Green Acres is an American sitcom starring Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor as a couple who move from New York City to a rural country farm. Produced by Filmways as a sister show to Petticoat Junction, the series was first broadcast on CBS, from September 15, 1965 to April 27, 1971. Receiving solid ratings during its six-year run, Green Acres was cancelled in 1971 as part of the "rural purge" by CBS. The sitcom has been in syndication and is available in DVD and VHS releases. In 1997, the two-part episode "A Star Named Arnold is Born" was ranked #59 on TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time.
Oliver Wendell Douglas
Lisa Douglas
Weren't we so lucky to grow up having shows like **Green Acres** to watch everyday when we were kids? This show was truly funny and everytime I watch it now it gives me that warm feeling of being a kid sitting on the floor in front of the TV and laughing at these amazing character actors who we were also blessed to have like Eddie Albert as **Oliver Douglas** and Eva Gabor as **Lisa Douglas**. Nobody today could ever be as funny as they were together playing this role. The show itself was also amazingly written and a totally different kind of situation comedy for it's time. We never seen anything like it before and we absolutely loved it! I sure hope nobody ever tries to re-make the series but I doubt they will as this type of comedy is no longer appealing to the younger generation which to me also makes it a classic jem.
Thanks to Nick at Nite I still have the theme song and the advertisement for this memorized.
And, honestly, there is a reason for it, it was hysterical. The humor and the fish out of water comedy stay with you. It is brilliant and stands the test of time.
Green Acres is a bit before its time in modern TV, so it holds up well over time.
It's a comedy about a lawyer with an upscale wife who decides he wants to be a farmer.
It doesn't exactly go over the "fourth wall", but it climbs to the top of the fourth wall. Much of the comedy involves speaking about the mood music or the music score that is playing during the show.
Actor Eddie Albert is the main straight man, although he farms in a suit and tie. Yeah, that's the straight man. Frank Cady as a store clerk, and sometimes Bea Benaderet as the local hotel keeper are about the only other "straight men/women" on the show. The others are "hoots" in Hooterville.
The comedy runs from slapstick to sometimes a bit dry, so there is something for everyone.
## **Green Acres (1965) Review: A Perfect, Surrealist Masterpiece - 10/10**
*Green Acres* isn't just a television show; it's a state of mind. A perfect, surrealist comedy that holds up with breathtaking brilliance to this day, it remains the gold standard for situational absurdity and character-driven chaos. From its iconic, operatic theme song that lays out the entire premise, you know you're in for something special—a sophisticated New York couple, Oliver and Lisa Douglas, trading penthouses for pestilence on a dilapidated farm in Hooterville.
The genius of *Green Acres* is its unwavering commitment to its own bizarre internal logic. Oliver Wendell Douglas (the magnificently stoic Eddie Albert) is the ultimate straight man, a lawyer who believes reason and hard work can conquer all, constantly baffled by a world where nothing operates as it should. His wife, Lisa (the incomparable Eva Gabor), is his glamorous, mink-clad foil, who views their new life through a lens of charming incomprehension, famously trying to cook in a wood-burning stove with her high heels and cocktail dresses.
The supporting cast is a gallery of comedic legends. **Mr. Haney's** shenanigans, as he cons Oliver with every visit, are a masterclass in sly, countryfied grift. And then there's **Arnold the Pig**, a character of such refined tastes and intelligence (with a clear love of watching television) that you never question his presence at town meetings. The physical comedy is timeless, from the tractor that has a mind of its own to the Douglas's bedroom cupboard door that perpetually slides off and falls to the floor, exposing the backyard at the most inopportune moments.
### The Verdict
**10/10 - A Timeless, Unmatched Classic**
*Green Acres* is a perfect show. Its humor, derived from the collision of urban rationality with rural surrealism, is as sharp and funny now as it was nearly sixty years ago. It’s a testament to its quality that you can start watching it at ten years old for the slapstick and appreciate its sophisticated satire and flawless performances as an adult. It is, and will always be, a joyful, brilliant, and utterly unique classic.