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The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season One (5 Disc Box Set)
 
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The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season One (5 Disc Box Set) (1961)

Series: The Dick Van Dyke Show Rating: Unrated   Format: DVD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)

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The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season One (5 Disc Box Set)
82% buy the item featured on this page:
The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season One (5 Disc Box Set) 4.8 out of 5 stars (52)
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The Dick Van Dyke Show - The Complete Series
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The Dick Van Dyke Show - The Complete Series 4.9 out of 5 stars (44)
$182.49
The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season Two (5 Disc Box Set)
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The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season Two (5 Disc Box Set) 4.8 out of 5 stars (20)
$29.49
The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season Three
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The Dick Van Dyke Show - Season Three 4.8 out of 5 stars (14)
$30.49

Product Details


Special Features

  • 30 episodes on 5 discs: The Sick Boy and the Sitter, The Meershatz Pipe, Jealousy, Sally and the Lab Technician, Washington vs. the Bunny, Oh How We Met the Night That We Danced, The Unwelcome Houseguest, Harrison B. Harding of Camp Crowder MO, My Blonde-Haired Brunette, Forty-Four Tickets, Tell or Not to Tell, Sally Is a Girl, Empress Carlotta's Necklace, Buddy Can You Spare a Job?, Who Owes Who What?, Sol and the Sponsor, The Curious Thing About Women, Punch Thy Neighbor, Where Did I Come From?, The Boarder Incident, A Word a Day, The Talented Neighborhood, Father of the Week, The Twizzle, One Angry Man, Where You Been Fassbinder?, The Bad Old Days, I Am My Brother's Keeper, The Sleeping Brother, The Return of Happy Spangler
  • Bonus "Head of the Family" pilot episode starring Carl Reiner!
  • Commentaries by Carl Reiner and Dick Van Dyke for 2 episodes
  • Cast retrospective interviews and featurettes with Carl Reiner, Dick Van Dyke, Morey Amsterdam and Rose Marie
  • CBS promo spots
  • Excerpt from the 1961-1962 Emmy Awards footage
  • Cheer commercial spots
  • Still galleries and cast bios and more

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The Dick Van Dyke Show Season 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Before The Dick Van Dyke Show, suburbia was never portrayed on television as a haven of sophistication. We never followed Ozzie Nelson to work. And we never, ever fantasized what Ward and June Cleaver did behind closed doors. But Your Show of Shows veteran Carl Reiner's groundbreaking series broke the staid, sitcom mold. Just consider Mary Tyler Moore's Laura Petrie, the ravishing wife of Dick Van Dyke's comedy writer, Rob Petrie. "I'm just a housewife," she proclaims in the episode "To Tell or Not to Tell," just before breaking into an incendiary bossa nova in the Petrie living room. In "The Return of Happy Spangler," she is jokingly identified as Jackie Kennedy. But the comparison is apt. She's got style (those capri pants scandalized the show's sponsors!); she's got grace. The Dick Van Dyke Show boasts a peerless ensemble, gold-standard writing, and characters who have become icons. How many comedy writers were inspired to get into the business by watching Rob and his staff, man-hungry Sally Rogers (Rose Marie) and old school "human joke machine" Buddy Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam), brainstorm sketches for tyrannical boss Alan Brady (much discussed, and much feared, but never seen in season 1)?

Much of the comedy in the first season springs from Rob juggling his glamorous career with his harried home life. In the first episode, he compels his over-protective wife to attend a party at Alan Brady's, though she is worried son Ritchie (Larry Matthews) is sick ("He turned down his cupcake"). In "Washington vs. the Bunny," Rob must choose between a business trip and seeing Ritchie in a school play. In another episode, Rob forgets "Forty-Four Tickets" he had promised to the P.T.A. But back to Laura (and about time!). As the season unfolds, Moore comes into her own as a gifted comedienne, and she takes her stock character to dizzy new heights, as witness "My Blonde-Haired Brunette" and the classic "The Curious Thing About Women," the one with the inflatable boat. A pop culture benchmark, The Dick Van Dyke Show is must-own television. --Donald Liebenson

Product Description

Trip into the living room of comedy writer Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke) along with his lovely wife Laura (Mary Tyler Moore), wisecracking coworkers and nutty neighbors. Winner of 15 Emmy Awards, this groundbreaking series is consistently ranked among the top TV comedies of all time and renowned for its topnotch cast and stellar writing. Now enjoy the first season's entire 30 episodes, each digitally remastered to its original full-length version.

