Like most Americans in 1962, at age 3, I was, along with
both of my parents, a regular viewer of THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW. One of my
favorite characters was the genial, slow-witted hick named Gomer Pyle who
worked down at Wally’s filling station. Gomer had a good heart and could take a
car apart and put it back together with his eyes closed but he was otherwise
reasonably oblivious. At first perhaps a throwaway role, Gomer quickly became a
regular in Mayberry, picking up the slack from Howard McNear’s Floyd who was
sidelined for quite a while after a stroke.
After two years on the show, it was Andy who went to the
producers with the idea of doing a spin-off that essentially ripped off his own
famous stage and film role, NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS only starring the Gomer
character.
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In 1964, GOMER PYLE, USMC debuted to good ratings. The
series would stay atop the Nielsens for the next five years as Jim molded Gomer
from a stereotype into one of THE all-time great TV characters.
The premise was simple and lifted directly from Andy’s
earlier play---young, naïve country boy ends up in the military and a tough
sergeant doesn’t deal well with him at all. Hilarity ensues. And it did!
One of the factors really making this show was the brilliant
comic performance of actor Frank Sutton as Sgt. Carter, befuddled weekly by the
disingenuous antics of Private Pyle and determined to either make him or break
him. Sutton played the role at the top of his lungs through much of every
episode, just like a good drill sergeant should.
GOMER PYLE, USMC was basically a two-act between Nabors and Sutton.
There were a few other semi-regulars including, at various times, future TV
stars Ronnie Schell, Ted Bessell, Larry Hovis and William Christopher as
Gomer’s fellow recruits. Schell would later return as Sgt. Carter’s corporal, a
role played originally by TV Jimmy Olsen Jack Larson and then, for most of the
show’s run by a blasé Roy Stuart.
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In the mid-sixties, the country had not yet turned against
the war in Viet Nam but it was never mentioned on GOMER PYLE, USMC. Instead the
show adhered to the time-honored clichés of the military sitcom format with
little to no criticism of the Marine Corps in any way so as to stay in good
with them and maintain their unofficial sanctioning. The show could, in a way,
be seen as a recruiting forum. It showed the hard work and the discipline
involved sometimes but overall it made the Marines look like a fun place to be.
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Week after week, he would get into some mess or other either
on the base or off the base by trying to do the right thing and the Sergeant
would usually be dragged in with him or go in after him. As time went on, one could see that
carter was developing not just an affection for his “problem child” but an
actual respect. Not that he could ever let that show.
In the meantime, Nabors caused fans mouths to fall open when
it was revealed that he could sing like a semi-operatic angel! He was suddenly
in great demand on talk and variety shows and ultimately put out scores of
successful “easy listening” record albums.
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GOMER PYLE, USMC went into syndicated reruns, often
dominating local markets where it aired in spite of backlash at the military by
that point because of the escalated mess in Viet Nam.
Frank Sutton sadly passed as early as 1974. Jim Nabors, in spite of a long and successful career before health issues led to semi-retirement in the nineties, would never again reach the heights of popularity that he had as Gomer Pyle.
In fact, one of his last TV performances was in the acclaimed reunion movie, RETURN TO MAYBERRY, which reunited Andy, Barney, Opie and the whole surviving cast of THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW. Jim, of course, was Gomer Pyle.
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