"Leave It to Beaver" Beaver Finds a Wallet (TV Episode 1960) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
9 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
Human Nature on Parade
MichaelMartinDeSapio19 April 2016
Beaver was arguably at his best when paired with his portly pal Larry Mondello. But this episode is different in that Larry doesn't get Beaver in trouble as was his custom. Instead, the two boys discover a wallet on the sidewalk containing $89 and as good boys should, bring it to the police office. If nobody claims the wallet within ten days, the two boys can have the wallet and split the money! As it turns out, the owner of the wallet - a young lady named Miss Tomkins - shows up at the police station at the very same time as Beaver shows up to claim the wallet after ten days! Without spoiling the plot, suffice it to say that Miss Tomkins turns out to be not quite an exemplary human being.

People often think of LITB as a "sanitized" show, but in fact the less attractive side of human nature (both child and adult) was often highlighted. In this respect the series was like the paintings of Peter Brueghel, in which adults and children indulge in childlike vices. Here, Miss Tomkins appears on the surface to be a nice and attractive lady, but there's something subtle in the provocative way she's posed that tells us there's perhaps something not quite wholesome about her.

One of the things I love about LITB, particularly in the middle seasons, was the distinctive comic rhythm, a rhythm created out of the ordinary hubbub of daily home life. We see this early on this episode, when June tries to get various people to go to the supermarket for her. Another thing I like about this episode is that we see the good, loyal side of Larry. When the police officer asks who found the wallet, Larry tells the truth: that Beaver found it while he (Larry) said it was "a hunk of junk." Beaver puts his arm around Larry and the two are solidified in their friendship.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Miss Thompson, you are a big fat liar. Rat, rat, rat.
pensman28 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Wally is heading off to the market for June when Eddie Haskell shows up to get Wally, so June lets Wally off the hook. Beaver then gets the job. Beaver takes Larry with him and on the way Beaver finds a wallet. Larry wants to split the money, but Beaver says they need to turn it in; and then Beaver immediately forgets the market.

Beaver has been at the police station waiting now for quite a while. Finally, a desk sergeant comes out to make a report and give Beaver a receipt. If after ten days no one claims the wallet, the money is Beaver's. When Beaver eventually gets home after two and a half hours and explains what happened. After hearing what happened, Ward is proud of his son for doing the right thing.

It's a long ten days for Beaver and he's been making a list of possible purchases; but Ward suggests Beaver write an ad for the paper. Beaver comes up with an ad but Eddie feels Beaver is giving out way too much information; but that is Eddie. Beaver has been calling the police station every day to track the status of the wallet and finally Beaver gets the call to come down and get the money. Unfortunately, the owner makes it there the last day to get her money. Beaver fails to get the money but Miss Tompkins promises to send Beaver a present.

A present finally arrives and it's a clock radio but not from the lady; the present was from Ward because Ward didn't want Beaver to lose faith in human nature. Turns out Beaver has called the police station to get the address of Miss Tompkins so he can write a thank you note to the lady. After Wally, Ward and June hears the note, Wally is impressed with his brother. Ward offers to mail it for Beaver. June thinks it's a wonderful note and it's too bad the way things turned out. Ward however is going to mail the note; perhaps Miss Tompkins should get a little jolt to her conscience for lying to a little boy.

The best part of the episode is indeed the very end. A lot of parents no doubt taught their children about being honest and not lying, and were probably upset to see how Beaver was duped. That could easily be their child stuck with disappointment after believing their parent's teaching. We all know the world is cruel and for all the teaching about living the Judaic/Christian principles, the end results have been disappointing. Like Ward, many try to protect their children for as long as they can.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Another very entertaining demonstration of the realities of life.
tweiss-6736810 September 2021
Another excellent episode where Beaver experiences the realities of life. And although this woman lets him down, she does display a genuine sense of intimate affection that was at least something. A very nice showcase for this wonderful and forgotten actress. And Eddie as usual, has some of the best lines.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent
Dfjord12 June 2019
Andy Griffith ripped off this storyline almost wholesale and yet still didn't deliver as well as this one, with its poignant little ending, and that wonderful little twist of the knife in the coda. Again and again the show illustrates with gentleness and humor the importance of morality in a thankless world. First rate TV.
11 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Harsh reality
CJPALLISTER200225 May 2023
A fantastic episode on the complex reality of what was then America and the morally complex interlocking shift in human nature. Not everyone is as ethically grand as the Beaver is. Great lessons here by Ward and June especially with Ward buying a gift and pretending it's from the lady something that cost him 16 dollars and 89 cents "A small price to pay if it restores his faith in humanity." This is the final episode of the season that I can watch in the UK as unfortunately not every episode is avaliable here but gee Wally if this weren't the best season of the 3 so far and we've officially crossed the half way threshold.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
KEEP THE FAITH... NOT THE MONEY.
tcchelsey25 January 2024
Master of soap operas, Mathilde Farro, wrote this poignant episode, and nine others to her credit. She was behind such soapers as GENERAL HOSPITAL.

