Jerry Van Dyke Movies
Stocky comedic actor
Jerry Van Dyke -- the younger brother by several years of actor
Dick Van Dyke -- achieved some of the success of his older sibling, albeit with a somewhat lower profile and his own distinct persona. Time and again,
Jerry specialized in portrayals of flustered, befuddled, and slightly klutzy goofballs who projected grating angst. (His typical characterizations could be contrasted with the "laid-back everyman" qualities and smoothness required by many of
Dick's roles.)
Raised in Danville, IL -- a community about 130 miles south of Chicago --
Van Dyke evinced a flair for comedic buffoonery and loved to entertain audiences as early as high school, then spent several years touring the country and performing in every comedy club he could find that agreed to book him. His career only began to take off, however, following his decision to join the Air Force Special Services in 1952 (during the Korean War) -- which, in turn, provided him with the opportunity to travel around the world and entertain the troops. His act soon caught the eye of
Ed Sullivan, who booked
Jerry for two popular engagements on his iconic variety series, and in the mid-'60s he began appearing alongside his brother on
The Dick Van Dyke Show (conveniently playing Rob Petrie's brother, Stacey Petrie).
In the years that followed,
Jerry Van Dyke began associations with two key television producers -- relationships that would serve him well in the years to come. The first -- a collaboration with Grant Tinker (off-camera husband of
Mary Tyler Moore from
The Dick Van Dyke Show) led to
Van Dyke's starring role in the 1965 fantasy-tinged sitcom
My Mother the Car, which cast him as Dave Crabtree, a fellow revisited by his deceased mother -- in the form of an automobile. That program failed within a year, but the actor and producer would team up again nearly a decade later when Tinker and Co. cast
Van Dyke in a brief multi-episode stretch of
The Mary Tyler Moore Show as Wes Callison, an ex-boyfriend of Mary Richards who is plagued by complications when he happens to take a job in the same newsroom as Mary. During the same decade,
Van Dyke also turned up as a guest star on series including
That Girl,
Love, American Style, and
Fantasy Island.
Van Dyke then tried out for the role of dim-witted Vermont handyman George Utley on the seminal '80s sitcom
Newhart. Producer/creator
Barry Kemp felt that the actor would be the wrong choice for the part (and eventually handed it to
Tom Poston instead), but also felt so impressed by
Van Dyke's talents that he both cast the actor in a guest-starring role on a
season-one episode of that series (he played a flustered travel agent named Roy Herzog), and promised
Van Dyke a more substantial recurring assignment on a sitcom.
Kemp realized that promise five years later, by enlisting
Van Dyke to play spaced-out assistant football coach Luther Van Dam on the top-tiered sitcom
Coach (1989-1997). For that portrayal, the actor received numerous Emmy nominations.
In subsequent years,
Van Dyke continued his television work (he enjoyed a lengthy run on the sitcom
Yes, Dear as Big Jimmy Hughes), did standup comedy bookings around the country, and emceed advertisements for various brands, products, and companies, including Big Lots. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

- 1968
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Minister Sam (Andy Griffith) and his wife Mary Elizabeth (Lee Meriweather) move to a Kansas town divided by political concerns that stall the town's progress. Will Sinclair (Henry Jones) and Alex Gresham (Edgar Buchanan) have allowed a long-standing family argument to impede the progress of the small rural community. Sam must contend with his mother-in-law (Kay Medford) and his wild brother-in-law Bubba (Jerry Van Dyke) when Bubba sets up a moonshine still in the church basement with the help of his friend Calvin (Parker Fennelly). Art Shields (Gary Collins) is the ambitious young country lawyer who runs for mayor in hopes of bringing peace to the families, and he works for the best interests of the divided community. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Andy Griffith, Jerry Van Dyke, (more)

- 1997
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- Add Annabelle's Wish to Queue
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In this animated comedy/drama for the family, Annabelle (voice of Kath Soucie) is a calf who has a special wish for Christmas -- she'd like to be a reindeer and help Santa Claus drive his sleigh as he delivers his presents. Annabelle's friends tell her not to get her hopes up, but to everyone's surprise, Santa (voice of Kay E. Kuter) does indeed meet up with Annabelle, and the calf gets to help Santa make the holiday a special one for one young boy. Also appearing in the voice cast of Annabelle's Gift are Cloris Leachman, Jerry Van Dyke, Rue McClanahan, and Jim Varney; country music star Randy Travis narrates the story, and Alison Krauss and Nanci Griffith contribute songs to the soundtrack. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1987
- R
When a rapist avoids conviction several times in a row, his past victims join together to exact vigilante justice. ~ John Bush, Rovi
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- 1963
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Highlights and outtakes from The Tonight Show make up the meat of this collection, which, for good measure, also tosses in some footage from Carson's early game show Who Do You Trust?. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
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- 1987
- R
In this gritty thriller, a woman who suffers the pain and humiliation of sexual assault is appalled to discover the man who raped her has gone free. Enraged, she joins forces with a number of other women who have survived rape and together they set out to meet out justice on their own terms. Released on video as I Will Dance on Your Grave: Lethal Victims, the cast of W.A.R.: Women Against Rape includes Martin Landau, Frank Stallone, Jack Carter, Terry Moore, and Jerry Van Dyke. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1965
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In this domestic comedy, a high school graduate causes chaos when he tells his parents that he is going to get married and remain at home. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ricky Nelson, Jack Kelly, (more)

