1951
CBS Photo Archive//Getty ImagesLucille Ball and Desi Arnaz welcomed their first child, daughter Lucie Désirée Arnaz, in 1951.
1951
CBS Photo Archive//Getty ImagesLucille wasn't sure she would ever be a mother, after experiencing more than one miscarriage. “I had them late in life. I’d lost two and I thought, my God, I’ll be too old to have children," she shared with The Washington Star in 1980.
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1951
Bettmann//Getty ImagesDesi's mother encouraged Lucille to turn to religion during her struggle to conceive, which included more than one pregnancy loss. As she told The Washington Star: "During my ninth year of marriage, my mother-in-law, who was one of the most beautiful South American ladies ever, said to me, ‘You become Catholic. You have baby.’ So I went and had instruction and—*claps hands*—five months later I was pregnant. For me, the birth of a child, it was a miracle. I couldn’t believe it.”
1952
Bettmann//Getty ImagesAs a new parent, the actress often sought advice from famous friends. “She was always searching for answers herself. So she would talk to Jeanne Martin … or Debbie Reynolds, other women who had children, and she asked them, ‘How do you do it?’” Lucie revealed to KCRW.com in 2021.
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1952
Hulton Archive//Getty ImagesBecause their daughter was born just six weeks before I Love Lucy premiered, the couple had a lot to juggle during those first few years. “They were very busy,” Lucie recalled to the Television Academy Foundation in 2016. "So I think up from birth through 7, they weren’t home a lot, I would say."
1952
Archive Photos//Getty ImagesAs busy as their schedule was, the two stars made time for special family memories. Here, they celebrate Lucie's first birthday with some cake.
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Circa 1952
FPG//Getty ImagesLucille's own childhood wasn't the easiest. After her father died when she was just 4 years old, she lived with her grandparents while her mother worked. “She didn’t have much of a happy-go-lucky, bonded childhood with her own mother," Lucie later explained to KCRW.com. "So when she decided to have kids, she was kind of flying blind, as most of us are.”
1953
FPG//Getty ImagesIn 1953, the trio became a family of four when Desiderio Alberto Arnaz IV (known as Desi Arnaz Jr.) was born.
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1953
FPG//Getty ImagesDesi, holding a "Proud Papa" mug, looks into his newborn son's eyes.
1953
KM Archive//Getty ImagesFun fact: Lucille and Desi Jr. appeared on the cover of the first-ever national issue of TV Guide!
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1953
KM Archive//Getty ImagesLucille was more serious than her iconic TV character. "She was very responsible, took care of business. She worried a lot about her household, whether the kids were being taken care of, if the garage was being cleaned out, homework was being done," Lucie shared with the Television Academy Foundation.
1953
FPG//Getty ImagesThe couple, along with Desi's parents, celebrate their son's christening.
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1953
Hulton Archive//Getty ImagesWith both parents working so much, Lucie and Desi Jr. learned to appreciate every little moment. "Home and being together is a fond and favorite memory—if she made me a grilled cheese sandwich and we sat in the living room and we talked, that is a great moment in my memory," Lucie said in a 2019 Good Morning America interview.
1954
Bettmann//Getty Images"I think because she was a working mom in the 50s, there probably was a lot of guilt involved in not being home with the kids," Lucie speculated in an interview for the Television Academy Foundation.
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1954
FPG//Getty ImagesThe actress loved to cook for her family when she got the chance. "She really enjoyed when she could get in the kitchen and make chicken and dumplings or something, but there wasn’t a whole lot of time for that,” Lucie told the Television Academy Foundation.
1954
Bettmann//Getty ImagesAmid her many career accomplishments, Lucille said that it was her family that made her happiest. “Just having a career, that would be very boring," she told The Washington Star. "The best part of my life is having children. They keep you young. They keep you worried longer."
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1956
Michael Ochs Archives//Getty ImagesThough working together put a strain on their relationship, the couple always shared a mutual feeling of love and respect. “Lucy was the show. Viv, Fred, and I were just props. Damn good props, but props nevertheless. P.S. I Love Lucy was never just the title," Desi wrote toward the end of his life.
Circa 1957
Gene Lester//Getty ImagesDesi Jr. was always interested in music, even from an early age. That terrified Lucille, who worried it had the potential to pull him into the drug scene. “His peers were so much older. There were a great many things I worried about constantly. I’ve never had a problem, but they were exposed to it,” she told The Washington Star.
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Circa 1957
Archive Photos//Getty ImagesDesi reportedly struggled with alcoholism, gambling, and infidelity which, according to Lucille, caused a lot of hurt in the family. “My husband would frequently have temper outbursts in front of the children, and this was very bad," the actress told the court during their divorce hearing, according to the 2011 biography Desilu: The Story of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.
1959
J. Wilds//Getty ImagesIn 1959, “I made my last effort toward a relationship with Desi. We took the children … and 48 pieces of luggage to Europe: Paris, Rome, Capri, and London," the actress wrote in her autobiography. "The kids saw and heard way too much. … Desi and I came back from the trip not speaking."
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