Mary Wickes has been around practically forever. She was the hotel's housekeeper in " White Christmas".a nun in a couple of movies,etc...etc...etc..🎈🎈💥💥
Thanks for this. I remember watching this as a 7-year old and LOVED it. Life was certainly simpler then, but Annette was a great role model. Still is, actually.
Annette's much more charming & charismatic in footage like this where she's acting than still photos would suggest she is. Sad to hear she died today (April 8, 2013).
I liked Walt's narration of the program before it started. I used to have a vhs tape of the cross-eyed cougar which was filmed 40 miles away. I remember flumes but they weren't in use anymore by the time I came along.
Thank you for uploading these wonderful MMC episodes. I remember coming home from school and watching them as a child...they bring back beautiful childhood memories when life was a lot less complicated.
Jet was supposed to have been played by Darlene Gillespie but the plan fell through. She would have been great and sang so beautifully. I believe the actress who played Jet had to be dubbed.
Thank GOD for wonderful people like you, who share lost treasures like the old Anette episodes with those of us who never got the chance to enjoy a GOOD Disney show before the company started going to the Dark Side!!
These are fabulous ! Thanks so much. I miss these. I watched these when I was 6 yrs old. Your right ! these are the best TV shows ever. They should put these back on tv. Kids are cruel. I'm glad i'm not in school now. I am a Disney / Calif girl. Millei
I was fortunate enough to see these when they were first broadcast. While I was past five years old, it gave me something of an insight to becoming a teenager. Unfortuantely when I became one the rest of the crowd was jaded and mean-spirited. Not at all like this group of kids who were well balanced. While scripted and idylic, it was a reflection of Midwestern sentiments that are at the core of our nation. Unfortunately, mainstreadm entertainment has done a lot to destroy these sentiments.
I remember seeing some of these years and years ago, possibly when Disney Channel was still a premium channel, but very little of it stuck with me. I certainly didn't remember Mary Wickes was the housekeeper! She is one of my favorite character actresses, and I am loving see her in this!
I came upon this, it’s all the episodes together, makes a 3 hour movie. I knew her uncle was Richard Deacon, of course. And brilliant Mary Wickes as Katie, who runs the joint. Yet her aunt drove me nuts! Thank goodness for IMDb. She was Mrs. Wilson in the DENNIS THE MENACE show.
Popovers are what is known as a ''quick bread''; that is, they can be made in one's kitchen. Popovers are usually served filled, either with a sandwich filling for an entree or custard for a dessert.
I've never had a "filled" popover, never heard of that. The best place to have had them was a restaurant in Ft. Lauderdale called Patricia Murphy's. There is a great recipe in Joy of Cooking!!!! :)
I am your age and just retired from teaching high school. I completely agree with your sentiment. The values portrayed today on television are in complete opposition to the Annette series, Father Knows Best, Leave It to Beaver etc. that we grew up with. You will be interested to know that my social studies class had a project in which they had to make a comparative analysis of sitcoms from the last five decades. They overwhelming choose the 50's as the period they most wanted to grow up in.
Just retired from teaching as well (2016). I know all these american serials quite well from my childhood in Australia. My former secundary students would never have wanted to live back in the frowsty 50ies and 60ies. I have no idea of what kind of values (does the US have any values at all?) are portrayed on US TV these days, but the ones shown in all these US serials from the past are just stuffy. Glad to be living on the European continent where people aren't that influenced by shallow Hollywood TV shows.
These two relatives, let's face it, have plenty; the house and neighborhood speak to that.... While these people are willing to spend big bucks to send her away as soon as she gets there, they're reluctant to allow their routine /comfort zone(s) to accomodate any personal change. To be expected, naturally .. Still, Annette's arrival will prove to be just the 'wake-up call' they didn't realize they needed in their lives. This will be fun!😊
19 chapters (and a "introductory chapter", establishing and previewing the characters and story, shown before the first episode) were presented on "THE MICKEY MOUSE CLUB" from February 10th through March 7th, 1958, 'sallie'.
