The Great Gildersleeve 49 09 28 (334) Gildy's New Heartthrob Nurse Milford
# The Great Gildersleeve: Gildy's New Heartthrob Nurse Milford
Step into the cozy chaos of Summerfield as Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve finds himself utterly smitten—and hopelessly tangled—once again. When a charming new nurse named Milford arrives on the scene, our lovable gadabout can barely string two coherent sentences together, much less manage the domestic disasters unfolding around him. Expect the usual delightful mayhem: stammering declarations of devotion, hilariously misguided romantic gestures, and the inevitable interference of his sharp-tongued niece Margie, whose withering observations cut through her uncle's lovesick fog like a knife through warm butter. With Harold Peary's masterful comic timing at the helm, this September 1949 episode crackles with the kind of gentle, character-driven humor that made audiences roar with laughter in living rooms across America.
*The Great Gildersleeve* stands as one of radio's most enduring comedies, evolving brilliantly from its origins as a spinoff of *Fibber McGee and Molly* into its own powerhouse program. During the late 1940s, when this episode aired, the show had found its perfect rhythm—balancing slapstick absurdity with genuine warmth, mining comedy gold from small-town life without ever punching down at its characters. Peary's Gildersleeve became an American icon: pompous yet vulnerable, a perpetual bachelor drowning in his own schemes, yet somehow beloved by everyone in his orbit.
Don't miss this gem of Golden Age radio entertainment. In an era before television claimed all our attention, *The Great Gildersleeve* delivered pure, intelligent comedy that transcended mere gags—it captured the very heart of American humor. Tune in and discover why millions tuned in week after week.