The Secret Behind the Laughter: The ‘I Love Lucy’ Collection Will Reveal All

Housewife Lucy Ricardo is a frustrated performer always looking for a chance to shine, despite her limited abilities. She’s married to Ricky, a Cuban-American singer and bandleader who tries and fails to keep her feet on the ground. Their best friends are their landlords, Fred and Ethel Mertz. And in every episode, Lucy gets caught up in a farcical misunderstanding, or attempts some hare-brained scheme to get famous – like infiltrating Ricky’s act with her newly acquired clowning skills, which include beating a dancer with a pig’s bladder.

It might not sound like the template for one of the most successful and groundbreaking sitcoms of all time, yet not only was I Love Lucy hugely popular – with 67.3 million viewers at the peak of its six-season run – it was also the first programme to broadcast repeats and to record on film in front of a live studio audience. The show, which debuted in 1951, pushed the envelope on screen, too. TV executives initially blanched at the idea of their heroine being married to a Cuban-American. Lucille Ball, who played Lucy, had to fight hard for her real-life husband Desi Arnaz to be cast as Ricky.

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