hugh beaumont-related stories
Posted Nov 11th 2008 3:22PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Celebrities, Reality-Free

I was going to title this post "Louvre it to Beaver," but a quick check showed that 98% of the people doing the story on the web had already thought of that title. Everything moves so quickly these days.
Tony Dow, who played Beaver's older brother Wally Cleaver on the classic series
Leave it to Beaver, is also an artist, and he's going to have
one of his sculptures shown at the famed Paris museum The Louvre. It's an abstract sculpture titled "Unarmed Warrior."
Dow doesn't act much anymore, but he was busy behind the scenes of TV shows and movies while doing his artwork. He directed episodes of such shows as
Deep Space Nine,
Coach,
Crusade,
Get A Life,
Swamp Thing, and
Cover Me. He also did visual effects for the
Doctor Who TV movie in the 90s, as well as
Babylon 5.
So Dow didn't die from eating Pop Rocks, become a porn star, or end up dying in Vietnam, rumors which swirled around his
Beaver costars and aren't true.
Posted Oct 4th 2007 12:04PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, TV Royalty, Celebrities
Today marks the 50th anniversary of the classic sitcom Leave it to Beaver, and while many of the show's original stars have left us (Hugh Beaumont, Stanley Fafara, Sue Randall, Richard Deacon), much of the main cast is still going strong, and five of them - Jerry Mathers, Tony Dow, Barbara Billingsley, Ken Osmond, and Frank Bank - appeared on Good Morning, America this morning to celebrate the day.
They've all kept busy over the years. Mathers appeared on stage in Hairspray this year and has appeared in several TV shows and wrote a book. Dow has directed many TV shows and movies over the years and is also an artist. Billingsley is an incredibly active 92 and even recreated her famous Airplane jive talk on GMA. Osmond became a cop - and was shot three times in the line of duty - and is now retired, and Bank (Lumpy Rutherford) is a financial expert who handles Mathers and Dow.
Continue reading Happy 50th anniversary, Beaver!