Turner Classic Movies (TCM) will remember the life and career of actor Andy Griffith on Wednesday, July
18. Griffith passed away this morning at the age of 86. TCM's four-film memorial tribute is set to begin
at 8 p.m. (ET) with Griffith's brilliant performance in Elia Kazan's A Face in the Crowd (1957).
The night also features the hilarious service comedy No Time for Sergeants (1958). The following
is a complete schedule (all times Eastern):
8 p.m. - A Face in the Crowd (1957) - with Patricia Neal, Anthony Franciosa, Walter Matthau and
Lee Remick. Directed by Elia Kazan.
10:15 p.m. - No Time for Sergeants (1958) - with Myron McCormick, Nick Adams, Murray Hamilton and
Don Knotts. Directed by Mervyn LeRoy.
12:30 a.m. - Hearts of the West (1975) - with Jeff Bridges, Donald Pleasance, Blythe Danner, Alan
Arkin, Richard B. Shull, Herb Edelman, Alex Rocco and Marie Windsor. Directed by Howard Zieff.
2:15 a.m. - Onionhead (1958) - with Felicia Farr, Walter Matthau, Erin O'Brien, Joe Mantell, Ray
Danton, James Gregory and Joey Bishop. Directed by Norman Taurog.
Andy Griffith, 1926-2012
With his folksy, down-to-earth charm and winning smile, actor Andy Griffith brought a warm sincerity to
his most popular roles - small town Sheriff Andy Taylor on "The Andy Griffith Show" (CBS, 1960-68) and
the crafty southern lawyer Ben Matlock on "Matlock" (NBC/ABC, 1986-1995). Prior to becoming a friendly
face in many American living rooms, Griffith was a talented musician with early aspirations to be an
opera singer, though he went on to record gospel and Christmas albums - one of which earned him a Grammy
Award. Often exerting strong creative control over his efforts, Griffith brought a sense of realism to
his shows and characters that managed to never stray into caricature, and whose appeal endured for
generations of viewers well into the new millennium.
Born on June 1, 1926, in Mt. Airy, NC, Griffith developed a strong interest and talent in music at an
early age. First hoping to become an opera singer, he shifted gears and set out to become a preacher,
enrolling at the University of Chapel Hill in North Carolina as a pre-divinity student. While in
college, his focus turned again to the arts with an emphasis on music and theater, and he eventually
earned his degree in 1949. After graduation, he became a music teacher at Goldsboro High School, but
still yearned to perform professionally. After three years of teaching, Griffith and his first wife,
Barbara Edwards, began developing comedy and music routines that they performed on the road, including a
comedy monologue called "What it Was, Was Football," a first-person point of view of a simple farm boy's
first bewildering experience watching a football game. The skit was released on a record album in 1953.
Griffith honed the monologue to perfection and performed it in one of his four appearances on "The Ed
Sullivan Show" (CBS, 1948-1971). He was soon tapped to play the lead role in the United States Steel
Hour presentation of the Ira Levin play, "No Time for Sergeants" (ABC, 1955). He reprised the role on
Broadway the following year, earning a Tony nomination for his performance, and was joined onstage by a
young comic actor named Don Knotts, with whom Griffith would enjoy a lengthy professional and personal
relationship. He soon caught the eye of acclaimed film director Elia Kazan, who cast him in a startling
dramatic role in "A Face in the Crowd" (1957). Griffith played Larry "Lonesome" Rhodes, an Arkansas
drifter who is plucked out of obscurity and finds fame as a television host, but whose friendly, folksy
charm is cover for scheming ambition for political power. Written by "On the Waterfront" (1954)
screenwriter Budd Schulberg, the film was based on the alleged onstage phoniness of Will Rogers and
Arthur Godfrey. In his first film role, Griffith arguably never again turned in such a powerful
performance playing such a dark character.
Griffith returned to comedy with a feature film version of "No Time for Sergeants" (1958), working again
with Knotts, then returned to the stage and earned another Tony nomination for his performance in the
musical "Destry Rides Again" (1960). After a series of occasional guest appearances on "The Steve Allen
Show" (NBC, 1956-1960), Griffith landed an episode on the Danny Thomas show, "Make Room for Daddy,"
(ABC, CBS, 1953-1965), making his first appearance as the no-nonsense, down-home Sheriff Andy Taylor.
The episode served as the inspiration for "The Andy Griffith Show," which debuted on CBS in 1960, where
he expanded his character into one of the most beloved television series of all time. Set in the
fictional town of Mayberry, the show centered on Taylor, a widower living with his son Opie (Ron Howard)
and his Aunt Bee (Francis Bavier), who worked alongside his earnest, but high-strung deputy, Barney Fife
(Knotts). The town itself was populated by an array of quirky townspeople, including Gomer (Jim Nabors),
a dim-witted, but well-meaning mechanic; his equally dull cousin, Goober, gossipy Floyd the barber, a
rock-throwing town clown named Ernest T. Bass, and Sarah, a nosy-but-unseen telephone operator. Part of
the show's appeal was avoiding the stereotype that Mayberry's locals were irreproachably moral - the
citizenry, including Andy himself, were just as petty, judgmental or selfish as the outsiders who passed
through town.
