Quantcast
Channel: It's About TV
Viewing all 2481 articles
Browse latest View live

A "Christmas Carol" the likes of which you haven't seen before!

$
0
0
JUST WHAT DID SCROOGE SEE WHEN HE LOOKED OUT THE WINDOW? READ ON AND FIND OUT



INT. A ROOM - MORNING

Scrooge lies slumped on the floor, his hands locked around the bedpost. For a moment the reality of the situation escapes him; then, looking around, he realizes that he is in his own bedroom. There are the bedcurtains; they haven’t been torn down after all! The walls, the pictures – they’re all his!



SCROOGE
I’m alive! I’m alive! The Spirits have done it all in one night!
(Beginning to dance around the room)
I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future! The Spirits of all three will live within me. I’m as light as a feather, I’m as happy as an angel, I’m as merry as a schoolboy.
(He staggers slightly, as if lightheaded)
I’m as giddy as a drunken man. A Merry Christmas to everybody! But what day is it? I don’t know how long I’ve been among the Spirits. I don’t know anything!

Hearing the chimes of the church bells outside, he stops.


SCROOGE
Is it? Could it still be Christmas Day?

He runs to the window and throws it open, and he is stopped in his tracks. His mouth falls open. If he was confused a moment ago, now he is utterly shocked.

CUT TO:
EXT. STREET OUTSIDE SCROOGE’S WINDOW. SCROOGE’S P.O.V.

Everything that is familiar to Scrooge is gone. Across from his home rises a large glass skyscraper. Below him are people walking on sidewalks lining the sides of paved streets, wearing clothes in a style he has never before seen. Moving across the scene from right to left is a red double-decker bus. As his eyes cast back and forth he sees a jet aircraft streaking across the clear blue sky, the sunlight glinting off its silver skin.

CLOSE SHOT SCROOGE

His lips are moving, but nothing comes out. He shakes his head, his hands pressed on either side. Finally he speaks.


SCROOGE
It…it…it must be the aftereffects from the Spirts. Well, yes, a shock to the system such as this is bound to cause confusion. Yes, that must be it.

SHOT OF STREET OUTSIDE WINDOW. WE SEE SOMEONE WALKING PAST SCROOGE’S HOME.

CLOSE SHOT SCROOGE

SCROOGE
Here, let me ask that young woman out there.
(Raising his voice)
Excuse me, miss. What is today?

MEDIUM SHOT PEDESTRIAN

(Voice of a young male)
What? You talkin’ to me?

LONG VIEW YOUNG MAN, AS SEEN FROM OVER SCROOGE’S SHOULDER.

SCROOGE
Excuse me, I meant no offense. It’s just – it’s just...
(Motions to head)
Your hair, I’m afraid, well I mistook you for a young lady.

YOUNG MAN
Whatever.
(Under his breath)
Sod off, old man.

He begins to walk away.

SCROOGE
Wait!

YOUNG MAN
(Impatiently)
Yeah?

SCROOGE
Can you tell me what day today is?

YOUNG MAN
Are you barmy?

SCROOGE
(Insistent)
Today? What day is today?

YOUNG MAN
Why, it’s Christmas Day. Whatdy’a think?

MED. SHOT SCROOGE

SCROOGE
(As if to himself)
Then it is still Christmas Day. I haven’t missed it. But – this?
(To young man)
What kind of place is this?

CLOSE SHOT YOUNG MAN

YOUNG MAN
What kind of nutter are you? This is London.

CLOSE SHOT SCROOGE

SCROOGE
(Confused)
London?

The young man begins to walk away.

SCROOGE
(Suddenly)
Young man!

LONG VIEW YOUNG MAN, AS SEEN FROM OVER SCROOGE’S SHOULDER.

YOUNG MAN
(Exasperated)
Now what?

SCROOGE
(Insistent)
What year is it?

YOUNG MAN
What year is it? You really musta got rat-arsed last night!

CLOSE SHOT SCROOGE

SCROOGE
Never mind that. What year is it?

CLOSE SHOT YOUNG MAN

YOUNG MAN
(Deciding he might as well humor him)

Why, it’s 1993!
(Sotto voce)
Wanker.

CLOSE SHOT SCROOGE – HIS CONFUSED EXPRESSION GIVES WAY TO HORROR AS HE LISTENS TO THE VOICE ECHOING SUDDENLY IN THE ROOM.

VOICE OF GHOST
(Mocking)
Yes Ebenezer, it is Christmas Day, just as you wished. But you didn't say what year!

NARRATOR
(Voice Over)
Presenting Mr. Ebenezer Scrooge, the world’s most famous miser.

FAST PAN AROUND SCROOGE’S BEDROOM TO THE NARRATOR, IN SUIT AND TIE, HIS HANDS FOLDED IN FRONT OF HIM.

NARRATOR
For over a century, every Christmas, his journey through his own personal reclamation has played out, in book and film, for millions of people around the world. But whenever you enter the ghostly fog of time travel, you’re apt to discover that the rules have changed without warning. Tonight Mr. Ebenezer Scrooge is about to find out that, this time, the road from ruin to redemption will take him through the Twilight Zone.


◊ ◊ ◊
Every year, whenever we're watching A Christmas Carol, I expect something like this to happen. It doesn't, of course, and it didn't happen this year either. That doesn't stop me from hoping, though, and now it's your turn - anyone out there care to take a shot at telling the story from here? Maybe Jordan at The Twilight Zone Vortex or Joanna at Christmas TV History have some ideas? TV  

Around the dial

$
0
0
For the last time in 2017, let's see what's what in the world of TV, classic or otherwise interesting.

Jodie at Garroway at Large has a copy of NBC's two-page ad for their upcoming morning experiment, Today. In next week's TV Guide listings, Today (or, as it was listed, Dave Garroway) was called a variety show. Only Dave Garroway could pull it off as he did.

The Last Drive-In has a belated birthday wish to Ruth Roman, who would have been 94 on December 22. Any fan of classic television and movies will recognize that face.

The Eventually Supertrain podcast has left the station with its final cast of 2017, with looks at Ellery Queen Mysteries, The Green Hornet and The Immortal. It's a great podcast - you really should make it part of your regular listening. I know for a fact that next year will be quite interesting!

You've got to love this delightful story from The Broadcasting Archives at the University of Maryland, in which we find out about the typo in NORAD's first advertisement for its Santa Tracker in 1955.

Want to find out what was on TV on Christmas Day, 1947? Then check out Television Obscurities, which has the week's schedule for WNBT, the flagship NBC affiliate in New York City.

At Cult TV, John looks at the 1980 series Noah's Castle, and in doing so points out the need to view shows from the past through the eyes of the time. It's a series I wasn't familar with before - very interesting writeup, as usual.

We have one more post to go in 2017, the TV Guide review tomorrow. If you don't get to that until later in the week, then let me take this opportunity to wish you all the very best for 2018. I've got high hopes for this blog, as well as some additional projects I'll be working on, and I'd love having you all along for the ride!  TV  

This week in TV Guide: December 31, 1960

$
0
0
There's something bracing about the start of a new year. Why else do we say, "Out with the old year, in with the new"? It's the promise of something fresh, exciting, hopeful. So it is with television. Welcome to 1961!

Welcome to New Year's Day, 1961.

The first thing you'll notice is that it seems as if we're celebrating New Year's Day on January 2. That's because the first day of this new year falls on a Sunday, and whenever that happens the parades and football are moved to Monday.* There are no local or network programs to ring in 1961, at least not in Minneapolis-St. Paul, unless one counts the live Soul's Harbor broadcast that begins at 11:00 p.m. on KMSP and continues well past midnight.

*It has nothing to do with the NFL, as some might think; the "Never on Sunday" policy began with the parade and dates all the way back to 1893. It has only happened 19 times, the most recent of which was this year.

Nor are there many seasonal programs on Sunday. The Apollo Club presents an hour of music at 5:00 p.m. on KSTP, and that's billed as a New Year's Day concert. Later, at 9:30 p.m. on WTCN, Kitty Carlisle hosts a New Year's Night half-hour of music featuring "seven young performers from the 'Class of '61'." They are folk singer Casey Anderson, pop-singer Marilyn Cooper, actress Sandy Dennis, dancer-singer Pat Finley, operatic baritone Roald Reitan, soprano Benita Valente, and ballet dander Edward Villella. I suppose the names that most jump out from that list, at least for me, are those of Sandy Dennis and Edward Villella, but all of them had what I'd consider to be successful careers.

