Andy Griffith Secrets & Scandals: Who Hated Who, The Vicious Fights, Affairs & Booze
Andy Griffith and Don Knotts came off as country bumpkins keeping the peace in the sleepy sitcom town of Mayberry — but their squeaky- clean image hid dark secrets and sleazy off-camera antics! From 1960 until 1968, The Andy Griffith Show showcased small-town life in fictional Mayberry, N.C.
It starred Griffith as Sheriff Andy Taylor, Knotts as Deputy Barney Fife, a young Ron Howard as Griffith’s son, Opie, Frances Bavier as Aunt Bee and a cast of supporting characters. It’s been almost eleven years since Griffith died of a heart attack on July 3, 2012. Now, OK! can rip the lid off the shameful secrets behind The Andy Griffith Show — including its beloved stars’ boozing, cheating and cruelty to kindly spinster Aunt Bee!
Despite playing a goodhearted, folksy sheriff on the show, Griffith had a reputation as a mean drunk and had some costars shaking in their boots! “Friends winced at the thought of spending an evening in the Griffith home,” said Daniel de Visé, author of the book Andy & Don. George Lindsey, who played Goober Pyle, a hayseed car mechanic on the show from 1964 to 1968, noted Griffith’s volatile moods in his 1995 memoir, Goober in a Nutshell. “Most of us were deathly afraid of Andy,” recalls Lindsey, who died in 2012. “Every Monday night, he would call you if he liked your performance. If the call didn’t come, I dreaded going back to work on Tuesday morning.”
The star’s white-hot rages were “unbearable,” spilled an insider — and during a furious fight with first wife Barbara, Griffith punched out a car’s windshield! Griffith later admitted he saw a shrink for more than a dozen years to control his anger, according to insiders.
The actor’s childhood had been rough, and there were times he said he felt looked down upon because of his “wrong side of the tracks” up-bringing in Mount Airy, N.C. He was especially bitter — and jealous — over the Emmy Awards and critical acclaim that Knotts won for playing bumbling Deputy Barney to his Sheriff Andy.
Knotts had an equally troubled childhood, growing up in a small town in West Virginia, with a disabled alcoholic father who reported held a knife to his own son’s throat. It fueled the two stars’ rift and prompted Knotts to leave the show in the lurch after five seasons, but it wasn’t always that way.
Knotts and Griffith had become friends in 1955 when they costarred in the Broadway play No Time for Sergeants. For years, they were partners in crime — sex-crazed womanizers who cheated on their first wives, stepping out on double dates with their mistresses! During the show, Griffith played practical jokes on Barney, calling him by his real name “Jess,” when he was angry, knowing Knotts hated that name. Griffith would also drop heavy metal film canisters when Knotts was sleeping. Many years after the show, they made up, and in 2000, Griffith said of Knots, “The five years we worked together were the best five years of my life.”
Actress Aneta Corsaut, who played Griffith’s on-screen girlfriend, teacher Helen Crump, became his real-life lover almost immediately after joining the cast in 1963. “Andy couldn’t get enough of Aneta,” de Visé wrote, adding that one of Griffith’s buddies describe the relationship as “true love. They were closer than anyone knew.”
But the couple’s torrid affair was the worst-kept secret on the set! In one of their many pranks, a crew member donned a waiter’s uniform and delivered food to Griffith’s Hollywood hotel room — catching him locked in a steamy embrace with Corsaut. Griffith was fit to be tied!