30 episodes on 5 discs: The Sick Boy and the Sitter, The Meershatz Pipe, Jealousy, Sally and the Lab Technician, Washington vs. the Bunny, Oh How We Met the Night That We Danced, The Unwelcome Houseguest, Harrison B. Harding of Camp Crowder MO, My Blonde-Haired Brunette, Forty-Four Tickets, Tell or Not to Tell, Sally Is a Girl, Empress Carlotta's Necklace, Buddy Can You Spare a Job?, Who Owes Who What?, Sol and the Sponsor, The Curious Thing About Women, Punch Thy Neighbor, Where Did I Come From?, The Boarder Incident, A Word a Day, The Talented Neighborhood, Father of the Week, The Twizzle, One Angry Man, Where You Been Fassbinder?, The Bad Old Days, I Am My Brother's Keeper, The Sleeping Brother, The Return of Happy Spangler.


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52 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (52 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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71 of 73 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful quality!, October 22, 2003
By Larry J. Commons (Arlington, TX USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)    (VINE VOICE)   
I just bought this set (along with Season 2) and can't say enough good things about it. First, when Image says the episodes are "restored" -- they mean it! Picture and sound quality are excellent. Next, these are the FULL-LENGTH episodes, completely unedited. The first episode I played had a scene in the middle of the show that I'd never seen before (not on TV Land, not on Nick at Nite, not in local syndication). Running time of each episode is at least 25 minutes & 30 seconds -- wow. Another episode I played even had the original network footage at the beginning, with Dick Van Dyke saying, "Welcome to our new time slot." Amazing. Then there are the bonus features -- audio commentaries (interesting ones!) and new interviews and original TV commercials and Emmy Awards footage and more. Finally, the packaging is very sleek and looks great. Do yourself a favor and buy this. Do ALL "Dick Van Dyke Show" fans a favor and buy it so that Image will release Seasons 3 through 5.
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55 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ohhhh, Rooob! this is the best sitcom ever, June 2, 2003
By Tommy (Kansas City,MO USA) - See all my reviews
There's nothing better or more impressive than a great, old, sitcom that still cracks you up, no matter how old you are. This sitcom makes me laugh *very* hard, and i'm 13. all the slapstick can be enjoyed by the younger group of children while the wittiness, quick timing, and sacarsam will appeal to an older audience. here are the great episodes from the first season.

Ratings:

**** - One of the very best
*** - Good
** - Not so good
* - Unworthy of association with the rest of the series

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THE SICK BOY AND THE SITTER (1) - The first episode ever. Laura worries about leaving Ritchie with a babysitter when she thinks he's sick. *** (NOTE: Mary Tyler Moore's real-life son was named Ritchie.)

THE MEERSHATZ PIPE (2) - Rob gets jealous when Buddy seems to be getting preferential treatment from Alan Brady. ***

JEALOUSY (3) - Laura doubts Rob's faithfulness when a beautiful guest star appears on the show. ***

SALLY AND THE LAB TECHNICIAN (4) - Sally ruins a date with Laura's cousin when she can't stop wisecracking. ***

WASHINGTON VS. THE BUNNY (5) - Rob agonizes over having to miss Ritchie's school play. ****

OH, HOW WE MET ON THE NIGHT THAT WE DANCED (6) - Rob and Laura explain to Ritchie how they met. *** (NOTE: In this episode, Laura's maiden name is Meeker, which was the last name of Mary Tyler Moore's first husband. In Episodes 59, 87, 131 and 156, it's Meehan. Rob also says he doesn't smoke, but in several other episodes, he is clearly seen with a cigarette.)

THE UNWELCOME HOUSE GUEST (7) - Rob takes care of Buddy's dog for the weekend. ***

HARRISON B. HARDING OF CAMP CROWDER, MO (8) - An old army buddy of Rob's shows up, but Rob doesn't remember him. ***

MY BLONDE-HAIRED BRUNETTE (9) - Laura bleaches her hair when she thinks Rob has lost interest in her. ***

FORTY-FOUR TICKETS (10) - Rob forgets that he promised the PTA tickets for the Alan Brady show. ***

TO TELL OR NOT TO TELL (11) - Rob worries that Laura will want to go back to her dancing career. ***

SALLY IS A GIRL (12) - Laura notices that everybody treats Sally like one of the guys, including Sally herself. (We meet Pickles Sorrell for the first time!) ***

EMPRESS CARLOTTA'S NECKLACE (13) - Laura pretends to love the hideous necklace that Rob bought for her. *** (This one only makes sense if you assume that Rob has absolutely NO taste. Also note that Rob's parents are played by a different actor and actress than usual, and that Rob's father's name is Edward instead of Sam.)

BUDDY, CAN YOU SPARE A JOB? (14) - Buddy asks to be released from his contract so he can take a higher-paying job. *** (NOTE: Sally clearly states that Mel married Alan's sister! In Episodes 146 and 153, it's the other way around.)