Ah, but come Monday, the festivities start, beginning at 10:30 a.m. with coverage of the Rose Parade on both NBC and ABC. NBC, the pioneer in color broadcasting, makes much of the fact that they're the only network to colorcast the parade*; imagine what it must have been like to watch all those beautiful floats pass by in black-and-white. Yet that's the way it was throughout the '50s and much of the '60s, of course; we didn't get our first color set until 1971. (And don't forget to send in your order for those lifelike plastic roses.)

*Although a note in the TV Guide says that the first 15 minutes of the program are in black-and-white only. A studio show, perhaps?

Meanwhile, over on ABC, the parade announcers are Bob Cummings and Bess Myerson. The former Miss America was a sophisticated beauty, and a staple on game shows such as I've Got a Secret.  Bess Myerson alone might have been enough to make up for ABC's black-and-white coverage.

◊ ◊ ◊

Stanley and Albert were the cartoon spokesmen for Grain Belt beer.
The day's football action is is fascinating for a number of reasons. There's a big build-up to them, as you can see by the teaser on the front cover, and yet they're literally exhibition games, the national title having already been determined. In 1961 both the Assocated Press and United Press International, the two main wire service polls, as well as most other organizations, continued the long-standing (if somewhat controversial) policy of naming the national champion after the regular season but before the bowl games, which were seen primarily as rewards for having had a successful year.* The busines of the season, therefore, has been concluded for over a month; your 1960 National Champions, with a record of 8-1, are the Minnesota Gophers. The Gophers would go on to lose the Rose Bowl to Washington, 17-7; having the champs lose in their bowl game was not all that uncommon either (it happened again to Michigan State in 1966), by the end of the decade the rule had been changed. After an unprecedented return trip to the Rose Bowl the following year (see here for the details), the Gophers haven't been back since.

*As a matter of fact, it was not uncommon for schools to choose which game to play in based not on the opponent, but on the location; many young men from the Midwest and East had never been to such exotic places as New Orleans and Miami. In addition, several conferences had "no-repeat" clauses that prevented teams from making consecutive trips to a bowl; hardly helpful if you're trying to win the championship. Melvin Durslag mentions in a separate article that half of the schools in the Big 10 are against postseason competition.

And that leads to perhaps the most noticable thing about this year's games, especially if you've followed college football for a number of years. The Orange Bowl (11:45 a.m., CBS) pits Navy against undefeated Missouri; the Midshipmen boast Heisman Trophy winner Joe Bellino in their backfield, and another Heisman winner, Roger Staubach, would take them to the Cotton Bowl in 1964, after which they ceased to be part of the New Year's bowl scene. The Sugar Bowl (12:45 p.m., NBC) features Rice and Mississippi; for Rice it was their sixth and final major bowl appearnce to date; they've only played in six bowl games of any kind since then. The Cotton Bowl (2:30 p.m., CBS) has Duke and Arkansas; Duke was once a football powerhouse, and in the last few seasons has become more than respectable; nonetheless, it would be until 2013 that they would be a ranked team at the end of the season again.

There were only nine bowl games in total played in 1960-61, and the college all-star games are held before New Year's Day, to showcase all the talent from teams that didn't make it to bowl games. The Blue-Gray and East-West Shrine games both take place on Saturday, as well as the Gator Bowl (1:00 p.m, CBS), with Baylor and Florida.

◊ ◊ ◊

Before we continue, another football note, non-college related but historic. On New Year's Day at 2:30 p.m., ABC broadcasts the inaugural American Football League championship game, It features two teams who were dominant in the early years of the old AFL, but are barely on the fringes of today's playoff relevance: the Los Angeles Chargers and Houston Oilers (now the Tennessee Titans). Between them, the two teams would win three of the ten championship games the league would stage, and seven of the ten title games would include at least one of the two teams. The Oilers came out on top in this game, 23-16; they would win the rematch the following season as well, before the Chargers came out on top in 1963, beating Boston in the title game. Neither team has won a title game since.

◊ ◊ ◊

 This week's starlet is Dorothy Provine, and she's already proved herself in the business, having graduated from local appearances to numerous guest shots on television to leading roles in The Alaskans and Warner Brothers' The Roaring 20's, which is the theme of this week's cover story.


Almost everyone who works with her adores her, says writer Dan Jenkins. Howie Horwitz, producer of the Warner hit 77 Sunset Strip, says that "That girl has everything it takes to be a star. She has a quality about her. She is unique. And she works. I'm very, very proud of her." Her first agent says that "Dorothy really isn't a beauty by the usual Hollywood standards. What she has is beneath the surface - drive, entergy, a compelling personality," Besides acting, she also sings and dances, befitting her 20's role as Pinky Pinkham.

Part of the humor from the article comes from the "embellishment" of Provine's CV - everything from having replaced Gretchen Wyler and Martha Wright in road show productions to taking classes in nuclear physics at the University of Washington. Provine herself readily admits to the confusion when presented with it - "I've ben through all this before," she says carefully and a little tensely. "Lots of things are printed about me that just aren't true, some by people I've never even met." She says she doesn't particularly care about the lies, "but I do care aobut what it does to my parents," especially when articles refer to her as a "sex-pot," which she firmly denies.

Dorothy Provine's career runs through 1968, when she marries film and television director Robert Day, a marriage that lasts until Provine's death in 2010. After her marriage, she retires from acting except for occational guest appearances. However, anyone who's seen her on television is likely not to forget her.

◊ ◊ ◊

Here's a curiosity: Saturday's episode of The Honeymooners on KMSP (6:30 p.m.) is entitled "'Twas the Night Before Christmas." Only problem: it's airing on New Year's Eve. I'm sure there's an explanation for that, but I'd like to hear it. Elsewhere, on Checkmate (CBS, 7:30 p.m., theme by John Williams), Terry Moore guests as an heiress who's the target of a murder plot. Do you remember Moore's claim that she was married to Howard Hughes in 1949 and never divorced, despite five subsequent marriages? "I didn't care whether I was a bigamist or not, frankly. I mean, my desire to have children was that strong."

On Sunday, NBC Opera Theater presents "Deseret" by Leonard Kastle, the story a love triangle involving , an Army captain, and a young woman who isn't at all sure she wants to be the Mormon leader's 25th wife. The producer of that telecast, Warren Steibel, was better known as the producer of William F. Buckley's Firing Line. When in the late '60s Steibel was given $150,000 by a friend in order to make a movie, he turned to his friend Kastle for ideas.  Together, they came up with The Honeymoon Killers, based on the story of Raymond Fernandez and Martha Beck, known as the Lonely Hearts Killers.  So far, so good.  Kastle wrote the scrpit.  The director that Steibel hired, a a newcomer named Martin Scorsese, didn't work out so well - Steibel accused him of taking an entire afternoon to film a beer can, and fired him. Eventually, unlikely as it may seem, Kastle ended up directing the picture, his only work as a movie director.  Even more unlikely, the movie wound up a cult classic, and far better known than "Deseret."

If you're not in the mood for the football festival on Monday, check out the game show About Faces 1:00 p.m., ABC), hosted by Ben Alexander - you'd more likely remember him as Frank Smith, the partner to Jack Webb's Joe Friday on the classic Dragnet. Never pictured him as a game show emcee, but I've since seen him as a panelist on Ernie Kovacs'Take a Good Look, and it makes more sense. Monday night at 9:30 p.m., CBS has June Allyson's anthology drama; on Thursday night at 7:30 p.m., the same network has her husband's series, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre.

On Tuesday, The Fulton Sheen Program (KMSP, 7:30 p.m.) discusses "The Divine Sense of Humor," something we could stand to be reminded of more often. Wednesday features a local item of interest at 12:30 p.m.; it's the inauguration of Minnesota Governor-Elect Elmer L. Andersen, shown on WCCO, KMSP, and WTCN. At 9:00 p.m. on CBS, it's Armstrong Circle Theater, the every-other-week series that presents what we'd think of today as docudramas focusing on contemporary events. Tonight, it's "Black-Market Babies," starring Barbara Barrie.

Friday's highlight is probably Route 66 (7:30 p.m., CBS), with Lee Marvin and Whitney Blake as guest stars. Opposite that is the debut of Westinghouse Playhouse (also known as Yes, Yes Nanette*), starring Nanette Fabray and Wendell Corey. Corey's a widowed screenwriter (no divorcees allowed yet!) who marries Fabray, a Broadway star, to take care of his two children. Of course.

*A pun on the Broadway musical No, No Nanette, the play that producer and Boston Red Sox owner Harry Frazee allegedly financed by selling Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees.

◊ ◊ ◊

Interesting article looking at the failure of two series, Dan Raven and The Westerner, and the circumstances leading to the cancellation of each. For Dan Raven, an NBC police series starring Skip Homeier, Dan Barton and Quinn Redeker and set on the Sunset Strip, it was a matter of circumstances: the series was preempted twice in six weeks, once by the second Kennedy-Nixon debate and once for a documentary on Our American Heritage, the show was axed. Says Homeier, "We never had a chance!" It also didn't help that the show was scheduled in the so-called "kiddie hour" (6:30 p.m. CT).