10 Stars. All the way with some valuable lessons.

Beave and Larry find a wallet filled with lots of money. Naturally, they have to turn it in, and there could be a big, fat reward. I agree with the last reviewer, not everyone was as good as Beave, and probably why he had friends like Larry!

A lady called Miss Tompkins (played by Valerie Allen) finally, finally claims the money and promises Beave a reward.

He gets nothing. And it takes Ward to restore Beave's faith in one and all by purchasing a gift for him, pretending it was from Miss Tompkins. Truly, it's something all our parents would do, and we would do for our kids who faced a really trying time in their lives. This is tough on Beave.

Hugh Beaumont, who became a minister, once again probably had a hand in this special episode. It just has that feel about it. By the way, actress Valerie Allen, quite popular on tv, was married to movie star, Troy Donahue.

About 10 years later this story was revamped by THE BRADY BUNCH --only the guy who lost the wallet was a good guy. I guess times change!

Not to be missed. SEASON 3 EPISODE 30 remastered.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Sometimes honesty has to be its own reward.
AlsExGal17 February 2024
Beaver and Larry Mondello find a wallet on the sidewalk containing 89 dollars. They go to the police station to turn it in. The big surprise here being that Larry, usually the devil on Beavers shoulder, sans pitchfork and horns, customarily urges Beaver to do the wrong thing. This time he actually is on board with turning the wallet in. Maybe this level of theft would make Larry uncomfortable, but I digress.

The police say that if nobody claims the wallet in ten days, then the wallet is Beaver's. On top of that, Ward urges Beaver to put an ad in the paper mentioning that the wallet has been found. The day that the wallet is to be Beaver's, he goes to the police station to receive the unclaimed property. Unfortunately for him, on the bench right next to him, is the actual owner of the wallet.

She does not look the part of the person Beaver was told to visualize when going the extra mile to reunite the lost money with the rightful owner - that being a widow with four children who needs to buy food and pay rent. I'm not arguing that the money belongs to the rightful owner regardless of wealth, I'm just saying what you would need to say to a young boy who is anticipating a windfall based on the rightful owner never showing up.

Back to the rightful owner - She is young, sharply dressed, and says she has been out of town for awhile so she only just now found out about the wallet being found. She promises Beaver she is so grateful for the return of the wallet that she is going to go out and buy the best present a little boy could want and send it to him. So Beaver sits out by the mailbox day after day - but no present ever arrives. This woman has her wallet, probably forgot she ever promised Beaver anything, and has gone back to her life. If you think about it, she could have given Beaver ten dollars on the spot if she wanted to reward him, but she didn't. How will what has turned out to be a bummer of an episode so far work out? Watch and find out.

I like how this episode made the woman claiming the wallet a complete blank page. Was she a jet setter? Was she an average worker, perhaps a secretary, who had to accompany her boss on a business trip? Something else entirely? The only thing we know for sure is that she broke an important promise to an honest little boy.

One more thing - At one point the cost of a clock radio in 1960 is mentioned as being about 18 dollars. I looked online, and you can still buy one for 18-50 dollars. But 18 dollars in 1960 is worth 190 dollars! How is it that clock radios don't cost in the neighborhood of that price? It's because that clock radio in 1960 was American made. Today they are all cheap stuff made overseas and not made to last. Sometimes the comparisons between today and 1960 can be interesting in economic terms.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Stellar episode after monkey fiasco
vitoscotti11 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
S3 E30 "Beaver Finds a Wallet". Valerie Allen. The "no gift for you" lady. When she's first shown on the police station bench. Wow! How the scene was shot really captured her beauty. Some side notes. There's the garbage man as the police sergeant (James Kirkpatrick). Also a man's wallet? If so. Not losing the purse it was in? If it was her husband's. Why was she carrying it? What did it drop out of? The sky?
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
The Right Thing To Do
StrictlyConfidential25 March 2021
(*Beaver quote*) - "Eddie, how come you're always polite to me when my mother's here?"

Walking along Grand Avenue with his friend, Larry Mondello, Beaver finds a wallet at the side of the road that has no I. D. in it, but it contains a sizable amount of money.

Doing the right thing and taking it to the Mayfield police station, Beaver is told that if the wallet isn't claimed in 10 days he gets to keep the money.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed