From the archives:: Patty Duke looks back on ‘The Patty Duke Show’
Patty Duke, who died Tuesday at age 69, sat down with The Times’ Susan King in 2013 to discuss TV fave “The Patty Duke Show” on the eve of the show’s 50th anniversary.
Fifty years ago this fall, ABC premiered “The Patty Duke Show,” the endearing sitcom starring the then-16-year-old as the mischievous Patty from Brooklyn Heights and her quiet, studious British look-alike cousin Cathy.
And now five decades after the series began, the Oscar winner (“The Miracle Worker”) is coming clean: “I liked Cathy better,” she confessed by phone interview from Honolulu, where she’s appearing in the play “Heaven Forbid!.”
“Patty was very embarrassing to me,” the 66-year-old said, laughing. “They would write those outrageous things for her to do. I would dive in and do it, but I couldn’t wait to get to Cathy. She was sensible, and I’d like to think she was classy.”
The show had a slightly surreal concept — look-alike cousins? — and a catchy theme song — “Where Cathy adores a minuet / the Ballet Russes and crêpes suzette / our Patty loves to rock and roll / a hot dog makes her lose control — what a wild duet!” It also boasted such guest stars Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, Frankie Avalon, Sal Mineo and the British pop duo Chad and Jeremy.
“I was obsessed with them,” said Duke of Chad and Jeremy. “That was a big week for me.”
The series is so much a part of the pop lexicon, the show was even seen beaming on the TV screen on a recent episode of “Mad Men.”
Though she played the carefree Patty onscreen, offscreen her life was a nightmare because of the vise-like grip her Svengali-esque managers John and Ethel Ross had over her.
“They were very misguided people,” said Duke, who has been a mental health advocate since she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 1982.
In fact, she wasn’t even allowed to watch the series when it was on because “that would be part of puffing myself up.”
So it wasn’t until the 1980s when she was dating her now-husband, Michael Pearce, then a sergeant in the Army, that she finally saw the series.
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“I would visit him, and I would have to wait for him to get off duty,” she said “One day I was clicking around the channels and all of a sudden there is Patty. The first thing I thought was what is that ugly hair? They actually let me go out like that? But by the end of the show, I realized it did have some value. Patty was doing naughty things, but she had respect for her parents.”
She has remained close to William Schallert, who played Patty’s loving and often exasperated father, Martin Lane. “He’s the dad I never got to spend time with,” she said, adding “the family we created the show was very much a family. That was my safety zone.”
She said she’s tickled when baby boomers approach her about the series. “There is a community or a coming together that I treasure. When someone comes up to me — and they might have white hair like mine — and they say, ‘I grew up with you,’ I say, ‘Now we’re growing old together.’”
Duke’s also treasuring that four of the albums she recorded in the 1960s — “Don’t Just Stand There,” “Patty,” “Patty Duke Sings Songs from Valley of the Dolls and Other Selections” and “Patty Duke Sings Folks Songs (Time to Move On)” — have made their CD debuts. The folk song album, which Duke recorded in 1968, was never released.
YouTube is filled with clips of Duke performing on shows such as ABC’s pop music series “Shindig!,” NBC’s “Kraft Music Hall,” “The Mike Douglas Show” and even CBS’ “The Ed Sullivan Show.”
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“It was part of the marketing for the show,” Duke explained of her recording career. “I had delusions I could sing. I was beyond excited until I got into the studio. I felt about an inch and a half tall. I just was frozen. So they had to put a person in the booth with me so they could point to me when it was time to sing.”
Arnold Goland, music arranger and conductor for three of her albums, said Duke could definitely carry a tune. “Her intonation was good,” he said. “She was a real pro.”
“I don’t think Judy Garland or Barbra Streisand were worried about the competition,” said Matt Tunia, a longtime Duke fan who was the CD reissue producer, including writing liner notes and supplying the artwork. “But the charm she brought to those records is captivating and real fun.
Duke’s series and music, said Tunia, “reminds me of that quieter, more innocent time. I think Patty Duke the actress and the person that everyone fell in love with on ‘The Patty Duke Show’ was a sweet, charming girl-next-door that was very relatable. I think people really gravitated toward her.”
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