(Syndication, October 8, 1988-May 25, 1991)
MAIN CAST:
John Schuck
– Herman Munster
Lee
Meriwether – Lily Munster
Jason Marsden –
Edward “Eddie” Wolfgang Munster
Mary-Ellen
Dunbar (pilot) & Hilary
Van Dyke – Marilyn Munster
Howard Morton
– “Grandpa” Vladmir Dracula
The
Munsters franchise was built on the premise of a sitcom starring some of Universal’s famous monsters.
The gag? They didn’t know they were any different from the ordinary human
beings that inhabited the world around them.
The notion
was first suggested to Universal Studios by animator Bob Clampett as a series of
cartoons. He worked on concepts from 1943-45, but the project ended up stalling.
In 1963, a similar idea was submitted by writers Allan Burns
and Chris
Hayward and given to writers Norm
Liebman and Ed Haas for
further development, writing a pilot titled Love Thy Monster. The
original idea took great inspiration from The Addams Family
cartoons by Charles
Addams, but because Universal owned the rights to Frankenstein’s
Monster and Dracula,
they decided to inject them into the idea. A push was made for it to be
animated, but ultimately it was decided to proceed with live-action.
Fred Gwynne was cast as Herman
Munster, who was basically a goofy and lovable version of the Frankenstein
monster. Cast alongside him was his Car 54, Where Are You?
co-star Al Lewis as Count
Dracula, Herman’s father-in-law who was irritable, sarcastic and often
antagonistic towards Herman, but doted on his daughter when not working on
crazy inventions in his basement dungeon. Joan Marshall was cast as
Herman’s wife, Phoebe, who had a gothic look to her and a very abrasive and
tense relationship with Herman while also being seductively lovey with him. “Happy” Nate Derman was cast as
their son Eddie, who displayed werewolf-like qualities such as a floofy widow’s
peak hairstyle and pointy ears. Beverly
Owen rounded out the cast as Marilyn, Phoebe’s niece who stayed with them
while she attended a local college. The gag with Marilyn is that she appeared
as a normal human girl. While this made her attractive to outsiders, she was
considered hideous by her own family and often drew their sympathies. It was
this inherent “ugliness” that was often believed to drive off Marilyn’s
suitors, rather than the shock of meeting the other members of her family.
Together they lived in a decaying Victorian Gothic-style mansion at 1313
Mockingbird Lane in Mockingbird Heights--complete with all the dust and cobwebs
you could ask for, as well as a pet dragon named Spot living under their stairs--after
having immigrated from Transylvania.
A
full-color pilot was filmed titled “My Fair Munster”, running 16 minutes (later
cut to just over 13), and was used to sell the series to CBS. A second pilot was also filmed; this time in
black-and-white and with some tweaks to the final make-up designs for the
characters; particularly Herman, who was given more padding to hide Gwynne’s
naturally thin frame. Realizing Phoebe was just a carbon copy of Morticia Addams
in her appearance and mannerisms, the producers decided to revamp and recast
the character as Lily Munster with Yvonne DeCarlo, who used Donna Reed as an inspiration
for her performance. Lily had more of a bat motif in her wardrobe and was a lot
gentler towards Herman; however, she was capable of displaying a fiery temper
when pushed. Derman was also replaced as Eddie by Butch Patrick. Eddie’s
personality was initially more feral like his wolf brethren and in general
fairly awful, but was adjusted to make him more respectful. Owen would end up
replaced by Pat Priest after
13 episodes as she was miserable being away from her boyfriend in New York due
to contractual obligations.
The
Munsters debuted on CBS on September 24, 1964, running for two seasons and
70 episodes. Bud Westmore was
responsible for the show’s make-up design, and the theme song was composed by Jack Marshall. Its first season
scored high in the ratings, easily besting the television version of its
inspiration The Addams
Family on ABC, and earning itself a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best
Television Series. Unfortunately, its second season was thoroughly trounced by Batman and was
cancelled by its conclusion. A spin-off film, Munster, Go Home!
was produced and released immediately following the series’ end—with Debbie Watson replacing Priest
as Marilyn—as a means to introduce international audiences to the characters
ahead of international syndication. It followed the clan as they journeyed to
England to take possession of an inherited English manor called Munster Hall;
however, their British cousins wanted it for themselves and sought to get rid
of their American counterparts. The film was presented in color.
