Nanny and the Professor
1970Nanny and the Professor is an American fantasy situation comedy created by AJ Carothers and Thomas L. Miller for 20th Century Fox Television. During pre-production, the proposed title was Nanny Will Do.
Seasons & Episode
Prudence tries to get her seeds to grow faster while the Professor upsets his new girl friend when he doesn't try to save a dying tree.
The Professor tries to get out of playing football with his friends.
Nanny's Uncle Horace (Ray Bolger) visits from the South Seas to perform a rain dance in order to cure a drought.
Nanny's pychic aunt (Elsa Lanchester) predicts Nanny will be menaced by a man with a mustache.
Nanny's fiance arrives to claim her hand in marriage. The marriage had been arranged by their families on the day Nanny was born. They ask the Professor if he will give the bride away. The children and the Professor are upset by the thought of losing Nanny. She tries on her great-great-grandmother's wedding dress. Along with the dress is a note written by her mother which makes it clear the decesion to marry ""Chumley"" must be her's and her's alone. Nanny decides she's not rady to leave the Everett household.
Butch, thinking he is a jinx, is given a good luck charm from Nanny's Aunt Henrietta (Elsa Lanchester)
Nanny is accused of being a witch. (30 years later actress Juliet Mills will portray on witch on the daytime drama Passions)
The Professors RICH brother (Robert Sterling) donates two million dollars to his brothers college.
Aunt Henrietta (Elsa Lanchester) believes there is a ghost in the house because the furniture is disarranged every night.
Hal enters a golf tournement using strange clubs given to him by Nanny
Nanny and Hal help the Professor keep a basketball player from failing math.
Hal tries to visit his uncle, but doesn't quite make it.
Nanny trades in her old car ""Arabella"" for a new one
Prudence, being ignored by her brothers, becomes attached to Nanny's old doll.
Nanny and the Professor is an American fantasy situation comedy created by AJ Carothers and Thomas L. Miller for 20th Century Fox Television. During pre-production, the proposed title was Nanny Will Do.