The Munsters



A Mundane Fantastic Dom Com that originally ran from 1964 to 1966 about a working class family of would-be monsters. Experienced surprising high ratings during the period before the Batman TV series came on, revolutionizing color TV.

The humor of the series came from the odd juxtaposition of many "cartoon" antics in a live action series, namely "Fast Motion", as well as the fact that despite their gothic appearance, the family doesn't seem to think they're different from anyone else, with the exception of cousin Marilyn who didn't inherit "The Family Look". Though sometimes compared to the Addams family, there are considerable differences. The Addams Family are in essence landed gentry (their history in the US goes back to the Pilgrim era), very refined and elegant, and independently wealthy; the Munsters are working-class recent immigrants (Grandpa having immigrated from Transylvania), and Herman has a quite coarse sense of humour. The Addamses are borderline supernatural in some undefined way; the Munsters are explicit monsters. The most important difference, however, is in the families' views of themselves and the people around them. The Addamses consider themselves perfectly normal, and cannot understand why the people they meet are so very strange; the Munsters believe themselves to be just like the people around them, and cannot understand why said people seem to think the family is so strange.

The main characters are:


 * Herman, the 7-foot-tall Frankenstinian patriarch of the family. Though he believed himself to be a Standard Fifties Father, he was really more of a Bumbling Dad and loveable idiot. Afraid of Blood.
 * Lily, the doting Housewife. The child of immigrant parents, Lily was more keenly aware of social standards than the rest of her family, but nevertheless cheerily went about her bizarre habits anyway. Usually became involved to bail Herman and Grandpa out of trouble.
 * Eddie, a boy with werewolf tendencies, Eddie had the typical problems of a pre-teen in 1950s America: too much homework, not enough television, can't stop chewing the teacher's leg, etc.
 * Marilyn, the pretty blonde Unfazed Everyman of the series, Marilyn was the shockingly normal Muggle niece of the family. Rather than proud of being able to conform better, Marilyn was convinced that she was the freak, and her aunt and uncle regarded her "weirdness" as a tragic affliction. Despite being ripe for storylines, Marilyn was a background character at best. Her (second) actress even said years after the fact that anyone could have played her.
 * Grandpa, Herman's Lancer and usually the instigator for the show's zany scheme of the week. A combination Count Dracula and Mad Scientist, Grandpa was an Omnidisciplinary Scientist with at least one degree in Occult Magic. He sometimes reported being discriminated against by his neighbors -- not because he was a blood-sucking demon of the night, but because he was European.


 * Amusing Alien
 * Animated Adaptation: The Mini-Munsters, a 1973 animated TV movie.
 * Blind Without'Em: Dr. Dudley.
 * Bumbling Dad: Herman.
 * Cool Car: The Munster Koach and the Dragula race car. The Munster Koach was arguably the show's signature.
 * Note: The car used in Rob Zombie's Dragula music video is not the Dragula, but the Munster Koach.
 * Cool House
 * Cute Monster Girl: Lily.
 * Darker and Edgier: The 2013 reboot.
 * Dark Is Not Evil
 * Deadpan Snarker: The Raven in the Clock. Also, Grandpa.
 * Development Hell: A prospective feature film adaptation was trapped in this for years in the mid-'00s, with the Wayans Brothers attached at one point, before the idea was ultimately scrapped.
 * Dueling Shows: The Addams Family.
 * Dysfunctional Family
 * Extremely Dusty Home
 * Fantasy Kitchen Sink: Frankenstein monster, vampires, and a werewolf...all related!
 * Fast-Forward Gag: Whenever someone meets the Munsters and runs away.
 * Forgotten Theme Tune Lyrics
 * Fluffy the Terrible: Spot The Dragon.
 * Friendly Neighborhood Vampires
 * Gentle Giant: Herman
 * Halloweentown
 * Happily Married: Herman and Lily.
 * The first (live-action) couple to be shown sharing the same bed. The first couple was Fred & Wilma Flintstone.
 * Housewife: Lily
 * I Am Not Spock: Averted. Al Lewis loved his Grandpa Munster character, and eagerly exploited it.
 * I Want You to Meet An Old Friend of Mine: Previously, Fred Gwynne and Al Lewis were featured in the series Car 54, Where Are You?.
 * It Runs in The Family
 * Lightning Can Do Anything: Like turn Herman into a normal human.
 * Or put hair on a bowling ball! SERIOUSLY
 * Or change Herman back into a man. See Sexophone below.
 * Mad Scientist/Bungling Inventor: Grandpa
 * Man Child: Herman. One of the Running Gags was him throwing foundation-shaking temper tantrums.
 * Mirror-Cracking Ugly: Herman.
 * Monster Mash: Another difference from the Addams Family who were general gothic, while the Munsters were based on specific movie monsters.
 * The Movie: Several
 * Nightmare Fetishist: Not as much as The Addams, but still...
 * Only Sane Man: Even though he was more or less Dracula incarnate, Grandpa wasn't really as naive as the rest of the clan.
 * The Other Darrin: Beverly Owen played Marilyn in the first 13 episodes. After she left to marry Sesame Street writer-producer-director Jon Stone, Pat Priest took over for the rest of the series.
 * Our Werewolves Are Different
 * Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette
 * Quirky Household
 * Revival: The 1980s series The Munsters Today and a revival movie from the 90s.
 * Worth noting that The Munsters Today, despite being a show whose premise was that the Munsters were cryogenically frozen and woke up in the '80s, lasted longer than the original show.
 * Also, a new revival series idea seems to have been pitched to NBC and is pending. Recently revealed character descriptions for it show severe Adaptation Decay, amongst other problems.
 * Sequel Series: The Munsters Today.
 * Sexophone: Used when Grampa's latest invention turns Herman into a woman. (He got changed back by the end of the episode).
 * Shout-Out: Butch Patrick's 1983 novelty single "Whatever Happened to Eddie?" is set to the tune of the theme song and details his life as Eddie Munster.
 * Marilyn, of course, is a reference to Marilyn Monroe.
 * Sitcom
 * Skunk Stripe: Lily
 * Sleeping Single: Subverted. Then again these Munsters are strange folk.
 * Teens Are Monsters: Averted literally-- Marilyn Munster is the only normal person in the family.
 * "Poor dear... it's not her fault she's so ugly."
 * Kind of a Fridge Brilliance Aesop to some kids about beauty being subjective.
 * Lampshaded when a TV Land Channel Commercial was showing reruns of the show, their promotions added (less than masterful) lyrics to the theme song, including the line, "Marilyn, you're normal, where the heck did you come from?"
 * Thirteen Is Unlucky: The Munsters live at 1313 Mockingbird Lane.
 * This Is My Side: Grandpa and Herman had many childish antics like this.
 * The Tonsillitis Episode: Eddie in "Operation: Herman."
 * Under Crank: The Fast Motion Scenes
 * Unfazed Everyman: Marilyn
 * White Sheep