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Occasional Wife is an American that aired on from September 13, 1966 until August 29, 1967.

(1996). 9780140249163, Penguin Books USA, Inc..


Plot
Peter Christopher is a New York bachelor who enjoys the single life but is blocked in his professional advancement without a wife. Peter's boss, baby-food manufacturer Max Brahms, is a strong believer in marriage and family. Peter asks young hat check girl Greta Patterson to pose as his wife at company functions. In return, Peter rents Greta an apartment in his building. Greta uses the to slip into Peter's apartment whenever his boss visits unexpectedly. A man who lives on the floor between Peter's and Greta's apartments bemusedly watches them as they pass.


Cast

Callan and Harty married in 1968.


Episodes

Production
Fred Freeman and Lawrence J. Cohen created the show. Ernst Pintoff was the director. was the executive producer for the series, which was produced by in association with NBC. Thirty episodes were filmed in color with a laugh track. and Brown & Williamson were among the sponsors.
(2012). 9780786468126, McFarland. .

The series was broadcast from 8:30 to 9 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesdays.

(1999). 9780345429230, The Ballentine Publishing Group.
It first experienced good ratings, tying at #18 with The Man from U.N.C.L.E. in the . The series then fell to #64 in the ratings after having to compete against ABC's popular series and the staple The Red Skelton Show. Occasional Wife was canceled after one season.


Critical response
, writing in The New York Times, highlighted Harty's work, saying "she made a viewer more aware of what was right than wrong" with the show. Noting that the story line was a "well-worn gambit", he complimented the creators and the director for dealing with it in a "warmly understated" way. He added that Callan should become a "worthy foil" for Harty. Gould ended his review by urging the ending of "stop-action camera nonsense, wherein an offstage narrator tries to be coyly amusing between scenes".

  • Brooks, T. & Marsh, E. (1979). The Complete Directory To Primetime Network TV Shows. New York: Ballantine Books, pp. 454–455
  • Brooks, T. (1987). The Complete Directory To Primetime TV Stars. New York: Ballantine Books, p. 141
  • Tucker, D. C. (2010). Lost Laughs of '50s and '60s Television: Thirty Sitcoms That Faded Off Screen. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, pp. 171–177


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