WHO OWES WHO WHAT? (15) - Rob isn't sure whether Buddy paid back the money he borrowed. ***

SOL AND THE SPONSOR (16) - Rob's army buddy Sol Pomeroy invites himself to dinner the night that Rob is entertaining his stuffy sponsor. *** (NOTE: Interesting casting here... The sponsor's wife is played by the actress who sometimes plays Rob's mother, and Sol PomerOY is played by Marty Ingels, whereas in certain other episodes, the character's name is Sol PomerANTZ and is played by Allan Melvin.)

THE CURIOUS THING ABOUT WOMEN (17) - Rob gets mad at Laura for opening his mail. ****

PUNCH THY NEIGHBOR (18) - Jerry goes too far when he needles Rob about the Alan Brady Show. *** (NOTE: Rob says that Alan Brady's wife's name is Barb. In Episode 153, Mel says that her name is Margaret.)

WHERE DID I COME FROM? (19) - Rob tells Ritchie the story of the day he was born. ***

THE BOARDER INCIDENT (20) - Buddy stays at Rob's house while Pickles is out of town. ***

A WORD A DAY (21) - Ritchie starts using naughty words. ***

THE TALENTED NEIGHBORHOOD (22) - Rob ends up auditioning every kid in town when the Alan Brady Show announces a talent contest. ***

FATHER OF THE WEEK (23) - Ritchie doesn't want Rob to talk to his class at school. *** (NOTE: Ritchie's teacher is played by the actress who often appears as Rob's mother.)

THE TWIZZLE (24) - Sally discovers a new dance craze. **

ONE ANGRY MAN (25) - Rob is called for jury duty, and he's the only one who thinks the defendant is innocent. ***

WHERE YOU BEEN, FASBINDER? (26) - An old high school classmate of Sally's shows up, and she misinterprets the reason for his visit. *** (NOTE: Pickles Sorrell shows up again.)

THE BAD OLD DAYS (27) - Rob begins to think that Laura has robbed him of his masculinity. ***

I AM MY BROTHER'S KEEPER (28) - Rob's brother Stacey comes to visit, with a bizarre secret. *** (NOTE: In Episode 11, Rob tells Sally that his brother is married. In this episode, Rob tells Sally that Stacey is engaged. In Episode 111, Stacey announces he is about to BECOME engaged. Also, Stacey says that he remembers Laura from the wedding, but considering the circumstances under which Rob and Laura got married, it's highly unlikely that Stacey was present.)

THE SLEEPING BROTHER (29) - Stacey performs for Alan Brady at Rob's house. **** (NOTE: It is stated that Mel married Alan's sister. In Episodes 146 and 153, it's the other way around.)

THE RETURN OF HAPPY SPANGLER (30) - Rob gives his old mentor a comedy writing job. ***

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30 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's Van Dyke's show, but it's Tyler Moore's breakthrough., April 28, 2004
By Michael K. Beusch (San Mateo, California United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)    (VINE VOICE)   
The Dick Van Dyke Show is simply a landmark of television situation comedy. It's treatment of the American family bought the sitcom into the 1960's. Where I Love Lucy, The Honeymooners, Leave it to Beaver and Father Knows Best were relics of the staid, conservative Eisenhower years, The Dick Van Dyke Show propelled sitcoms into the New Frontier. Audiences now got to see a family that more closely mirrored the situations and concerns of their own lives (even with the inevitable exaggeration of situations that occurs in event the best shows). For the first time, audiences not only got to see where the father figure in a family worked, but that workplace became a focal point for many of the show's episodes. Fathers and mothers were real people and not the carboard cutouts of Father Knows Best and Ozzie and Harriet or the hysterical cartoon characters of I Love Lucy. A Jewish character was vital, not as a caricature as in previous shows, but as a real, viable character. To be sure, there was the usual lunacy found in most sitcoms, but the humor arose from situations that its audience could identify with and relate to.

However, no innovation introduced by The Dick Van Dyke Show was more important than the modernization of the portrayals of women on television. Mary Tyler Moore's Laura Petrie isn't the pretty, but sexless perfect housewife of the 1950's. She is a sexy, intelligent partner to Dick Van Dyke's Rob Petrie who is nobody's fool and is Rob's moral conscience in many ways -- unheard of in the 1950's. As Van Dyke said during a retrospective on the show, "You knew that even though Rob and Laura slept in twin beds, they were doing something else besides sleeping in that bedroom." Moore's tight capri pants and curvaceous figure inspired lust among men (including Carl Reiner's son Rob, who once touched Moore's rear end on the set) that was unimaginable just a few years earlier.

