Here's another character you may not have known originated (somewhat) in 
BookWorld:
LUCY CARMICHAEL
AS SEEN IN:
'The Lucy Show'
ADAPTED FROM:
"Life Without George"
BY:
Irene Kampen
PORTRAYED BY:
Lucille Ball
TV DIMENSION:
Earth Prime-Time
After the death of her husband, Lucy Carmichael (Lucille Ball) and her 
friend, the recently divorced Vivian Bagley (Vivian Vance), move into a house 
together with their children. The series follows the adventures of the widow 
Lucy as she grapples with the comic complications of life on her own.
- DVD Release Note
'The Lucy Show' does not have the iconic status of I Love 
Lucy, but it was a worthy and very popular successor (it was the fifth-rated 
show in its inaugural season). Based on a book, Life Without George, it 
was something of a groundbreaking series in that it centered on two single moms: 
one, Lucy, a widower, and the other, Vivian (Vivian Vance), a divorcee (the 
first such sitcom character). Vivian and her son, Sherman (Ralph Hart), share 
Lucy''s suburban home in Danfield, New York, with her two children: teenage 
daughter Chris (Candy Moore) and wisecracking young son Jerry (Jimmy Garrett), 
who delivers zingers like a pint-sized Fred Mertz. 
-Donald Liberson
Tower Video Review
From Wikipedia:
Irene Kampen (April 18, 1922, in Brooklyn, NY – February 1, 1998 in 
California) was an American newspaperwoman and writer who wrote several books 
about events in her life.
Kampen's first book, "Life Without George", was 
published by Doubleday in 1961 and was about her divorce. The book became the 
basis for 'The Lucy Show', a TV series that ran from 1962 to 1968 and starred 
Lucille Ball, who had also experienced divorce recently in her split with Desi 
Arnaz.  (Producers re-wrote Ball's character, Lucille Carmichael, as a widow, 
however, Vivian Vance's character, Vivian Bagley, is portrayed as divorced.) 
The credits list the show's basis as the novel "Life Without George", by 
Irene Kampen. This book was a collection of humorous pieces about two divorced 
women and their children living together. A next-door airline pilot neighbor, 
Harry Connors, became a character in the series played by Dick Martin. The 
character of Chris, Lucy's daughter in the series, had the same name in the 
book. In a later volume of essays, "Nobody Calls at This Hour Just To Say 
Hello", Kampen wrote a piece entitled "How Not to Meet Lucille Ball," which 
detailed her efforts to meet Lucy when she visited Los Angeles. Ms. Kampen and 
Ms. Ball never met.
O'BSERVATIONS:
I suppose this will be considered heresy, but I preferred 'The Lucy Show' over 'I Love Lucy'.....
BCnU!