, but he does play football[8] and wins his school team's Most Inspirational Player award.[9] He also performs in many school plays. Beaver has several one-shot pets (an alligator,[2] a rabbit,[10] pigeons,[11] and other creatures) during the series' run. Though Beaver has many friends his own age, his best friend is Gus, an old fireman in the neighborhood, who gives Beaver sound advice and tries to keep the boy on the straight and narrow. Beaver wants and tries to do the right thing, but cannot help going astray and usually faces a moral lecture from his father at the end of each episode regarding some misadventure he has suffered or mistake he has made. A recurrent theme is Beaver's gullibility leading to embarrassing results, such as the time he was locked in the school principal's office while looking for the "spanking machine" his friend Larry Mondello had convinced him was there, or the time Gilbert misled Beaver into making a face for the cameraman taking their class picture. Perhaps one of the series' most-remembered scenes, when Beaver fell into a billboard's soup bowl, was prompted by his friend Whitey's challenge to prove that the steam wafting from the soup advertisement's bowl was coming from real soup inside. Actor Jerry Mathers played the role in the pilot and the show's spin-offs.

Recurring characters

Beaver's friends, classmates, and teachers

Beaver's best pals include apple-munching Larry Mondello (Rusty Stevens, November 22, 1957 – June 6, 1960), Gilbert Bates (Stephen Talbot, March 19, 1959 – June 6, 1963), Hubert "Whitey" Whitney (Stanley Fafara, October 4, 1957 – June 6, 1963), and the old fireman, Gus (Burt Mustin, October 4, 1957 – February 24, 1962). Except for Gus, Beaver's friends steer him into trouble time and again. Other friends include Harry Henderson (Keith Taylor), a chubby, bespectacled boy brought in after Rusty Stevens' departure, and Richard Rickover (Richard Correll, April 30, 1960 – October 18, 1962).

Judy Hensler (Jeri Weil, October 4, 1957 – October 15, 1960) is Beaver's snitching, goody-goody classroom nemesis on the show. Penny Woods (Karen Sue Trent, February 20, 1960 – January 20, 1962) filled the nemesis role when Judy was dropped. Other friends include Lumpy's sister Violet Rutherford, (Wendy Winkleman, 1957 and Veronica Cartwright, February 19, 1959 – May 2, 1963). Bengie Bellamy (Joey Scott) and Chuckie Murdock (Rory Stevens) are both small boys and Cleaver neighbors who cause trouble. Beaver's notorious classmate Angela Valentine is an unseen character, mentioned a dozen times in the series but never shown on screen.

Beaver had two female teachers in the earliest seasons. Miss Canfield (Diane Brewster, October 4, 1957 – March 21, 1958) is Beaver's kind and understanding second-grade teacher at Grant Avenue Grammar School and appears in four first-season episodes. Beaver has a crush on her in one episode. Alice Landers (Sue Randall, October 16, 1958 – February 17, 1962) becomes Beaver's third-grade teacher in the second season, replacing Miss Canfield. She remains his teacher for several seasons. Beaver develops a crush on her but his joy turns sour when she announces her engagement to Tom Brittingham. Cornelia Rayburn (Doris Packer, October 4, 1957 – June 13, 1963) is the principal of Grant Avenue Grammar School and Beaver's teacher after Miss Landers, replacing Mr. Bloomgarten. Beaver also has male teachers, including Mr. Willet and Mr. Blair, both played by Wendell Holmes.

Wally's friends and classmates

Wally's closest friends are archetypal wise-guy Eddie Haskell (Ken Osmond, November 1, 1957 – June 6, 1963), Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford (Frank Bank, January 24, 1958 – May 30, 1963), Tooey Brown (Tiger Fafara, November 15, 1957 – May 28, 1960) and Chester Anderson (Buddy Hart, November 8, 1957 – May 28, 1960). Eddie and Lumpy appear in all six seasons while Tooey and Chester appear in the first through third seasons. Buddy Hart's father, John Hart (star of television's Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans and part-time Lone Ranger), appears in three episodes though in no scenes with his son.

