"Leave It to Beaver" Farewell to Penny (TV Episode 1962) Poster

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7/10
Sometimes Former romantic flames can be counted as "bad pennies
pensman1 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Beaver is invited to a party for Penny Woods; and June wants Beaver to go because it will be a sweet little affair. Penny has been Beaver's perpetual tattletale/showoff for what seems forever. And when did Mr. Blair switch from teaching English to teaching history? At the end of a particular rotten class Beaver and Penny come as close to blows as possible. When Beaver arrives home, June hands him the invitation and he says he's not going to a Zombie's party. At the other side in the Wood's house, Penny is yelling at her mother for sending Beaver an invitation. Ward is all for allowing Beaver to make up his own mind; but once the Cleavers learn it's a farewell party—Beaver has to go, basically June says so.

Beaver confesses to Wally that he is actually going to miss Penny. Wally says it's just like a Cary Grant movie. Once Cary starts yelling at Doris Day, you know he's going to end up hugging her. Again, in the Woods house, Penny's mother tells her the boy she thought was the most annoying boy she ever met ended up as Penny's father. It is a "Beaver Grant" and "Penny Day" episode.

The day of the party, Beaver is dressed to the nines. The party has been a success and at the end Penny reads a poem she and her mother wrote. Pretty sappy poem. Mr. Blair volunteers Beaver into helping Penny carry her gifts out to her mother's car. As they are getting ready to go, Beaver apologies for the fight yesterday and Penny does too. Both end up admitting they are each going to miss one another after all. Beaver in a moment of weakness says he likes Penny. Penny even gives him her pencil box as a token. When June sees the pencil box, she is somewhat pleased that it is a signifier that Beaver likes a girl.

June tells Ward she thinks it's cute that Beaver actually likes Penny. Ward says he had a crush on a girl when he was Beaver's age. Her father owned a paint store, and to this day whenever he opens a can of turpentine, he thinks of Elinor. (You have to love Ward little side comments.) Then Beaver gets a phone call from Whitey, Penny's not moving, she's staying with her grandmother until the end of the year. Beaver panics. He asks Wally if he thinks Penny will blab that Beaver said he liked her. Of course, she will, she's a girl, explains Wally. Now Beaver really panics, he needs a plan.

June says she found Beaver making faces in the mirror and he wanted to know if she had any good names to call somebody. What does it mean? Ward tells her that the pencil box romance has gone sour. The next day Beaver tells Penny everything he said was a lie. She's really a rat. She says Beaver is goof, and they return to normal. Or with the subtle smile on Beaver's face, have we entered a new normal.

I gather the writers wanted to stretch Beaver's character some. I'm not sure they realize how deep the dislike for the tattletale/showoff can go. There was a girl in my grammar school who took that image to unbelievable heights. She tattled on everyone and took pleasure in it. If she could find a way to make a fellow student feel stupid, she felt obligated to do so. It's been over 50 plus years since then, and "seniors" who bump into one another will still look incensed when her name comes up. I guess you will go with the "romance" element of the episode depending on how in touch you still are with those early years, and if you recall them as happy or unhappy.
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7/10
I think both Beaver and Penny doth protest too much
AlsExGal16 March 2024
Beaver and Penny Woods have been calling each other names since Judy Hensler left town and Penny took her place as the snooty female of Beaver's class, always making with the biting insult. But then word has it that Penny will be moving away because of her dad's job, and Beaver is invited to her going away party. June insists that he go.

The day of the party, at school, Beaver is instructed by Mr. Blair to remain behind and help Penny carry her things to her mother's car. Alone in the classroom, he ends up saying rather "mushy stuff" to her, admitting that he actually likes her, and she returns the sentiment. But then comes news that may upend Beaver's plans to keep what he said a secret to his grave, or at least until he is in high school. What would that news be? Watch and find out.

This party apparently took place at school, and that bit was confusing since the invitation to the party came from Penny's mother, as though it would be held at the Wood home.

