As dad to one of television’s most famous child actors (then adult actor, then Oscar-winning director), Rance Howard didn’t just sit on the set of The Andy Griffith Show. He assisted his son Ron with dialogue and at times even took on a role himself on the show that debuted in 1960.
And in one of his final interviews, Rance shared one of his best memories from the show’s set.
The Howard family lived very close to ‘The Andy Griffith Show’ set
In a 2016 interview with Andy Griffith Show fan podcast “Two Chairs No Waiting,” Rance Howard, whose Griffith Show perspective had largely been unheard from over the years, shared a detail many of the show’s fans were unaware of: that the Howard family lived so close to the show’s set, the comedy’s staffers will come fetch Ron for his scenes.
for #Father’sDay here’s a pic I found while Clint & I were writing our memoir. My Dad Rance on the left & 1st TV dad #AndyGriffith. This was at our wedding in ’75 & made me smile.
“I have a memory, one time, of quite early in the show, maybe the first possible second year,” Rance said. “We lucked out; we were able to rent a house right across the street from the studio. It had a wonderful backyard.
“The reason I mentioned the house is to show you how the show appreciated Ron and cooperated. He sometimes didn’t have to come to work until they needed him. And then the first assistant director will run across the street and knock on the door of our house and say, ‘Hey Ron, they’re ready for you!’ And he will come to work.”
The cast and crew played a part in Rance’s favorite memory
Rance who died in 2017 at age 89, laughed when asked about his memories from the show’s set. His recollections from his son Ron’s eight years on the show must have been too numerous to pick only one; there was one, though, that remains with him. It had to do with a special gift the cast and crew of the Griffith Show surprised Ron Howard with on his birthday.
“One year for Ron’s birthday, the cast and crew chipped in and bought him a swing set, you know, the kind of A-shaped thing that has a swing and a slide and a teeter-totter,” he recalled. “It was really a great swing set. Anyway, they had set it up for him on the stage. And he was called out for his birthday cake and for happy birthday song, and there the swing set was.”
Rance explained that his son was overcome with emotion when he was presented with the overwhelming gift.
“Somebody said, ‘Well, hey, Ron, this is your birthday present, happy birthday! Right after the show, we’ll send the crew over and set it up in your yard,’” Rance revealed. “And Ron was so floored, so knocked out, that he burst into tears and was trying to say thank you to everyone. Finally, the sound guy, sitting up on the boom, reached over and nudged Ron with the microphone, and said, ‘Get out of here, you dirty rotten kid!’ So Ron was excused and dried his eyes. He was so touched by that gift from the crew.”
Rance loved the ‘Griffith Show’ set’s atmosphere
Rance added that “there were so many instances similar to that. The show was so kid-friendly, ‘Ronny,’ they always called him ‘Ronny’ at that time.”
He noted that his son’s years on the show benefited Ron not only at the moment but in his career to come.
“I just have to again realize how important and how formative this show was for Ron during his formative years,” he said. “I bet you today he knows things that he doesn’t even know he knows; but he knows things that he learned on The Andy Griffith Show.”