Peck's Bad Girl

1959
Peck's Bad Girl

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 unknown May 05, 1959

Torey Peck momentarily forsakes her boy friend and has a school-girl crush on her art teacher.

EP2 The Big Fib May 12, 1959

In an effort to impress her rich new neighbors, Torey Peck invents a story that involves her parents in an embarassing and confusing set of circumstances connected with an imagined trip to Europe. (TVG) Torey Peck meets Francesca, the little girl who has just moved in next door. Francesca tells Torey that her parents are on a trip.

EP3 Lips That Touch Lipstick May 19, 1959

Torey Peck faces a crisis when her father objects to her wearing lipstick to a party.

EP4 The Pet Rabbit May 26, 1959

Torey Peck puts her family in a spin when she envisions her brother, Roger, as a potential delinquent.

EP5 unknown Jun 02, 1959

Torey Peck suspects her mother is falling in love with Jacques Bergerac, a visitor to her home, and sets about to break up the imagined romance.

EP6 Society vs Torey Peck Jun 09, 1959

A pledge of secrecy becomes a dilemma for Torey Peck when she is torn between loyalty to her best friends and duty to her girls' club.

EP7 Spare the Rod Jun 16, 1959

Steve and Jennifer Peck learn a lesson in child behavior when they follow the advice of a prudish aunt and consult a child psychologist about raising the youngsters.

EP8 Feet of Clay Jun 23, 1959

Torey's girlfriends decide her father is as charming as their movie idols, until he consents to take them dancing.

EP9 Lady Bountiful Jun 30, 1959

Torey Peck abandons her selfish ambitions when she becomes concerned over the plight of a poor little girl whom she dislikes. (TVG) - Torey is too busy thinking about herself to bother being nice to Nancy Hogan, who just doesn't fit into Torey's group of friends.

EP10 The Picnic Jul 07, 1959

Eager to be accepted by a ""sophisticated"" crowd, Torey Peck accepts a date with a smooth-talking 15-year-old boy instead of with Norman, her classmate. (TVG) Torey is anxious to be accepted as ""one of the crowd"" in an older group.

EP11 unknown Jul 14, 1959

Torey Peck creates quite a problem in the Peck household when she decides her father doesn't really love her and is partial to her younger brother, Roger.

EP12 Slumber Party Jul 21, 1959

Tory Peck invites her friends over for a slumber party. All the girls think Dad is the greatest. But, after Tory is disillusioned that her Dad isn't perfect, she realizes that it's okay anyway.

EP13 The Breadwinner Jul 28, 1959

(TVG) Jane Withers appears as a guest star in ""The Breadwinner."" Convinced that it's time she earned a living of her own, Torey decides to advertise in the newspapers for a baby-sitting job. Her first customer is actress Jane Withers. TV Guide says that this is the last show of the series in it's July 25-31 issue.

EP14 Treehouse of the Steven Peck's Aug 04, 1959

City hall, the neighbors, and a bird-watcher's society object when the Peck's put up a tree house in their back yard.
7.7| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 05 May 1959 Ended
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Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Peck's Bad Girl is an American sitcom that aired on CBS from May 5 to August 4, 1959. The series centers on the misadventures of 12 year-old Torey Peck, played by Patty McCormack.

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margot For a program that disappeared nearly as fast as it was mounted, Peck's Bad Girl has remarkable staying power in the memories of those who caught some of its few episodes. It is best described as a deconstructionist parody of family-life sitcoms of the 1950s (Bachelor Father, Father Knows Best, etc.). The script would set up a routine situation (Torey adopting a stray cat, parents taking separate vacation), and quickly blow it up to absurd proportions.At points in the narrative, Torey Peck (Patty McCormick, she of the blond fringe and pigtails, a few years on from the Coppertone billboard and 'The Bad Seed') would stand against a blackout background and give droll Hitchcockian commentary on the proceedings.None of this was totally original conceptually; the Burns and Allen show also featured absurdist plots with running commentary by a principal (George would watch the latest scene on the TV in his den and then tell you what he thought); Dwayne Hickman in Dobie Gillis also gave frequent commentary, away from the action and in front of Rodin's Thinker; the cartoon show Rocky and His Friends consisted of nothing but endless parodies and knowing winks. What distinguished Peck's Bad Girl was that it didn't shout 'sitcom' at you. Its presentation was closer to that of a soap opera. Someone tuning into it for the first time might not immediately realize it was a comedy. All good excuses for the show not surviving. It also occurs to me that the notion of a child narrator of 11 or 12--and a highly stylized female child at that--may have been off-putting to a lot of people.