A part on Andy’s show might just rekindle his career-and their friendship. Don had no inkling Andy was working on a television show. Offstage between 400-some performances the two had hit it off personally as well, but once the play closed they fell out of touch. In the Broadway production, Don had been an $85-a-week bit player, but in their scenes together he and Andy generated audience-pleasing hilarity. ![]() He and Andy had met on Broadway in 1955 on the cast of No Time for Sergeants, the comedy on which a hit film, also starring Andy, would be based. Ronny “Opie” Howard is there, but Sheriff Taylor has no deputy.ĭon was riveted. Frances Bavier comes to see Andy, but she is not Aunt Bee she is the widow Henrietta Perkins. But the sot isn’t Otis, and Hal Smith isn’t playing him. The town drunk shambles into frame, announces, “I’m under arrest!” and locks himself in a cell. The episode, concocted by Danny Thomas producer Sheldon Leonard as a cheap way to float a pilot for a series he was pitching CBS, contained bits and pieces of what would become legend. “Name ain’t Clem,” Andy replied, with a wide smile. “You picked on the wrong guy this time, Clem,” Danny warned. Griffith’s character, a backwater lawman, had caught Danny Thomas running a red light. He was escorting the show’s star and family into a soundstage town called Mayberry. “Tonight’s special guest,” the announcer intoned, “…Andy Griffith.” The lens descended to a street, where the special guest, wearing a khaki sheriff’s uniform, sat in a Ford Galaxie 500 rigged as a squad car. The screen filled with a sketch of a man who looked like a sinister ventriloquist’s dummy. he halted Tuesday evening’s card game so he and his guests could watch that night’s episode. NBC was about to cancel Steve Allen, so Don and Pat were looking for work Pat was up for a guest role on The Danny Thomas Show. Don and Pat had become friends as members of the cast of The Steve Allen Show, where Don had attained semi-fame as the Nervous Man. The evening of February 15, 1960, actor Don Knotts and his wife, Kay, were at Pat Harrington’s house in Los Angeles, California, playing bridge. Slapstick: He was a master of the craft.How the Andy Griffith Show Unleashed Primal Comedic Force on 1960s TV Close.He did come back for a few guest appearances, and also for the 1986 reunion TV movie Return to Mayberry. Put on a Bus: Don Knotts left The Andy Griffith Show and the character of Barney Fife accepted a new job in Charlotte.Lovable Coward: His frequent screen persona. ![]() Averted in real life, as he was a talented singer with a fine baritone voice.
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