Used to love the Mickey Mouse Club when I was a child at the beginning of the 60ies in Australia. Now, having grown up ;) and living in Europe, I regard this Annette serial as ever so mushy (as well as a lot of other US TV shows). Glad my kids got to see more sensible TV shows here on the continent.
Agreed. I'm a child of the 70's and 80's and while my generation was far from perfect, we were a lot more appreciative of what we had plus we had a higher level of respect for hard work, authority, and not expecting to be spoon fed constantly. I miss those days of relative innocence and the lack of jaded persona that permeates most teenagers today.
@SirLesful I maintain that the good of Disney still comes through in some of their movies, like The Princess and the Frog and Tangled. Shows like Wizards of Waverly Place are incredibly flashy, but good at their core.
Jet Maypen was played by Judy Nugent, daughter of Carl Nugent, property master for MGM during the 50s and 60s. Nugent, who was right at home playing a farm girl or cowgirl, left show business in the eary 60s to marry another actor Buck Taylor (who would later star as Newly on "Gunsmoke"), and raise a family.
I'm not even cuban or colombian, I'm panamannian, and at 14 I was def. having some coffee 😂. My dad didn't wanted me to have it at a young age, but in my mother's family coffee was introduced to children quicker. Plus, I was never a fan of milk for breakfast.
have to take off both shoes to count all those years there kid. Watched some of these on a new B&W 19" TV in 1959. The Mouseketeers were the highlight of afternoon programming. Newscasters read from their paper notes for news of the day. Westerns were pretty common too. The weather report included all sections of the U.S.A, and hand-drawn weather maps of the coming storms and winds helped to plan road trips. Today weather is all about micro-formatting the 20 square miles around the transmitter tower. You have to go to the computer to get weather farther than 60 miles away. Yup. Progress.... have a great day from Oregon.
@mjcamck71 Thanks for your reply. I suppose in a way today's equivalent might be IN THE MIDDLE. I watch it every Wednesday and always find it hilarious.
I was with you, Ray. By the time I hit my teen years, the malt shops were a thing of the past and "the teens" were becoming hippies, enjoying sit-ins, and experimenting with dope. What a letdown. How I longed for the teen activities of the better dressed "Annette" crowd. The death of our president, riots in the streets, and marches certainly painted a different picture than that of the 1950s. Fear of nukes looked pretty good compared to the turmoil of the 1960s. I was out of the loop. Sign.
@mjcamck71 I think it's more than that. The examples have to be set at home. If the parents don't know good behavior, you can't expect their children to know it either. I'm not so sure that showing them these films might influence them for the better. They would not appreciated it and say that it was not real according to their definition of "reality." These are among the reasons we have so many disfunctional families.
I'm not quite getting why would the milkshake guy would be accepted in the crowd if he wanted to, but the egg girl (Jet?) gets an awful and eew-face "heck no" from Olmstead. Aren't both ranch dwellers, like peasants to those snobby kids? Is he "cooler" just because he works on a store and gets to dress accordingly, while the girl's business is delivery, farm to table like?
Actuallly they were calld "soda shops" and not so idyllic as posts here make out. They were the place (thru the 90s and even some now) where you "picked up" a girl to "park" with, recruited a person old enough to by booze for you at a local bar, purchased pot or better drugs OR had a soda or took you girl after a ball game. Now often have been replaced as were Root Beer stands by drive-in food spots or 7-11 type stores. As these kids sing, "DON'T JUMP TO CONCLUSION." No poodle skirts now and different slang for teens. That's all! Still "juvenile delinquents" ( called "criminals" now.) STOP CLAIMING KIDS ARE DIFFERENT. LIFE WAS SIMPLER and so on. I was Annette's age in 1957. LIFE IN fear OF THE H BOMB WAS NOT easier. IT WAS VERY complex AND FRIGHTENED HELL OUT OF US WHEN WATCHING TV INCLUDED ED MURROW DOINNG DOCUMENTARY ON EXACTLY how THE BOMBERS COULD GET THRU TO ANY,,, ANY TOWN in Americaor how Strontium 90 was KILLING kids who drank milk, (CHECK "ED MURROW BOMBER ATTACK" ON YOU TUBE.) For God sake CREDIT us kids of the fifties. We were under un- precsidented stress. STUDT history YOURSELF. Don't just let what Grandparents say color to lense for you!!!!!!!!!
