

Season - Episode
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1 - 1Housewarming Sep 24, 1962
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1 - 2Second Look Oct 01, 1962
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1 - 3First Encounter Oct 08, 1962
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1 - 4Not a Moment Too Soon Oct 15, 1962
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1 - 5Pony Tails and Politics Oct 22, 1962
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1 - 6First Assignment Oct 29, 1962
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1 - 7Two of a Kind Nov 05, 1962
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1 - 8Love Willow Nov 12, 1962
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1 - 9The Cheat Nov 19, 1962
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1 - 10Possessive Woman Nov 26, 1962
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1 - 11Somebody, Somewhere Dec 03, 1962
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1 - 12Decision At Midnight Dec 10, 1962
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1 - 13Romance For Everybody Dec 17, 1962
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1 - 14Anything for a Laugh Dec 24, 1962
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1 - 15A Little Peace and Quiet Dec 31, 1962
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1 - 16Welcome Stranger Jan 07, 1963
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1 - 17Suspicion Jan 14, 1963
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1 - 18Dugan's Alley Jan 21, 1963
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1 - 19It Gives A Lovely Light Jan 28, 1963
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1 - 20The Ring Master Feb 04, 1963
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1 - 21Facsimile Feb 11, 1963
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1 - 22Hey Rube Feb 18, 1963
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1 - 23Crisis at 8 PM Feb 25, 1963
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1 - 24Interesting Jeopardy Mar 04, 1963
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1 - 25It's Spring Again Mar 11, 1963
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1 - 26When You Are Near Mar 18, 1963
Overview
The New Loretta Young Show, is an American television series, which aired for twenty-six weekly episodes on CBS television from September 24, 1962 to March 18, 1963, features Loretta Young in a combination drama and situation comedy about a free-lance writer in suburban Connecticut named Christine Massey, the widowed mother of seven children. The program is the only one in which Young starred as a recurring character. Her previous anthology series on NBC placed her in the role of hostess and occasional star. Young is the first star to garner both Academy and Emmy awards, one of a relatively few to make the transition from motion picture to television. Though it followed the popular The Andy Griffith Show on CBS, The New Loretta Young Show, sponsored by Lever Brothers, proved unable to sustain the needed audience in competition at 10 p.m. Eastern time on Mondays with the ABC medical drama Ben Casey starring Vince Edwards and Sam Jaffe, which entered its second season. NBC fielded David Brinkley's Journal at the same time, reflections of the news correspondent David Brinkley. The New Loretta Young Show was hence quietly dropped at the end of winter in 1963. Young had formed LYL Production Company for the series, an indication that she did not expect a premature end to the program. Norman Foster directed most of the episodes; John London and Ruth Roberts were the producers.