Hazel: The Baby Came C.O.D.


11:30 am - 12:00 pm, Tuesday, December 30 on WBSF Antenna TV (46.3)

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About this Broadcast
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The Baby Came C.O.D.

Season 3, Episode 9

George and Hazel help a lawyer and his pregnant wife. Merrick: James Stacy. Evans: Oliver McGowan. Maria: Mikki Jamison. Shirley Booth, Don DeFore, Whitney Blake, Bobby Buntrock.

repeat 1963 English
Comedy Sitcom

Cast & Crew
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Shirley Booth (Actor) .. Hazel Burke
Don DeFore (Actor) .. George Baxter
James Stacy (Actor) .. Merrick
Oliver Mcgowan (Actor) .. Evans
Mikki Jamison (Actor) .. Maria
Whitney Blake (Actor) .. Dorothy Baxter
Maudie Prickett (Actor) .. Rosie
Howard Smith (Actor) .. Harvey Griffin
Bobby Buntrock (Actor) .. Harold Baxter

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Shirley Booth (Actor) .. Hazel Burke
Born: August 30, 1898
Died: October 16, 1992
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Born Thelma Ford, Shirley Booth began appearing in amateur plays at age 12, then made her professional stage debut four years later; her Broadway debut, in 1925, was opposite Humphrey Bogart in Hells' Bells. Booth toiled on Broadway for a decade before being cast in her first significant role. Ultimately, her work on stage and radio led to a lead role in Come Back, Little Sheba (1950), for which she won the Tony Award and the New York Drama Critics Award; she made her screen debut in the film version of that play (1952) and won the Best Actress Oscar for her efforts. Booth did a number of other films, but in her later years she was best-known as the maid Hazel in the TV series Hazel (1961-66). She retired after appearing in the TV series A Touch of Grace (1973).
Don DeFore (Actor) .. George Baxter
Born: August 25, 1917
Died: December 22, 1993
Trivia: Character actor Don Defore was the son of an Iowa-based locomotive engineer. His first taste of acting came while appearing in church plays directed by his mother. Defore briefly thought of becoming an attorney, but gave up a scholarship to the University of Iowa to study at the Pasadena Playhouse. He began appearing in films in 1937 and in professional theatre in 1938, billed under his given name of Deforest. Defore's career turning point was the Broadway play The Male Animal, in which he played a thickheaded college football player; he repeated the role in the 1942 film version, and later played a larger part in the 1952 remake She's Working Her Way Through College. In most of his film assignments, Defore was cast as the good-natured urbanized "rube" who didn't get the girl. For several years in the 1950s, Defore played "Thorny" Thornberry, the Nelson family's well-meaning next door neighbor, on TV's Ozzie and Harriet. Don Defore's best-known TV role was George Baxter on the Shirley Booth sitcom Hazel (1961-65).
James Stacy (Actor) .. Merrick
Born: January 01, 1936
Died: September 15, 2016
Trivia: James Stacy had passed the quarter-century mark before deciding upon an acting career. In 1956, Stacy's James Dean-ish handsomeness landed him a part in a Pepsi-Cola commercial. Afterward, Stacy put together a portfolio and started making the casting rounds. Unfortunately, his difficult attitude managed to get him fired from his first film role in South Pacific (1958), and had his lines taken away from him in Sayonara (1957). His recurring appearances as Fred on TV's The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet started the ball rolling again, and by 1965 Stacy was Columbia Pictures' answer to Frankie Avalon, starring in such Beach Party rip-offs as A Swingin' Summer and Winter a Go Go. He also found time to marry actress Connie Stevens, only to lose her to singer Eddie Fisher. Stacy's second wife was Kim Darby. From 1968 through 1971, Stacy starred on the TV western Lancer. Two years after the series' cancellation, he was seriously injured in a motorcycle accident, which cost him his left arm and leg. Courageously refusing to retire, he began appearing in roles specially written to accommodate his handicap. His comeback film was the 1975 Kirk Douglas western Posse, in which he was cast in the nonambulatory role of newspaper editor Hellman. In 1977, he starred in the TV-movie Just a Little Inconvenience, playing a double-amputee Vietnam veteran. And in Disney's 1982 fantasy film Something Wicked This Way Comes, Stacy plays a crippled, embittered bartender, who makes the mistake of his life when he wishes to be "whole" again. His last regular TV role was Rogosheske in the weekly cop series Wiseguy. In 1996, once he was retired from acting, he served a six-year prison sentence after pleading no contest to the molestation of a minor (Stacy's erratic behavior around his arrest negated the hope of only getting probation for the incident). He was released in 2001 and resumed his life as a private citizen. Stacy died in 2016.
Oliver Mcgowan (Actor) .. Evans
Born: January 01, 1906
Died: January 01, 1971
Mikki Jamison (Actor) .. Maria
Born: December 13, 1944
Whitney Blake (Actor) .. Dorothy Baxter
Born: February 20, 1926
Maudie Prickett (Actor) .. Rosie
Born: January 01, 1913
Died: January 01, 1976
Howard Smith (Actor) .. Harvey Griffin
Born: August 12, 1894
Died: January 10, 1968
Trivia: An imposing presence in films of the late '40s, as well as early television shows such as The Aldrich Family (1949), New York stage actor Howard I. Smith actually made his screen debut as far back as 1918, in Young America. Relocating to Hollywood in 1946, Smith usually played overbearing politicos or other figures of authority, but is perhaps best remembered today as Uncle Charley in the 1951 screen version Death of a Salesman.
Bobby Buntrock (Actor) .. Harold Baxter
Born: January 01, 1952
Died: January 01, 1974

Before / After
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Hazel
11:00 am
Bewitched
12:00 pm