Bill Daily Movies

From the late '60s through the mid-'70s, first on I Dream of Jeannie and later on The Bob Newhart Show, Bill Daily was one of the most visible comic acting talents in television, despite the fact that he'd always intended on a career in music. Born in Des Moines, IA, in 1928, he was raised by his mother with help from several aunts and uncles after the death of his father and he gravitated toward music as a teenager. Following a stint in the army in the late '40s, Daily became a professional musician, playing upright bass with different groups in the Midwest, and he eventually added little bits of stand-up comedy to his repertory in the course of performing. He hooked up with an NBC station in Chicago, first working behind the camera as a writer and musician and then doing comedy on the air. Eventually, he became a regular guest as a comedian on The Mike Douglas Show, which originated from Chicago. From there, he was discovered by Steve Allen who brought him onto his show as a comedian and sidekick. Daily subsequently credited his musical side with providing him with the sense of timing to become a successful comedian. During the early and mid-'60s, Daily moved into acting roles on programs like Bewitched -- on which he debuted in a straight dramatic role, in a Christmas episode in which he was highly effective -- and was given a small role in the pilot of I Dream of Jeannie. That part, of Major Roger Healy, turned into the co-starring role after the program's first season. Following five successful seasons on that program, he moved to The Bob Newhart Show as Howard Borden, providing comedic support similar to the part he'd played on I Dream Of Jeannie, as Newhart's befuddled, constantly jet-lagged next door neighbor. Daily has only ever appeared in two feature films, both of them comedies -- the made-for-television In Name Only in 1969, as a carefree bachelor (clearly modeled after one aspect of his character on I Dream of Jeannie) and in Disney's release of The Barefoot Executive in 1971. Since the first Bob Newhart series left the air, his television appearances have been infrequent and always in supporting, guest starring roles, although he did appear on Nick-at-Nite helping to promote The Bob Newhart Show when it aired on the channel. He has since reportedly become a theatrical actor and director in the Albuquerque, NM, area. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1972  
 
After attending a party where virtually all the guests are doting parents, Bob and Emily are even more determined to conceive. Finally, they discuss the possibility of adopting a child, and the benefits and drawbacks attending such a decision. The large supporting cast includes Louise Lasser as Mrs. Radford, William Redfield as Arthur Hoover, and M. Emmet Walsh as Jack Hoover. Written by David Davis and Lorenzo Music, "P-I-L-O-T" was originally written to be the pilot episode for the series. After several changes, including Newhart's insistence that he didn't want to be in a show "about kids," the series was held back from release until November 18, 1972, by which time the series was firmly entrenched in the ratings. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bob NewhartSuzanne Pleshette, (more)
1972  
 
Returning from a Mexican vacation, Bob discovers that Jerry has decided to marry his gorgeous oral hygienist, Cynthia Fremont (Elaine Giftos), whom he has known for all of nine days. Love being blind, Jerry is oblivious to the fact that Cynthia is pushy and domineering. Though Bob tries to remain aloof, he realizes that Jerry is on the verge of making the biggest mistake of his life. Written by Martin Cohan, "Anything Happen While I Was Gone?" first aired on November 25, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bob NewhartSuzanne Pleshette, (more)
1972  
 
Feeling the need for a bit of peace and quiet to clear his mind, Bob checks into a hotel room alone. Not unexpectedly, Howard jumps to the conclusion that Bob and Emily have called it quits. Featured in the cast are such seasoned farceurs as Alan Hewitt (Mr. Warner) and Bernie Kopell (Dr. Arnold), this is also the final appearance of Patrica Smith as neighbor Margaret Hoover. Listed in most syndicated program logs as the 24th episode of The Bob Newhart Show, "I Want to Be Alone" was aired as the series' 11th offering, on December 2, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bob NewhartSuzanne Pleshette, (more)
1972  
 
Under the influence of sodium pentathol (the result of a visit to the dentist), Howard exhibits are heretofore unsuspected poetic side to his personality. Captivated by the "new" Howard, Carol instantly falls in love with him. Though Bob is convinced that this romance is a mistake, Emily tries to smooth Carol and Howard's path to true happiness, but as it turns out, Bob was right all along. Pat Morita appears as a bartender in a Chinese restaurant. Written by Charlotte Brown, "Bob and Emily and Howard and Carol and Jerry" originally aired on December 9, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bob NewhartSuzanne Pleshette, (more)
1972  
 
