LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
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- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Griffith was a superb actor, and rarely gets credit for that: watch him in "A Face In The Crowd" and see the dark, dangerous side of his whole "folksy" persona.
"The Andy Griffith Show" was brilliant on many levels -- it was one of the very few television series to ever really capture the honest texture of Golden Era small town life. I say Golden Era because even though the show was a product of the sixties, the mindsets behind it were far more influenced by the 1940s -- several of its writers were the same men who made Summerfield seems like a real place on radio's "The Great Gildersleeve." The series managed to capture the mix of oddball characters, comfortable settings, and unstrained humor that really characterized small town life for many of us who had the good fortune to grow up in such a place, and they did it without being the least bit smarmy or condescending. That's the show's -- and Griffith's -- greatest legacy.
For some strange reason, though, his most indelible personal impression on me comes from a series of commericals he did in the '70s for Ritz crackers. He'd take an enthusiastic bite out of one, make a face of pure delight, and murmur "Mmmmm-mmmm! Gooooooooood cracker!" To this day, when something especially pleases me, I'll say "Mmmmmm-mmmm, goood cracker!"
"The Andy Griffith Show" was brilliant on many levels -- it was one of the very few television series to ever really capture the honest texture of Golden Era small town life. I say Golden Era because even though the show was a product of the sixties, the mindsets behind it were far more influenced by the 1940s -- several of its writers were the same men who made Summerfield seems like a real place on radio's "The Great Gildersleeve." The series managed to capture the mix of oddball characters, comfortable settings, and unstrained humor that really characterized small town life for many of us who had the good fortune to grow up in such a place, and they did it without being the least bit smarmy or condescending. That's the show's -- and Griffith's -- greatest legacy.
For some strange reason, though, his most indelible personal impression on me comes from a series of commericals he did in the '70s for Ritz crackers. He'd take an enthusiastic bite out of one, make a face of pure delight, and murmur "Mmmmm-mmmm! Gooooooooood cracker!" To this day, when something especially pleases me, I'll say "Mmmmmm-mmmm, goood cracker!"
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