I watched the E.R. Murrow documentary about the "bomb" when I was a kid. It was scary and depressing and has hung over my head ever since. The local soda shop was a combination drive-in/walk in and was very much in the vein of Happy Days and Disney versions. Of course, anyone our age who takes these old movies and TV representations of life as reality is probably caught in sentimentality and the glossing of distant memories. I do think times were simpler then, but I was a kid then, so what did I know?
No matter what happened to Annette, here she was in all her teen beauty and perfection, captured for always.
The classiest girl ever featured on American TV. Thats a FACT.
The housekeeper is so cool!
Mary Wickes has been around practically forever. She was the hotel's housekeeper in " White Christmas".a nun in a couple of movies,etc...etc...etc..🎈🎈💥💥
@@janeiwasduncan8463 a great favourite🌟
Sister Act, the Choir teacher🤣🤣🤣 she's fantastic with that sarcasm
Mary Wickes the Great! Wonderful in the Father Dowling Mysteries too 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
@@janeiwasduncan8463 Aha! I recognized her voice and "housekeeper" style, but couldn't quite place her. Thanks for the nudge!
Thanks for this. I remember watching this as a 7-year old and LOVED it. Life was certainly simpler then, but Annette was a great role model. Still is, actually.
"Oh, that'll be keen!" :D
I seriously can't get enough of this show.
IKR! ❤❤❤❤
Annette's much more charming & charismatic in footage like this where she's acting than still photos would suggest she is. Sad to hear she died today (April 8, 2013).
My first crush....
The way she died was so terribly sad....
Rest in heavenly peace dearest Annette..
I think I enjoy watching the old Disney rather than the ones now.. Thanks for sharing this! (:
I liked Walt's narration of the program before it started. I used to have a vhs tape of the cross-eyed cougar which was filmed 40 miles away. I remember flumes but they weren't in use anymore by the time I came along.
Mr.John Sutfin, Thank you for putting these wonderful episodes on here.
Thank you for uploading these wonderful MMC episodes. I remember coming home from school and watching them as a child...they bring back beautiful childhood memories when life was a lot less complicated.
Jet was supposed to have been played by Darlene Gillespie but the plan fell through. She would have been great and sang so beautifully. I believe the actress who played Jet had to be dubbed.
I ever missed an episode of Mickey Mouse Club - and every guy had a crush on.Annette.
Thank GOD for wonderful people like you, who share lost treasures like the old Anette episodes with those of us who never got the chance to enjoy a GOOD Disney show before the company started going to the Dark Side!!
These are fabulous ! Thanks so much. I miss these. I watched these when I was 6 yrs old. Your right ! these are the best TV shows ever. They should put these back on tv. Kids are cruel. I'm glad i'm not in school now. I am a Disney / Calif girl. Millei
Ah the good old days.
I was fortunate enough to see these when they were first broadcast. While I was past five years old, it gave me something of an insight to becoming a teenager. Unfortuantely when I became one the rest of the crowd was jaded and mean-spirited. Not at all like this group of kids who were well balanced. While scripted and idylic, it was a reflection of Midwestern sentiments that are at the core of our nation. Unfortunately, mainstreadm entertainment has done a lot to destroy these sentiments.
I have always noticed Mike was having a great crush on Annette, I ❤watching him smile at her,
Same here I ❤watching Annette series
Wish I could buy this serial and the spin and Marty serials took
This series makes me feel so clean and wholesome when I watch it. ❤
I remember seeing some of these years and years ago, possibly when Disney Channel was still a premium channel, but very little of it stuck with me. I certainly didn't remember Mary Wickes was the housekeeper! She is one of my favorite character actresses, and I am loving see her in this!