As for The Westerner, starring Brian Keith, which followed Dan Raven on Friday nights, it was only scheduled as a stopgap in that time slot until Westinghouse Playhouse was ready to run on January 6, and after that it would have to find another timeslot - if the ratings warranted it. They didn't. The series was critically acclaimed (no wonder since the producer was Sam Peckinpah), and it was scheduled against the new season's only certifiable hit, ABC's The Flintstones. Peckinpah's assessment is depressingly bleak: "The show is evidentelly too adult. Advertisers are afraid of it. Those are the determining factors."

You can say it again, Sam. TV  

What's on TV? Wednesday, January 4, 1961

$
0
0
Happy New Year, everyone! I realize many, if not most of you, are reading this on a date other than January 1, but whenever it is that you're reading this, here's hoping nothing but the best for you in 2018.

As far as this week's listings are concerned, it's the fourth day of 1961, and there are plenty of items of interest to be found. The listings are from the Minneapolis-St. Paul Edition - have fun!



 2  KTCA (EDUC.)

MORNING


    7:00
YA HABLAMOS ESPANOL

    9:30
ART – Education

  10:00
UNITED NATIONS REVIEW

  10:15
YA HABLAMOS ESPANOL

  10:30
SCIENCE – Education

  11:00
YA HABLAMOS ESPANOL

AFTERNOON


    1:15
SINGING TOGETHER – Snyder

    1:50
KOM, LACH UND LERNE

    2:05
EXPLORING SCIENCE – Nelson

    2:30
DISCOVERY III – Mary Grimes

    3:00
AMERICAN MIND

    3:30
MUSIC FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

    4:00
SPANISH – Education

EVENING


    6:15
SING HI, SING LO – Bash Kennett

    6:30
ST. PAUL PUBLIC SCHOOLS

    7:00
TO BE ANNOUNCED

    7:30
INQUIRY – Discussion

    8:00
RUSSIAN AREA STUDY

    8:30
FACES OF PERFECTION

    9:00
FOLIO – Variety

  10:00
ART – Education

  10:30
BACKGROUND – News Analysis

  10:40
COMMAND IN BATTLE - Memoirs


Command in Battle is described as "Memoirs," and I don't think I've ever seen that in the TV listings before. It's a British-made series, and as it turns out the memoirs in question are those of the famed Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery - who, depending on the source, was either a great general, a pompous ass, or both.


 4  WCCO (CBS)

MORNING


    7:00
FLYING SAUCER – Siegfried

    8:00
NEWS – Richard C. Hottelet

    8:15
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Children

    9:00
NEWS – Dean Montgomery

    9:10
DR. REUBEN K. YOUNGDAHL

    9:20
WHAT’S NEW? – Arle Haeberle

    9:30
VIDEO VILLAGE – Monty Hall

  10:00
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

  10:30
CLEAR HORIZON – Serial

  11:00
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

  11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

  11:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

AFTERNOON


  12:00
NEWS – Dave Moore

  12:15
SOMETHING SPECIAL – Merriman

  12:20
WEATHER – Bud Kraehling

  12:30
INAUGURATION CEREMONIES – Gov. Elmer Andersen

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY – Art Linkletter

    2:00
MILLIONAIRE – Drama

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS – Drama

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY – Serial

    3:15
SECRET STORM – Serial

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    4:00
AROUND THE TOWN – Haeberle

    4:30
AXEL AND DOG – Clellan Card

    4:50
BOZO THE CLOWN – Children

    5:00
QUICK DRAW McGRAW – Cartoons

    5:30
CLANCY THE COP – Children

    5:55
SPORTS – Rollie Johnson

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS – Dean Montgomery

    6:10
WEATHER – Don O’Brien

    6:15
NEWS – Douglas Edwards

    6:30
AQUANAUTS – Adventure

    7:30
WANTED – DEAD OR ALIVE

    8:00
MY SISTER EILEEN – Comedy

    8:30
I’VE GOT A SECRET – Panel

    9:00
CIRCLE THEATER – Drama

  10:00
NEWS – Dave Moore

  10:15
WEATHER – Bud Kraehling

  10:20
SPORTS – Dick Enroth

  10:30
FOUR JUST MEN – Drama

  11:00
WEATHER – Don O’Brien

  11:05
MOVIE – Adventure
“Long John Silver” (Australian; 1954)

I've mentioned before that there apparently used to be a tradition that drama series would offer something lighthearted during the Christmas season, or at least get away from episodes in which people were getting killed. I assume that it's in this spirit that we watch this week's episode of Wanted - Dead or Alive, in which Josh (Steve McQueen) is hired by a man to track down his wife's pet ewe.



 5  KSTP (NBC)

MORNING



    6:00
CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM   COLOR 
Chemistry


    6:30
CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM   COLOR 
Modern Algebra


    7:00
DAVE GARROWAY – Variety
Guest: Lucille Ball


    9:00
SAY WHEN – Game


    9:30
PLAY YOUR HUNCH – Merv Griffin   COLOR 


  10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT – Cullen   COLOR 


  10:30
CONCENTRATION – Contest


  11:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES


  11:30
IT COULD BE YOU   COLOR 


  11:55
NEWS – Ray Scherer

AFTERNOON



  12:00
NEWS – John MacDougall


  12:15
WEATHER – Johnny Morris


  12:20
TREASURE CHEST – Variety


    1:00
JAN MURRAY – Contest   COLOR 


    1:30
LORETTA YOUNG – Drama


    2:00
YOUNG DR MALONE – Serial


    2:30
FROM THESE ROOTS – Serial


    3:00
MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY


    3:30
HERE’S HOLLYWOOD – Interviews
Guests: Gene Barry, Dimitri Tiomkin


    4:00
MY LITTLE MARGIE – Comedy


    4:30
T.N. TATTERS – Children


    5:15
TOPPER – Comedy


    5:45
NEWS – Huntley, Brinkley

EVENING



    6:00
NEWS – Bob Ryan


    6:15
WEATHER – Johnny Morris


    6:30
WAGON TRAIN – Western


    7:30
PRICE IS RIGHT – Cullen   COLOR 


    8:00
PERRY COMO – Variety   COLOR 
Guests: Alan King, Bobby Rydell, Elizabeth Seal


    9:00
PETER LOVES MARY – Comedy


    9:30
LOCK UP – Police


  10:00
NEWS – John MacDougall


  10:15
WEATHER – Johnny Morris


  10:20
SPORTS – Dick Nesbitt


  10:30
JACK PAAR – Variety   COLOR 


  12:00
NEWS – Roger Krupp

Interesting how certain programs are described. I've never seen Concentration called a "Contest." I wonder what differentiates it from Who Do You Trust on ABC, which is described as a "Quiz." In any event, by 1965, they're described as "Game."



 9  KMSP (Ind.)

MORNING



    9:50
CHAPEL OF THE AIR – Religion


    9:55
NEWSBEAT – Tony Parker


  10:00
JACK LA LANNE – Exercises


  10:30
WHAT ABOUT LINDA? – Variety   SPECIAL 
Guests: Louis Armstrong, the Kingston Trio, John Raitt, Debbie Reynolds, the Crosby Brothers, Lee Marvin, Kenneth Tobey


  11:30
I MARRIED JOAN – Comedy

AFTERNOON



  12:00
KARTOONTIME – Children


  12:30
INAUGURATION CEREMONIES – Gov. Elmer Andersen


    1:30
CHUCK CARSON – Variety


    2:00
MOVIE – Musical
“The Countess of Monte Cristo” (1948)


    4:00
HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE – Comedy


    4:30
MR. ADAMS AND EVE – Comedy


    5:00
SUSIE – Comedy


    5:30
OUR MISS BROOKS – Comedy

EVENING



    6:00
LOONEY TUNERS CLUB - Children


    7:00
RACKET SQUAD – Police


    7:30
HARBOR COMMAND – Police


    8:00
CODE THREE – Police


    8:30
ROUGH RIDERS – Western


    9:00
MOVIE – Drama
“Four Men and a Prayer” (1938)


  10:35
NEWS – Paul Sevareid


  10:50
SPORTS – Tony Parker


  10:55
WEATHER – Jere Smith


  11:00
MOVIE – Prison Drama
“Within These Walls” (1945)

The variety program What About Linda? is on behalf of the March of Dimes, and features Linda Breese, the 1961 poster child for the drive, who suffered from Spina Bifida. Here she is with President Kennedy.