Throughout the years, Griffith made subtle adjustments to his performance. For the second season, he
began to rein in some of his wide-eyed, "gee whiz" qualities, and became more of a straight man to comic
foil, Knotts. The show was also remarkable for its portrayal of Taylor as a single father going through
the dating process; first with Mayberry's pharmacy clerk Ellie Wakler (Elinor Donahue), then Opie's
schoolteacher, Helen Crump (Aneta Corsaut). Initially, Griffith and Knotts figured on the show running
just five years and signed contracts accordingly. But when the first five years were up, Knotts left the
series, while Griffith chose to remain until the show finished its run in 1968 after eight seasons. The
series remained a ratings success and finished number one in the ratings in its last season. Griffith
stepped into an executive producer role for the spin-off, "Mayberry RFD" (CBS, 1968-1971), though he did
appear in the pilot episode. Despite setting a ratings record for a new show, the spin-off was
nonetheless cancelled when the network elected to rid itself of rural-themed shows.
Griffith went on to occasionally star in movies, but it was mostly forgettable fare like "Angel in My
Pocket," (1969) and "Hearts of the West" (1975). On television, he tried to recapture some of his
down-home appeal with the short-lived "The New Andy Griffith Show" (CBS, 1971), a confusing program on
which Griffith played Andy Sawyer, a man who made good and left his small rural hometown, only to return
to fill in as a replacement mayor. Regarded as distinctly inferior to the original, "The New Andy
Griffith Show" was cancelled after a few months on air. Meanwhile, Griffith continued appearing in guest
spots on shows like "The Mod Squad" (ABC, 1968-1973), "Hawaii 5-0" (CBS, 1968-1980), "Here's Lucy" (CBS,
1968-1974) and "The Bionic Woman" (ABC/NBC, 1976-78). Griffith had a leading role in the television
movie "Salvage" (ABC, 1979) and its subsequent series, "Salvage 1," (ABC, 1978-1980), playing Harry
Broderick, an ordinary junk dealer who creates a working rocket ship to fly to the moon to retrieve
spare parts left behind by NASA astronauts.
After a string of guest spots and the disappointing ratings of "Salvage 1," Griffith turned in an
Emmy-nominated performance as the suspicious father of a woman believed to have been murdered by her
plastic surgeon husband in the TV movie-of-the-week "Murder in Texas" (NBC, 1981). He then appeared in
the James Burrows-produced old west sitcom "Best of the West" (ABC, 1981-82), before turning in a cameo
in a 1982 episode of "Saturday Night Live" (NBC, 1975- ). But in 1983, his acting career was put on hold
when he became stricken with Guillen-Barre syndrome, a muscular disease that left him partially
paralyzed for several months. But in a few years, he made a triumphant return, joining co-stars Don
Knotts, Ron Howard and others for a reunion movie, "Return to Mayberry," (CBS, 1986). That same year,
Griffith made a significant return to series television with the courtroom drama, "Matlock" (NBC, ABC,
1986-95). His portrayal of lawyer Ben Matlock, whose country charm and simple mannerisms belied a sharp,
cunning mind, struck a chord with millions of viewers - many of them older and likely fans of his
previous work as a Sheriff Taylor. Griffith also served as executive producer on the show and appeared
in all 180 episodes. After the long-running series left the airwaves, he reprised the role in a special
guest appearance for two-part storyline on "Diagnosis Murder" (CBS, 1993-2001).
Of all the characters he played over the years, Griffith remarked that Matlock was his favorite. During
the show's run, he played the character in several well-received movies-of-the-week, including "Matlock:
The Vacation" (ABC, 1992), "Matlock: The Legacy" (ABC, 1992) and "Matlock: The Heist" (ABC, 1995).
Griffith continued working even after the show, playing a villain in the Leslie Nielsen espionage spoof
"Spy Hard" (1996), while appearing on episodes of "Dawson's Creek" (WB, 1998-2003) and "Family Law"
(CBS, 1999-2002). He also recorded a series of Christmas and gospel albums, including I Love to Tell the
Story: 25 Timeless Hymns which won a Grammy Award in 1997. Griffith made frequent appearances on
television after the death of his old co-star Don Knotts in early 2006, including a tribute to his
friend on "Larry King Live" (CNN, 1985- ). As the years piled on, the aging star appeared less
frequently on screen, while several health issues began to take prominence. In 2000, he underwent a
successful quadruple bypass surgery. After receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005, Griffith
re-emerged for a return to the big screen in the independent romance, "Waitress" (2007), playing Old J ,
a wise patron of a small town diner where an unhappy waitress (Keri Russell) works. The beloved actor
died on July 3, 2012 at the age of 86 at his home in Dare County, North Carolina.
* Biographical data provided by TCMdb
TCM Remembers Actor Andy Griffith Wednesday, July 18
July 03, 2012
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