Going My Way (TV Series 1962–1963) Poster

(1962–1963)

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6/10
NYC 400 - #362 - "Going My Way"
DeanNYC27 April 2024
In 1944, a film about a St. Louis Priest who got relocated to an impoverished neighborhood in New York City to help a group of wayward boys, became a smash hit. Bing Crosby played the priest and it went on to win a slew of Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Screenplay, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor, Best Actor for Mr. Crosby and Best Song for the hit "Swingin' on a Star"

Then, in 1962, a very different time and place, though the very same location, we got this television adaptation.

In this small screen adaptation of "Going My Way," Gene Kelly essentially plays the Crosby role of Father Chuck O'Malley who is less focused on the youth of the parish than the character was in the movie. That's because Tom, Fr. O'Malley's friend, played by Dick York, also helped out around the Cathedral, and ran a program for kids and teens. Also, crucial was Leo G. Carroll as Father Fitzgibbon, in charge and who had the final say on all the decisions to be made.

The interest in the Catholic Church was reaching a peak at this moment in history. After all, America had its first Catholic President in the White House as this show was first broadcast. Really, the plots of the series could reasonably be seen as a kind of PR statement for the Kennedy Administration. And the interests of the church were on display in how they helped their parishioners.

New York played a part in a lot of ways here, as the city was still evolving into what it would become. For example, construction of The Pan Am Building was still ongoing and could be seen in the opening credits of this series. And the run down neighborhood depicted here was yet another of the places that became gentrified and turned into some of the most valuable property on the planet. It's something else to attach to the name, Robert Moses.

But also the Church had a hold on The City (and to some degree, still does). And it's within that control that the archdiocese has that gave it an immediate sense of importance - through the stories that allowed the characters to display their goodwill and caring. Everyone needs a little help through a world where not everything is nice. And it's just a great comfort to have someone to whom you can share your troubles, deal with your problems and will listen and support what you're attempting to do. That's where this show shines brightly.

Perhaps the biggest problem with the series was a lack of conflict. Both Fr. O'Malley and Tom were hard-working, dutiful, caring, helpful and kind guys. They were basically the same character, only Tom was not married to the cloth. And even when they pitched their concepts to Fr. Fitzgibbon, there wasn't a lot of friction involved. Every show needs a little bit of a battle to push the concepts being offered and to challenge the audience to take a side. If there's only a little discord, then that opportunity is lost.

The other, more practical, problem was that the second half of "Going My Way" ran opposite the Number One show on all of television: "The Beverly Hillbillies" on CBS, so it's likely that the bulk of America never got to see Kelly in his collar.
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5/10
Updating our Fathers
bkoganbing21 September 2006
I often wondered whether Bing Crosby ever was given any scripts to update Going My Way. Had I been able to secure his services for a television series like this, I would have had the show with him returning to St. Dominic's Parish taking over from the recently deceased Father Fitzgibbon. Then I would have cast some younger priest fresh out of the seminary with a good voice of his own. Then with Bing roughly the age Barry Fitzgerald was when he was the new curate at St. Dominic's the roles would have been nicely reversed with the young priest having to face all kinds of crises and wise old Father O'Malley to lean on. I think it might have worked.

But instead St. Dominic's was updated to the Kennedy years and the roles that Crosby and Fitzgerald played and made so beloved were taken by Gene Kelly and Leo G. Carroll. They added a secular social worker in the television series played by Dick York. The reason being was that it left room for romantic involvements that the two priests couldn't participate in.

It was a pleasant enough series, but it didn't take hold. Ironically Crosby later did a half hour situation comedy that also didn't last. Gene Kelly never went back to a weekly television series, but Leo G. Carroll did several seasons as Mr. Waverly on The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and Dick York became immortalized as Darrin number one on Bewitched.

I wouldn't mind seeing any of the episodes now, but they linger somewhere in a vault and few enough people remember that the Best Picture of 1944 was made into a television series.
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6/10
Pleasant nostalgia
design-21628 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I had the good fortune to find this on You Tube (it was not there for long.) It was a providential search, since a friend and I, who remember the original broadcast, somehow had discussed the memory. The programme only ran for 6 months (1962 to 1963.) Essentially, all that was borrowed from the original film was the names of the parish and priests. The setting is the 1960s, and there are two major emphases: the permanence of a church marriage (theme of several episodes), and the well-being of neighbourhood youth. Gene Kelly, of course, was a major film star and brilliant dancer, and, though this was his only television series, Leo G. Carroll had been a favourite in "Topper." I wonder if the reason the series was not successful then was that it has a low entertainment value, by comparison with the original film. (The film was no literary masterpiece, but had far more humour - and Bing seemed to solve everything by singing. Gene Kelly does not contribute any music or dance sequences, outside of 1 episode.) The rare, brief dialogue between Fr Fitzgibbon and others essentially are the only moments of wit, and they'd seem condescending today.

During the 1940s through the earlier 1960s, there was a huge vogue for both memoirs and novels/films about religious figures or topics, including any denomination. I do not recall any television programmes which featured priests as main characters, and a programme with two such stars must have seemed to be a potential blockbuster. Perhaps the lack of humour and entertainment value led to its quick demise. I'll admit I nearly wept with nostalgia. I miss when priests were 'the good guys' (as many were and are!); churches and community centres could host clubs, teams, and other pursuits for youth; parishioners who were troubled could consult the clergy.

Some of the episodes may not appeal to young viewers, or to those who see Catholic church laws as oppressive. The episodes of Going My Way which are fostered in a theme that 'marriage in church is forever' may seem shocking to those who see, for example, that a woman whose husband is a philanderer wants to try to recapture the love they once shared, and, though there were couples in the situation then, another episode, about a young couple who reconcile (at their son's prompting) after a separation of seven years, might make people today shake their heads that both couples should be in a church which allows divorce and remarriage.

Yet the programme does capture some important elements of the era. In 1962, there were many religious schools, still plentiful vocations to the priesthood and religious life, heightened concern for social concerns and justice. All of these are captured in the story-lines.
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