A Tribute to Don Knotts



What can one say when a true living legend passes from this life to the 
next?  For more than forty years Don Knotts touched the hearts of millions 
as he portrayed that bumbling, nervous, and loveable Deputy Barney Fife.  We 
first met Barney Fife and the wonderful people of Mayberry back on October 
3, 1960, when the very first episode, "The New Housekeeper" was aired. 
Television and comedy were never the same again.



My friends and I grew up watching The Andy Griffith Show.  Many people 
consider Mayberry to be a totally unrealistic town.  But growing up in a 
small town very similar to Mayberry in many respects, I can attest to the 
fact that there were towns like Mayberry.  I use the past tense were because 
those days of Mayberry and the Andy Griffith Show are no longer here.  Gone 
are those simpler and much slower times when virtues such as innocence, 
caring, and simplicity were the norm in countless small towns throughout 
this great land.  However, because of countless reruns and DVD's of the Andy 
Griffith Show, Barney Fife will continue to be a part of our lives for many 
years to come.  I have every single episode of the Andy Griffith Show on 
either video tape or DVD and not a single day passes without my sitting down 
for a few episodes of Andy and Barney.



People who know me closely call me Barney.  All you have to do is look at my 
license plate on my car and you will understand why.  It is B FIFE.  I wear 
a Barney Fife collector's wristwatch and I carry a Barney Fife driver's 
license in my wallet. When I dress up for a special event, I quite often 
wear my beautiful Barney Fife tie. I drink soda from a Barney Fife stein and 
we serve guests on our Barney Fife matching dishes.  I have a Mayberry 
pennant hanging above my computer in my den and I have numerous pictures of 
Barney Fife hanging around the house.  My bookcase has a number of books 
about Mayberry and several specifically about Barney Fife.



When I retired early from teaching because of medical issues, all the 
teachers at the Fall Creek Elementary School dressed up like Barney Fife on 
my last day teaching.  They presented me with a large poster of Barney Fife. 
However, it had one alteration.  Instead of Barney Fife's face on the 
poster, it had mine.  They knew how to make my final and difficult day of 
teaching a very special one for me.  They included Barney Fife.



Television today is unlike television when The Andy Griffith Show debuted. 
Standards of conduct and decency were quite different.  For forty-six years 
families could gather around the television and know that for the next 
thirty minutes they could share in good clean humor without any 
embarrassment.  The Andy Griffith Show, and in particular Don Knotts, could 
make people laugh with out any off color humor, sexual innuendos, or foul 
language.  Perhaps that is the main reason I enjoy the program so much even 
to this day.



There will always be a special place in my heart for Don Knotts.  I never 
had the privilege of meeting Don.  But if I had, I would have said, "Thank 
you Mr. Knotts.  Thank you for giving me forty six years of laughter.  Thank 
you for making my life just a little bit better by having entered my home 
for so many years.  Thank you for setting a standard for others to follow."



Farewell, Don Knotts.  Farewell, Barney Fife.  Farewell to a comedian whose 
likes we shall never see again.  Thank you for all the memories.



Kenneth G. Anderson

2906 May Street

Eau Claire, Wisconsin 54701

[EMAIL PROTECTED]







Kenneth G. Anderson
2906 May Street
Eau Claire, Wisconsin 54701
715-839-8470
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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