Wally again brings some older brother wisdom to the situation, first making Beaver aware of the fact that he actually likes Penny, and what he's experiencing with the insult trading is actually sexual tension - the words are mine, the wisdom is Wally's. What Wally actually did was compare Beaver's situation to a Cary Grant/Doris Day movie - "You know they start out yelling at each other and end up hugging". The interesting thing about this line is that Cary Grant and Doris Day only made one movie together, "That Touch of Mink", and it wasn't released until several months after this show aired. Both LITB and That Touch of Mink were both produced by Universal Pictures, so it appears that Universal's publicity department got ahead of itself in this particular case.
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7/10
School party?
deblc-9133416 March 2024
I've seen this episode several times and when I happened to catch it this morning, something interesting occurred to me. Penny's mother's went to the trouble to send invitations in the mail. Penny threw a fit because she sent one to Beaver. Beaver swore he wasn't going. June made a big deal of telling him to be polite and thank Penny's mother for a nice time. The party turned out to be held in the classroom at the end of the day and there was no sign of Penny's mother. It was just as if the party had organized itself. Penny put a few things in a box and her mother was picking her up outside. If the party was held at school, how could Beaver have "not" gone?

I think it was an easy way of getting out of making another set, but it didn't make sense.
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10/10
Love/Hate Relationship
MichaelMartinDeSapio25 April 2016
Penny Woods filled the role that Judy Hensler had played in the first few seasons of LITB, that of the goody-goody tattle-tale and know-it-all who was Beaver's classroom antagonist. In contrast to Judy, Penny was blonde, cute and had high-class pretensions; she participated in horse shows and planned to attend Vassar. There was friction between her and Beaver, but also the tentative stirrings of attraction. Theirs was a love/hate relationship, and as such was a more complex relationship than that between Beaver and Judy.

It seems that Penny is moving away to Bellport. She has a going-away party at school, and she and Beaver share a farewell moment after class that threatens to spill into what Beaver and his comrades would term "mushy stuff." (Beaver tells Penny he guesses he kinda likes her, Penny tells Beaver he's cute.) But when it turns out that Penny isn't moving after all, Beaver is embarrassed and mortified in light of what they said to each other! How will he restore the equilibrium?

Puppy-love stories carried out with subtlety and restraint were a staple of the series, and this is a memorable example. By rights, Beaver and Penny should have become an "item" by the end of the series, but unfortunately the actress who played Penny gradually disappeared from the show.
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10/10
BEAVE & PENNY AND CARY GRANT & DORIS DAY???
tcchelsey12 March 2024
Dick Conway (who passed in 2002), the master writer for sitcoms, had to have been influenced by all those romantic comedy movies Doris Day starred in. We loved her. In fact.... listen when Wally mentions Cary Grant and Doris Day. There you have it!

Cleverly written for teenagers, pretty Penny Woods (played so well by Karen Sue Trent) is leaving the neighborhood, relocating to another school --and its good bye to all, including Beaver. Here's the rub.... if you followed the series, Beave had a love/hate relationship with Penny, but you know, deep down inside, he kinda' liked her in his own way.

Penny was your 60s teen "surfer girl slash dream girl," and with an attitude. Karen played this role to perfection. Accordingly, since Penny is leaving, Beave's real feelings come out... and watch what happens. Shades of PILLOW TALK, starring Doris Day and Rock Hudson? Whitey (Stanley Fafara) is in this one too, sort of playing a juvenile Tony Randall-type role? All this has to make you chuckle.

Special guest star is famous Jean Vander Pyl, playing Penny's mom. Jean was the long time voice of Wilma on the FLINTSTONES and Rosie the robot maid on the JETSONS. On a sad note, Karen Sue Trent about a year after this story, was injured in an episode of the RIFLEMAN and gave up acting altogether. She passed in Florida in 2022.

Again, many thanks to Dick Conway. 10 Star episode if there ever was one. SEASON 5 EPISODE 15 remastered.
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5/10
Penny's Moving. Hooray! Hooray!
StrictlyConfidential15 December 2020
(*Whitey Whitney quote*) - "It doesn't pay to be stupid."

It's no secret that Beaver hates Penny Woods and Penny woods hates Beaver.

So, when Beaver gets invited to her farewell party at school you can be sure that he won't be going. (And, that's that!)

Anyway - Ward and June work on Beaver and finally convince him to attend Penny's party. And what happens as a result may surprise many viewers.
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5/10
Missed Opportunity
nicholsonlarry-720255 April 2022
The Dukes of Hazzard invented an idea that would have been great for Beaver. Always wear the same clothes and use old footage in new shows. No need to film Whitey's bad advice or Beaver calling everybody creepy and stupid every show. No need to film June's 'Oh Ward don't punish the Beaver....no matter what."more than once. Overall this episode could be switched with lots of other episodes and nobody would notice.
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