The Mothers-in-Law
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The Mothers-in-Law was a weekly sitcom starring Eve Arden and Kaye Ballard. The show ran from 1967 to 1969, and was produced by Desi Arnaz after the dissolution of both his marriage to Lucille Ball and Desilu Productions. Most of the episodes were written by Madelyn Pugh Davis and Bob Carroll, Jr., who had worked with Arnaz previously on I Love Lucy. Arnaz would make a couple of guest appearances as a matador from Barcelona. The studio audience was thrilled to see him performing again after a long absence.
[edit] Story Line
Eve Arden and Kaye Ballard played next-door neighbors who become in-laws when their children marry. The plot was similar to what I Love Lucy probably would have been if it had lasted long enough. Eve and Herb Hubbard (played by Herbert Rudley) lived next door to Kaye and Roger Buell (played by Roger C. Carmel and Richard Deacon) for 15 years. Herb was a successful lawyer. Roger was a television writer who worked at home. The Hubbards were very straightlaced, the Buells were off-the-wall and fun loving. Despite the differences, they were best friends. The children, Jerry (Jerry Fogel) and Susie (Deborah Walley), fell in love while in college and decided to get married and set up housekeeping in the Hubbards garage. Both sets of parents had different ideas of how they should live their lives and when coupled with the meddling of the Mothers-In-Law, set up the premise for the TV Show. During the second season, the children would have a baby.
[edit] Ratings
The show however suffered the same problem virtually all of the shows in the same NBC Sunday time slot suffered through the 1960s. Despite being sandwiched between The Wonderful World of Disney and Bonanza, the show never garnered the ratings NBC had hoped for. NBC considered canceling the show after the first season, but agreed to renew the show for the same price as the first season. All cast members agreed to do the second season for the same money except for Roger Carmel. The producers let him go and replaced him with Richard Deacon. The second season did even worse than the first and NBC opted not to renew again.