The Tammy Grimes Show (TV Series 1966) Poster

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Tammy and the script doctor
With her distinctively angular face, and her distinctly smoky voice (with that cod mid-Atlantic accent), Tammy Grimes was one of the most unique and attractive talents of the 1960s. Fresh from her triumph in the Broadway musical 'High Spirits', in which she played a very sexy ghost named Elvira, Miss Grimes was set to conquer television in 1966 as the star of a new sitcom in which she would again play a bewitchingly supernatural woman. However, when she learnt that her work in this TV series would involve lots of time-consuming trick photography (for the special effects), she then vowed that the sitcom would be a flop, and she quit.

That series (which recast the lead role, and went on without her) was 'Bewitched', a huge hit. Having passed up the chance to play Samantha Stevens, Miss Grimes instead chose to star in a sitcom with no trick photography at all, which she must have considered an improvement over 'Bewitched' because it was called 'The Tammy Grimes Show'.

Although not quite as awful as 'You're in the Picture' (the notorious game show that lasted only one night), 'The Tammy Grimes Show' was the first clanging disaster of American series television, as this was the first comedy or drama to be yanked in mid-season for sheer awfulness. Ten episodes of Tammy Grimes's sitcom were filmed and edited, but only four were ever aired in the USA. I viewed the episodes at a London television office, where an American producer was hoping to sell the UK rights to the series (after it had already been cancelled in America). There were no takers. In the London screening room, we all had a good laugh when we saw the name of Tammy Grimes's production company in this show's credits: Tamworth Productions. Nobody told Miss Grimes that, in England, 'Tamworth' is a breed of swine.

It seemed good on paper. Tammy Grimes played a character named Tammy Ward. (That name is further proof of MacIntyre's Law, which states that a sitcom probably stinks if the main character has the same forename as the actor playing the role.) Tammy is a dizzy spendthrift heiress, anticipating Paris Hilton. As Tammy and her twin brother Timmy (I mean Terence) are orphans, the family's purse-strings are controlled by sour Uncle Simon. Tammy's strait-laced twin Terence and housekeeper Mrs Ratchett abet Uncle Simon in trying to curb Tammy's spending.

The show just wasn't funny. In the pilot episode, Tammy asks her uncle for $50,000 (allegedly for a charity). He refuses. Tammy then gets kidnapped by a gang who hold her to ransom ... and the ransom is precisely $50,000. When Uncle Simon gets the ransom demand, he naturally assumes that the kidnap is a hoax engineered by Tammy. I sat through this rubbish nearly 40 years ago, and I haven't started laughing yet. The head kidnapper was played by Jesse White, normally a deft performer but just floundering badly here. In another episode, Uncle Simon banishes Tammy to a hillbilly village called Cobb Corner, figuring she can't spend any money there. (Are you sure this show isn't about Paris Hilton?) Tammy changes the village's name to Paris, for some reason.

A typical 'joke': in one episode, Tammy tried to persuade Mrs Ratchett to relinquish a loving cup that Tammy needed for some scheme. When Mrs Ratchett refused, Tammy announced: 'I'm going to take my cup, and blow.' With that, she grabbed the trophy and exited, slamming the door. Hold for a beat, then she opened the door just far enough to stick her head through the doorway and *blow* a puff of air at the camera. Funny? No, but the laugh track sure seemed to be having a good time.

Hiram Sherman - in real life a man with some truly contemptible political activities - was annoying and dull as Tammy's practical uncle. There was no reason for Tammy and her practical-minded brother Terence to be twins, especially as there was no physical resemblance between Tammy Grimes and the actor who played her twin: Dick Sargent, now reviled as 'the wrong Darrin'. In a supreme irony, Dick Sargent had been the actor originally cast to play Darrin Stevens on 'Bewitched', but he was unable to take the role due to his contractual commitment to co-star in 'The Tammy Grimes Show' ... which kept him committed just long enough for 'Bewitched' to go into production with the role of Darrin recast with Dick York, who struggled manfully with spinal injuries until Sargent eventually replaced him. Confusing, yes?

'The Tammy Grimes Show' is painfully unfunny and utterly unworthy of revival. However, Tammy Grimes was so sexy in those days that I would gladly sit through these episodes again just to have another squizz at her. And as excellent (and sexy) as Elizabeth Montgomery was as Samantha in 'Bewitched', I think that Tammy Grimes would have done even better than Liz Montgomery in that role.
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1/10
What was in William Dozier's mind?!?
tforbes-228 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Tammy Grimes and the other performers in "The Tammy Grimes Show" are perfectly capable actors, but I saw this on YouTube, and I can see why ABC pulled the plug on this show. This show makes "Shotgun Slade" look like something right out of the BBC by comparison!

The show makes no sense at all!

By contrast, Phyllis Diller should have had her show kept on the schedule; that was funny, and by mid-1967 was a sort-of de facto third season of "The Addams Family." Her sitcom had substance.

But not this one.

No wonder why ABC did not want to deal so readily with William Dozier, who produced this. This show may have been why "The Green Hornet" and "Batman" were gone by June 1968! Unfortunate.
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Only one good thing about this show
bpatrick-81 April 2018
ABC promoted this show as one-third of "Dollhouse 90": Tammy, Elizabeth Montgomery, and Marlo Thomas, whose shows ran in a block from 8:30-10 on Thursdays (when "Love on a Rooftop" moved from Tuesday to Thursday ABC had to redo the thing with Judy Carne in Tammy's place). That is the one and only thing I find worth mentioning.

As for the post referring to Phyllis Diller's show, they should have used the revised format throughout: Phyllis takes in borders and what a cast! Marty Ingels and John Astin reunited (but not as Dickens and Fenster), Paul Lynde, Louis Nye, Richard Deacon. I would have killed just to see a rehearsal for that show!
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