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Here's Beaver! New York : Berkley, 1961. Berkley Medallion book [10] Beaver and Wally New York : Berkley, 1961. [11] Juvenile books Leave It to Beaver by Lawrence Alson New York : Golden Books, 1959; Leave It to Beaver: Fire by Cole Fannin Racine, Wisconsin; Whitman Publishing Company 1962 [12] [13] There was also a novelization of the 1997 film:
The pilot episode is included on the season-one DVD. Shout! Factory released Season 3 on June 15, 2010, and the complete series set was released on June 29, 2010.
In Beaver and Wally's bedroom, they get into a fight, which sends Beaver's new computer flying out the open window. Wally grabs the wire and tries to pull it in, but the wire breaks, and it crashes on the ground and smashes into pieces. This results in Ward completely losing all of his patience and grounding Beaver and Wally.
The sixth season of Leave It to Beaver debuted on ABC September 27, 1962, with "Wally's Dinner Date" and aired its last episode, "Family Scrapbook", June 20, 1963. Like the previous five seasons, the sixth season consists of 39 black-and-white, full-screen, half-hour episodes (with ads) shot on 35mm film.
Ward and June object to Beaver having an untamed mouse as a pet, but they say he can have a sensible, domesticated animal. At the market, Beaver sees a home-wanted ad for a free monkey and eagerly answers the ad. Defying all logic, his parents agree to let him keep this monkey, who Beaver names “Stanley” as a pet.
Beaver wants the bigger boys to notice him so he tells a fib about a real, live Indian fight that occurred across the street from the Cleaver house a hundred years ago. Beaver even bets Eddie Haskell a dollar fifty that it really happened. The bigger boys dig for artifacts in the field and find garnets. They dream of becoming "jillionaires".
Barbara Billingsley, who played his mom on "Leave It to Beaver," displayed one of his bronze pieces in her backyard garden. She passed away in 2010 at 94 years old. Dow may have left acting behind ...
Billingsley and Adams "It's a Small World" is the pilot episode from the American television series Leave It to Beaver (1957–1963). The pilot (originally proposed as Wally and The Beaver) was first televised April 23, 1957, on the syndicated anthology series, Studio 57, without a laugh track nor the series' well known theme song, "The Toy Parade". [1]