The Dick Van Dyke Show
Considered to be one of television's classics, "The Dick Van Dyke Show" centers on the personal and professional lives of Rob Petrie, a writer for the fictional "Alan Brady Show". The non-stop laughs revolved around Rob's relationships with with fellow writers Buddy Sorrell and Sally Rogers, and producer Mel Cooley. At home, we also got to chuckle (and sometimes cry) over Rob's antics involving his wife, son, and neighbors.
During a flashback about his early days as a parent, Rob recounts why he believed Laura and he brought home a baby belonging to someone else.
Rob's unguarded gestures at an auction have him unwittingly bidding on and winning an ugly clown painting that covers another work beneath, perhaps a masterpiece.
Rob would like to know why Laura disappears every time his insurance agent Ed Rubin comes over or calls.
Rob and Laura must remarry to maintain legal marital status, but a marital squabble before the judge may prevent it.
Having unintentionally eavesdropped on the Helpers, Rob and Laura become infuriated just prior to attending their dinner party, making for a seriously disquieting evening.
As director of the annual area variety show, Rob finds himself trapped between casting Laura as this year's leading woman (again) or a dazzlingly talented newcomer to the neighborhood.
After receiving a bump on the head at the office, Rob develops temporary amnesia and winds up at a swinging party in New Jersey with no idea how he got there.
Rob's energetic Uncle George comes for a visit to eagerly pressure Rob into finding him a wife.
A man with suspected underworld connections asks Rob, Sally and Buddy to write a comedy routine for his no-talent nephew - a favor they fear for their lives to either decline or accept.
Rob and Jerry's friendship is sorely tested when they buy a boat together.
Rob hires a maid through the classifieds and ends up with a woman fresh from Barcelona who speaks no English, has a broken arm, and expects to work as a live-in.
Rob struggles between his civic duty and fear for his family's safety when he believes he can identify the two robbers in a jewelry store holdup.
It's the first Christmas presentation of The Alan Brady Show where he turns the spotlight upon his talented staff to entertain the TV public.
Rob becomes the victim of undying gratitude and amorous attentions when he elevates a talented young chorus girl to a featured role on the show.
Rob's job is threatened, and his work relationships throttled, by a news article praising him more than Alan for the success of The Alan Brady Show, all thanks to Laura.
A suave bachelor moves in next door, and Rob and Laura compete as matchmakers. Rob sets him up with Sally, and Laura arranges a date with her clumsy but sophisticated cousin.
By pure chance, the tall, handsome, stud bachelor Rob meets at the golf course used to write love sonnets to Laura, which she kept.
A social game of poker turns sour when it's discovered Rob has been playing with a marked deck.
Rob makes a lot of trouble for himself when he decides to hold Ritchie's birthday party at home rather than at an amusement park - for sixty-three screaming kids.
Rob suspects his illness is psychosomatic when he develops sudden and severe back pains after he and Laura make plans to spend a weekend at Lake Sissy Manoonoo for the fourth time.
Buddy and Rob are left writing the script without Sally when she becomes a hit as a regular guest on late night talk show.
With Sally away, Laura wants to help Rob at the office. He resists, but his inability to find even remotely adequate help forces him to relent, and sparks fly when her success outshines his security.
Rob recalls the hurdles he had having his honeymoon with Laura.
A sultry, yet manipulative guest star has Mel replaced by Rob as producer for her appearance on the Alan Brady Show, much to Rob's discomfort.
The purchase of multiple burial plots triggers a battle over primary affection between Rob's and Laura's two sets of parents.
Laura dreads telling Rob about the big passenger-side scratch she found on their brand new car (which Rob adores) when she went shopping in it.
Rob proposes doing what's never been done before on television - radio.
Laura once commissioned an artist for a fully clothed portrait of herself, which he, taking artist license, rendered nude and now has standing in an art gallery for all to see.
With Laura out of town for a few days, Rob tries to figure out what to do in his spare time. Eventually, he looks in on an old Army buddy, who is at a nightclub. Unfortunately, it results in confusion that ultimately lands Rob behind bars.
Rob and Laura spot their neighbor Jerry at a fancy restaurant with a pretty blonde. They suspect him of having an affair, and his lack of candor seems to confirm their fears. They try to squirm out a confession and save his marriage.
Fearing he may be going bald, Rob tries a dubious homemade remedy formulated by Buddy's barber.
Laura takes a creative writing course, and the teacher extols Laura's writing abilities. Rob infers from this unwarranted attention that Mr. Caldwell is using Laura to meet him. In fact, Mr. Caldwell's interest is only in Laura.
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Dick Van Dyke | Rob Petrie |
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Mary Tyler Moore | Laura Petrie |
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Rose Marie | Sally Rogers |
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Morey Amsterdam | Buddy Sorrell |
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Larry Mathews | Ritchie Petrie |
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Ann Morgan Guilbert | Millie Helper |
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Richard Deacon | Mel Cooley |
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Frank Adamo | Club Patron |
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Jerry Paris | Jerry Helper |
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Johnny Silver | Waiter |
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Carl Reiner | Diamond Club Announcer |
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Abdullah Abbas | Club Patron |
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Amzie Strickland | Nurse |
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Steve Carruthers | Club Patron |
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Jackie Joseph | Alberta Schweitzer |
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Arthur Batanides | Bernard |
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Carl Benton Reid | Mr. Meehan |
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Ray Kellogg | John |
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Alan Dexter | Hoodlum |
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Tiny Brauer | Mr. Parker |
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Cornell Chulay | First Girl |
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Kathleen Freeman | Mrs. Campbell |
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Leon Alton | Gambler |
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J. Pat O'Malley | Sam Petrie |
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Bernard Fox | Mr. Caldwell |
| Director | Jerry Paris |
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| Howard Morris |
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| John Rich |
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| Stanley Z. Cherry |
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| Writer | Carl Reiner, Bill Persky, Sam Denoff, Howard Merrill, Jerry Belson, Garry Marshall, Sheldon Keller, John Whedon, Bill Idelson, Martin Ragaway, Ernest Chambers, Nathaniel Curtis | |
| Producer | Ronald Jacobs, Sheldon Leonard, Carl Reiner, Danny Thomas | |
| Musician | Earle Hagen | |
| Photography | Robert De Grasse | |
| Packaging | Custom Case |
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| Nr Discs | 5 |
| Screen Ratios | Fullscreen (4:3) |
| Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital Stereo [English] Dolby Digital Mono [English] |
| Distributor | Image Entertainment |
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | Feb 24, 2004 |
| Regions | Region 1 |