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The Real McCoys

  • Série télévisée
  • 1957–1963
  • TV-14
  • 30min
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
1,4 k
MA NOTE
Walter Brennan, Richard Crenna, and Kathleen Nolan in The Real McCoys (1957)
Regarder The Real McCoys Trailer - Season 1
Lire trailer1:00
1 Video
63 photos
SitcomComedyFamily

Lorsque les McCoy héritent d'un ranch en Californie, le grand-père Amos y installe sa famille depuis la Virginie-Occidentale et donne des conseils non sollicités, convaincu que les voisins o... Tout lireLorsque les McCoy héritent d'un ranch en Californie, le grand-père Amos y installe sa famille depuis la Virginie-Occidentale et donne des conseils non sollicités, convaincu que les voisins ont besoin de ses conseils.Lorsque les McCoy héritent d'un ranch en Californie, le grand-père Amos y installe sa famille depuis la Virginie-Occidentale et donne des conseils non sollicités, convaincu que les voisins ont besoin de ses conseils.

  • Création
    • Irving Pincus
  • Casting principal
    • Walter Brennan
    • Richard Crenna
    • Kathleen Nolan
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    1,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Création
      • Irving Pincus
    • Casting principal
      • Walter Brennan
      • Richard Crenna
      • Kathleen Nolan
    • 20avis d'utilisateurs
    • 3avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 5 Primetime Emmys
      • 5 nominations au total

    Épisodes224

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés

    Vidéos1

    The Real McCoys Trailer - Season 1
    Trailer 1:00
    The Real McCoys Trailer - Season 1

    Photos63

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    + 55
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
    • Grandpa Amos McCoy
    • 1957–1963
    Richard Crenna
    Richard Crenna
    • Luke McCoy
    • 1957–1963
    Kathleen Nolan
    Kathleen Nolan
    • Kate McCoy
    • 1957–1962
    Tony Martinez
    • Pepino
    • 1957–1963
    Michael Winkelman
    Michael Winkelman
    • Little Luke
    • 1957–1962
    Lydia Reed
    Lydia Reed
    • Hassie
    • 1957–1962
    Andy Clyde
    Andy Clyde
    • George MacMichael
    • 1957–1963
    Madge Blake
    Madge Blake
    • Flora MacMichael
    • 1957–1963
    Janet De Gore
    • Louise Howard
    • 1963
    Jon Lormer
    Jon Lormer
    • Sam Watkins…
    • 1959–1962
    Butch Patrick
    Butch Patrick
    • Greg Howard…
    • 1963
    Willard Waterman
    Willard Waterman
    • Mac MacGinnis…
    • 1957–1961
    Stanley Farrar
    Stanley Farrar
    • Dr. Sloane…
    • 1958–1962
    Robert Foulk
    Robert Foulk
    • Ed Bailey…
    • 1959–1963
    Marjorie Bennett
    Marjorie Bennett
    • Amanda Comstock…
    • 1958–1962
    Eva Norde
    • Helga
    • 1961
    Eddie Quillan
    Eddie Quillan
    • Arthur…
    • 1958–1963
    Olan Soule
    Olan Soule
    • Mr. Copley…
    • 1958–1962
    • Création
      • Irving Pincus
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs20

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    Avis à la une

    jonesy74-1

    Rural America comes to Californy

    Any show with Walter Brennan is a winner! I was very little when this show aired. Walter Brennan was the epitome of a grandfather to me. I loved the way he walked, arms slightly bent, elbows back and kind of cocking them in the rhythm of his step.

    Favorite episodes include Grandpa's games of checkers with George (Andy Clyde).

    Brennan's Grandfatherly persona was showcased in this series. He disappeared for several years after the show's cancellation from television and resurfaced as a tough old hombre in The Guns of Will Sonnet, which was another great series.

    The show declined over the years with cast members falling off like over-ripe cherries from a cherry tree. It finally died and made way for its successor, The Beverly Hillbillies.

    When it aired on TNN a few years ago, it made for some wonderful memories of retro-t.v.
    8gatebanger

    Standard late 50s-early 60s family sit-com.

    A pleasant thirty-minute bit of family values. Like all successful TV shows of the era, it included a "real star" in the cast - in this case, Walter Brennan. The show stressed family solidarity and doing the right thing. Each episode contained an understated lesson in life and living.
    8bkoganbing

    Grandpappy Amos, The Girls And The Boys

    A small part of a very large family named McCoy who hailed from the hills of West Virginia, put a down payment on a land in the Imperial Valley of Southern California and moved there and into our television sets for a considerable in the late fifties and early sixties. We know there was a whole lot more of them because occasionally some kinfolk came to visit.

    After a career with three Oscars under his belt and at that time he was the only one who had that many, you'd think Walter Brennan might want to slow up at the age of sixty three when he started that series. Not only did he keep up the grind of a weekly television series, but Brennan's movie career didn't slow down a might. You might remember he played a pretty substantial role in Rio Bravo and in How the West Was Won while The Real McCoys were still running.

    The rest of the McCoys consisted of Richard Crenna and Kathleen Nolan as Luke and Kate, a pair of young marrieds. Kate married into the McCoys, but like Ethel Kennedy you'd think she was born into the clan instead. Kathleen was a wise old soul in her own way inside a beautiful young lady. She was the heart of the show, more than Brennan at times.

