Well, your family may well be justified in declaring you crazy, but Imogene Coca did appear in 32 episodes of the sit-com *Grindl* between September 1963 and September 1964. She played a maid working for a temp service, her boss played by James Milhollin; created by David Swift, produced by Harry Ackerman and Winston O'Keefe. Three years later Coca also starred in the sit-com *It's about Time,* which can be best described as a live-action *Flintstones* meets *I Dream of Genie.* Coca and Caesar began their network television careers with *Admiral Broadway Revue* in 1949 (broadcast simultaneously by NBC and DuMont), which would, by the next year, evolve into *Your Show of Shows.* _______________________________________________________________________________ William Lafferty, PhD Department of Theatre Arts [log in to unmask] Wright State University office (937) 775-4581 or 3072 Dayton, OH 45435-0001 USA facsimile (937) 775-3787 The universe was once conceived almost as a vast preserve, landscaped for heroes, plotted to provide them the appropriate adventures. The rules were known and respected, the adversaries honorable, the oracles articulate and precise as the directives of a six-lane parkway. Errors of weakness or vanity led, with measured momentum, to the tragedy which resolved everything. Today, the rules are ambiguous, the adversary is concealed in aliases, the oracles broadcast a babble of contradictions. --- Maya Deren, from her notes for *At Land* ---- Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite http://www.tcf.ua.edu/screensite