MY THREE SONS is a delightful slice-of-life comedy about the
American family. The series chronicles the life of the Douglas
family; a seemingly simple premise that was a huge hit with
audiences and a keystone of the TV family lineup in the '60s.
Fred MacMurray delivers a standout portrayal as Steve Douglas, an
aeronautical engineer and widower raising his three sons alone.
Join the Douglas family in Season One, Volume One as Steve guides
his oldest son Mike (Tim Considine) through college, Robbie (Don
Grady) through those tumultuous high-school years and youngest
son Chip (Stanley Livingston) through adolescence. Wrangling this
rambunctious group is a fulltime job; and that's where Grandpa
"Bub" (William Frawley) comes in. Being the cook, the nanny and
the housekeeper to three growing boys isn't easy, as BUb quickly
finds out! Loaded with laughs, this first volume of Season One
will let you relive one of the all-time longest running classic
comedy series in television history!
.com
----
When one thinks of cutting edge television, My Three Sons does
not immediately leap to mind, but this beloved Boomer-era ste
(it ran for 12 seasons, which, for a family sitcom, is second in
longevity only to The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet) broke the
nuclear family mold. Fred MacMurray's Steve Douglas was a
widower, raising his titular brood--college-bound Mike (Tim
Considine), middle son Robbie (Don Grady), and youngest son Chip
(Stanley Livingston)--with the help of his gruff, but
soft-hearted her-in-law, Bub (William Frawley). In the first
episode, when a door-to-door cosmetics salesman asks to see the
woman of the house, Bub laughs, "Boy, do you have the wrong
house." Also not par for the sitcom course is the avant-garde use
of sound effects. In one episode, sibling rivalry over a girl
results in a "cold war" between Mike and Robbie. Their dinner
table sniping as Steve tries to broker peace is punctuated by the
sounds of s firing and bombs exploding. Which is to say that
My Three Sons has aged nicely, and has much to offer beyond
nostalgia. No offense to the great William Demarest, who replaced
an ailing Frawley in 1965, but the series' "Bub" years were the
best. Save for the episode in which comedian George Gobel is a
guest at the house, the situations are grounded in reality, and
the writing often surprises with twists that subvert sitcom
convention and stereotypes. "Countdown" cleverly unfolds in real
time as the family's Monday morning routine plays out against a
televised satellite launch. In another episode, a fraternity
rejects Mike, not because they are snobs (the usual sitcom
portrayal), but because they believe Mike isn't serious enough
about his education. Some episodes simply bring home the laughs,
as in "The Little Ragpicker," in which a realistic looking dummy
causes a new neighbor to think the worst about the Douglases. But
there is genuine pathos in "Bub in the Ointment," in which Bub's
"Irish temper" and lack of tact embarrass the kids, until Steve
reminds Mike of the sacrifices Bub made to move in with the
family after his daughter died. The boys talk, act, and fight
like brothers, and Steve, while a pipe-puffing fount of sage
herly advice, is sometimes at a loss, and is allowed to be
testy and impatient with his "wild bunch." The split season is
unfortunate, but these inaugural 18 episodes are a y
serving for those who want a taste of this iconic series.
--Donald Liebenson