Hanks for the Memories!

Back in the 1965 TV season, there was a one-term situation comedy on NBC that I liked a lot called Hank. At the time, there were a lot of news stories about teenagers dropping out of school and a few of these were balanced by tales of students dropping in. That is to say, kids who couldn't afford to go to college were allegedly sneaking into classes and at least learning something even if it wouldn't result in a degree.

There was some question as to how true the "drop-in" reports were but they did form the premise of Hank, which starred Dick Kallman. Years ago on this site when we got to discussing the series, I posted this summary of its premise…

Kallman played Hank Dearborn, a fellow of college age who couldn't afford to go to college due to lack of funds and the need to raise his younger sister. They were orphans and though he was old enough to be on his own, there were social workers who felt that sis Tina, who was around twelve, should be in an orphanage. Neither Hank nor Tina wanted that so Hank had to keep proving he could support her, which he did by holding down a stunning array of odd jobs: Delivering dry cleaning, driving an ice cream truck, etc., most of these done at or around the local university. At the same time, he wanted to get a college education so he'd dress up in different disguises which he kept in the back of his delivery van and sneak into classes, eluding the campus police. As if that wasn't complicated enough, he was also trying to date a girl who was, you guessed it…the daughter of the Dean.

I remember enjoying this show tremendously. Kallman was a bundle of energy, the episodes moved fast, they were full of great character actors and the series even had a jazzy theme song with lyrics by Johnny Mercer. I've been waiting a long time to see it again and — hooray, hoorah! — Warner Archive just put all 26 episodes out on a 3-DVD set. I ordered a copy while I was in the hospital and it arrived a few days ago.

hank01

I have not watched all 26 yet. I watched five and I think I'll ration the rest out, one or two a week, until I've seen them all. But I'm pretty sure I've seen enough to answer the big question I had when I ordered: Would I like the show as much as I did when I was 13? Answer: No. The stories are quite contrived and being mostly farce comedies, the plots hinge on someone (Hank, mainly) telling a lot of fibs and then everyone around him being too dumb to see through them. I never bought that Ricky Ricardo couldn't recognize his own wife when she put on a wig and an accent. The folks who populate Hank's university are so blind to this one guy running around with bogus facial hair that you wonder how they got into college when he couldn't.

Also, the laugh track is really horrible. It didn't bother me then but it does now.

Which leads us to the question: Am I sorry I bought this? Answer: Heavens, no. Kallman is fun to watch. It's a shame he never found a better starring vehicle. Hank is filled with wonderful actors — folks who seemed to turn up on every TV series of that era. We're talking names like Dabbs Greer, Lloyd Corrigan and Howard St. John (who were regulars) and guest players like Burt Mustin, Henry Corden, Paul Smith, Allan Melvin, Peter Leeds, Les Tremayne, Marvin Kaplan and so many more. There's even one with Maury Wills in it.

A lot of shows I loved when I was younger stand up well for me today like The Dick Van Dyke Show, The Honeymooners, Sgt. Bilko and Car 54, Where Are You? Many do not. I can kinda tolerate and maybe even enjoy any I Love Lucy in which Ricky has a big part and no one ever says of their mate, "I'm going to teach him/her a lesson!" I can't make it through most of Lucille Ball's subsequent programs or the folksier, preachier episodes of The Andy Griffith Show or The Danny Thomas Show.

Hank is somewhere in the middle. If you remember the show and want to get 'em all for thirty bucks, I give you this Amazon link. It's the whole run, including the black-and-white, not-wonderful pilot and the other, better 25 episodes in color. The last one is the one in which — this is not deserving of a SPOILER ALERT! — Hank manages to get into the university as a legal student, though he retains all his crazy businesses. The producers figured the "drop-in" gimmick had run its course and were trying to reposition the series for a possible second season which never happened. As is, it does make for a nice final chapter.

The Hank-Dobie Connection

Vince Waldron (a fine author, whose website is a haven for us sitcom fanciers) writes in reference to our earlier item on the series, Hank

Just saw the Hank piece question, on which I have no more to add. (I think that one may have been before my time.) However, I did have a "wait a minute!" moment when I saw the publicity graphic you included in your listing, which showed Hank pondering one of life's ponderables next to a statue of Rodin's Thinker. Surely I'm not the only fan of old tv who found the juxtaposition of Hank and thinker more than a tad reminiscent of a motif frequently employed in the opening bumper of another series that featured a campus cut-up named Dobie.

Yeah, that's interesting. I don't recall "The Thinker" ever being a part of the TV series. It may have turned up only in that one publicity photo, which Hank star Dick Kallman also used on the cover of a record album he had out at the time. Hard to believe though that no one involved with Hank realized they were replicating a key visual from The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, which had gone off the air not long before and was still quite visible in reruns.

…although I'll tell you an odd thing. One of the producers of Hank (and I think he directed some of them) was my old boss, Jimmie Komack. And in 1977, when CBS hired Komack to produce a revival of Dobie Gillis, Jimmie enraged Max Shulman, Dwayne Hickman and everyone else involved in the old show by bragging that he'd never seen the original series. Hickman, Bob Denver, Frank Faylen and Sheila James all signed on to the pilot/special because Max Shulman had co-written (with Eric Cohen) a very funny script that was true to the spirit of the original but, I thought, quite accessible to anyone who didn't know the old show. It also struck me as quite contemporary, but Komack decided that everyone involved was too fixated on replicating a series no one remembered and he was worried it wouldn't be modern…so he tossed the Shulman-Cohen script and had a new one written by two other writers who didn't particularly recall the old series.