Good ole' Sylvia Field, aka as"Mrs. Wilson" (5:27); always thinking of others.
well we can't send her to school in blue jeans. my how the world has changed
Feminism has turned the woman against the natural order of things, and ruined America!
@@voiceover-impressionist 👍👍👍👍☹️
Thank you very much for uploading this video so that we can see it whenever we are confined to staying at home during this quarentine as much as possible.
Please do paste only positive comments over here. ©®
February 22, 2021 @ 7:20 am ©®
What a rude comment that Annette's Uncle Archie told Kate.
Please do show me thumbs up only if you do agree with me on this topic. ©®
February 22, 2021 @ 7:30 am ©®
Such manners and respect wish I could go back in time. But I am old now and the world has changed so much.
I came upon this, it’s all the episodes together, makes a 3 hour movie.
I knew her uncle was Richard Deacon, of course. And brilliant Mary Wickes as Katie, who runs the joint.
Yet her aunt drove me nuts! Thank goodness for IMDb.
She was Mrs. Wilson in the DENNIS THE MENACE show.
Popovers are what is known as a ''quick bread''; that is, they can be made in one's kitchen.
Popovers are usually served filled, either with a sandwich filling for an entree or custard for a dessert.
I've never had a "filled" popover, never heard of that. The best place to have had them was a restaurant in Ft. Lauderdale called Patricia Murphy's. There is a great recipe in Joy of Cooking!!!! :)
I am your age and just retired from teaching high school. I completely agree with your sentiment. The values portrayed today on television are in complete opposition to the Annette series, Father Knows Best, Leave It to Beaver etc. that we grew up with. You will be interested to know that my social studies class had a project in which they had to make a comparative analysis of sitcoms from the last five decades. They overwhelming choose the 50's as the period they most wanted to grow up in.
Just retired from teaching as well (2016). I know all these american serials quite well from my childhood in Australia. My former secundary students would never have wanted to live back in the frowsty 50ies and 60ies. I have no idea of what kind of values (does the US have any values at all?) are portrayed on US TV these days, but the ones shown in all these US serials from the past are just stuffy. Glad to be living on the European continent where people aren't that influenced by shallow Hollywood TV shows.
That maid is awesome :) !
MarieMinou recognize her? Her name is Mary Wickes. You may have seen her in Sister Act (Sister Mary Lazarus)
@@RhiannaBarr That's where I know her from! Thank you! I've been trying to place her, lol :)
As well as in, " White Christmas" !!!🦋🦋🎶🎶
I watched this every day.
I can’t see Richard Deacon without thinking about his Fred Rutherford character from Leave it to Beaver.
But Deacon is shown in a role displaying greater acting range than what he was allowed for the TV characters. This is interesting because of that.
JET!! Ah mater!
This is awesome!!!!!
Mary Wickes is great!
I remember this. Annette is trying to make new friends and some bitch tries to accuse Annette of taking the bitch's cheap Woolworth bracelet.
It was Roberta Shore of "The Virginian". She does play a snob in a few movies, but I like her as an actress.
Aunt Lila shouldn't have snapped at her about the way she held her fork.
Thanks. Have a good summer.
These two relatives, let's face it, have plenty; the house and neighborhood speak to that....
While these people are willing to spend big bucks to send her away as soon as she gets there, they're reluctant to allow their routine /comfort zone(s) to accomodate
any personal change.
To be expected, naturally ..
Still, Annette's arrival will prove to be just the 'wake-up call' they didn't realize they needed in their lives.
This will be fun!😊
19 chapters (and a "introductory chapter", establishing and previewing the characters and story, shown before the first episode) were presented on "THE MICKEY MOUSE CLUB" from February 10th through March 7th, 1958, 'sallie'.
They have shindigs there? How about hullabaloos? ;)
Love that state-of-the-art fridge, too!