11 WTCN (ABC)

MORNING



    7:40
IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST


    7:55
FARM NEWS


    8:00
GOOD MORNING MINNESOTA!


    8:30
CARTOONS – Children


    9:00
ROMPER ROOM – Miss Betty


    9:45
SHAPE UP – Louraine Larson


  10:15
PEOPLE AND PLACES - Lindman


  10:30
LIFE OF RILEY – Comedy


  11:00
MORNING COURT – Drama


  11:30
LOVE THAT BOB! – Comedy

AFTERNOON



  12:00
TEXAN – Western


  12:30
INAUGURATION CEREMONIES – Gov. Elmer Andersen


    1:30
PAUL COATES – Interview


    2:00
DAY IN COURT – Drama


    2:30
ROAD TO REALITY – Drama


    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY - Bailey


    3:30
WHO DO YOU TRUST – Quiz


    4:00
AMERICAN BANDSTAND – Clark


    5:00
CASEY JONES WITH POPEYE


    5:30
LONE RANGER – Western

EVENING



    6:00
VIKINGS – Adventure


    6:30
HONG KONG – Adventure


    7:30
OZZIE AND HARRIET – Comedy


    8:00
HAWAIIAN EYE – Mystery


    9:00
NAKED CITY – Police


  10:00
NEWS – Chick McCuen


  10:15
WEATHER – Stuart A. Lindman


  10:20
SPORTS – Buetel, Horner


  10:30
JOHNNY MIDNIGHT – Mystery


  11:00
MOVIE – Musical Comedy
Theater 11:  “Best Foot Forward” (1943)


  12:30
NEWS – Jerry Rosholt

Right now I'm watching two of Warner Brothers'"assembly line" detective shows, 77 Sunset Strip and Bourbon Street Beat, with a third, Surfside 6 on the shelf waiting for an opportunity to break in. That leaves only Hawaiian Eye, tonight at 8:00, to complete the set. 

State of the Blog, 2018

$
0
0
One of the obligations I have as a blogger is to report from time to time to you, the readers, on the State of the Blog. Seeing as how this is the first Wednesday of the year, it seems like a good time to meet this obligation.

I'm pleased to report that the State of the Blog is very good. The very first post at It's About TV! (not including the obligatory site construction post) was on April 20, 2011, and was entitled "So What's the Big Deal About Television?" Nearly seven years later, it's a question I'm still trying to answer, and you - the reader - have helped me immensely. From ideas for articles to loans of TV Guides to comments that contained additions, corrections, suggestions, and other tidbits, I consider myself far more knowledgable about classic TV than I was when I started this show.

Your readership keeps It's About TV! alive. In many ways this site represents an experiment, an attempt to see just how much we can learn about ourselves by studying the shows that have been broadcast on television, and the articles written about it. In all honesty, I think it's an experiment that's probably closer to the end than the beginning; after all, there are only a finite number of TV Guides, and an even more finite number that actually serve my purpose. One of Tthese days I'll find that I've said all there is to say about the subject, at least in this venue, and then it will be time to move on. However, since I've already purchased all the issues I'll be using this year, that day remains at least a year or so away.

I'm happy to say that I'll be appearing as a presenter at this year's Mid Atlantic Nostalgia Convention, September 13-15 in Hunt Valley, Maryland. The title of the seminar might be tweaked between now and then, but not the content: TV Guide as a Cultural Time Capsule in America. If you're a regular reader of the blog, I think you'll know what to expect, but it should be fascinating - I can't wait to hear it myself. I wonder what I'm going to say? Anyway, information on this year's convention isn't up yet (it's still the lineup from last year), but I'll let you know when it is, and how you can get your tickets.

One of the things I hope to have with me at the Convention is my latest book, The Electronic Mirror: How Classic Television Helps Us Understand Who We Are and Who We Were (and everything in-between). I'm working feverishly on it as we speak - well, perhaps not feverishly, but as hard as I ever work at anything. I'm not ignoring my non-TV writing, either; in addition to The Collaborator, I'm hoping to see my newest novel, The Car, out in print later this year.  If you notice on occasion that my pieces are a bit shorter than normal, it's probably because I'm working on several things at the same time.

Which brings me to my next point: I certainly would not refuse any help in the form of an occasional guest column. If you have something you'd like to share with the blog community, or if you'd even like to take a shot at a vintage TV Guide you own, I'd love to hear from you. Even one or two guest posts a month could save me as much as four hours, time that can help me complete another chapter of the book. Don't be shy; we're not professional critics here, so if you'd like to help out, now's the time!

I'll also be appearing as a guest on my friend Dan Budnik's Eventually Supertrainpodcast. We're going to be reviewing a short-lived detective show of the past, but that's all I'm going to say about it for the time being. Other than that I think you'll have a lot of fun listening to these episodes!

In short, this should be a busy year for me, and for the blog. I am determined, however, to ensure that the State of the Blog remains good for the next year, and that I keep you, the audience, informed, entertained, or at least help you kill a few minutes each week. Because of this blog, I've met some very, very nice people, both in person and via email, and I'm priviledged to include a very dear friend in that count. I owe this blog much, just as I owe all of you much. I hope to continue to make payments on that debt.

So to all of you, I hope your holidays were wonderful and that 2018 is the best year of your life, so far. I intend to do what I can to see to it that it is for me, and for It's About TV. TV  

Around the dial

$
0
0
I've enjoyed reading Fire Breathing Dimetrodon Time's account of his son watching the Doctor Who classic story "Planet of the Spiders," the farewell tale for Jon Pertwee. One of his earlier posts refers to detractors, who see the story's several chase scenes as padding to make sure it lasts six episodes, but I've always thought that hogwash. I think that makes it all the more poignant; since Pertwee's Doctor regenerates at the end of the story, it's as if his victories in all the chases and confrontations only put off the inevitable. I'm glad his son enjoys it.

Keeping with the British theme, Cult TV Blog looks at The Avengers* episode "Killer." It's a nifty episode, with a "new"Avengers girl (Jennifer Croxton, a one-episode stand-in for Linda Thorson) and a cracking story. It reminds me that it's been a couple of years since we concluded our run of The Avengers; might be time to reintroduce it to the rotation.

*By the way, let it be known that there is only one Avengers. That superhero story may have the same name, but one can't really compare the two, can one? 

David at Comfort TV has an interesting rumination on episode titles. I highly approve of them myself; while there was a span of time in the late '50s and early '60s when the titles could be somewhat pretentious (as our own Mike Doran points out in a comment), I've always thought they were a proper part of a TV episode, and I try to use them when I can. Having said that - I couldn't pass David's quiz at the end. Can you?

It's another issue of The Twilight Zone Magazine over at Twilight Zone Vortex, a good issue from the looks of it. Of particular interest - Gahan Wilson's movie reviews (John Boorman's Excalibur and Oliver Stone's The Hand), and Allan Asherman's article, “Forerunners of ‘The Twilight Zone’.”

At bare-bones e-zine, Jack's latest Hitchcock Project continues a rundown on the contributions of Francis and Marian Cockrell: this time, it's the second season episode "The Hands of Mr. Ottermole," adapted by Francis Cockrell and directed by Robert Stevens. Isn't that a wonderful name, "Ottermole"? You'll find that it carries a symbolic meaning, as well.

'Tis the season for looking back as well as ahead, and at Christmas TV History, Joanna runs down the five most popular posts of the past year. Some very good ones there; if you didn't catch them the first time, now's your chance to go back and read them. If you've already done so, why not do it again?

Jodie at Garroway at Large shares a couple of clips from 1952 of the Master Communicator, pre-Today, appearing with comedy legends Bob and Ray, and Fred Allen. Very fun and very funny as well, and it's always interesting to see Garroway in the time immediately before he became a legend.

At The Lucky Strike Papers, Andrew shares his visit to Morgan White Jr.'s radio program on WBZ. It's all worth listening to, including the role of YouTube (Andrew nails it: while it has many good points, "There is also, of course, a great deal of junk on YouTube--including a lot of offensive junk--yet the site's virtues are substantial."), along with some tidbits from The Wizard of Oz.

And Martin Grams celebrates the New Year with his own take on the SI swimsuit issue, to good effect. Can't think of a better way to kick off 2018 - keep it going by coming back here tomorrow for a new TV Guide. TV  

This week in TV Guide: January 8, 1966

$
0
0
This week ABC kicks off its second season (it even calls it that in its ads) with a number of new shows to replace the old shows that had failed during the fall. So farewell, O.K. Crackerby!, au revoir Shindig, auf wiedersehen The King Family, adiós Amos Burke, Secret Agent. In their place, welcome Blue Light, Robert Goulet's attempt to become a dramatic TV star; The Double Life of Henry Phyfe with Red Buttons; and The Baron, the British series starring the American actor Steve Forrest.* But it's the fourth series, premiering on Wednesday, that I want to talk about here.