Several episodes in the last seasons concentrate on Eddie's adventures, with one episode following his plans to work on an Alaskan fishing boat[12] and another chronicling his troubles with a credit card.[13]

Lumpy is the heavy-set, not-very-bright, yet sincere football-playing Clarence, the son of Ward's co-worker, Fred Rutherford. While later appearances would cast him as a friend and classmate, initially he is an 'outsider'. He bullies both Beaver and Wally in his first appearance[14] He's presumably a year older than Wally, as in high school he 'repeats' his sophomore year.

Wally has several girlfriends through the series' run, with Mary Ellen Rogers (Pamela Baird, occasionally as Pamela Beaird, April 16, 1958 – June 6, 1963) and Julie Foster (Cheryl Holdridge, January 7, 1961 – April 11, 1963) making many appearances (Holdridge had earlier played girlfriend Gloria Cusick in two 1959 episodes). Carol Sydes (aka Cindy Carol) appears as Wally's first girlfriend, Penny Jamison, in "Wally's Girl Trouble", and later appears as classmate and date Alma Hanson.

Cleaver family, neighbors, and co-workers

Aunt Martha Bronson (Madge Kennedy, December 13, 1957 – March 28, 1963) is June's beloved aunt. She is a proper old maid who lives not far from Mayfield and wants Beaver to attend a prep school. Ward is nervous around her, as he feels that he must always be apologizing for something when she visits. She can sometimes be overbearing when she's around; e.g. in one episode she tells June she's not happy that Wally wears jeans instead of trousers, and makes Beaver wear an outdated boy's ['short pants'] outfit to school, where he is ridiculed by his classmates. She appears in five episodes and is mentioned in other episodes. Because she once gave Wally and Beaver umbrellas as gifts, they refer to her as their ""umbrella aunt".

Uncle Billy (Edgar Buchanan, December 30, 1960 – March 21, 1963) is Ward's fancy-free, globe-trotting, story-telling great-uncle. June does not trust him completely because he fills her sons' heads with tales of irresponsible living, but she does respect him enough to send him copies of the boys' school pictures. Despite his usual carefree attitude, he does prove to be responsible when necessary. He appears in two episodes, and is mentioned in several others.

Larry Mondello's mother Margaret Mondello (Madge Blake, June 25, 1958 – February 27, 1960) is a fidgety nervous woman who finds her son's misadventures exasperating. The character was dropped when Rusty Stevens left the show in its fourth season.

George and Agnes Haskell are Eddie's parents. George was played by Karl Swenson and George O. Petrie. However, in one episode, it is implied that Mr. Haskell's name is "Edward Clark Haskell, Sr."; and in another episode, where he's played by John Alvin, he is "Frank". Agnes was played by Ann Doran and Anne Barton. Ann Doran also portrayed toddler Bengie Bellamy's mother in one episode. Tooey Brown's mother, Mr. Mondello, Judy Hensler's parents, and Whitey Whitney's parents make one-time appearances. Larry Mondello's high-school sister is never seen.

Fred Rutherford (Richard Deacon, October 18, 1957 – May 23, 1963) is Ward's pompous, overbearing co-worker. Fred is the father of awkward teenage son Clarence ("Lumpy"), and a daughter about Beaver's age named Violet. The Rutherfords socialize with the Cleavers on a couple of occasions: playing cards in the Cleaver home and later, enjoying a picnic outing together. Fred travels widely and gives Ward a meerschaum pipe after visiting Germany.