Used to love the Mickey Mouse Club when I was a child at the beginning of the 60ies in Australia. Now, having grown up ;) and living in Europe, I regard this Annette serial as ever so mushy (as well as a lot of other US TV shows). Glad my kids got to see more sensible TV shows here on the continent.
Love Ms Wickes in this and Also in White Christmas and the Sister Act movies
I love watching manors and morals for story
In case no one else noticed, this features Annette.
Tim Considine was in "My three sons"
Agreed. I'm a child of the 70's and 80's and while my generation was far from perfect, we were a lot more appreciative of what we had plus we had a higher level of respect for hard work, authority, and not expecting to be spoon fed constantly. I miss those days of relative innocence and the lack of jaded persona that permeates most teenagers today.
An amazing lady who had MS .
@SirLesful I maintain that the good of Disney still comes through in some of their movies, like The Princess and the Frog and Tangled. Shows like Wizards of Waverly Place are incredibly flashy, but good at their core.
Well golly gee whizz! I am watching my fathers t.v shows through a time machine, neat o! 🤖
At approximately 5:46 Jet comes into the house to greet Kate meanwhile at approximately 7:23 comes to the kitchen to meet Jet.
Please think positive at all times. ©®
February 22, 2021 @ 8:05 am ©®
I do detect that Annette and Jet will be good friends.
Please be polite at all times. ©®
February 22, 2021 @ 8:10 am
RIP
Who is the young lady who plays jet? She is a very happy 😊 person.
Yes, she was Martha Wilson on that show.
When economic cultures collide...........
There is the complete series as a 3 hr movie online. The father ends up being a great guy.
The sound is very low, I had to turn my speakers up full volume and can barely hear it, but it's there.
Thank you for correcting my typo. But you must agree with the thought expressed or else you wouldn't have commented. Good for you!
Sure was, she played good old Mr. Wilson's wife.
YES! It IS a "kissing" game. Spin. Not picked up! DO the "penalty. Which would be announced as????? Kiss Jack. Kiss Jill. Dance.
Jet Maypen was played by Judy Nugent, daughter of Carl Nugent, property master for MGM during the 50s and 60s. Nugent, who was right at home playing a farm girl or cowgirl, left show business in the eary 60s to marry another actor Buck Taylor (who would later star as Newly on "Gunsmoke"), and raise a family.
Judy Nugent appeared in the original 'Cheaper by the Dozen'. Her sister Carol was an actress who was at one time married to actor Nick Adams.
i wasnt even alive then but i still like watchin. thanks 4 puttin up. i think annette is cute. and by the way can anybody tell me what are pop overs?
what do u mean "what do you drink?" what kind of guardians would offer coffee to a young girl? lol..
If you grew up Cuban you started drinking "cafe Cubano," at a young age!!:-)
I'm not even cuban or colombian, I'm panamannian, and at 14 I was def. having some coffee 😂. My dad didn't wanted me to have it at a young age, but in my mother's family coffee was introduced to children quicker. Plus, I was never a fan of milk for breakfast.
Is this Earth, why is everyone acting so alien
❤❤❤❤❤❤
I saw them when they were first broadcast, too, This is etched in my mind after so long. (Uh-uh, don't figure out my age, LOLOLOLOL).
have to take off both shoes to count all those years there kid. Watched some of these on a new B&W 19" TV in 1959. The Mouseketeers were the highlight of afternoon programming. Newscasters read from their paper notes for news of the day. Westerns were pretty common too. The weather report included all sections of the U.S.A, and hand-drawn weather maps of the coming storms and winds helped to plan road trips. Today weather is all about micro-formatting the 20 square miles around the transmitter tower. You have to go to the computer to get weather farther than 60 miles away. Yup. Progress.... have a great day from Oregon.
Same here!
You can find them on Amazon and Ebay. They're a bit pricey.
That’s a strange way to hold a fork. Is that how country people hold a fork?