*The Baron was the first ITC show without marionettes to be produced entirely in color, a singular distinction. Bonus tidbit: Steve Forrest was the younger brother of Dana Andrews.

"Criminals are a superstitious, cowardly lot, so my disguise must be able to strike terror into their hearts. I must be a creature of the night." It shouldn't be too difficult to imagine Adam West speaking those lines, though I'm not sure they ever appeared anywhere other than the issue of Detective Comics that introduced Batman to the world. And though the show ran only for a little over two years, until March 14, 1968, it became, for a short time, the most influential program on television. Not only did it make camp a high art form on American television, it turned West and Burt Ward into household names, made the role of "Guest Villain" into one of the most coveted on television, spawned a second series based on a comic book hero (The Green Hornet), and influenced a change in direction for such existing shows as The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

This week's inaugural episode, "Hey Diddle Diddle*," introduces us to Frank Gorshin in the memorable role of the Riddler, with Jill St. John as his sidekick Molly, out to steal the priceless pachyderm statue The Mammoth of Moldavia from the Gotham City World's Fair. It concludes the following night with "Smack in the Middle," in which the evil fiends receive their comeuppance.

*Yes, I know the title was actually "Hi Diddle Diddle," but it's "Hey" in the TV Guide. This strikes another blow to accuracy in the media.

Interesting notes in the listing - Lorenzo Semple Jr., who wrote the script for the original version of Casino Royale, wrote this script; Neal Hefti, who wrote the theme for The Odd Couple and worked with Woody Herman, Count Basie, and Frank Sinatra, did the theme; and the incidental music was by Nelson Riddle, who most famously did the arrangements for Sinatra's comeback. (With two connections like those, it's interesting that Sinatra never did one of the window appearances.)

Open question: was there ever a series with a shorter run that had a more significant cultural influence on its time than Batman?

◊ ◊ ◊

No "Sullivan vs. The Palace" this week, and when that happens it's usually because of a pre-emption on ABC's part. This week, however, CBS pre-empts not only Ed, but Lassie and My Favorite Martian, for the annual presentation of The Wizard of Oz, with wraparound segments hosted by Danny Kaye.

From the first broadcast in 1956
In this age when even classic movies are played over and over on various channels (not that I'm complaining, mind you), it's hard to understand what an event The Wizard of Oz was. It was always presented as a special, rather than in one of CBS's regular movie timeslots, with a host from one of CBS's prime-time programs. It was also always broadcast in color (except for 1961), even when color televisions were a rarety in homes.* For the first few years, it was shown in December, as part of CBS's holiday programming, and it was invariably one of the highest rated programs of the year. When it was eventually joined on TV by its MGM stablemate Gone with the Wind, the two became the most highly anticipated movies shown on television. (The always-reliable Wikipedia, in this article, has more on the Wizard's television history.)

*In this issue, a note along with the description advises views that "The first 22 minutes of this movie are in black and white."

The Wizard of Oz was the true definition of a "special," a show that families made plans to watch and incorporated as part of their annual seasonal traditions. I appreciate how you can now see the movie just about any time you want, and how you can see it without commercial interruption (both on TCM and in its home video incarnations), but at the same time that very familarity has made it somehow less special, if you know what I mean. I suppose it's one of the tradeoffs that we always seem to be making.

◊ ◊ ◊

One program this week that definitely is not an event is the NFL Playoff Bowl (Sunday, 12:30 p.m., CBS), an absolutely awful excuse for a football game. The game pitted the second-place teams in the Eastern and Western Conferences in what amounted to a game for third place, and was a benefit for the NFL players' pension fund.* It was played in Miami, started in the years before the Dolphins were created, and was another way for the NFL to increase its visibility. This year's combatants are the Baltimore Colts and Dallas Cowboys, and probably because Miami was part of the Colts' TV territory in the pre-Dolphin years, this year's game will draw a record crowd of 65,569. The Colts reward that crowd with a 35-3 victory. The game disappears after the NFL-AFL merger.

*Nobody wanted to play in this game; Packers coach Vince Lombardi, whose teams won five championships during the ten years the game existed, derisively referred to it as the "Shit Bowl."

In other sports, the final college football game of the season is played: the Senior Bowl all-star game (Saturday, 1:00 p.m., NBC). The Pro Bowlers Tour returns to ABC on the same date (2:30 p.m.), as does Shell's Wonderful World of Golf  (NBC, 4:00 p.m.). It's also a return to TV for college basketball; in these unenlightened days when there weren't 50 games a week on television, most nonconference games are seen primarily as tuneups for the far more important conference schedule beginning in January; when the important games start, they're back on TV.

And the NBA isn't exactly big-time yet, either. Yes, now that we're in January ABC has its Game of the Week Sunday afternoons (it's New York vs. Baltimore this week, by the way), but when it comes to the league's All-Star Game, it's being shown via syndication on Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m., live from Cincinnati Gardens. Harry Carey (Holy Cow!) and Jack Buck report the action.

◊ ◊ ◊

Throughout the 60s and early 70s, TV Guide's reviews were written by the witty and acerbic Cleveland Amory. Whenever we get the chance, we'll look at Cleve's latest take on the series of the era. 

After all these years of reviewing Cleveland Amory's reviews, we have finally arrived at vintage Amory, the perfect Amory, the review that combines his puns and acerbic wit to produce a sparkling prose that leaves no doubt as to where he stands on the program in question.

Juliet Prowse and Denny Miller
That program is Mona McCluskey, starring singer-dancer Juliet Prowse, and somehow - it being January 1966 - it has managed to survive its premiere, which was September 16, 1965. Our first indication as to Mona's difficulties comes with Amory's initial paragraph: "There are five principle troubles with this show - the idea, the writing, the acting, the directing and the producing." Other than that... The premise of Mona McCluskey is that of an Air Force sergeant married to a movie star; the sergeant, being the breadwinner of the family, insists that they live off of his $500 monthly salary, rather than her $5,000 weekly earnings, and if this idea sounds not just thin but also more than a little stupid, then you're not alone. "It is," writes Amory "quite a problem all right - and a Happy New Year to you too."

As for the writing, all one has to do is look at episode titles such as "Mail Against Female,""the touching saga of the little woman who can't resist opening her male's mail," or "My Husband the Wife Beater," based on the classic misunderstanding when a couple of maiden aunts overhear a "marital pillow fight" and assume the worst. The head writer and show's creator, Don McGuire, has done better - he wrote the screenplay for the classic Bad Day at Black Rock, but, says Cleve, "we asure you, however bad things were at the Ol' Rock, the day he first thought of this show was worse."

The acting is "led" by Denny Miller as the sergeant; his credits say he was "first choice to become Hollywood's 12th Tarzan in the film 'Tarzan, the Ape Man.' For this show, however, he would be our 13th choice - and the only reason he would be that high is that he overacts less tha the rest of the cast." Included in that assessment is star Juliet Prowse, "who is one of our favorites as a dancer, [but] as an actress she is one of our least favorites." Says Cleve, "The best that can be said for her is that - particularly in the cutesy-cutesy love scenes, of which there are about six each half hour, not including the commercials - she is actually fascinating; unfortunately, in much the same way that a school play is fascinating when your child isn't in it."

There can be no question that "When so many actors are so bad, the directors have to be at fault." George Burns, who really ought to know better, is the producer of all this, along with United Artists Television, "which obviously does not." In any case, writes Amory, there can be only one conclusion: "Together they have managed to produce a show whose premise would be irritating enough in real life. On TV it is positively excruciating."

◊ ◊ ◊

Richard Warren Lewis has an interesting article on Lola Albright, the former Peter Gunn flame who pinch-hit for the ill Dorothy Malone on Peyton Place, and while it's certainly enlightening reading about Lola's stormy third marriage (and her troubled second marriage as well), her battles with insomnia, her seeing a psychiatrist and the like, what I find most intriguing about it all is the very fact of one actress temporarily replacing another on a series.

Malone had suffered a life-threating pulmonary embolism and was in the hospital after a seven-and-a-half-hour emergency operation, leaving Peyton Place producer Paul Monash with a dilemma. His two choices were to either write Malone's character, Constance Mackenzie Carson, out of the series, or bring on someone who could essay the role until Malone was able to return. Considering how vital Constance was to the storyline, there wasn't really any choice, and the call went out to Albright. It happens all the time in daytime soap operas.

Would this happen today? You'll recall that when Raymond Burr was incapacitated during the run of Perry Mason, several actors were brought in to play surrogate lawyers, including Hugh O'Brien, Walter Pidgeon, Bette Davis, and Mike Connors. Something like this could be done, and had to be done, because shows produced a lot more episodes back in the day. Variety show hosts like Red Skelton had guest hosts when they were sick, and this made sense because of the short leadtime between the show's taping and airing. Albright was brought in because a surrogate could never work in the complicated world of the soap.