The result was a deservedly-unsold pilot called, appropriately enough, Whatever Happened to Dobie Gillis? and if you ever run into Dwayne Hickman and want to see him turn a lovely shade of scarlet, ask him about it. (Actually, don't, 'cause he's a very nice guy. Here's a link to his website, by the way. His autobiography, which you can purchase there, is a pretty good book.)

I guess this really has nothing to do with the Hank photo but in the world of weblogging, if something pops into your head, you post it. By the way, the above story has one of those EC Comics endings. A few years later, when Jimmie might have been trying to sell a new sitcom to CBS, he had a teensy problem: The guy you pitched to then at CBS was Dwayne Hickman.

While I'm posting: Tom Wittick wrote to ask if I knew anything about Dick Kallman. Well, I know he was a musical performer before and after his time in Hollywood. He spent a lot of time after Hank playing the Robert Morse role in productions of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, then he replaced Tommy Steele in the lead of Half a Sixpence on Broadway, then took it on the road for a while. He worked a lot actually, bouncing around between movie and TV parts and stage, plus he also played Vegas a lot. Somewhere in the mid-seventies, performing dried up and he became a dealer in rare paintings and antiques until 1980 when he was killed in a robbery of some of his wares. Sad ending for a pretty talented guy.

Hank's for the Memory

Time to tackle one of the vital questions of television history. This was sent to me by "BradW8" and it's about Hank, a one season (1965) sitcom on NBC…

This has been bothering me, and I know you've written about the show, which is why I'm asking you: What was Hank thinking?  I saw the show when it first ran, and found it pleasant enough.  Like you, I found it unusual for any TV series of that time to have a final episode that wrapped everything up.  But a lot of it went over my grade school head, and it's only after thinking back to my own college years that it hits me: How did Hank expect to graduate, if all his credits were taken under aliases?  If his intel hadn't been faulty, and those two students not shown up when he was impersonating them, presumably he'd have gone on his merry way until he got enough credits to graduate.  But how could he claim them?  This may have been covered somewhere and I just missed it, but I can't seem to find it.  I realize it's probably some time since you last saw the tapes, but if you happen to recall I'd sure appreciate it.

For those who don't recall the show, I'd better explain the underlying storyline: Dick Kallman played Hank Dearborn, a fellow of college age who couldn't afford to go to college due to lack of funds and the need to raise his younger sister.  They were orphans and though he was old enough to be on his own, there were social workers who felt that sis Tina, who was around twelve, should be in an orphanage.  Neither Hank nor Tina wanted that so Hank had to keep proving he could support her, which he did by holding down a stunning array of odd jobs: Delivering dry cleaning, driving an ice cream truck, etc., most of these done at or around the local university.  At the same time, he wanted to get a college education so he'd dress up in different disguises which he kept in the back of his delivery van and sneak into classes, eluding the campus police.  As if that wasn't complicated enough, he was also trying to date a girl who was, you guessed it…the daughter of the Dean.

A little premise-heavy, wouldn't you say?  The producers apparently agreed.  They did a whole year of episodes about Hank almost getting caught and Tina almost getting put in that orphanage before deciding that it was all too gimmicky.  So in the last episode of the season, Hank was caught impersonating one real (absent) student and then another, and his whole racket was exposed.  The authorities were ready to send Tina to the orphanage and Hank to jail for impersonating a freshman or something of the sort…but throughout the year, he'd done so many good deeds that the Dean was flooded with requests to forgive.  I forget how it was all resolved but I think it was argued that in an era of so many students "dropping out," Hank should not be punished for "dropping in," plus professors came forth to say he was a great, if unregistered, student.  It all came down to Hank taking a final exam and if he passed, the charges would be dropped and he'd have proven he was fit to keep raising Tina…and it had a happy ending.

The show had marginal ratings and as they neared the end of the first season, the producers realized that the premise was dragging the show down.  They told sponsors and the network that they'd get rid of it and set up a new, simpler life for Hank Dearborn.  When they did the last show of Year One, they closed off the "drop-in" gimmick and, hoping for Year Two, set up a more organic format.  But since the show was then cancelled, that last episode wound up actually "ending" the series, which brings us to BradW8's question: How did Hank figure that attending classes under false identities would get him his degree, which they said in the theme song was his ultimate goal?

I actually put that question to the late Martin A. Ragaway, who was one of the show's writers.  He said, approximately: "The guys behind the show thought the gimmick was so great that it would run for years and they'd all be very rich and on to other things before anyone had to worry about that.  They thought Hank would be in college forever.  They were actually discussing how long Dick Kallman would be able to pass for a college student.  In other words, it didn't make sense and they knew it.  The producers didn't have a long-range plan but they assumed viewers would assume Hank, being such a clever and resourceful guy, did."  I always assumed that his goal was the education, not the actual degree but you're right, BradW8.  They did say he planned to somehow get a diploma out of the deal but there was no obvious way in which that could have happened.  If and when someone chooses to rerun those shows, maybe we'll spot a line or something that one of the writers snuck in to give a hint of what Hank was thinking. But if we believe Marty Ragaway, there was no conscious plan.  It was just one of those plot holes in which sitcoms of the sixties (and before and after, I suppose) abounded.

I wish someone would rerun Hank.  In the meantime, over at TV Party, they have a terrific page on the series, complete with video clips.  Look for the one that will let you watch about a minute of the show, theme song included.  The show had a great theme song, complete with lyrics by Johnny Mercer.