My Favorite Husband 49 09 30 0056 Womans Club Election
# My Favorite Husband: "Woman's Club Election"
Step into the living room of postwar America where Liz and George Cooper are about to navigate the treacherous waters of suburban society—and this time, it's personal. When Liz decides to run for president of her local woman's club, what begins as innocent ambition quickly spirals into comedic chaos. George finds himself drafted as campaign manager, complete with hastily scrawled posters and increasingly desperate strategies, while Liz discovers that her well-meaning friends have some very different ideas about who should actually lead. With misunderstandings piling up faster than ironed tablecloths and Liz's rival candidate pulling out all the stops, listeners will hear the snap and crackle of genuine domestic friction beneath the laughter—the kind that made husbands and wives chuckle knowingly at each other across their living rooms.
*My Favorite Husband*, which aired on CBS from 1948 to 1951, captured something essential about American life in the immediate postwar years: the delicate dance between marital partnership and individual ambition, between domestic tranquility and the human desire to prove oneself. Based on the Isabel Scott Rorick stories and featuring the perfect chemistry of Lucille Ball and Richard Denning, the show elevated the domestic sitcom beyond mere slapstick into genuine social commentary. This particular episode, recorded in the fall of 1949, reflects the era's preoccupation with women's roles—showing Liz as neither a mere homemaker nor a caricature, but a fully realized woman with her own goals, stubbornness, and dignity.
Tune in to hear how the Coopers navigate ambition, loyalty, and the ultimate question of whether love can survive a woman's club election. It's radio comedy at its warmest and wittiest.