Munster, Go Home! wasn’t a
commercial success on its release, but the series certainly was in syndication;
finding a whole new audience and popularity in the following decades. 1973 saw
the first attempts at a revival, returning to the animated form originally
desired. The Mini-Munsters saw the Munsters visited by Transylvania
cousins who start the titular band with Eddie (Bobby Diamond). Meanwhile,
Grandpa (Lewis, the only one to reprise his role) makes it so that a haunted
hearse Herman (Richard Long) bought for the band could run on music when it ran
out of gas. That ended up putting them directly at odds with gangsters who
recently took over a gasoline company. The special was aired as an installment
of The
ABC Saturday Superstar Movie, but wasn’t picked up for a series.
A second
revival attempt came in 1981 with the telefilm The Munsters’ Revenge,
which aired on NBC. The original cast was
reunited, with Jo McDonnell
taking over Marilyn and K.C.
Martel taking over Eddie since Patrick had aged out of the role. It dealt
with Herman and Grandpa having to clear their names when a pair of robots
resembling them was used by a mad scientist to commit robberies. CBS was so
convinced that it would be a hit for NBC that they posted an airing of The Wizard of Oz
against it. However, it ended up being a dud and was quickly forgotten.
In 1987 another
revival attempt had begun development. The idea would take the form of a sequel
series to the original, using one of Grandpa’s experiments to put the family in
suspended animation for 22 years and have them awaken in the present day. Lewis
attempted to reprise his role but he was either insulted by being asked to
audition or the producers just decided to start fresh with an all-new cast, and
Gwynne was asked to reprise the role of Herman but he outright refused. The
cast would end up including John Schuck as Herman (who only took the job for
the money), Lee Meriwether as Lily (who starred as Catwoman in the film for Batman,
the original Munster-killer), Jason Marsden as Eddie, Hilary Van Dyke as
Marilyn (replacing Mary-Ellen Dunbar from the pilot), and Howard Morton as
Grandpa. While many of the original Munsters props were recycled, a
whole new set needed to be designed to accommodate a multi-camera set-up and a
studio audience. The series was also shot on videotape rather than film, giving
it a different look from the original.
The
Munsters Today debuted on October 8, 1988 in syndication. A pilot depicting
the suspended animation story was shot but never aired. Instead, that plot
device was relegated to the intro and explained in the lyrics over an
arrangement of Marshall’s original theme. It was written by Haas, Liebmann,
Burns, Steven Baum, Ted Bergman, Barbara Berkowitz, Donna Blinder, Andrew Borakove, Marc Brown, David Carren, J. Larry Carroll, Mark Cassutt, William Cyr, Michael Davidoff, Lisa DeBenedictis, Lisa Eberhard, Howard Friedlander, James Gates, Ann Gibbs, Laura Glendinning,
Patty Gordon,
Joy Grdnic,
Carol Hatfield,
Chris Hayward,
Bob Destri
Hilgenberg, Barbara
Hobart, Ron
Jarvis, Bryan
Joseph, Kathy
Joseph, Hope
Juber, Craig
Kellem, Joel
Kimmel, Paul
Lander, Neil
Alan Levy, Michael
Lyons, Mark
C. Miller, Danny
Morris, Kim
Mortensen, Alan
Moskowitz, Ken
Peragine, Janice
Pieroni, Scott
Redman, Billy
Riback, Neil
Rosen, Bill
Rosenthal, Daryl
Rowland, Jeffrey
Russel, Jeffrey
J. Sachs, Lane
Sarasohn, Robert
Schechter, Elroy
Schwartz, Lloyd
J. Schwartz, Philip A. Scorza,
Adele Styler,
Burt Styler,
Noah Taft,
Bruce Teicher,
George Tricker
and Kimberly
Wells, with Rosenthal, Gibbs and Kimmel serving as story editors. David Abbot
served as the head make-up artist with Gilbert A. Mosko,
and Jody
Lawrence was the key hair stylist. Bill Fulton and
Lisa Brochet
handled the series’ score.
For the first season, Today
largely emulated the original series with the added “fish out of water” element.
