

Jay Gould wrote that the direction and the script were weak and the main characters lacked detail. Critical response Ī review in The New York Times of the program's premiere episode said that the show was "rather obviously patterned on radio's Fibber McGee and Molly.

Harry Herrmann was the show's producer, with Ted Luce (the Hartmans' son) and Frank Wilson as writers. NBC had hoped to cash in on the couple's popularity following their respective Tony Award wins but the series failed to catch on and was canceled by NBC nearly two months later.

The Hartmans were given their own television series shortly after they won Tony Awards for the Broadway revue Angel in the Wings (Paul won for Best Actor while Grace won for Best Actress in a Musical. The series centers around a young married couple who live in Forest Heights, New York. The series stars Paul and Grace Hartman, a married couple who performed together on the vaudeville circuit and on the Broadway stage. The Hartmans (also known as The Hartmans (at Home)) is an American television sitcom that aired live on NBC on Sunday nights from February 27 to April 24, 1949. American TV series or program The Hartmans