It's so nice. Where can we buy these?
It was the fifties, what do you expect?
@mjcamck71 Thanks for your reply. I suppose in a way today's equivalent might be IN THE MIDDLE. I watch it every Wednesday and always find it hilarious.
I was with you, Ray. By the time I hit my teen years, the malt shops were a thing of the past and "the teens" were becoming hippies, enjoying sit-ins, and experimenting with dope. What a letdown. How I longed for the teen activities of the better dressed "Annette" crowd. The death of our president, riots in the streets, and marches certainly painted a different picture than that of the 1950s. Fear of nukes looked pretty good compared to the turmoil of the 1960s. I was out of the loop. Sign.
@ztslovebird I completely agree.
I don't drink milk when I was Annette's age here
Why no sounds on any of them?
@mjcamck71 I think it's more than that. The examples have to be set at home. If the parents don't know good behavior, you can't expect their children to know it either. I'm not so sure that showing them these films might influence them for the better. They would not appreciated it and say that it was not real according to their definition of "reality." These are among the reasons we have so many disfunctional families.
No audio?
that jet was so hot
I'm not quite getting why would the milkshake guy would be accepted in the crowd if he wanted to, but the egg girl (Jet?) gets an awful and eew-face "heck no" from Olmstead. Aren't both ranch dwellers, like peasants to those snobby kids? Is he "cooler" just because he works on a store and gets to dress accordingly, while the girl's business is delivery, farm to table like?
i wish we saw more of mike ): hes my fave
Why is there volume for this? Tuned off mute, still no volume..
Hi Brianna, volume works fine on my pc and watching youtube on my Roku. Sorry you are having problems with the video.
That happens to me in CZcams intermittently. Wish I knew why and how to fix.
Of course not. But she was supposed to be something of an up-tight snob.
Who played Jet?
Judy Nugent
Was Jet in Magnificent Obsession?
She was. Her voice did not change much.
I have sound on my pc Lauren.
20 episodes
Actually, it's 'd-y-s', the opposite of the prefix 'eu'.
Who's jet?
Jet Maypen, played by Judy Nugent, is the blonde girl who's delivering farm products.
Actuallly they were calld "soda shops" and not so idyllic as posts here make out. They were the place (thru the 90s and even some now) where you "picked up" a girl to "park" with, recruited a person old enough to by booze for you at a local bar, purchased pot or better drugs OR had a soda or took you girl after a ball game. Now often have been replaced as were Root Beer stands by drive-in food spots or 7-11 type stores. As these kids sing, "DON'T JUMP TO CONCLUSION." No poodle skirts now and different slang for teens. That's all! Still "juvenile delinquents" ( called "criminals" now.) STOP CLAIMING KIDS ARE DIFFERENT. LIFE WAS SIMPLER and so on. I was Annette's age in 1957. LIFE IN fear OF THE H BOMB WAS NOT easier. IT WAS VERY complex AND FRIGHTENED HELL OUT OF US WHEN WATCHING TV INCLUDED ED MURROW DOINNG DOCUMENTARY ON EXACTLY how THE BOMBERS COULD GET THRU TO ANY,,, ANY TOWN in Americaor how Strontium 90 was KILLING kids who drank milk, (CHECK "ED MURROW BOMBER ATTACK" ON YOU TUBE.) For God sake CREDIT us kids of the fifties. We were under un- precsidented stress. STUDT history YOURSELF. Don't just let what Grandparents say color to lense for you!!!!!!!!!
I watched the E.R. Murrow documentary about the "bomb" when I was a kid. It was scary and depressing and has hung over my head ever since. The local soda shop was a combination drive-in/walk in and was very much in the vein of Happy Days and Disney versions. Of course, anyone our age who takes these old movies and TV representations of life as reality is probably caught in sentimentality and the glossing of distant memories. I do think times were simpler then, but I was a kid then, so what did I know?
@Shellbackl Click on the mute button right above the LIKE button.
We
Love ❤the Mickey club ❤