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Fred is the head of the "Rancho Rutherford" household and is married to Geraldine/Gwendolyn. He is balding, and self-aggrandizing, the father of a son named Clarence (nicknamed "Lumpy" by everyone in town), played by Frank Bank, and a daughter named Violet, played by Wendy Winkelman and later by Veronica Cartwright.
The boys try the same booby-trapping method, but Fred Rutherford becomes its victim rather than Lumpy. When the Rutherfords arrive at the Cleaver house to play cards, Fred mentions the incident. Wally and Beaver, not knowing if Mr. Rutherford saw that it was they who pulled the prank, do whatever they can to avoid Mr. Rutherford while he's in ...
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.
"Family Scrapbook" is the series finale of the American television series Leave It to Beaver. It is the 39th episode of the sixth season , and the 234th episode overall. Written by Joe Connelly and Bob Mosher and directed by series star Hugh Beaumont , the episode originally aired on ABC on June 20, 1963.
Ward is a farmer's son and hails from Shaker Heights, an actual location in Ohio, which also has a suburb called Mayfield.Ward attended a preparatory school, is a veteran of World War II (having served as a surveyor in the Seabees), a state college graduate (majoring in philosophy), [2] and member of a fraternity (Alpha Kappa), a responsible white-collar professional, and an upstanding citizen.
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The antics of family members are recalled as June and Mary Ellen organize the clan’s photo album. Notes: This episode features clips from past episodes. Although aired out of sequence, this was the final episode produced for the show's third season, and was intended to be the series finale, hence the title reference to the final episode of ...
A running gag on the show was to have Fred, who always referred to his son as Clarence, call him "Lumpy" when angry. Fred would also call Lumpy a "big boob" or a "big oaf." Lumpy's mother Gwendolyn ("Geraldine", in some early episodes) and his younger sister, Violet (who is about Beaver's age), round out the family. Violet gives Beaver a black ...