Despite some questionable quality in the final presentation that made it to
screens, Today ended up finding a large pre-teen audience. The producers
decided to better connect with that demographic and made some changes going
forward. Beginning with the second season, the out-of-time element was dropped
and the family was allowed to join everyone else in the 80s. Their appearances
were slowly updated beginning with Eddie’s hair and attire, and then-current
pop culture references found their way into their dialogue. For a period, the
Munsters even moved into a modern apartment after their house was destroyed by
a storm, although this ended up being short-lived. Celebrity guest stars would
be brought in for occasional appearances, such as Zsa Zsa Gabor, Pat Morita, Eddie Mekka, and Marcia Wallace, and new
characters were introduced such as Grandpa’s favorite ex-wife, Katja (Jo de Winter), and brother, Yorga
(Sandy Baron). By the third
season, it was clear that ideas were getting harder to come by as they started
recycling storylines from the original series, such as Herman being turned into
a regular human in “Just Another Pretty Face”, or engaging in outlandish plots,
like Marilyn finding a shifty genie (Billy Barty). Ratings declined
as a result and it was cancelled; having run 1 season and 2 episodes (not
counting the unaired pilot) longer than the original.
The Munsters Today largely
faded into obscurity, having seen no home media releases and only being
re-aired from 2008-11 on digital subchannel Retro Television Network. But
Universal wasn’t done with the Munsters yet—although none of their attempts
manage to garner or duplicate the acclaim of the original. In 1995, a new
telefilm was released on FOX as a Halloween
special called Here
Come the Munsters; a prequel of sorts that depicted how the Munsters
came to America from Transylvania. De Carlo, Lewis, Patrick and Priest all made
a cameo as restaurant patrons. The next year, FOX aired the The Munsters’ Scary
Little Christmas, which featured an entirely different cast that
included Baron as Grandpa. ABC Family (now Freeform)
would add Scary Little Christmas to their 25 Days of Christmas
marathon line-up in 2009. In 2012, a new attempt at a television series was
produced called Mockingbird
Lane, which skewed the franchise into darker territory and shied away
from the classic Universal Monsters depictions of the characters. The pilot
aired on NBC in October, but it was never picked up as a series. The most
recent attempt was a 2022 Netflix film
written and directed by Rob Zombie, a
self-professed lifelong fan of the series. Produced by Universal’s
direct-to-video division Universal
1440 Entertainment, the film was again a prequel showing how Herman (Jeff Daniel Phillips) met Lily
(Sheri Moon Zombie). Priest
again cameoed as a Transylvania Airlines announcer. The film received mixed to
negative reviews.
EPISODE GUIDE:
Season 1:
“Still the Munsters After All These Years” (N/A) – After
getting into Grandpa’s sleeping machine, a malfunction causes the Munsters to
sleep for 22 years and awaken in the 1980s.
“Vampire Pie” (10/8/88) – Herman decides to win a cooking
contest, but Grandpa discovers one of his ingredients causes something in
ordinary people.
“A Little Russian Dressing” (10/15/88) – Grandpa is awarded
3 wishes in a Transylvanian sweepstakes and ends up wasting 2 of them.
“Flyweight Champion of the World” (10/22/88) – Grandpa gives
Eddie a strongman formula to help him deal with videos, but it inflates his ego
as well as his muscles.
“Magna Cum Munsters” (10/29/88) – Herman goes back to school
so that Eddie will want to ask him questions when he needs help and ends up in
Eddie’s class.
“Designing Munsters” (11/5/88) – Lily enters the world of
fashion, leaving Herman and Grandpa to do all the housework.
“Farewell, Grandpa” (11/12/88) – Grandpa ends up in trouble
when its revealed he never got his Green Card when he came to America.
“Corporate Munsters” (11/19/88) – Herman’s stocks have led
to him getting a position in the company, but he must juggle his new job with
being a good dad.
“Herman the Astronaut” (11/26/88) – Grandpa and Lily aren’t
as thrilled as Herman is that he’s going to Venus as a civilian astronaut.
“Rock Fever” (12/3/88) – One of Marilyn’s favorite bands,
the Lizards, are turned into real lizards the day before their TV debut by one
of Grandpa’s inventions.
“Professor Grandpa” (12/10/88) – Grandpa takes a chemistry
class to improve his skills after his latest formula destroys his lab.
