Known for his exceptional directorial work on films such as Apollo 13, A Beautiful Mind, and Splash, Ron Howard can also count on being known as Opie Taylor from The Andy Griffith Show.
Howard’s work on the classic sitcom sets the stage for his future television and film successes. In a revealing interview, the Cinderella Man director explained that it was a surprising shoutout from a U.S. president-to-be that gave his young career the jumpstart it needed.
‘The Andy Griffith Show’s legacy
From its start in 1960, The Andy Griffith Show brought Mayberry to life and viewers fell in love with the fictional town. Starring Andy Griffith as the town’s capable Sheriff Andy Taylor and Howard as his sweet young son Opie, the show featured a cast of characters as wholesome as the town.
As author Richard Kelly expressed in his 1981 book titled The Andy Griffith Show: “The town [of Mayberry] had a distinctive character. Central to this character is the pace of the town – and of the show. The small talk between Andy and Barney sitting on the front porch conveyed an authentic atmosphere of village life.”
The president-to-be who was impressed with little Ronnie Howard
In his conversation with the Archive of American Television, Howard talked about his appearance on a television show that got him noticed by a prominent individual. It was on a program called General Electric Theater that Howard enjoyed having been a part of.
“Most fun of all was this part I got to do on an episode of General Electric Theater,” he remembered. “It was a pilot for a TV series. And Ronald Reagan was then hosting that show.”
Unknown to Howard, his small, uncredited role on the episode did not escape the attention of the future U.S. president. president.
“I guess I didn’t have much of a credit, but Ronald Reagan had seen the episode and at the end, he just ad-libbed this thing and said, ‘Special thanks to little Ronnie Howard who did a wonderful job as Barnaby’ or something like that,” he recalled.
Ronald Reagan’s shoutout led to ‘The Andy Griffith Show’
Howard pointed out that, thanks to Reagan’s thoughtful attention to the child actor’s work on the episode, it opened a door for him to work on the Andy Griffith program.
“And that led [The Andy Griffith Show producer] Sheldon Leonard to call my agent and say, ‘I’m doing a series with Andy Griffith and we need a son,” he said.
The young actor’s first appearance on the classic show was on its pilot, which appeared on The Danny Thomas Show.
“I don’t remember anything like an audition for The Andy Griffith Show,” he said. “I just remember doing the first pilot episode.That was done in front of an audience and that was the first time that I ever remember being in front of an audience.”
And it was most certainly not Howard’s last time.