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When I Love Lucy premiered in 1951, TV was still trying to figure out what it could be. Then came Lucy Ricardo, housewife, dreamer, chaos-bringer, determined to break into show business despite zero ...
Ricky tries to keep Lucy away from auditioning for a TV show, but when a clown becomes unavailable, Lucy takes his place. It's Fred and Ethel's 18th wedding anniversary, Ethel wants to go to the ...
From direct follow-ups to dynamic reinventions, I Love Lucy was a bonified franchise that has outlived nearly every other show in history. It’s hard to imagine now, but I Love Lucy was more than ...
From Broadway legends to big-screen cowboys, crooners, comedians and even a certain Man of Steel, the guest stars who ...
The iconic television show, 'I Love Lucy,' premiered on Oct. 15, 1951, and had its finale on May 6, 1957, setting a groundbreaking precedent for women in comedy. Take a look back at the comedic show.
This line has become so undeniably linked to the show through pop culture and the media that even official "I Love Lucy" merchandise and apparel features the phrase, furthering the confusion about ...
I Love Lucy helped make television matter ... including how sitcoms were shot and the use of reruns. While the show about the Cuban bandleader and his showbiz-starved goofball wife only ran ...
It’s a space for artists to create moments that stand the test of time and still make us laugh to this day, just like the I Love Lucy chocolate factory scene. For a show that had to be delayed ...
Although "I Love Lucy" ended, the show's characters would go on to appear in a spinoff, "The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Show," which was also called "The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour," notes the Emmys website.