“Say Ah!” (12/17/88) – Herman takes a sick Eddie to the
doctor, but all the doctor can focus on is Herman’s appearance.
“A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ But a Cereal” (1/28/89) – Herman gets
a cereal endorsement deal when he becomes a hero, but wonders if he should do
it when he discovers the cereal isn’t any good.
“Computer Mating” (2/4/89) – Grandpa uses a computer dating
service and ends up with a lady who may be a black widow.
“McMunsters” (2/11/89) – The Munsters turn their house into
a bed and breakfast to bring in some extra money when times are tough at the
funeral parlor.
“One Flu Over the Munsters’ Nest” (2/18/89) – Marilyn runs
away when she’s forced to break a date to babysit Eddie for a sick Lily.
“Green Eyed Munsters” (2/25/89) – Herman gets jealous when
Lily spends all her time with her instructor preparing to enter the Mrs.
Transylvania contest.
“The Not So Great Escape” (3/4/89) – Grandpa wants to enter an
escape-artist competition, but Herman and Lily aren’t supportive of his hobby.
“Two Left Feet” (3/11/89) – The family of Marilyn’s crush
try to break them up after meeting the Munsters.
“Lights, Camera, Munsters” (4/29/89) – The Munsters debate
on what kind of film Marilyn should do for her project while Eddie’s teacher
dreads the need for a meeting with his parents.
“Neighborly Munstrers” (5/6/89) – The Munsters’ new
neighbors do everything they can to dig a pool into the Munsters’
property—except talk to them.
“Munster’s Hoopsters” (5/13/89) – Eddie takes up basketball
so that Herman can brag about him…unfortunately, he’s terrible at it.
“Don’t Cry Wolfman” (5/20/89) – Two burglars decide to
infiltrate the Munster family in order to get to the stolen loot they buried in
their house while they were in stasis.
“The Howling” (5/27/89) – Grandpa devises a solution to help
temper Eddie’s howl so that he can join the glee club.
“Eau de Munster” (6/3/89) – Herman tries to keep their house
from being torn down for a museum, but Grandpa accidentally douses him with a
love potion that makes the councilwoman in charge fall for Herman.
Season 2:
“Threehundredsomething” (10/7/89) – Lily attempts to put
some romance back into her marriage, but it just leads to a fight with Herman.
“There’s No Place Like Home” (10/14/89) – Herman and Lily
embrace modern living when storm damage forces them to move into an upscale
apartment complex.
“Raging Hormones” (10/21/89) – Eddie decides to adopt a new
look as he struggles with being a teenaged werewolf.
“Murder in Munsterland” (10/28/89) – Losing their invitation
causes the neighbors to believe a murder party at the Munsters’ is an actual
murder.
“The Trial” (11/4/89) – Herman ends up in court after saving
a choking man’s life.
“It’s A Wonderful Afterlife” (11/11/89) – Grandpa shows
Herman what life would have been like if he was never built.
“The Eyes Have It” (11/18/89) – Grandpa shows Eddie how to
use the “evil eye” to deal with a bully, but it working ends up causing Eddie’s
ego to go out of control.
“It’s a Sad, Sad World” (11/25/89) – Misfortune causes
Herman’s downer of a co-worker to move in with them.
“The Melting Pot” (12/2/89) – A bored Grandpa ends up
gambling with more than his soul when he plays with the Devil.
“Once in a Blue Moon” (12/9/89) – Grandpa’s favorite ex-wife
returns to make amends.
“Drac the Ripper” (12/16/89) – When murders occur during
Grandpa’s absences, Herman suspects he’s the culprit and reports him to the
police.
“Gateman and Son” (1/27/90) – Chaos ensues when Herman lets
his boss’ son stay with the family.
“Reunion” (2/3/90) – A wedding leads to a family
reunion—which includes Herman’s hated brother Frank.
“Pants on Fire” (2/10/90) – The family tells lie on top of
lie to get out of helping Lily clean the house.
“Munstergest” (2/17/90) – Grandpa’s device to get Eddie to
stop watching TV ends up zapping him into it and becoming part of the family of
his dreams.
“Never Say Die” (2/24/90) – A group of poodles attacks
Grandpa’s pet skeleton.
