Full disclosure: if you've got a little 'snow on the roof,' you might remember My Little Margie -- the charming sitcom that wrapped its four-season run on this day in 1955. If not, you've missed one of early television's best-kept secrets.
Debuting on June 16, 1952, as a summer replacement for Lucille Ball's beloved I Love Lucy, My Little Margie starred Gale Storm as 21-year-old Margie Albright and former silent film star Charles Farrell as her widowed father, Vern. Living together at the Carlton Arms Hotel in New York City, the father-daughter duo navigated life, love, and plenty of mischief -- with most plots, much like I Love Lucy, centered on Margie's spirited escapades.
After the initial summer run on CBS, My Little Margie moved to NBC and ultimately concluded after 126 episodes back on CBS.
Produced by Hal Roach, whose name was synonymous with comedy classics like Laurel and Hardy and Our Gang, the show carried his signature blend of visual gags, timing, and playful domestic chaos. Though it never reached the fame of I Love Lucy, My Little Margie was a hit in its own right, launching Storm into 1950s television stardom and living on for years in syndication, where new audiences discovered the comic charm that made Margie unforgettable.
Due to the TV show's popularity, a companion radio series with the same main cast was launched on CBS in December 1952, where it was heard simultaneously with the broadcast.
Other cast members in My Little Margie included Willie Best, who played the elevator operator Dian Fauntelle; and film star ZaZu Pitts, who among her many film credits appeared in the series of Hal Roach shorts with Thelma Todd.
Compared with other 1950s sitcoms such as I Married Joan with Joan Davis and Life with Elizabeth with Betty White, My Little Margie and its contemporaries owed their roots to I Love Lucy. But nothing could compare to the Ricardos and the Mertzes. While this trio of shows has largely fallen into obscurity, My Little Margie stands as a reminder of television's early experimentation with domestic comedy, showcasing how Hal Roach's pioneering vision helped shape the sitcom landscape for generations to come.
Building on her success, Storm reunited with ZaSu Pitts in 1956 for The Gale Storm Show (also known as Oh, Susanna!), playing Susanna Pomeroy, a cruise director traveling the world. The series ran for four seasons and remains another forgotten classic comedy gem, cementing Storm's status as one of television's comedy pioneers.