Thursday, April 16, 2026

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: Bewitched: Season 6

 


The 30-episode 6th season of Bewitched aired during the 1969/1970 TV season. This season saw the largest cast shakeup, with Dick Sargent taking over the role of Darrin following Dick York's exit after season 5 due to a long-term back injury. David White was promoted to a series regular and added to the opening credits, and Alice Ghostley (who played a guest role in season 2) joined the cast in a new recurring role as Esmeralda, a part-time housekeeper/babysitter who is a witch with spotty powers (much like Aunt Clara). Elizabeth Montgomery returned (albeit begrudgingly) as Samantha (and occasionally Serena), Erin Murphy returned as Tabitha, and Agnes Moorehead returned as Endora. The guest stars this season included NFL star Deacon Jones, Bernie Koppell (who appeared as several different characters), Danny Bonaduce, J. Edward McKinley (who also made multiple appearances as different characters), and Jay Robinson (who also made multiple appearances). Bernard Fox, Maurice Evans, George Tobias, Sandra Gould, and Paul Lynde also made appearances in their recurring roles.  

The blu-rays are, as of this writing, only available in the complete series set, and the 6th season episodes span three discs. The epsisodes can be played with English captions, but the only bonus feature is a commentary track on the season premiere by Herbie Pilato and Johnny Whitaker (who guest-starred in the first episode of the season). The DVD set is a four-disc set. 

The series continues to mostly be a story-of-the-week procedural sitcom. Some elements (such as Samantha's pregnancy) spanned multiple episodes, but for the most part, the episodes are stand-alone. The writers do recycle storylines every so often, and as mentioned above, some of the same guest stars play totally different characters in different episodes. Interestingly, the writers did not address the fact that Darrin looked totally different after recasting the role, even though it would have been easy to explain with a spell gone awry that could not be reversed. The series was getting a bit stale by this point in its run. Montgomery had to be coerced to return (and given a significant raise in the process). Even so, there were definitely some funny moments, and it remained well-acted. Sargent did a good job making the role of Darrin his own, incorporating some of what Dick York did with the character without being a carbon copy of York. Ultimately, if you liked the prior seasons of the series, this one is worth checking out. 

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