“It’s A Baby” (3/3/90) – Herman and Grandpa reminisce about
the day Eddie was born when they think Spot is pregnant.
“Tell ‘em Herman Sent You” (4/28/90) – A fight with his boss
leads to Herman deciding to open his own funeral parlor.
“Thicker Than Water” (5/5/90) – Grandpa threatens to rat out
a fellow vampire that writes a novel that goes against the vampire code.
“Misadventures in Time” (5/12/90) – Herman and Grandpa end
up in a future only inhabited by children.
“Will the Real Herman Munster Please Stand Up?” (5/19/90) –
Lily and Grandpa call on one of Dr. Frankenstein’s descendants to find out why
Herman’s been acting strangely.
“Deadlock” (5/26/90) – Herman must convince his fellow
jurors that his verdict is the right one when he and Grandpa get jury duty.
“Take This Job and Shovel It” (6/2/90) – Herman becomes a TV
addict when the gravediggers go on strike, and Grandpa ends up taking a job as
a shoe salesman.
“That’s Gratitude” (6/9/90) – The family must keep Herman
from being taken advantage of by a grieving widow.
Season 3:
“The Silver Bullet” (10/6/90) – Eddie goes up against his
kindergarten rival in a rock video competition.
“The Reel Munsters” (10/13/90) – The Munsters take the
director of a home-video show to court over his depiction of them as an abnormal
family.
“Wishing You Were Here” (10/20/90) – Grandpa gives Eddie a
magical shamrock for his birthday and he wishes for the love of a supermodel
with it.
“Three Munsters and a Baby” (10/27/90) – Herman, Grandpa and
Eddie end up babysitting while trying to watch a football game.
“It’s My Party and I’ll Die if I Want To” (11/3/90) – A
party to raise Grandpa’s spirits ends up going south when the guests overstay
their welcome.
“Makin’ Waves” (11/10/90) – A brush with death causes
Grandpa to try and change his ways with the help of a surfer dude angel.
“Just Another Pretty Face” (11/17/90) – Grandpa’s new
invention accidentally changes Herman into a “normal” human.
“Kiss Kiss” (11/24/90) – Grandpa whips up Marilyn’s perfect
boyfriend.
“Mind Reader” (12/1/90) – Eddie accidentally drinks a
mind-reading potion and decides to use his new abilities to his advantage.
“No More Mr. Nice Guy” (12/8/90) – Tired of being pushed
around, Herman decides to shed his nice guy image.
“A House Divided” (1/19/91) – The Munsters end up having to
share their house with its new owners after Herman’s promotion falls through.
“A Matter of Trust” (1/26/91) – Herman and Lily give Eddie a
credit card to show that they trust him, but he ends up bitten by the shopping
bug.
“Large” (2/2/91) – Grandpa’s experiment accidentally ages up
Herman’s boss’ son.
“Genie from Hell” (2/9/91) – Marilyn frees a genie and the
family competes to get his final wish.
“Lotsa Luck” (2/16/91) – Eddie gets good luck from Grandpa’s
magic coin, but the curse on it could destroy the neighborhood.
“If I Only Knew Now” (2/23/91) – Herman and Eddie go into
the music business when Eddie demonstrates the ability to predict a hit song.
“Beating of Your Heart” (3/2/91) – Eddie and Marilyn go into
the future to see if their guidance counselor’s grim predictions would come
true.
“Parenthood vs. Childhood” (3/9/91) – Herman and Lily trade
roles with Eddie and Marlyn to see how the other half lives.
“Das Trunk” (3/16/91) – The Munsters inherit a mysterious
trunk from their fun-loving aunt.
“A Camping We Will Go” (4/27/91) – Mother Earth convinces
Herman to go with the family on an environmentally conscious camping trip.
“Breaking the Chain” (5/4/91) – Herman ends up causing the
family bad luck when he throws away some chain letters.
“Diary of a Mad Munster Wife” (5/11/91) – Lily’s sorority
sister writes a book on unfulfilled homemakers that hits a little too close to
home for Lily.
“The Bet” (5/19/91) – An old vampire buddy of Grandpa’s
tries to help him make Herman commit a dishonest act.
“Family Night” (5/25/91) – Honesty may not be the best
policy when a counselor advises the family to be more honest with each other.
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