- 1963
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- Add McLintock! to Queue
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George Washington McLintock (John Wayne) has a saddlebag full of trouble. The owner of the largest ranch in the territory, which also includes a mine and a lumber mill that he built up himself, should be a happy, fulfilled man, but he isn't. His wife, Katherine (Maureen O'Hara), walked out on him two years ago without a word of explanation and has been living back east and running in very fancy circles. He's getting older, a fact of which he's constantly reminded as friends around him decline in health. He's being challenged by their sons, eager to make their mark on the territory, and by the homesteaders who are pouring in with the support of the government, hoping to farm on land that's just barely adequate for cattle to graze on; he's got government officials underfoot, including an inept Indian agent (Strother Martin) and a corrupt land agent (Gordon Jones); the thick-headed, longwinded territorial governor, the honorable Cuthbert H. Humphrey (Robert Lowery), and the government back east are trying to push the Indians -- whose chiefs are some of McLintock's oldest enemies and his best and most honored friends -- by shipping them off to a reservation, where they'll be cared for like old women; and to top it all off, Katherine is coming back to secure a divorce and take custody of their 17-year-old daughter, Rebecca (Stefanie Powers), who's been at school back east and no longer likes anything to do with the West, any more than her mother does. All of that -- plus the presence of a young hired hand (Patrick Wayne) who's interested romantically in McLintock's daughter -- is the setup for a sprawling comedy Western with serious overtones, part battle-of-the-sexes and part political tract.
McLintock! was made mostly to keep John Wayne's production company solvent in the wake of the losses incurred from the production of The Alamo. Wayne needed a film that could be made quickly and have mass appeal, and he got more than he bargained for in James Edward Grant's screenplay, which owed a little to both The Taming of the Shrew and The Quiet Man. Shot in the spring of 1963 and premiered in late November of that year, McLintock! proved to be one of the star's most popular and successful films of the '60s. It was a prized possession of the Wayne estate and was held unavailable for all of the '80s and beyond until they missed the copyright renewal in 1991 -- after that, it emerged in numerous substandard videocassette and DVD editions. There was an authorized VHS edition from MPI in the early '90s, and there were legitimate showings on WTBS, but until 2005 there was no decent quality DVD version. Late that year, Paramount Home Video, working under license from the Wayne estate, released a beautiful letterboxed DVD edition loaded up with extras. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
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- Starring:
- John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, (more)

- 1994
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- 1963
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This light romantic comedy filmed on location in Palm Springs finds couples engaging in a kissing frenzy of puppy love. Jim (Troy Donahue) has eyes for Bunny (Stephanie Powers), unaware she is the daughter of the local chief of police (Andrew Duggan). Connie Stevens, Jack Weston, Ty Hardin and Jerry Van Dyke. The Modern Folk Quartet makes an out-of-place appearance performing in a casino. Robert Conrad is the spoiled rotten rich kid who tries to interfere with love and romance with his lupine lusting. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Troy Donahue, Connie Stevens, (more)

- 1964
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Housekeeper Nellie Conway (Joan Lovejoy) tells Perry Mason (Raymond Burr) that she thinks her boss Newton Bain (Harry Townes) is planning to kill his invalid wife Elizabeth (Shirley Mitchell). Investigating the situation, Perry finds that Mary may not be playing with a full deck. Later on, Elizabeth is indeed murdered--but it is Mary Douglas (Nancy Gates) who is charged with the crime. Comedian Jerry Van Dyke plays a rare dramatic role in this episode, which is based on Erle Stanley Gardner's 1951 "Perry Mason" novel The Case of the Fiery Fingers (previously filmed under its original title during Season One). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1987
- R
Here's another cop thriller with a terrified witness, a determined assassin, and a highly untrustworthy supporting cast. Run if You Can is all about a young woman who turns on her TV for a little entertainment and relaxation, only to tune in on a real-life murder in progress. This one works best when the plot convolutions are ignored; otherwise, the viewer will be at a complete loss as to what the heck is going on. Actors Martin Landau, Yvette Nipar and Jerry Van Dyke look as confused as we are. Director Virginia Lively Stone is not the same Virginia Stone who used to coproduce "actuality" movies like Ring of Fire and Last Voyage with husband Andrew Stone. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1976
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Child actor Ike Eisenmann, a frequent participant in the ABC Afterschool Special offerings of the 1970s, plays the title role in The Amazing Cosmic Awareness of Duffy Moon. Shorter in stature than most of his classmates in the sixth grade, young Duffy decides to purchase a somewhat mystical book that, according to its advertising, will enable him to "THINK BIG." Among the book's suggestions is to speak in a robotic voice when confronted by an adversity (namely, the school bully). An unexpected incident involving an injured pet crow serves to prove that Duffy doesn't really need a book to tap the inner resources -- and strengths -- that he's had all along. The impressive adult supporting cast includes Jim Backus and Jerry Van Dyke. ~ Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ike Eisenmann, Lance Kerwin, (more)

