Surprising Details from Your Favorite Sitcoms You Never Noticed

November 7, 2023

Don't Try This at Home: Samantha's Adorable Nose Twitch on "Bewitched" Was All Cinematic Magic.

This collection of colorized images from classic 1950s and 1960s black-and-white television shows will have you reminiscing about some of your favorite past series. If you were a fan when these shows originally aired, you will love to learn the behind-the-scenes secrets, fun facts, feuds, and tragedies that were not publicly known about these classic shows at the time. Sit back, relax, and enjoy a blast from the past with these colorized screen stills from classic black-and-white television shows.

(pinterest)

On TV’s Bewitched, Samantha, played by Elizabeth Montgomery, could conjure up some witchy magic with a twitch of her nose. How many of us spent hours in the mirror trying to figure out how to twitch our own noses in such a way? Turns out, no one can make their nose move like that. It is impossible, thanks to the limits of our facial muscles. According to the stories, it was Montgomery herself that suggested the magical twitch for her character. The only issue was that Montgomery, as a mere mortal actress, couldn’t actually get her nose to move in that manner. Fortunately, the cameramen had a few tricks up their sleeves. Thanks to the magic of special effects, Samantha’s darling nose sprang to life when she needed to cast a discreet spell or two. 

"The Addams Family" Was Based On an Unnamed Comic Strip with Unnamed Characters. 

(pinterest)

TV’s The Addams Family, the macabre, gothic kooks that graced the small screen from 1964 to 1966 was based off a popular comic strip that began appearing in The New Yorker in 1938. The comic strip was the brainchild of cartoonist Charles Addams. But did you know that Addams’ original comic strip never had a name? Neither did any of the characters? When David Levy decided to turn the comic strip into a television series, he chose the name The Addams Family as a homage to Addams. Levy reached out to Addams for his suggestions on the names of the characters. Morticia, a variation of ‘mortician’, was an obvious choice for the mother. As for the father, Addams offered two suggestions, Gomez or Repelli. Daughter Wednesday’s name was taken from the “Monday’s child” poem in which it states, “Wednesday’s child is full of woe.” Addams suggested the son be named “Pubert” but the network thought this sounded too close to ‘puberty,’ a word that wigged people out in the 1960s. “Pugsley” was selected instead.