Upset over his inability to make a romantic commitment, Jerry asks Bob for advice. Against his better judgment, Bob agrees to take Jerry on as a patient. Can their friendship survive? And more to the point, can Bob charge Jerry his usual handsome fee? Written by Martin Cohan, "I Owe It All to You...but Not That" first aired on December 16, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bob NewhartSuzanne Pleshette, (more)
1972  
 
The Yuletide season is anything but an occasion of joy and goodwill for Bob and his patients. While Bob struggles with the irritations of last-minute shopping and mercenary merchants, his therapy group copes with hostile and unpleasant memories of Christmases past. Hoping to solve everyone's problems, Bob invites the entire group to a Christmas party in the Hartley apartment. Written by David Davis and Lorenzo Music, "His Busiest Season" was appropriately broadcast on December 23, 1972. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bob NewhartSuzanne Pleshette, (more)
1972  
 
Add The Bob Newhart Show: Season 01 to QueueAdd The Bob Newhart Show: Season 01 to top of Queue
Chicago psychologist Bob Hartley (Bob Newhart) puts out his shingle for the very first time as The Bob Newhart Show launches its first season. Among the familiar characters introduced during season one are Bob's schooteacher wife Emily (Suzanne Pleshette); the Hartley's neurotic next-door neighbor, airline pilot Howard Borden (Bill Daily); dentist Jerry Robinson (Peter Bonerz), a self-styled swinging bachelor who works in the same office building as Bob; the building's scatterbrained receptionist Carol Kester (Marcia Wallace); and Bob's most frequent patients, paranoid Elliot Carlin (Jack Riley), high-strung Mr. Petersen (John Fiedler), and flighty widow Mrs. Bakerman (Florida Friebus). Also making their first appearances are Bob's highly judgmental mother Eleanor Hartley (Martha Scott); the divorced Howard's impressionable son Howie (Moosie Drier); and Emily's friend Margaret Hoover (Patricia Smith), a character originally intended as the equivalent of "Rhoda" on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, but ultimately written out of the series.

The pilot episode (helpfully titled "P-I-L-O-T"), in which Bob and Emily consider adopting a child, was not the first episode shown; that honor went to "Fly the Unfriendly Skies," wherein Bob tries to help Emily overcome her fear of flying. In later first-season episodes, the normally reserved Bob becomes jealous of Emily's handsome tennis instructor and goes through the torments of the darned trying to tell his mother that he loves her; the Hartleys come to regret their mutual promise never to go to bed in an angry mood; Jerry falls in love with oral hygenist Cynthia Fremont (Elaine Giftos), who unfortunately turns out to be too much like him for the relationship to last; Howard and Carol briefly enjoy a romance; Howard becomes the archetypal overprotective big brother when his sister Debbie (Heather Menzies) goes out on a date with Jerry; Emily's full-time job with the Board of Education has a curious effect on Bob; and despite his worries that his patients can't live without him, Bob goes on a European cruise with Emily -- one that threatens to become a Marx Brothers movie before it even gets under way. The Bob Newhart Show closed its first season with very healthy ratings, ending up 16th place in the Nielsens. ~ All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bob NewhartSuzanne Pleshette, (more)
1971  
G  
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At last the secret has been revealed! Prime-time network programming is determined by a chimpanzee! That's the premise of Disney's The Barefoot Executive, a highly amusing spoof of the TV bizz. Kurt Russell plays a page boy at a bottom-rated TV network. Stuck with his girl friend's (Heather North) pet chimp, Russell discovers that his hairy friend has a genuine gift for picking hit TV series. Appointed head of programming, Russell keeps the fact that the chimp is doing all the work hidden from the public. But when his former boss Joe Flynn and his rival John Ritter find out, all heck breaks loose (we'd say "all hell", but this is a Disney flick). A strong supporting cast of comic "regulars"-Wally Cox, Harry Morgan, Alan Hewitt, Hayden Rorke et al.--keeps The Barefoot Executive moving at a fast clip ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kurt RussellJoe Flynn, (more)
1969  
 
Add I Dream of Jeannie: Season 05 to QueueAdd I Dream of Jeannie: Season 05 to top of Queue
The fifth and final season of I Dream of Jeannie marks the long-overdue consummation of the romance between sexy genie Jeannie (Barbara Eden) and her "master", astronaut Tony Nelson (Larry Nelson), with Tony finally popping the question in the two-part episode "Guess Who's Going to Be a Bride." The impending marriage of the two principals opens up all sorts of new plot developments: For example, Jeannie is unable to partake of the obligatory blood test because a genie's blood is green; and in the episode "The Wedding", an attempt to snap a picture of the happy couple comes a-cropper because genies can't be photographed! And even though Tony and Jeannie are still husband and wife, Jeannie's duplicitous twin sister (also Barbara Eden) has not given up her efforts to snag Tony for herself, as witness the episode "My Sister the Homemaker", which ironically boasts a guest appearance by Barbara Eden's real-life husband Michael Ansara. And so it goes until the series' 139th and final episode, "My Master, the Chili King". ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Barbara EdenLarry Hagman, (more)
1969  
 
