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[1] [3] Mathers played the Beaver for six years, appearing in all 234 episodes of the series. He was the first child actor to have had a deal made on his behalf to get a percentage of the merchandising revenue from a television show. Leave It to Beaver still generates revenue more than six decades after its original production run.
Twenty years later, he returned to Mayfield as the grown-up Beaver for the TV movie, Still the Beaver, which premiered forty years ago on Mar. 19, 1983 and launched the four-season sequel series ...
The New Leave It to Beaver (also known as Still the Beaver) is an American sitcom sequel to the original 1957–1963 sitcom Leave It to Beaver.The series began with the 1983 reunion television movie Still the Beaver that aired on CBS in March 1983.
Dow (top) with his Leave It to Beaver co-stars (L–R): Hugh Beaumont, Barbara Billingsley and Jerry Mathers, circa 1959. With a little stage acting and two television pilots as his only acting experience, Dow's career began when he went on an open casting call and landed the role of Wally Cleaver in Leave It to Beaver.
Tony Dow, the actor and director best known for playing the stalwart older brother Wally Cleaver to Jerry Mathers’ Beaver in the iconic series “Leave It to Beaver."
Osmond returned to acting in 1983 reprising his role as Eddie Haskell in the CBS made-for-television movie Still the Beaver, which followed the adult Cleaver boys, their friends, and their families. [4] [9] [18] The television movie was a success and led to the revival comedy series The New Leave It to Beaver, which premiered the following year.
He also appeared in three episodes of the follow-up series The New Leave It to Beaver through 1989. Stevens was able to join the cast for Still the Beaver, after Jerry Mathers, who portrayed Beaver Cleaver, tracked him down after searching for many years. [5] At the time, he was working as a car insurance salesman in New Jersey. [5]
The furry baby animal’s parents were nowhere to be seen, Connecticut rescuers said, which is highly unusual.