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Leave It to Beaver is an American television situation comedy about an inquisitive and often naïve boy named Theodore "The Beaver" Cleaver (portrayed by Jerry Mathers) and his adventures at home, in school, and around his suburban neighborhood.
Ward gives Beaver money for a haircut, but Beaver loses it as well, and is afraid to explain yet another loss to his parents. With Wally's help, Beaver gives himself a ragged haircut, and the two try to cover it up by wearing stocking caps to dinner, saying the caps are part of a secret club initiation.
Its reception led to a new first-run, made-for-cable series, The New Leave It to Beaver (1984–1989), with Beaver and Lumpy Rutherford running Ward's old firm (where Lumpy's pompous, demanding father — played by Richard Deacon in the original series — had been the senior partner), Wally as a practicing attorney and expectant father, June ...
Beaver waits around the house all afternoon believing that Larry is on his way over. Ward asks Beaver to run to the drugstore and pick up a paper. Beaver hears Larry telling the other boys he has spent the 75 cents and sees him finishing a soda at the drugstore counter. Beaver tells Larry to go outside so Beaver can sock him but Larry refuses.
The fifth season of Leave It to Beaver debuted on ABC September 30, 1961 with "Wally Goes Steady" and aired its last episode, "Un-togetherness", June 30, 1962. Like the previous four seasons, the fifth season consists of 39 black-and-white, full-screen, half-hour episodes (with ads) shot on 35mm film.
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]
Gilbert quits; he plans to get a newspaper route and have his father deliver the papers. Beaver is encouraged at home by the story of Robert the Bruce and the spider. Beaver then finds a woman whose husband is away, mows her lawn, and gets a five dollar check that bounces. Beaver thought she was a nice lady and his faith in adults is sorely tried.