The point is, I'd imagine that if something similar happened today the show would fill in with reruns until the star was able to return. If it looked like it was really going to be protracted, they might bring in someone in a similar role for awhile. One of the reasons why Monash had to bring in Albright was because you couldn't stop a soap opera in the middle of a story. I wonder - considering how serialized television has become, if the star of one of today's shows fell ill during a crucial point in middle of the storyline, one in which his or her character was absolutely essential to what was going on, what would the producers do? I tend to watch so little new television nowadays, I don't know but what this has already happened.

◊ ◊ ◊

Speaking of guest hosts and the like, Johnny Carson is subbing for Sammy Davis Jr. on Davis' variety show. (Friday, 7:30 p.m., NBC) Back in the early days of this blog, I wrote about Davis's show, and the puzzling contractual obligation with ABC that required Davis to sit out the second, third and fourth episodes of his own show. Carson's guests on Sammy's show are Mickey Rooney, Diahann Carroll, Joan Rivers, Bobby Van, Tony Mattola and Don Allan.

Elsewhere this week, Don Knotts returns to Mayberry for a class reunion on The Andy Griffith Show (Monday, CBS, 8:00 p.m.), while the aforementioned Dorothy Malone returns to Peyton Place on Tuesday night (8:30 p.m., ABC). CBS Reports is pre-empted for a documentary on "The Search for Ulysses," attempting to prove that the hero of Homer's "Odyssey" was a real man (Tuesday, 9:00 p.m.). Academy Award winner Simone Signoret makes a rare television appearance, appearing with George Maharis in the drama "A Small Rebellion" on Bob Hope's Chrysler Theatre (Wednesday, 8:00 p.m., NBC), and Eve Arden makes a post-Our Miss Brooks appearance Thursday on Bewitched (7:30 p.m., ABC). Also on Thursday, Mona McCluskey gives ample demonstration of why it only lasted one season: "Mike, who's broke, refuses to let Mona buy a color TV set - so Mona decides to plant a coin worth hundreds of dollars in his pocket."

◊ ◊ ◊

And now for some bonus Amory this week, although Amory himself is not the author. It comes from a very funny Letter to the Editor - the sole letter in this week's issue - by J. Harvey Howells of Brunswick, Maine, who was inspired to write in after reading about Amory's experience with his series O.K. Crackerby!, which ran a couple of weeks ago. In 1956, Howells won a Writers Guild award for Best TV Comedy of the Year for a script called "Goodbye, Grey Flannel," an episode of the anthology series Robert Montgomery Presents. It's the story of a Madison Avenue ad executive who escapes to a New England orchard only to find out that, as Howells puts it, "advertising is a state of mind, not geography." Soon, the exec, played by Lee Bowman, has organized the local farmers and has set up a new agency in his home.

Howells went on to work on other projects, and he's almost forgotten about this one when he's approached by George Chandler, who played Ichabod Lewis, the ringleader of the locals, who wondered if Howells owned the story. "I agreed to George becoming my 50-50 partner if he could sell it as a series, a possibility I thought remote." Before he knows it, though, a pilot is filmed, it tests high, and now it's on to financing the series itself. "Somewhere along the line," Howells writes, "I acquired six more partners, and my ownership fell to five percent. I didn't object; five percent of something was better than 100 percent of nothing. But when the title was amended to Ichabod and Me, I knew my baby was in for more than a change of diapers."

The series would focus not on Ichabod, but on "Me," played by Bob Sterling. ("See the parallel, Cleve?") The ad exec's ex-model wife was replaced by "a fat, jolly housekeeper such as never was in New England." The exec's bulldog, which had scored high in the pilot, was replaced by a "adenoidal boy-child" playing Me's orphaned son. "Retired ad me being old hat (sic), Me became a small-town newspaper editor, and if that wasn't a deep reach into the cliché closet, then Bob's your uncle." Howells won but one battle, and that was to keep the locale in New England, rather than moving it to Kansas "for more national empathy."

Needless to say, Ichabod and Me was no hit show, although unlike O.K. Crackerby! it did survive for an entire season, and Howells points out that he did make some good friends along the way, like George. "But I still can't understand why they bought my idea in the first place. Can you, Cleve?" TV  

What's on TV? Friday, January 14, 1966

$
0
0
We've reached the point now where color programming isn't unusual anymore, and the '60s wouldn't be the '60s without color, would they? Most of NBC's programs are in color, and both ABC and CBS have started to make inroads into color. There are still B&W shows, though, plenty of them - especially during the day. Most of these shows will change in the next couple of years, though. If they're still around, that is.

As you might gather, this week's listings are from the Minnesota State Edition, so see what the state is watching.


 2   KTCA (EDUC.)

Morning

    9:15
CLASSROOM
Chs. 2 and 8 sign off at 2:55 P.M. and return at 5 P.M.

Afternoon

    5:00
KINDERGARTEN – Education

    5:30
INQUIRY – Panel

Evening

    6:00
FRENCH

    6:50
ANTHROPOLOGY – Hoebel

    7:40
MODERN LITERATURE – Hoyt

    8:30
COLLEGE OF ST. CATHERINE – Latin America

    9:00
SIGHT, SOUND, MOVEMENT

    9:30
JET AGE HOME

  10:00
BIOLOGY – Skjerstad



 3   KDAL (DULUTH) (CBS)

Morning

    7:35
FARM AND HOME

    7:45
TREETOP HOUSE – Miss Jane

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Children

    9:00
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

    9:30
McCOYS – Comedy

  10:00
ANDY GRIFFITH – Comedy

  10:30
DICK VAN DYKE – Comedy

  11:00
LOVE OF LIFE

  11:25
NEWS

  11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

  11:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

Afternoon

  12:00
TOWN AND COUNTRY – Becker

  12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial

    1:00
PASSWORD
Celebrities: Lucille Ball, Gary Morton

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY   COLOR 
Guest: Larry Craig

    2:00
TO TELL THE TRUTH – Panel

    2:25
NEWS – Edwards

    2:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    3:00
SECRET STORM – Serial

    3:30
NEVER TOO YOUNG – Serial

    4:00
FILM FEATURE

    4:30
SUPERMAN - Adventure

    5:00
LEAVE IT TO BEAVER – Comedy

    5:30
NEWS – Cronkite

Evening

    6:00
NEWS

    6:30
WILD WILD WEST – Adventure

    7:30
HOGAN’S HEROES – Comedy   COLOR 

    8:00
GOMER PYLE, USMC – Comedy   COLOR 

    8:30
JOHN FORSYTHE – Comedy

    9:00
TRIALS OF O’BRIEN – Drama

  10:00
NEWS

  10:15
STAGECOACH WEST – Western

  11:15
CHANNEL 3 THEATER- Drama
“Conspirator” (1949)



 4   WCCO (CBS)

Morning

    6:00
SUNRISE SEMESTER - Education

    6:30
SIEGFRIED – Children

    7:00
AXEL AND DEPUTY DAWG

    7:30
CLANCY AND COMPANY

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Children

    9:00
DR. REUBEN K. YOUNGDAHL

    9:05
NEWS – Dean Montgomery

    9:10
MIKE DOUGLAS – Variety

  10:00
ANDY GRIFFITH – Comedy

  10:30
DICK VAN DYKE – Comedy

  11:00
LOVE OF LIFE

  11:25
NEWS

  11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

  11:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

Afternoon

  12:00
NEWS

  12:15
SOMETHING SPECIAL

  12:25
WEATHER – Bud Kraehling

  12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial

    1:00
PASSWORD
Celebrities: Lucille Ball, Gary Morton

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY   COLOR 
Guest: Larry Craig

    2:00
TO TELL THE TRUTH – Panel

    2:25
NEWS – Edwards

    2:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    3:00
SECRET STORM – Serial

    3:30
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

    4:00
MOVIE – Western   COLOR 
“The Outriders” (1950)

    5:30
NEWS – Cronkite

Evening

    6:00
NEWS

    6:20
DIRECTION – Religion

    6:25
WEATHER – Don O’Brien

    6:30
WILD WILD WEST – Adventure

    7:30
HOGAN’S HEROES – Comedy   COLOR 

    8:00
GOMER PYLE, USMC – Comedy   COLOR 

    8:30
SMOTHERS BROTHERS – Comedy

    9:00
TRIALS OF O’BRIEN – Drama

  10:00
NEWS

  10:30
MOVIE – Drama   COLOR 
“Strangers When We Meet” (1960)