    Richard Crenna went on to a career that involved him playing a lot more than hayseeds like Luke McCoy. But he said many times that the real value of The Real McCoys for him was as an acting school. Just working with and watching Walter Brennan every week was more valuable than acting lessons with Stella Adler or the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts.

    Two younger siblings came along with Luke, Kate, and Grandpa. There was Lydia Reed and Michael Winkelman as Hassee and Little Luke. I thought it a bit much to name a kid after Tallahassee because someone sent them a picture postcard from the place and they thought the name was so pretty. Lydia had enough teenage angst, settling from West Virginia into sophisticated southern California without that added to her woes. As for Little Luke, I guess the McCoy clan got squeamish on names after Tallahassee and stuck with one tried and true.

    Tony Martinez, all barely five feet of him, played their Chicano farmhand, Pepino. The Chicano and hill cultures blended very well together. At the time Tony Martinez was considered to have a breakthrough part for Latinos. Pepino was always a cheerful guy, but a hardworking person of real dignity and was never demeaned in any way by the stories.

    As I said other McCoys got in the cast. Jack Oakie did several episodes as Uncle Rightly McCoy when Brennan was on extended leave in a movie. And several episodes had the McCoys make a visit back to West Virginia where we ran into the real head of the clan, Great Grandma McCoy played by Jane Darwell. That's right, Jane was Amos's mother and in fact she was just about old enough in real life to be just that.

    They should have canceled the show after Kathleen Nolan left or paid her what she wanted. A lot got taken out of the show when she left and Luke was left a widower.

    In many ways the Real McCoys was a survival story about a family leaving one culture and trying and succeeding in making it in a different location with different ways. Maybe that's why The Real McCoys was as successful as it was. Isn't that what the American Dream is all about?
    Kirasjeri

    A great cast

    Re: the other comments. But although Walter Brennan was great as grandpa DO NOT forget the rest of the cast. Richard Crenna was wonderful as Luke, and Kathy Nolan (as she was called in the first years of the show, not Kathleen) was fine too, among others. She eventually left the show in a bitter contract dispute for a short-running series (check her credits) and her career went the route of DAvid Caruso from NYPD BLUE. This show had a wonderful theme song: "Want you to meet the family known as the real McCoys. That's grandpappy Amos, they head of the clan, he roars like a lion but he's gentle as a lamb. And now here's Luke who beams with joy since he may take Mrs Kate McCoy". A good show that never recovered from Nolan leaving - Luke as a widow didn't cut it.
    earlytalkie

    Charming, Undeservedly Forgotten Sitcom

    The Real McCoys is a genuine classic from the golden age of television. A fine series. They really don't make well-crafted, heart warming shows like this anymore. Walter Brennan was simply amazing as old Amos McCoy, the patriarch of a family transplanted from Smokey Corners, West Virginia to "sunny Cal-i-for-nai-ay" as the theme song tells us. The stories are at once funny and often touching and there are some great people in the cast. Richard Crenna, fresh from playing squeaky-voiced Walter Denton on Our Miss Brooks, drops his voice to it's proper register to play Luke McCoy, Grampa Amos's grandson. He plays him as a sometimes naive, sometimes wise newlywed. The bride in question is lovely Kathy Nolan, as beautiful a woman as any who ever graced a sitcom. Her Kate is the balancing conscience which is a big asset to the show. (Indeed, when she was absent in the show's last season, it was the last hurrah for this long-running series.) Hassie, the 13 year-old "old maid" as Grampa would say is played by Lydia Reed, whose only other performance I have seen was in the 1956 MGM film, High Society. She was very good in the film and is very good in the Real McCoys. Michael Winkleman plays Little Luke with a naturalness not seen in today's high-strung attempts at situation comedy. Tony Martinez plays, Pepino, the "ranch hand". He plays off of Walter Brennan quite well and is an asset to the cast. Finally, we have Andy Clyde and Madge Blake as brother and sister neighbors George and Flora MacMichael. They are pros who know just the right way to play their scenes. The series is populated with many well-known character actors and this show has a cozy, home-spun feel to it. Indeed, it is a predecessor to the many rural comedies that followed in the sixties, like Andy Griffith, Petticoat Junction and The Beverly Hillbillies. Some people have complained about the DVD episodes being edited, but I saw these same episodes when CBS ran this show as part of their morning comedy block of shows, from 1962 to 1966. These appear to be the same prints as shown on the network back in the day. I vaguely recall seeing some nighttime telecasts in prime time, but mostly I recall the morning CBS run. The stories are well-written and some are very heartwarming. The characters are three-dimensional and seem like genuine human beings. This series is all but forgotten these days and I don't think the DVD releases exactly set the world on fire sales-wise, but I am enjoying the set I got for one penny and think this should be picked up by one of the nostalgia channels like ME-TV or Antenna TV. This classic series is ripe for re-discovery.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      In the promos for this series, the McCoys' farm is described as "20 miles northwest of the Los Angeles City Hall". This would be very close to where Walter Brennan was buried, at the Mission San Fernando Cemetery.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Le Kid de la plage (1984)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does The Real McCoys have?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 3 octobre 1957 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The McCoys
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Iverson Ranch - 1 Iverson Lane, Chatsworth, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Brennan-Westgate
      • Marterto Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      30 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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    Walter Brennan, Richard Crenna, and Kathleen Nolan in The Real McCoys (1957)
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