Hank (1965 TV series)

For the Kelsey Grammer series from 2009, see Hank (2009 TV series).
Hank

Dick Kallman and Linda Foster.
Genre Situation comedy
Created by Garry Marshall
Jerry Belson
Directed by Leslie H. Martinson
Allen Baron
and others
Starring Dick Kallman
Howard St. John
Dabbs Greer
Linda Foster
Katie Sweet
Lloyd Corrigan
Theme music composer Johnny Mercer
Frank Perkins
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 26
Production
Executive producer(s) William T. Orr
Producer(s) Hugh Benson
James Komack
Running time 24 mins.
Production company(s) Warner Bros. Television
Release
Original network NBC
Audio format Monaural
Original release September 24, 1965 (1965-09-24) – April 15, 1966 (1966-04-15)

Hank is an American situation comedy which is notable for being an early example of a program with a true series finale,[1] in which the underlying premise of the series reaches a natural conclusion with its final episode.[2]

Synopsis

The show, which aired on NBC in 1965, revolves around a pair of orphans. In both the unaired pilot and first episode, Hank Dearborn (Dick Kallman) is explained to be a teenager left to raise his young sister, Tina (Katie Sweet), after their parents die in a car crash. Seeing that the best route to this is higher education, Hank attempts to illegally audit classes at the fictional Western State University, while at the same time taking a variety of odd jobs, the main one of which was to run his own lunch truck, to financially support what remains of his family. Much of the humor of the show derives from the fact that accomplishing these twin goals requires him to engage in identity theft. Much of the drama arises from his fear of his sister being forced into foster care.[3]

His life is further complicated by the fact that he is dating Doris Royal (Linda Foster), the daughter of the university's registrar, Dr. Lewis Royal (Howard St. John), who is on the lookout for unregistered students like Hank.[1] Typical episodes show Hank narrowly avoiding detection as an impersonator. In the final episode, his true identity is compromised. However, because of his excellent performance on a recent exam, the university rewards him with a full academic scholarship and formal admittance to the university.

The series ends with his sister remarking, "There goes my brother – the registered student."[1]

Cast

Episode list

Episode # Episode title Original airdate Episode Summary
1-1 "Who's Waldo Smith?" (pilot) September 17, 1965 College drop-in Hank, an unregistered student who's hungry for learning, gets the help of Professor McKillup in his plots to attend classes in place of absent students.
1-2 "Will the Real Harvey Wheatley Please Stand Up?" September 24, 1965 Hank transforms a personality-challenged egghead (Bob Balaban) into the most sought-after man on campus.
1-3 "Dunsetter For President" October 1, 1965 Hank tries to sabotage his own campaign when he is nominated for campus president, since winning would expose his "drop-in" status.
1-4 "Cherokee Hank" October 8, 1965 In his latest subterfuge, Hank disguises himself as Sam Lightfoot, a speedy Native American runner.
1-5 "Candidate" October 15, 1965 Hank is temporarily disillusioned by the seemingly unethical conduct of his faculty friend.
1-6 "Catering Competition" October 22, 1965 Hank faces bankruptcy when a professional food service arrives on campus.
1-7 "Farewell, Coach Weiss" October 29, 1965 Hank arranges a surprise testimonial dinner for Western State's frustrated athletic director.
1-8 "My Boyfriend, the Doctor" November 5, 1965 Hank encounters girl problems when he assumes the identity of a pre-med student.
1-9 "Somebody Loves This Albatross" November 12, 1965 Hank helps keep an honor student from dropping out of school by getting him a scholarship after the student's hidden athletic talents are uncovered.
1-10 "The Campus Caper" November 19, 1965 Hank makes a mockery of a private detective who was hired by Dean Royal to ferret out unregistered students.
1-11 "Dean Royal, Matchmaker" November 26, 1965 Dean Royal misinterprets Hank's invitation to his daughter as being a proposal to elope.
1-12 "They're Playing Our Song" December 3, 1965 Disguised as an absent music student, Hank composes a winning song for Professor Wagner.
1-13 "My Fair Co-Ed" December 10, 1965 Hank solves the "three's a crowd" problem by transforming an unsophisticated babysitter into a campus beauty contest winner.
1-14 "Four's A Crowd" December 24, 1965 Hank and his disguises cause Dean Royal to think that he is having hallucinations.
1-15 "Operation: Crackdown" December 31, 1965 Hank once again outwits Dean Royal and thwarts the registrar's campaign to catch "drop-in" students.
1-16 "The Millionth Dollar Baby" January 7, 1966 Hank contributes to the stadium fund, but his generosity nearly exposes his "drop-in" status at Western State.
1-17 "Money, Money, Who's Got the Money?" January 14, 1966 Hank gets unexpected help when a loan shark plans to take his truck as interest.
1-18 "The Trouble With Tina" January 28, 1966 Guardianship of Tina is in jeopardy until Hank's friends come to his aid.
1-19 "His Highness, Count Gazzari" February 4, 1966 Hank is able to convince a coach that he is a descendant of Italian nobility.
1-20 "The Ten Lettermen" February 11, 1966 In an attempt to help Coach Weiss keep his job, Hank helps recruit a star athlete to attend Western State.
1-21 "Rah, Rah, Commissar" February 25, 1966 A Russian exchange student is convinced by Hank to join the school's track team.
1-22 "Maury Wills to the Rescue" March 4, 1966 Hank extends an invitation to Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Maury Wills to visit the campus in order to appease disgruntled alumni.
1-23 "Wedding, Anyone?" March 18, 1966 A cancelled wedding party that could mean a big financial loss forces Hank to try and marry off Coach Gazzari.
1-24 "Ethel Weiss, Won't You Please Come Home?" March 25, 1966 Coach Weiss patches up a lovers quarrel between Hank and Doris, but alienates his wife in the process.
1-25 "McKillup's Best Seller" April 8, 1966 A 25-year-old obsolete textbook becomes the most sought-after book on campus thanks to Hank.
1-26 "Operation: Matriculation" April 15, 1966 Hank is finally unmasked as an elusive "drop-in" at Western State.

DVD release

On November 3, 2015, Warner Bros. released Hank: The Complete Series on DVD via their Warner Archive Collection. This is a manufacture-on-demand (MOD) release, available through Warner's online store and Amazon.com.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "What Happened to Hank". TV Party. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  2. "Hank – Trivia". IMDb. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  3. "Hank". Jump the Shark. 2007. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  4. Official Announcement for 'The Complete Series': Date, Cost, Artwork


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