  12:00
SPORTS – Hal Scott

  12:10
MOVIE – Mystery
“Murder over New York” (1940)



 5   KSTP (NBC)

Morning

    6:00
CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM

    6:30
CITY AND COUNTRY   COLOR 

    7:00
TODAY   COLOR 

    9:00
EYE GUESS – Game   COLOR 

    9:25
NEWS – Newman

    9:30
CONCENTRATION – Game

  10:00
MORNING STAR – Serial   COLOR 

  10:30
PARADISE BAY – Serial   COLOR 

  11:00
JEOPARDY – Game   COLOR 

  11:30
LET’S PLAY POST OFFICE – Game   COLOR 

  11:45
NEWS

Afternoon

  12:00
NEWS AND WEATHER C

  12:15
DIALING FOR DOLLARS – Game   COLOR 

  12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game   COLOR 

  12:55
NEWS – Kalber

    1:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial   COLOR 

    1:30
DOCTORS

    2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

    2:30
YOU DON’T SAY! – Game   COLOR 
Guests: Jan Murray, Jaye P. Morgan

    3:00
MATCH GAME   COLOR 
Contestants: Debbie Bryant, Hugh O’ Brian

    3:25
NEWS

    3:30
DIALING FOR DOLLARS – Game   COLOR 

    4:30
CHEYENNE – Western

    5:25
DOCTOR’S HOUSE CALL – James Fox

    5:30
NEWS – Chet Huntley, David Brinkley   COLOR 

Evening

    6:00
NEWS   COLOR 

    6:30
CAMP RUNAMUCK – Comedy   COLOR 

    7:00
HANK – Comedy   COLOR 

    7:30
SAMMY DAVIS   COLOR 
Guest host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Diahann Carroll, Mickey Rooney, Joan Rivers

    8:30
MISTER ROBERTS – Comedy   COLOR 

    9:00
MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. – Adventure   COLOR 

  10:00
NEWS   COLOR 

  10:30
JOHNNY CARSON   COLOR 

  12:15
MOVIE – Melodrama
“The Killer Shrews” (1959)



 6   WDSM (DULUTH) (NBC)

Morning

    7:00
TODAY   COLOR 

    9:00
EYE GUESS – Game   COLOR 

    9:25
NEWS – Newman

    9:30
CONCENTRATION – Game

  10:00
MORNING STAR – Serial   COLOR 

  10:30
PARADISE BAY – Serial   COLOR 

  11:00
JEOPARDY – Game   COLOR 

  11:30
LET’S PLAY POST OFFICE – Game   COLOR 

  11:45
NEWS

Afternoon

  12:00
BEN CASEY – Drama

    1:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial   COLOR 

    1:30
DOCTORS

    2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

    2:30
YOU DON’T SAY! – Game   COLOR 
Guests: Jan Murray, Jaye P. Morgan

    3:00
MATCH GAME   COLOR 
Contestants: Debbie Bryant, Hugh O’ Brian

    3:25
NEWS

    3:30
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

    4:00
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game

    4:25
BOZO AND HIS PALS   COLOR 

    5:30
NEWS, ROCKY TELLER   COLOR 

Evening

    6:00
NEWS – Huntley, Brinkley   COLOR 

    6:30
CAMP RUNAMUCK – Comedy   COLOR 

    7:00
HANK – Comedy   COLOR 

    7:30
COMBAT! – Drama

    8:30
MISTER ROBERTS – Comedy   COLOR 

    9:00
MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. – Adventure   COLOR 

  10:00
NEWS   COLOR 

  10:20
JOHNNY CARSON   COLOR 



 6   KMMT (AUSTIN) (ABC)

Morning

  10:00
SUPERMARKET SWEEP

  10:30
DATING GAME

  11:00
DONNA REED – Comedy

  11:30
FATHER KNOWS BEST

Afternoon

  12:00
BEN CASEY – Drama

    1:00
NURSES – Serial

    1:30
A TIME FOR US – Serial

    1:55
NEWS – Marlene Sanders

    2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

    2:30
YOUNG MARRIEDS – Serial

    3:00
NEVER TOO YOUNG – Serial

    3:30
WHERE THE ACTION IS
Guests: the Beau Brummels, Bobby Freeman

    4:00
CAPTAIN ATOM – Children
Movie: “On the Old Spanish Trail” (Western; 1947)

    5:30
RIFLEMAN – Western

Evening

    6:00
NEWS – Peter Jennings

    6:10
NEWS, SPORTS, WEATHER

    6:30
FLINTSTONES – Cartoon   COLOR 

    7:00
TAMMY – Comedy   COLOR 

    7:30
ADDAMS FAMILY – Comedy

    8:00
HONEY WEST – Mystery

    8:30
FARMER’S DAUGHTER   COLOR 

    9:00
JIMMY DEAN – Variety
Guests: Roy Acuff, Hank Snow, George Hamilton IV, Dottie West, Faron Young, Flatt and Scruggs, Sonny James Carl Smith and Kitty Wells

  10:00
NEWS

  10:30
UNTOUCHABLES – Drama

  11:30
NEWS



 7   KCMT (ALEXANDRIA) (NBC, ABC)

Morning

    7:00
TODAY   COLOR 

    9:00
EYE GUESS – Game   COLOR 

    9:25
NEWS – Newman

    9:30
CONCENTRATION – Game

  10:00
MORNING STAR – Serial   COLOR 

  10:30
PARADISE BAY – Serial   COLOR 

  11:00
JEOPARDY – Game   COLOR 

  11:30
LET’S PLAY POST OFFICE – Game   COLOR 

  11:45
NEWS

Afternoon

  12:00
NEWS

  12:20
TRADING POST – Jon Haaven

  12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game   COLOR 

  12:55
NEWS – Kalber

    1:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial   COLOR 

    1:30
DOCTORS

    2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

    2:30
YOU DON’T SAY! – Game   COLOR 
Guests: Jan Murray, Jaye P. Morgan

    3:00
MATCH GAME   COLOR 
Contestants: Debbie Bryant, Hugh O’ Brian

    3:25
NEWS

    3:30
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

    4:00
FATHER KNOWS BEST – Comedy

    4:30
MAGILLA GORILLA - Cartoons

    5:00
YOGI BEAR – Cartoons

    5:30
NEWS – Chet Huntley, David Brinkley   COLOR 

Evening

    6:00
NEWS

    6:30
CAMP RUNAMUCK – Comedy   COLOR 

    7:00
PLEASE DON’T EAT THE DAISIES – Comedy

    7:30
SAMMY DAVIS   COLOR 
Guest host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Diahann Carroll, Mickey Rooney, Joan Rivers

    8:30
MISTER ROBERTS – Comedy   COLOR 

    9:00
MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. – Adventure   COLOR 

  10:00
NEWS

  10:30
FBI – Drama

  11:30
PIONEERS – Drama



 8   WDSE (DULUTH) (EDUC.)

Morning

    9:15
CLASSROOM
Chs. 2 and 8 sign off at 2:55 P.M. and return at 5 P.M.

Afternoon

    5:00
KINDERGARTEN – Education

    5:30
DISCOVERING AMERICA

Evening

    6:00
TO BE ANNOUNCED

    6:30
WHAT’S NEW – Children

    7:00
INQUIRY – Discussion

    7:30
ANTIQUES – Art

    8:00
PROFILE – Discussion

    8:30
COLLEGE OF ST. CATHERINE – Latin America

    9:00
IVES SYMPHONY NO. 4   SPECIAL 



 9   KMSP (ABC)

Morning

    7:30
MY LITTLE MARGIE – Comedy

    8:00
RILEY ‘ROUND THE TOWN

    8:30
GRANDPA KEN – Children

    9:00
ROMPER ROOM – Miss Betty

  10:00
SUPERMARKET SWEEP

  10:30
DATING GAME

  11:00
ELEVENTH HOUR – Drama

Afternoon

  12:00
BEN CASEY – Drama

    1:00
NURSES – Serial

    1:30
A TIME FOR US – Serial

    1:55
NEWS – Marlene Sanders

    2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

    2:30
YOUNG MARRIEDS – Serial

    3:00
NEVER TOO YOUNG – Serial

    3:30
WHERE THE ACTION IS
Guests: the Beau Brummels, Bobby Freeman

    4:00
ROUTE 66 – Drama

    5:00
NEWS – Peter Jennings

    5:15
NEWS AND WEATHER

    5:30
LEAVE IT TO BEAVER – Comedy

Evening

    6:00
WOODY WOODPECKER   COLOR 

    6:30
FLINTSTONES – Cartoon   COLOR 

    7:00
TAMMY – Comedy   COLOR 

    7:30
ADDAMS FAMILY – Comedy

    8:00
HONEY WEST – Mystery

    8:30
FARMER’S DAUGHTER   COLOR 

    9:00
JIMMY DEAN – Variety
Guests: Roy Acuff, Hank Snow, George Hamilton IV, Dottie West, Faron Young, Flatt and Scruggs, Sonny James Carl Smith and Kitty Wells

