The Goldbergs


7:00 pm - 7:30 pm, Saturday, December 6 on WNEMDT2 (5.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Classic sitcom about the warm, slice-of-life misadventures of a Bronx Jewish family with a gossipy, good-hearted materfamilias named Molly, who was identified by her signature salutation, 'Yoo-hoo, Mrs. Bloom.' Originally a long-running radio show, the series ran in 15-minute and 30-minute forms during different TV incarnations, and had the distinction of appearing on three different networks and in syndication. Creator-writer-star Gertrude Berg won an Emmy as Molly in 1950.

1949 English
Comedy Sitcom Family Coming Of Age Satire

Cast & Crew
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Gertrude Berg (Actor) .. Molly Goldberg
Philip Loeb (Actor) .. Jake Goldberg
Harold J. Stone (Actor) .. Jake Goldberg
Robert H. Harris (Actor) .. Jake Goldberg
Larry Robinson (Actor) .. Sammy Goldberg
Tom Taylor (Actor) .. Sammy Goldberg
Arlene McQuade (Actor) .. Rosalie Goldberg
Eli Mintz (Actor) .. Uncle David
Olga Fabian (Actor) .. Mrs. Bloom
Betty Bendyke (Actor) .. Dora Barnett
Ruth Yorke (Actor) .. Carrie Barnett
Susan Steel (Actor) .. Daisy Carey
Jon Lormer (Actor) .. Henry Carey

