After seeing a travelogue about island life on TV, Howard quits his job to become a beachcomber in the Caribbean.After seeing a travelogue about island life on TV, Howard quits his job to become a beachcomber in the Caribbean.After seeing a travelogue about island life on TV, Howard quits his job to become a beachcomber in the Caribbean.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn this episode, the bus stop is in front of what used to be The Grand Theater. In all previous episodes, the bus stop in by Walker's Drug Store.
- GoofsHoward Sprague is a bookish county clerk, cloistered in a small town. But Jack Dodson is a Hollywood actor who belies this character by showing the audience a full body tan while he's on the island.
- Quotes
Howard Sprague: Wanna buy a boat in a bottle?
Featured review
One of the Oddest Episodes of the Entire Series...
The premise of this installment- "leaving it all behind to escape to a tropical paradise"- is certainly a popular one, and is as relevant to today's audiences as it was back then.
And, despite all the flack he gets from us TAGS fans for playing a "dull" character that can't match up to Barney Fife's level of comedy- which is, let's face it, a somewhat unreasonable expectation- actor Jack Dodson was very good at playing "quirky character" comedy when given the right material to work with (as he does in this episode), resulting in a fun performance for the audience.
Having established all this, a good lead performance by Jack Dodson & a few solid laughs (which "Howard's New Life" delivers) cannot totally save this episode from being overshadowed by two glaring (and major) issues:
First of all, can a 30 minute show that centers & revolves around Howard Sprague- all by himself & on his own, starting a new life thousands of miles away from Mayberry- really be considered "The Andy Griffith Show"? It certainly doesn't seem that way, and the episode feels more like the pilot episode of a separate spin off series than TAGS we've come to know & love. It's not bad, it's just...weird & unfamiliar. Maybe if Andy Griffith was the one "getting away from it all", things would have clicked better within the context of the entire series, but the Howard Sprague character didn't even arrive on TAGS scene until nearly the end of Season 6, so devoting an entire episode to his life away from Mayberry is strange, especially for a TAGS character that we haven't known all that long.
Second- and even more distracting for those fans that appreciate series continuity- it seems like the writers were in such a hurry to get Howard out of Mayberry & on that island inside of 30 minutes that they completely threw out/ignored the "playbook" on Howard Sprague that had been built up over the last two seasons, creating with this episode two huge plot holes:
1. What happened to Howard's extremely vocal, possessive, domineering mother, the one he lived with that used to freak out if Howard was 10 minutes late calling in/coming home? Howard's suddenly moving away forever- on the spur of the moment- and Mom is nowhere to been seen. Has she suddenly decided to keep quiet? Is she at home sulking? Has she mysteriously disappeared? Even more perplexing, Howard- in this episode- conveniently goes from being a mama's boy who is ALWAYS talking about "mother" to never mentioning her at all. This doesn't make any sense. with what we've learned about Howard up to this time.
2. And speaking of disappearing acts- what happened to Millie? After being in love & engaged just three episodes ago, now she has vanished off the face of the earth. OK, maybe they broke up off camera, but Howard's leaving Mayberry forever and she doesn't even come to the bus station to say good-bye and wish him well??? Here again is another unexplained break in established character plot lines.
The aforementioned blatant disregard of established character backgrounds & series continuity should result in this episode receiving a lower rating (shame on you, naughty writers), but I have to give it a 6 because of a strong (and funny) performance by Jack Dodson (perhaps his best outing in the series)- and for a very brief but funny appearance by legendary character actor Harry Dean Stanton ("Alien", "The Green Mile") as the nearly comatose proprietor of the island trading post.
And, despite all the flack he gets from us TAGS fans for playing a "dull" character that can't match up to Barney Fife's level of comedy- which is, let's face it, a somewhat unreasonable expectation- actor Jack Dodson was very good at playing "quirky character" comedy when given the right material to work with (as he does in this episode), resulting in a fun performance for the audience.
Having established all this, a good lead performance by Jack Dodson & a few solid laughs (which "Howard's New Life" delivers) cannot totally save this episode from being overshadowed by two glaring (and major) issues:
First of all, can a 30 minute show that centers & revolves around Howard Sprague- all by himself & on his own, starting a new life thousands of miles away from Mayberry- really be considered "The Andy Griffith Show"? It certainly doesn't seem that way, and the episode feels more like the pilot episode of a separate spin off series than TAGS we've come to know & love. It's not bad, it's just...weird & unfamiliar. Maybe if Andy Griffith was the one "getting away from it all", things would have clicked better within the context of the entire series, but the Howard Sprague character didn't even arrive on TAGS scene until nearly the end of Season 6, so devoting an entire episode to his life away from Mayberry is strange, especially for a TAGS character that we haven't known all that long.
Second- and even more distracting for those fans that appreciate series continuity- it seems like the writers were in such a hurry to get Howard out of Mayberry & on that island inside of 30 minutes that they completely threw out/ignored the "playbook" on Howard Sprague that had been built up over the last two seasons, creating with this episode two huge plot holes:
1. What happened to Howard's extremely vocal, possessive, domineering mother, the one he lived with that used to freak out if Howard was 10 minutes late calling in/coming home? Howard's suddenly moving away forever- on the spur of the moment- and Mom is nowhere to been seen. Has she suddenly decided to keep quiet? Is she at home sulking? Has she mysteriously disappeared? Even more perplexing, Howard- in this episode- conveniently goes from being a mama's boy who is ALWAYS talking about "mother" to never mentioning her at all. This doesn't make any sense. with what we've learned about Howard up to this time.
2. And speaking of disappearing acts- what happened to Millie? After being in love & engaged just three episodes ago, now she has vanished off the face of the earth. OK, maybe they broke up off camera, but Howard's leaving Mayberry forever and she doesn't even come to the bus station to say good-bye and wish him well??? Here again is another unexplained break in established character plot lines.
The aforementioned blatant disregard of established character backgrounds & series continuity should result in this episode receiving a lower rating (shame on you, naughty writers), but I have to give it a 6 because of a strong (and funny) performance by Jack Dodson (perhaps his best outing in the series)- and for a very brief but funny appearance by legendary character actor Harry Dean Stanton ("Alien", "The Green Mile") as the nearly comatose proprietor of the island trading post.
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- phantomcurator-178-818096
- Jun 7, 2015
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