students from a tenth grade
English class at
Jefferson High School in Los Angeles. In 1969, Having gained an audience with Montgomery and her husband
William Asher, Saunders told the couple that most students at the school were unable to read, write, or comprehend at a high school level, with 44% reading at a third grade level and very few students reading at a level much higher than that; less than 1% were reading at a ninth grade level. Saunders added that
Bewitched was the students' favorite television series. Out of concern for the students in Saunders'
English class, did not have the financial means to make their way to Hollywood, Montgomery and Asher paid for the class to be transported there and back by chartered bus. gift-wrapped. Montgomery and Asher were impressed with the quality of the script. Montgomery later said, "We've had bad scripts submitted by professional writers that weren't as well written or creative." Asher told
Barbara Avedon about the students' script, saying that it only needed a little reworking, and he asked if she would help the students with the rewrite. Avedon, who had written for
The Donna Reed Show which she suggested because the script "was so imbued with the spirit." She said that one of the students indicated a desire to write for
Bewitched because the series deals with
miscegenation by way of a marriage between a witch and a mortal. Sargent considered Saunders the main reason for the success of the program, saying, "She was interested in innovative forms of teaching. These kids, who might have been stuck in the ghetto for the rest of their lives, loved
Bewitched, and with just a little approval and motivation, came alive on the set." Samantha's statement at the end of the episode, "We're having integrated turkey: white meat and dark", was repeated in
Spike Lee's 1986 film ''
She's Gotta Have It. is the only shot in any episode of Bewitched
to depict the interior of the house from the perspective of the backyard. "Sisters at Heart" is the only episode of the series in which Lisa appears. Seven years before acting together in "Sisters at Heart", Montgomery and Baer appeared together in an episode of the CBS television series Rawhide called "Incident at El Crucero", which aired when the pilot episode of Bewitched
was in pre-production. In 1970, Montgomery appeared on The Merv Griffin Show to promote "Sisters at Heart", thereby making one of the only three talk show appearances of her career. After Griffin left the network, CBS wiped all episodes of The Merv Griffin Show'' produced between 1969 and 1972, but a copy of the episode featuring Montgomery's promotion of "Sisters at Heart" was later discovered when it became known that relevant
kinescopes and
master tapes had survived. Endorsed by meat production company
Oscar Mayer, "Sisters at Heart" is a half-hour,
color episode as the 213th episode of
Bewitched to be aired. As an introduction and conclusion to the episode, Montgomery briefly spoke to the camera about the episode, saying that it "was created in the true spirit of Christmas ... conceived in the image of innocence and filled with truth." while Janee Michelle, who portrayed Dorothy Wilson in "Sisters at Heart", later became best known for her role in the 1974
horror film The House on Skull Mountain. "Sisters at Heart" was Montgomery's favorite episode of the series. Reflecting on the episode in 1989, she said, "Yeah, this is what I want
Bewitched to be all about."
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment eventually released the episode on a VHS collection called
A Bewitched Christmas 2. ==Reception==