“The Brady Bunch” was a hugely successful sitcom which ran for 5 seasons (117 episodes) from 1969 to 1974. One of the show’s stars was Robert Reed, a Shakespearean trained stage actor. Previous to “The Brady Bunch”, Reed had also been a co-star of a very successful drama called “The Defenders” with E.G. Marshall in the early 1960s.

Usually when a TV show is canceled, it happens mid to late season, before production actually winds down. The actors know they have been canceled, but they wind down and knock off the last few episodes. In recent years, a final “end-of-the-series show” has become almost a ritual in Hollywood.

When “The Brady Bunch” was winding down after their fifth season, they had every reason to believe they would be returning for a sixth season in 1974-75. Robert Reed was not crazy about doing the series, but he stuck with it because, like most actors, he needed the work.

Reed often tangled with producer Sherwood Schwartz over the shows silly, inane plots. Before “The Brady Bunch”, Schwartz had also been the producer of “Gilligan’s Island”. This fact alone is very telling. Schwartz was a genuinely nice man and a very successful producer, but it was simply apparent that although both series ran during the turbulent late sixties and early seventies, he did not care for dealing with or giving time to “social issues” of the times. “The Brady Bunch”, like “Gilligan’s Island” before it, was good-natured, innocent fluff- essentially, cotton candy on TV.

Reed just hated the ridiculous, juvenile stories “The Brady Bunch” had and he would frequently send Schwartz memos telling him what was wrong with the episodes and how he could improve them. Reed wanted the series to be more than just a silly sitcom and wanted to combine other elements in the show’s scripts, such as satire and farce. Not surprisingly, the two got into more than one argument on the set over the storylines the show’s contained.

During the 1972-73 season, Reed was even written out of an episode where Alice, the housekeeper on the show, leaves the Brady home and does not return until the end of the episode (titled “Goodbye Alice Hello”). Reed thought Alice’s character, if played correctly, would not leave the family household after “telling on” the kids. He did not agree with the “Alice” character’s “motivation”. So, he was written out of the episode, although his character was referred to by cast members.

Reed’s growing discontent continued, and Schwartz tried to placate him by letting him direct several episodes. As a relevant side issue, Robert Reed was also one of television’s first “closet gays”. From the first time he had to kiss his co-star and “wife” Florence Henderson, he must have felt uncomfortable and uneasy, no matter how professional he was. In fact, according to Florence Henderson, she knew Reed’s “secret” from the first time the two locked lips. This secret undoubtedly played at least a small part in Reed’s growing unhappiness with the series.

Nonetheless, Reed had a genuine affection for his fellow cast members. And the Brady children seemed to have regarded him as something of a second father, as would be natural after five years of filming the show.

Before the last episode, because of the trouble he was causing and discontent he had over the show, it was generally agreed that Reed would not be back for the show’s upcoming sixth season. How would this work?

Several possible scenarios were discussed:

The Brady family would have no father anymore Another actor would take over the same character Robert Reed would return, but only as a recurring character, rather than a full time cast member Carol’s (Florence Henderson’s) first husband would return and he would take over as the Brady father. (An odd choice, given that in the series, Carol and Mike Brady are widow and widower, respectively, when they marry each other.) Reed would not be back, but his character would be “passively referred to”, as in “dad is away on a long business trip” etc.

The (unknown at the time) final “Brady Bunch” episode was filmed, with the somewhat awkward plot of Greg graduating from high school with his father nowhere to be seen; “dad” was simply referred to a few times in the episode.

Little did the viewing audience know, but as the episode was filmed, Robert Reed was present and standing a few feet off-camera. It was reported that Reed was disgusted by the inane episode and having been written out of it, stood off to the side, making faces as the show was filmed.

Soon after the conclusion of the episode, it was decided that “The Brady Bunch” would end its successful five-year run, thus providing a rare instance of a lead character getting written out of the last episode of the show he starred in.

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