Special appearances

  • Lyle Talbot appeared in two episodes as Mr. Dennison, the father of Beaver's first girlfriend, Linda. In one early episode, Linda is sweet on Beaver and invites him to her all-girl birthday party. Beaver suffers miserably until he sneaks off to a den in the house where Mr. Dennison entertains him with his antique gun collection. Lyle Talbot was father of Stephen Talbot, who portrayed Beaver's friend Gilbert Bates. Talbot had no scenes with his son.
  • John Hart, the star of the 1950s television series The Lone Ranger (54 episodes from 1950 to 1953) and the syndicated Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans, appeared in one episode as a scoutmaster. He also appeared in a fifth-season episode as a forest ranger. Hart was father of Buddy Hart, the portrayer of Wally's friend Chester Anderson. Though his son appeared in the scouting episode, the two had no scenes together.
  • Former baseball player Don Drysdale appeared as himself in the episode "Long Distance Call".
  • Ryan O'Neal, star of the classic tearjerker Love Story and television series Peyton Place, appeared as Tom Henderson, a young married man, in the fifth season's "Wally Goes Steady".
  • Barbara Parkins also starred in "Peyton Place" as Ryan O'Neal's love interest, and was Patty Duke and Sharon Tate's co-star in the film Valley of the Dolls— played Judy Walker in "No Time for Babysitters". Sitting for 12-year-old Beaver, she understands his embarrassment over having a babysitter at his age, and why he wants Gilbert and Richard to think he is alone when they arrive.
  • John Hoyt, veteran film and television actor best remembered perhaps for his role as a mad scientist in the sci-fi classic Attack of the Puppet People (1958), appeared as different characters in three episodes.
  • Jason Robards Sr. appeared in the third-season episode "Kite Day".
  • Kim Hamilton, the only black performer to appear on the show, played a maid at a wedding reception in "The Parking Attendants".
  • Richard "Dick" Simmons, portrayer of the title character in George W. Trendle's Sgt. Preston of the Yukon, played Mr. Langley in both "Beaver the Caddy" and "The Parking Attendants".
  • William Schallert (who later portrayed Patty Duke's father on The Patty Duke Show) played Mr. Bloomgarten, a schoolteacher, in the episode "Beaver's Short Pants".
  • William Fawcett, venerable performer in countless early television westerns, played Grant Avenue Grammar School's night watchman Mr. Johnson in "Beaver's Crush".
  • Lee Meriwether, winner of the 1955 Miss America beauty pageant, appeared as an unnamed housewife in "Community Chest."

Several Andy Griffith Show players appeared on Leave It to Beaver. Hal Smith, Mayberry's town drunk Otis Campbell, appeared as a restaurant manager in the fourth-season episode "Beaver Won't Eat", while Dorothy Neumann, Otis Campbell's wife Rita on The Andy Griffith Show, appeared in "The Community Chest" as a Mayfield housewife. Howard McNear, Mayberry's barber Floyd Lawson, played a barber in a second-season Beaver episode. Burt Mustin (Mayfield's Gus, the fireman) had a long career as Jud Fletcher on The Andy Griffith Show and Will Wright (Mayfield's first season Pete, the fireman) appeared on The Andy Griffith Show as Ben Weaver, a sour, miserly Mayberry department store owner.

Phyllis Coates, who portrayed Lois Lane during the first season of The Adventures of Superman, played Mrs. Donaldson in "New Neighbors," while Superman heavy Herb Vigran appeared in the first-season episode "Brotherly Love".

Two actors playing veterinarians on the long-running CBS children's series Lassie appeared on Leave It to Beaver. Frank Ferguson (Dr. Peter Wilson in the early seasons of Lassie) played Jeff, the tramp, in "Beaver's Good Deed", and Arthur Space, who portrayed Doc Weaver through the Timmy years of Lassie, played Mr. Judson in "Wally's Present".

Veteran film and television character actresses appearing on the show included Maudie Prickett as Mrs. Bennett, the owner of a lost chihuahua in "Beaver and Poncho", Irene Tedrow as Mrs. Hathaway, Aunt Martha's traveling companion in "The Visiting Aunts", and Lurene Tuttle as Mrs. Evans, Eddie's landlady in "Bachelor-at-Large".

Other characters

References

  1. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 11: "Beaver's Short Pants".
  2. ^ a b Leave It to Beaver, episode 2: "Captain Jack"
  3. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 140: "Mother's Helper".
  4. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 214: "Beaver's Good Deed",
  5. ^ Mathers, Jerry. ... And Jerry Mathers as The Beaver. Berkley Boulevard Books, 1998. (ISBN 0425163709)
  6. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 51: "The Visiting Aunts".
  7. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 21: "Cleaning Up Beaver".
  8. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 117: "Beaver's Team".
  9. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 197: "Beaver's Football Award".
  10. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 36: "Beaver and Henry".
  11. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 59: "Beaver's Pigeons".
  12. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 228: "Summer in Alaska".
  13. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 215: "The Credit Card".
  14. ^ Leave It to Beaver, episode 16: "Lumpy Rutherford".

Further reading

  • Applebaum, Irwyn. The World According to Beaver. TV Books, 1998.