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Gertrude Berg (Actor) .. Molly Goldberg
Born: January 01, 1899
Died: January 01, 1966
Trivia: Gertrude Berg was, from the 1920s until the mid-'40s, the most prominent and successful female producer/writer/actress on radio and television, responsible for creating one of the earliest "franchise" series in electronic media, The Rise of the Goldbergs, later shortened to The Goldbergs. Berg was born Tilly Edelstein in New York City in 1898. The family originally had two children, of whom Tilly was the younger; her older brother died of diphtheria at a young age, an event from which Tilly's mother never recovered. Tilly's father opened a resort, Fleischmann's, in the Catskills. Tilly had aspired from an early age to a career on the stage, but her family had no way to get into the entertainment world. It was at Fleischmann's that she got her chance to work in entertainment. Starting at age 15, she wrote and rehearsed little playlets and sketches, which became ever more elaborate, and began devising characters on the page and the stage, based on who and what she knew from life in the Jewish section of East Harlem where she grew up. After finishing high school, she enrolled in Columbia University, where she studied playwriting. She later married Lewis Berg, and the couple left New York for a time to live in Louisiana, where Lewis landed a job in the research division of a sugar company. Tilly never gave up her desire to entertain, and when the family -- which soon included two children -- moved back to New York, she waited for her opportunity. She broke into radio as an actress, in a commercial for cookie mix in Yiddish -- which she didn't speak, but learned phonetically from her grandfather -- which proved so popular that she suddenly had a performing career. After that, she sold a few scripts on radio, and as early as 1928 started treading new thematic ground with what ended up as a one-shot show called "Effie And Laura," about a pair of working-class sales girls. Garry Marshall, born seven years later, obviously never heard "Effie And Laura," but that program eerily anticipated Laverne & Shirley 50 years later. In November 1929, she went on the air as the creator, writer, and producer of The Rise of the Goldbergs on NBC, in the role of family matriarch/host Molly Goldberg. Later shortened to The Goldbergs, the series became an instant hit as an island of genial urban ethnicity and warm family-based humor in a radio world dominated by most decidedly more middle American sensibilities. Strangely enough, it had never been her intention to portray Molly Goldberg -- she did it at the audition for the sake of expediency -- but network executives asked Berg to try doing it on the air, and their instincts were right. NBC was paying her the extraordinary sum of $2,000 a week, but really didn't discover how big a hit they had until a few weeks later, when a sore throat forced Gertrude Berg, as she billed herself professionally, to miss some episodes in her portrayal of family matriarch Molly Goldberg. The network received so many phone calls that the switchboard shut down, and over 100,000 letters came in. The Goldbergs, 15 minutes a day five days a week, ran on radio for the next 16 years until the end of 1945, switching networks to CBS midway through the run.In the course of the show's run on radio, Berg kept the humor level consistent, even as she included topical references to the worsening lot of Jews in Europe and anti-Semitism at home. The series' humor was accompanied by a message of hope and reassurance that transcended the setting and characters of the series itself. Immigrant families of all origins could identify with The Goldbergs, but middle American listeners also came to identify with and understand aspects of urban and Jewish life that had never before been presented on radio. For the 1933 episode coinciding with Passover, for example, Berg had a real rabbi officiate at a Seder, carrying the actual service on the air, this at a time when the airwaves were filled with anti-Semitism. And the reaction from out in the country was almost entirely positive. Berg became the Jewish community's de facto emissary to the rest of the nation. Polls from the mid-'30s placed her as the second most beloved woman in the United States after the president's wife, Eleanor Roosevelt. And there were commercial tie-ins with the series, including jigsaw puzzles, comic strips, and other products. And in the midst of the run, Gertrude Berg did a theatrical tour as Molly Goldberg that grossed $10,000 a week. The series lasted until late 1945, when it finally left he air. Berg did occasionally write for other shows and also authored one screenplay, for the 1937 Bobby Breen vehicle Make a Wish, co-starring Basil Rathbone. She was eager to try The Goldbergs in the new medium of television, and after some cajoling got an audition that led to a revival of the series in 1949, on CBS, as that network's first family sitcom. The show was so successful in its new incarnation that Paramount came knocking on the door with an offer to do a feature film, which was shot in the summer of 1950, entitled The Goldbergs (aka Molly). The year 1950, however, brought the first reversal of fortune to the series. A publication called Red Channels listed Berg's co-star, Phillip Loeb, who portrayed Molly's husband Jake, as a communist. Berg was able to resist the calls by her sponsor, General Foods, to fire Loeb, but only for a few months. The series was dropped and eventually Loeb was forced to take a buy-out of his contract. In the meantime, CBS had given the series' timeslot over to I Love Lucy. A bigger problem was finding a replacement for Loeb, which she only found two days before air time. Harold J. Stone became the new Jacob Goldberg, but his tenure with the show was an uneasy one, and he was eventually replaced by Robert H. Harris. The series continued until 1956, when it finally left the air. Berg wrote some scripts and acted for a few years. She wanted to revive The Goldbergs, but none of the networks or sponsors were interested. At the end of the 1950s, however, she went on the Broadway stage in the play A Majority of One, working opposite Cedric Hardwicke, and won a Tony Award. The role for the movie version went to Rosalind Russell, but the point was made: Gertrude Berg was more than a one-trick pony. She was cast with Hardwicke in a television series, The Gertrude Berg Show, which didn't last. And she never stopped trying to bring back The Goldbergs. Berg passed away in 1966 of heart failure.
Philip Loeb (Actor) .. Jake Goldberg
Born: January 01, 1893
Died: January 01, 1955
Harold J. Stone (Actor) .. Jake Goldberg
Born: March 03, 1913
Died: November 18, 2005
Birthplace: New York City, New York
Trivia: A third-generation actor, Harold J. Stone made his stage debut at age six with his father, Jacob Hochstein, in the Yiddish-language play White Slaves. Stone had one line--"Mama!"--which he managed to forget on opening night. He didn't act again until after his graduation from New York University. After gleaning valuable experience in radio, he returned to the stage in George Jessel's production of Little Old New York at the 1939 World's Fair. Stone made his Broadway bow shortly afterward in Sidney Kingsley's The World We Make, and thereafter was seldom unemployed. In 1952, he began the first of many TV-series gigs when he replaced Philip Loeb as Jake on The Goldbergs; within a decade, he was averaging 20 TV appearances per year. In films from 1956, the harsh-voiced, authoritative Stone was most often seen as big-city detective (as in Hitchcock's The Wrong Man), generals, and gangsters (he was Frank Nitti in 1967's St. Valentine's Day Massacre). Usually billed at the top of the supporting cast, Stone enjoyed a rare above-the-title starring assignment when he played investigator John Kennedy in the 1959 syndicated TV series Grand Jury. His other weekly-series roles included Hamilton Greeley (a character based on New Yorker maven Harold Ross) in My World and Welcome to It (1969) and Sam Steinberg in Bridget Loves Bernie (1972). In the latter stages of his career, Harold J. Stone unexpectedly found himself a favorite of Jerry Lewis, co-starring in Lewis' The Big Mouth (1967), Which Way to the Front? (1970) and Hardly Working (1980).
Robert H. Harris (Actor) .. Jake Goldberg
Born: March 28, 1900
Died: May 18, 1995
Trivia: British actor Robert Harris is best known for his ability to bring Shakespearean roles to life. Though most of his career was spent on stage, Harris also appeared in many feature films and occasionally on television. A graduate of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the London-born Harris took his first professional bow at the Westminister Theater following a 1932 production of J.M. Barrie's The Will. Harris made his Broadway debut in Noel Coward's Easy Virtue. Harris's film credits include The Fuzzy Pink Nightgown (1957), The Alamo (1960), The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943).
Larry Robinson (Actor) .. Sammy Goldberg
Tom Taylor (Actor) .. Sammy Goldberg
Arlene McQuade (Actor) .. Rosalie Goldberg
Born: May 29, 1936
Died: April 21, 2014
Eli Mintz (Actor) .. Uncle David
Born: January 01, 1904
Died: January 01, 1988
Trivia: Actor Eli Mintz has worked on stage, television, and screen. He came to the States in 1927 with his family and launched his career in New York Yiddish theater. Mintz is best remembered for playing Uncle David in The Goldbergs, a long-running play that was based on a radio show and was later adapted for a film and a television series. Mintz played David in all but the radio show. Following the demise of the television show, Mintz returned to Broadway.
Olga Fabian (Actor) .. Mrs. Bloom
Born: September 15, 1885
Betty Bendyke (Actor) .. Dora Barnett
Ruth Yorke (Actor) .. Carrie Barnett
Susan Steel (Actor) .. Daisy Carey
Jon Lormer (Actor) .. Henry Carey
Born: January 01, 1905
Died: January 01, 1986
Trivia: Actor Jon Lormer appeared in several films from the late '50s through the mid-'80s. He was also a teacher and director at the American Theater Wing in New York. Lormer guest starred in many television series and made-for-TV movies.

Before / After
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Seinfeld
6:30 pm