But even more importantly, a female character was now a vital part of the humor of a show without being a sarcastic parnter like Alice Kramden, a sterile, smiling mannequin like Donna Stone/June Cleaver/Margaret Anderson/et al or a wild maniac like Lucy Ricardo. What makes this first season DVD set so important is that the viewer can track when the show hits its stride. And, not coincidentally, it hits that stride when the show starts to utilize Mary Tyler Moore's great comedic talents in the 9th episode, "My Blonde Haired Brunette."

In the first eight episodes of the show, all of the characters, not just Laura Petrie's, seem unfinished. However, each character has their identity defined to a great extent (Rob is the father figure who sometimes is given to clumsiness, Buddy Sorrell is the wisecracking veteran writer, Sally Rodgers is the man hungry female writer who uses her sense of humor to hide her loneliness, Mel Cooley is the fussy producer who is the butt of Buddy's jokes, etc.) The character of Laura, however, seems to be a more modern version of the 1950's housewife, there to give support, cook breakfast for her family, etc.

In "My Blonde Haired Brunette," all that changes. Rob plucks a gray hair out of Laura's head and kids her that she's getting old. Laura becomes extremely insecure and wonders if Rob is still attracted to her. Encouraged by next door neighbor Mille Helper, Laura dyes her hair blonde for Rob. However, when Rob tells her over the phone that she would look like Harpo Marx if she were blonde, Laura panics and tries to dye her hair back to its natural brunette color, ending up with a head of hair that is half blonde and half brunette. When Rob sees her, Laura starts to cry uncontrollably in what would become a running joke in both the Van Dyke Show and The Mary Tyler Moore show (Moore is the best comic crier in entertainment history). Carl Reiner has said that that was when he knew how special Moore was and, from then on, Laura was an integral character in the show's humor, equal to every other character on the show. The humor doesn't arise from stupid, wacked out antics like on earlier sitcoms, but instead from feelings that everyone has had and can relate to: fear of aging, fear of being unattractive to your spouse, etc. "My Blonde Haired Brunette" is one of the most important moments in television history: the emergence of a more modern, realistic woman and the real debut of Mary Tyler Moore as a comedienne who can inspire laughter by showing her humanity rather than playing the fool.

(NOTE: If you want to see how integral Moore, Van Dyke, and all the rest of the cast was to the success of The Dick Van Dyke Show, be sure to see the pilot for the show called "Head of the Family" which starred Carl Reiner as Rob and Barbara Britton as Laura. The episode is so unfunny that it makes the audience appreciate Van Dyke and Moore's talents that much more.)

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Very, very American
I bought this with a lot of anticipation, having watched Dick van Dyke in movies like Mary Poppins & Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Poet Laureate

5.0 out of 5 stars Best TV Show!!
This is by far one of the best TV shows ever written! The actors' comedic timing is impeccable and the writing done by Carl Reiner was top-notch. Read more
Published 8 months ago by music fan

5.0 out of 5 stars Good family entertainment!
I was very satisfied by the product. The condition of the product was excellent. I arrived on time. The packaging was good. All the DVDs are new. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Midhat Ali

5.0 out of 5 stars Fun, when you are older.
I was not interested in this show as kid; but as an adult think it is great.

Lots of humor and friendship in every show about the married life of Rob and Laura... Read more
Published 13 months ago by Reliable Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Dick Van Dyke, simply the funniest TV Show Ever
I've loved the Dick Van Dyke Show for as long as I can remember. Back when I was a child it was a staple for us at home. Read more
Published on March 10, 2008 by S. Smith

5.0 out of 5 stars The Dick Van Dyke Show 1st Season
What ever happened to writers who could write real comody? This may have been first seen in the early 60's but it is still extremely funny. Read more
Published on February 24, 2008 by G. Garland

5.0 out of 5 stars Good, CLEAN Entertainment!
It is difficult in this day and age to find good, clean television, so my family has opted to purchase classic television shows such as this. Read more
Published on February 8, 2008 by T. Roper

4.0 out of 5 stars America before I was born
Having been born in late 1960, I found it strange watching my way through the first season of this show. I never knew America when it was like this. Read more
Published on January 2, 2008 by E. Carter

5.0 out of 5 stars Everyone knows that this is a great show...
So I want to mention the sound and picture quality. They are superb. Also, the menus are easy to navigate and the special features are really great! Read more
Published on September 7, 2007 by Pool Enthusiast

5.0 out of 5 stars The Best
Dick Van Dyke is the best!! I love watching all the shows, and never get sick of them. I wish there were more episodes. Read more
Published on August 4, 2007 by Jackie

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