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The Bob Newhart Show (1972-78)
The Bob Newhart Show is a classic TV sitcom that depicts Bob Hartley, the quirky but
well-adjusted Chicago psychologist who is surrounded by a society of very odd characters,
including a parade of basket-cases for patients. In this, he is much like Andy Taylor in
the Andy Griffith Show, who is surrounded by a lot of strange townsfolk. But whereas Andy
Taylor is the wise man with a solution for everything, who uses his sheriff's position as
a platform from which to do good, Bob on the Bob Newhart Show is someone who is
in an official wise man's position but who really doesn't have much of a solution to
anything. Mostly he listens, consoles, reflects back, and gives people a place to come to
talk about their problems, which may be the wisest thing of all.
The people who work on the same floor as Bob are pretty odd, as well. One
exception is Carol, the secretary, played by Marcia Wallace, who looks a little unusual
but holds everything together and has insightful barbs to offer about what is going on
around her. She's definitely a fool figure, whose barbs at others' expense reveal
something about their personalities.
Bill Daily plays the next door neighbor, Howard, a man-child and professional
pilot who is always between flights and can't make a home for himself, which is why he
seems to live with Bob and Bob's wife Emily.
I won't offer any homilies here about how the Bob Newhart Show reflected
the emergence of America's therapeutic culture, lest these overviews sound even more like
Nick at Nite's sardonic caricatures of sociology than they do already. The Bob Newhart
Show is often low comedy, reflecting the basic ethos of the sitcom: I'm okay; You are
totally bizarre.
Bob Newhart went on to star in Newhart, a re-creation of The Bob Newhart
Show, with Bob as Dick Loudon, the proprietor of a Vermont inn and a writer of how-to
books (a nice comic touch) who is once again surrounded by lovable crazies lost in their
own strangeness. In the famous last episode we discover that his life in Vermont is just a
dream. He's really Bob Hartley, the psychologist, in bed with Emily back in Chicago. Now
that's television.
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| Bob is the straight man, who is
surrounded by lovable oddballs |
Howard is the man-child and
Carol, the classic "fool" figure (no insult intended) |
Emily is the elegant wife,
here seen with next-door neighbor, Howard |

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Best friend |
Emily, always poised |

More on television & sitcoms
The Official
Bob Newhart Web Site
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