Harry is denied a loan unless Lucy is put in charge. She sublets half the office to a novelty salesman.
Another weak offering that gets dragged down by the appearance of Wally Cox. He is NOT funny and I don't understand why Lucy kept having him back. He may have been a star in the '50s thanks to MISTER PEEPERS, but his "comedy" -- if you can call it that -- certainly hasn't aged well.
Richard Deacon's character should have been the focus here instead of Cox. He only appears at the beginning and end as the loan officer who is impressed with Lucy's ability to survive on her meager salary.
Lucy and Wally do a bump-and-grind with a weird toy tied around their waists; Lucy rides down a giant slide; and yes... Harry ends up wet AGAIN -- this time in a kiddie pool.
Funniest part is how Harry is able to tell the exact denomination of $ just by holding it in his hand.
Another weak offering that gets dragged down by the appearance of Wally Cox. He is NOT funny and I don't understand why Lucy kept having him back. He may have been a star in the '50s thanks to MISTER PEEPERS, but his "comedy" -- if you can call it that -- certainly hasn't aged well.
Richard Deacon's character should have been the focus here instead of Cox. He only appears at the beginning and end as the loan officer who is impressed with Lucy's ability to survive on her meager salary.
Lucy and Wally do a bump-and-grind with a weird toy tied around their waists; Lucy rides down a giant slide; and yes... Harry ends up wet AGAIN -- this time in a kiddie pool.
Funniest part is how Harry is able to tell the exact denomination of $ just by holding it in his hand.