But behind the scenes, some of the actors didn’t get along as well as their on-screen characters did.
Set in Mayberry, North Carolina, The Andy Griffith Show ran for eight years and starred Griffith as small town sheriff Andy Taylor. He was joined by his dim witted yet charming deputy, Barney Fife played by Don Knotts, Taylor’s son Opie, portrayed by a young Ron Howard, and Taylor’s Aunt Bee, played by Frances Bavier. Along with the rest of the show’s cast, including Floyd the barber, Otis the town drunk, gas station attendants Gomer and Goober Pyle and many more, the Taylor family represented a closeness of family and community that represents many small towns across the country.
When cameras weren’t rolling, at least one of those characters was known for being hard to work with. Frances Bavier, America’s favorite aunt, had a reputation of being easily offended and didn’t appreciate the role that made her a household name.
“You can’t be an actress for 40 years, living in a world of make-believe, and not be affected,” she told the Star-Gazette of Elmira, New York, in 1966. “Sooner or later, your mind begins to click and in my case you are wise to seek professional help to help stop being Aunt Bee after work. It’s terribly difficult, because Aunt Bee is so much nicer than the real me. Unlike plays in which you play a character only a couple of hours each night, you must be a television character 12 hours a day. And even when you go home, people don’t recognize you as you, but for the character you play. It can be awfully confusing.”
Bavier reportedly only clashed with Griffith on set, but had great respect for him and his role in making The Andy Griffith Show a success. But, by the time the cameras stopped rolling and the show wrapped in 1968, Bavier was one of the few stars who appeared in the show’s spinoff, Mayberry R.F.D., making her one of the longest-lasting characters from the franchise.
In an interview with Ralph Emery, Andy Griffith revealed that Bavier had contacted him after finding out that she had cancer and apologized for being so difficult to work with.
“I’m sorry we didn’t get along better. It was my fault,” Griffith recalls the actress saying to him. “I just wish we had [got along better]. You ran the show and you made the show a success. I’m just sorry we didn’t get along better.”
While Frances Bavier had many other acting roles to her credit, she will always be Aunt Bee to us and to the millions of fans who loved her and The Andy Griffith Show.