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posted March 28, 2013
Born Andy Samuel Griffith in Mount Airy, North Carolina, in 1926, the fine comic actor was also a television producer, Grammy Award-winning Southern-gospel singer, and writer. In 2005 the White House awarded him the esteemed Presidential Medal of Honor.
In a long interview for the Archive of American Television in 1998, Griffith, who died last year (2012), described his long career in acting, including the eight-season run of his incomparable The Andy Griffith Show. He also spoke about the many television movies and miniseries he appeared in, including his crime series Matlock. As the features on the Andy Griffith page make plain, he was a likable, laconic, broadly comic, and expressive actor, right from the start.
The list of interviewees is long and varied. Ever wonder on the social agenda behind Get Smart. Was it intended to be subversive? “Absolutely; without question,” says Barbara Feldon, agent “99.” She says she once asked Mel Brooks’ co-creator and writer, Buck Henry, about that subject. She says: “He felt that the only way you could make an effective impression, make change, was through laughter, because when you laugh, you’re open.”
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URL to article: http://www.movingimagearchivenews.org/video-of-the-day-archive-of-american-television/
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