Although Tony (Larry Hagman) and Jeannie (Barbara Eden) are happily wed, Tony's best friend Roger (Bill Daily) remains a lonely bachelor. Hoping to remedy this situation, Tony arranges a date between Roger and Patricia (Janis Hansen), the niece of General Schaeffer (Vinton Hayworth). Unfortunately, at the exact same time Jeannie (Barbara Eden) pays a visit to a local computer dating service, where she fixes Roger up with a voluptuous creature named Laverne (Elaine Giftos). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1969  
 
This by-the-numbers TV movie features an all-star cast in a comedy of marital mix-ups and misunderstandings. Consultants Michael Callan and Ann Prentiss arrange the marriages of several couples, only to discover that all the unions are illegal. Among those affected are a cop (Christopher Connelly) and his hippie spouse (Heather Young); A bachelor at heart (Bill Daily) who thinks he'd be happier without his wife (Elinor Donahue); and a dull missus (Ruth Buzzi) and her "swinger" hubby (Herb Edelman). Whether or not the now-unmarried couples will want to tie the knot legally forms the basis of the comedy. In Name Only has innocently caused resentment among film buffs who've tuned in expecting to see the 1939 film In Name Only, a quite different dramatic opus starring Cary Grant and Carole Lombard. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1968  
 
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Season Four of I Dream of Jeannie opens with the episode "U-F-Oh Jeannie", in which the magical titular heroine Barbara Eden and her astronauts friends Tony (Larry Hagman) and Roger (Bill Daily) skirmish with a family of gun-totin' hillbillies. In the subsequent "Djinn Djinn Go Away", we are introduced to Jeannie's troublesome magical dog, who has a bad habit of making himself invisible after wreaking havoc. Also: Joe Flynn, late of McHale's Navy, plays the no-nonsense replacement of Tony's psychiatrist nemesis Dr. Bellows (Hayden Rorke) in "Dr. Bellows Go Sane"; "The Biggest Star in Hollywood" features guest appearances by several of the regulars from Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, as well as that series' producer George H. Schlatter; and still one year away from becoming the "new Darrin" on Bewitched, Dick Sargent shows up in "Jeannie for the Defense". The season's liveliest episode is the two-part "The Case of the Vanishing Master", wherein enemy agents plant a lookalike for Tony Nelson in his home, causing no end of mischief when the phony Tony tumbles onto Jeannie's secret identity. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Barbara EdenLarry Hagman, (more)
1967  
 
Add I Dream of Jeannie: Season 03 to QueueAdd I Dream of Jeannie: Season 03 to top of Queue
Season Three of I Dream of Jeannie finds the magical Jeannie (Barbara Eden) still loyal and devoted to her mortal "master", astronaut Tony Nelson (Larry Hagman), while Tony's best friend Roger Healy (Bill Daily) continues to hatch schemes to exploit Jeannie's astonishing powers--and Dr. Bellows (Hayden Rorke), flustered Air Force psychiatrist at Cocoa Beach, Florida, persists in his efforts to discover the source of the mysterious occurrences in the Nelson household. This season marks the introduction of Jeannie's twin sister Jeannie II (played by Barbara Eden in a brunette wig) in the episode "Jeannie or the Tiger." As wicked and calculating as her sister is sweet and unassuming, Jeannie II immediately begins plotting and planning to nab Tony for herself, usually by posing as "Jeannie I", bare-midriff harem costume and all. Other episodes of note include the season opener "Fly Me to the Moon", wherein Jeannie transforms a NASA chimp into a human being, played by Larry Storch; "My Master,the Weakling", featuring Don Rickles as a sadistic athletic coach; "Jeannie, the Hip Hippie", a showcase for Screen Gems' resident tunesmiths Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart; "Meet My Master's Mother", with the delightful Spring Byington in the title role; "My Son, the Genie", with Gilligan's Island escapee Bob Denver as a klutzy apprentice djinn; and singer Don Ho as himself in "Jeannie of Honolulu." Plus: In "Who are You Calling a Genie", our heroine develops amnesia; and in the three-part "Genie, Genie, Who's Got the Genie", the duplicitous "twin" Jeannie locks the genuine article in a safe bound for the moon! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Barbara EdenLarry Hagman, (more)
1966  
 
