The Bob Cummings Show
The Bob Cummings Show was an
American television sitcom which was produced from
1955 to
1959. The program began with a half-season run on
NBC, then ran for two full seasons on
CBS, and returned to NBC for its final two seasons. It starred
Robert Cummings as a dashing young
Hollywood photographer,
Air Force reserve officer, and "ladies man," Bob Collins. The character's interest in aviation and photography mirrored Cummings' own in real life. The program was later rerun in the daytime hours on
ABC and then
syndicated under the title
Love That Bob.
The Bob Cummings Show was important in the development of several television careers. One of the co-writers was
Paul Henning, later the
producer of major
1960s hits such as
The Beverly Hillbillies,
Petticoat Junction, and
Green Acres. Regulars in the show included
Ann B. Davis, later the long-suffering
maid "Alice" on
The Brady Bunch. Henning apparently remembered cast members
Nancy Kulp and
Joi Lansing favorably; both had long running roles on
The Beverly Hillbillies, Miss Kulp as "Miss Hathaway" (
secretary to
banker Milborne Drysdale) and Miss Lansing as "Gladys".
However, perhaps the biggest career boost was that received by young
Dwayne Hickman, a student at
Loyola University in
Los Angeles, who appeared as Bob's nephew and became a favorite with young women in the audience. The fall after
The Bob Cummings Show ended, he was cast as the lead in
The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis.
This program represented the height of Cummings' television career. Although he made many further appearances as a guest star and again starred in a series in the early 1960s,
My Living Doll, he never again achieved the success on television that he had with this program, which was rerun in off hours until
black and white television series lost almost all of their audience in the
1970s and were retired from syndicated distribution in large measure. However, reruns, using the
Love that Bob title, were seen on the
CBN Cable Network in the mid-'80s.