- 1965
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When the ladies of Mayberrry complain about the hootchie-kootchie dancers at a travelling carnival, Andy is forced to close the show down. As a result, the carnival's "one man band", Jerry Miller (Jerry Van Dyke) is thrown out of work. Feeling sorry for Jerry, Andy hires the man as a potential replacement for departing deputy Barney-and lives to regret it. Written by Bob Ross, "Banjo-Playing Deputy" originally aired May 3, 1965, as the final episode of The Andy Griffith Show's fifth season; it was also the series' last black-and-white episode. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1962
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- Add The Courtship of Eddie's Father to Queue
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Vincente Minnelli takes another of his occasional dips into situation comedy (i.e. The Long Long Trailer) in The Courtship of Eddie's Father. Ron Howard is the precocious Eddie, who wants to see his recently widowed father, Tom Corbett (Glenn Ford), get married again. He even has the lucky bride picked out -- their attractive neighbor Elizabeth Marten (Shirley Jones), a young divorcee. When his father's interest isn't whetted, he strikes up a friendship with Dollye Daly (Stella Stevens), a shy, beauty contest winner. But, much to Eddie's disappointment, Dollye falls in love with Tom's friend Norman Jones (Jerry van Dyke). When Tom meets stylish fashion consultant Rita Behrens (Dina Merrill) and announces their plans to marry, Eddie -- who disapproves of the match -- runs away from summer camp and hides out in Elizabeth's apartment. Tom breaks off his engagement to Rita and tries to find Eddie. Arriving at Elizabeth's apartment, Tom confronts Elizabeth and decides to try to get to know her a little better. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Glenn Ford, Shirley Jones, (more)

- 2004
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- 1962
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In the first episode of a two-part story, Dick Van Dyke's real-life brother Jerry Van Dyke guest stars as Stacey Petrie, younger brother of Rob Petrie. On a two-week furlough from the Army, Stacey stays with Rob and Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) -- and much to Laura's surprise, it doesn't look as though Stacey will stray any further than the Petrie living room. Clearly, the time has come for Rob to reveal the "dreadful secret" about his younger brother: Stacey is a neurotic dullard when awake -- and the supremely self-confident "life of the party" when he's asleep! ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jerry Van Dyke, Richard Deacon, (more)

- 1965
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In the first episode of a two-part story, Dick Van Dyke's real-life brother Jerry Van Dyke returns as Rob Petrie's kid brother Stacey Petrie. Once again showing up at Rob and Laura's doorstep, Stacey startles the couple with the announcement that he's about to be married. There are only two problems: he's never gone out on a real date, and he hasn't even met his fiancée! Sally (Rose Marie) is enlisted to help Stacey in matters of the heart...with surprising results. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1965
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In the conclusion of a two-part story, Rob Petrie's younger brother Stacey (played by Dick Van Dyke's real-life brother Jerry Van Dyke) is facing two major crises. First, he hopes to make a go of the dingy coffee house that he's bought to promote his singing career. And second, he must gear up for his first meeting with his "fiancée" Julie Kinkaid (Jane Wald), with whom he has been corresponding for months -- signing his letters "James Garner!" ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1962
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In the conclusion of a two-part story, Dick Van Dyke's real-life brother Jerry Van Dyke guest stars as Stacey Petrie, younger brother of Rob Petrie. Bowled over by Stacey's remarkable talents as a banjo-strumming, joke-spewing entertainer, several observers recommend that he be allowed to audition for "The Alan Brady Show." Rob, however, is hesitant to allow Stacey to do so, knowing full well that his brother, a habitual somnambulist, is only lively and self-confident when he's asleep -- and an untalented slug when he's awake! Nonetheless, Stacey is invited to perform at a party given by Rob for his boss Alan Brady...with surprising results. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jerry Van Dyke, Richard Deacon, (more)

- 1997
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In flashback, a bruised and battered Drew (Drew Carey) describes his Las Vegas Vacation from Hell. Among the various horrors experienced, Drew has a special place in his memory banks for his brief and entirely unintentional marriage to a waitress named Dianne (Nicole Sullivan), who used our hero in a ploy to regain custody of her kids from her nasty ex-husband. Originally telecast as part of ABC's "Viva Las Vegas Night" on February 26, 1997, this episode features crossover appearances by Grace Under Fire star Brett Butler, Coach costar Jerry Van Dyke, and Ellen regulars Joely Fisher and Jeremy Piven. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1992
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When two young twins decide to go to Grandmother's house, they take off on an adventure they're not likely to forget. ~ Tana Hobart, Rovi
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