Add I Dream of Jeannie: Season 02 to QueueAdd I Dream of Jeannie: Season 02 to top of Queue
I Dream of Jeannie switches from black and white to color as the series enters its second season, enabling magical heroine Jeannie (Barbara Eden) to convey her various mood swings via the color of the smoke emanating from the bottle where she resides. Otherwise, it's the mixture as before: Astronaut Tony Nelson (Larry Hagman) does his best to hide the fact that a genuine genie is living on his property; Tony's buddy Roger (Bill Daily) continues to try to capitalize on Jeannie's unique skills in order to fatten his bank account; and base psychiatrist Dr. Bellows (Hayden Rorke) is more determined than ever to prove that the strange occurrences in the Nelson household are proof that Tony is a few bricks shy of a full load. This season, the long-suffering Bellows is given an equally long-suffering wife named Amanda, played by skilled comic actress Emmaline Henry). The season opener "Happy Anniversary" features Michael Ansara, then the husband of series star Barbara Eden, as the Blue Djinn, who first trapped Jeannie in her bottle 2500 years ago. Other guest stars include Paul Lynde as a confused IRS agent in "My Master the Rich Tycoon"; veteran Hollywood musical arranger Frank DeVol in "My Master, the Great Caruso"; Butch Patrick, fresh from two seasons of The Munsters, as Dr. Bellows' bratty nephew in "My Master the Author"; and a cameo appearance by series creator Sidney Sheldon's longtime friend Groucho Marx in "Greatest Invention in the World". Also, this season features the series' first two-part episode, "The Girl Who Never Had a Birthday", in which Jeannie is in danger of disappearing forever because of the dilemma elucidated in the episode's title. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Barbara EdenLarry Hagman, (more)
1965  
 
Add I Dream of Jeannie: Season 01 to QueueAdd I Dream of Jeannie: Season 01 to top of Queue
Having crash-landed on a deserted island, astronaut Tony Nelson (Larry Hagman) wonders if he'll ever be rescued. He doesn't have to wonder long; discovering a strange-looking bottle, Tony uncorks the vessel and releases a sexy female genie (Barbara Eden) who has been trapped therein for 2500 years! "Jeannie" promptly arranges for Tony to be located by the air force search copters, and before long he has been whisked back to his home base in Cocoa Beach, Florida--with Jeannie, vowing eternal devotion to her new "master", dutifully following along. Thus begins the first season of I Dream of Jeannie, filmed in black and white so that Jeannie's magical powers will register better on the small screen. In the first four episodes, Karen Sharpe is seen as Tony's fiancée Melissa, the daughter of base commander Gen. Wingard Stone (Philip Ober). Thanks to the mystical machinations of the jealous Jeannie, Melissa has soon exited the scene, just as Tony's subsequent lady friends will be scared off in future episodes. Frustrated that his life is now in the hands of a capricious sprite, Tony at first tries to convince base psychiatrist Dr. Bellows (Hayden Rorke) that there's a genuine genie in his house. Alas, Tony not only fails to make his case, but he convinces Dr. Bellows that he's crazy, a plot development that will dictate the action of many an episode to come. As it turns out, the only other person who is aware of Jeannie's true identity is Tony's astronaut pal Roger Healy (Bill Daily), who stumbles onto the secret in the episode titled "The Richest Astronaut in the World". Roger's efforts to capitalize upon Jeannie's peculiar talents will, of course, cause nothing but trouble for himself and Tony. Appearing in several episodes during Season One is veteran movie villain Barton MacLane as bombastic air force general Martin Peterson. The season I Dream of Jeannie ends with "I'll Never Forget What's Her Name", wherein Tony develops partial amnesia, which enables him to remember everything and everybody EXCEPT Jeannie! (Incident, if Jeannie appears most modestly garbed than usual in several episodes, it is because star Barbara Eden was pregnant at the time). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Barbara EdenLarry Hagman, (more)
1964  
 
Child actor Billy Mumy and veteran scene-stealer Cecil Kellaway appear in this "very special" episode of Bewitched. During the Yuletide season, Samantha and Darrin try to convince a surly orphan named Michael (Mumy) to believe in Santa Claus -- and in Christmas itself. Need it be added that twinkly eyed Kellaway is cast as that "jolly old elf"? Written by Herman Groves, "A Vision of Sugar Plums" first aired on December 24, 1964, then was rebroadcast on December 23, 1965, with new footage added to frame the basic story as a flashback. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Elizabeth MontgomeryDick York, (more)

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