  10:00
NEWS

  10:30
MOVIE – Drama   COLOR 
“Torch Song” (1953)



11  WTCN (IND.)

Morning

    9:15
NEWS

    9:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Stolen Heaven” (1938)

  10:55
NEWS – Gil Amundson

  11:00
DONNA REED – Comedy

  11:30
FATHER KNOWS BEST

Afternoon

  12:00
LUNCH WITH CASEY – Children

  12:45
KING AND ODIE – Cartoons

    1:00
MOVIE – Melodrama
“The Unknown Terror” (1957)

    2:45
MEL’S NOTEBOOK – Interview

    3:00
GIRL TALK – Panel
Guests: Ilka Chase, Kathryn Murray, Louise Hall Tharp

    3:30
AMOS ‘N’ ANDY – Comedy

    4:00
POPEYE AND PETE – Children

    4:30
CASEY AND ROUNDHOUSE

    5:15
ROCKY AND FRIENDS C

    5:30
BACHELOR FATHER – Comedy

Evening

    6:00
RIFLEMAN – Western

    6:30
BOLD JOURNEY - Travel

    7:00
WILD CARGO – Travel

    7:30
MOVIE – Drama
“The Caine Mutiny” (1954)

    9:30
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:00
MOVIE – Western
“Yellow Sky” (1948)

  12:00
SLEEPY TIME
Time approximate



12  KEYC (MANKATO) (CBS)

Morning

    7:30
NEWS – Mike Wallace

    7:55
FILM SHORT

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Children

    9:00
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

    9:30
McCOYS – Comedy

  10:00
ANDY GRIFFITH – Comedy

  10:30
DICK VAN DYKE – Comedy

  11:00
LOVE OF LIFE

  11:25
NEWS

  11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

  11:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

Afternoon

  12:00
NEWS

  12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial

    1:00
PASSWORD
Celebrities: Lucille Ball, Gary Morton

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY   COLOR 
Guest: Larry Craig

    2:00
TO TELL THE TRUTH – Panel

    2:25
NEWS – Edwards

    2:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    3:00
SECRET STORM – Serial

    3:30
TAKE 12 – Bob Gardner

    4:00
BART’S CLUBHOUSE

    4:30
ROCKY AND HIS FRIENDS

    4:45
BART’S CLUBHOUSE

    5:00
SERGEANT PRESTON

    5:30
NEWS – Cronkite

Evening

    6:00
NEWS

    6:30
WILD WILD WEST – Adventure

    7:30
HOGAN’S HEROES – Comedy   COLOR 

    8:00
GOMER PYLE, USMC – Comedy   COLOR 

    8:30
SMOTHERS BROTHERS – Comedy

    9:00
TRIALS OF O’BRIEN – Drama

  10:00
NEWS

  10:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Angel Baby” (1961)



TV Jibe: The favorite chair

Around the dial

$
0
0
Television Obscurities offers a remembrance of the "other" Van Dyke, Jerry, who died last week at age 86. Perhaps he was overshadowed by his brother Dick, but if any of us had had the career Jerry did, I suspect we would all be well-pleased with it.

And while we're on the subject of Van Dykes, we shouldn't overlook the death of Rose Marie just prior to the end of the year. She was 94, and had a fabulous career that ran the gamut from child star to a member of one of the great ensemble casts in the history of television. They're all gone now, save Carl Reiner.

Catching up on a loose end, Bob Sassone at Vulture writes about 10 great Christmas movies that aren't really about Christmas. I understand exactly what he means by that; We're No Angels, although it takes place on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and involves a little Christmas party, isn't really about Christmas (unless you count the deaths of two people who could make your life miserable as being Santa's gift to you). I do like the idea of someone naming Three Days of the Condor as their favorite Christmas movie!

Thrilling Days of Yesteryear looks back on a series getTV is currently showing (although you can get it on DVD as well), The Restless Gun, with John Payne. I mentioned an episode from this series here; it's a good series, not a great or even very good one, but it isn't bad either. Payne is, as always, engaging, though  I never saw in him (or in Jimmy Stewart, who originally played a similar role in the radio series The Six Shooter) the kind of world-weariness that ought to be present in a former gunfighter.

British TV Detectives gets around to one of my favorite of the genre, Inspector Morse, which ran for 12 seasons between 1987 and 2000. I always admired the dark, moody atmosphere found in many of the episodes, which often touched on more existential matters than found in today's proceedurals.

At Comfort TV, David takes a charming look at some of the things that populate television shows from 50 or so years ago, things we might not be familiar with today - like charm schools. David offers an elegant line, one I feel more and more: "every New Year takes us further away from the time when shows from the Comfort TV era were made – shows that reflected what life in America was like at that time." As I wrote once in another context, it's another country, not my own.

Come back to that country tomorrow; you'll find a new TV Guide waiting for you. TV  

This week in TV Guide: January 10, 1970

$
0
0
This week Super Bowl IV takes top honors on television. Nowhere in this issue is it called that, by the way; it's only referred to as the "Super Bowl" even though the Roman numerals had already been implemented by then. Of course, we all know how much the Super Bowl has changed since its earliest days --

-- But wait. Maybe we don't all know that. After all, if you're under, say, 40, you've probably never known any other Super Bowl than what we have today. And if that's the case, then this one TV Guide is going to tell you everything about what the Super Bowl is by showing you what it was, and what it wasn't.

What it wasn't, first of all, was a ratings monster. How do we know that? Easy: the game started at 2:30 p.m. CT on CBS, with only a half-hour pregame show. It's true that nothing was scheduled against it*; local movies and syndicated series (The Rifleman, 77 Sunset Strip, The Man from U.N.C.L.E.), but in the days before saturation sports on TV, that wasn't all that unusual in the first place.

*In 1970 CBS broacast the NHL as well as the NFL, and the Rangers-Canadiens game began at 11:30 a.m. - it was about the only time CBS could televise it. In 1971, when NBC carries the Super Bowl, CBS schedules its NHL game directly opposite it.

It was about the game, not the commercials. It was the final matchup between the American and National Football Leagues, a rivalry as bitter as anything in sports. With the victory by the Kansas City Chiefs over the Minnesota Vikings, the final Super Bowl tally between the two leagues was 2-2. People watched it for what happened on the field, not during the commercial breaks. Besides, the game's only allocated three-and-a-half hours of airtime, and you have to figure that last half hour is reserved for the trophy presentation. When the commercials* are the most important thing about the broadcast, I can promise the game and the trophy presentation aren't going to get done in that amount of time.

*And the halftime "concert." In perhaps the first example of a Super Bowl halftime extravaganza, Al Hirt was the headliner of a Marti Gras celebration.

And about the two teams - there was no week off after the league championship games to allow the Super Hype to build up; therefore, at press time TV Guide didn't even know who the teams were. The best they could do was to give the rosters for the four teams playing to get into the game: the Kansas City Chiefs and Oakland Raiders in the AFL, and the Minnesota Vikings and Cleveland Browns in the NFL. Two of these teams will compete for the trophy; tune in Sunday to see who they are.

There's no special section in TV Guide, by the way, dealing with the game. No sidebar on "memorable moments" (such as last year's shocking upset win by the New York Jets over the Baltimore Colts), no "gameday recipes" for your Super Bowl party. Just a two-page article by TV Guide's resident sports expert Melvin Durslag, writing about the general surprise that this year's game was being played in New Orleans instead of making Miami the permanent home (as many had expected), and wondering about how long football would continue to remain America's top sport (looks like he was ahead of his time, doesn't it?).

There's no question that in January 1970 the Super Bowl is a big game. It's one of the biggest sporting events of the year. But that's all it was, and sometimes it helps to have a reminder of when, unlike today, that was the case.

◊ ◊ ◊

During the 60s, the Ed Sullivan Show and The Hollywood Palace were the premiere variety shows on television. Whenever they appear in TV Guide together, we'll match them up and see who has the best lineup..

Sullivan: Tiny Tim and his bride Miss Vicki are the headliners, offering a medly of love songs through the ages. Scheduled guests: Flip Wilson, Peter Gennaro, Stiller and Meara, country singer Sonny James and songstress Karen Wyman

Palace: Bacharach tunes predominate as hosts Burt Bacharach and his wife Angie Dickinson present jockey Bill Shoemaker (singing and dancing in his show business debut), comie Scoey Mitchell, and singers Dusty Springfield and Sam and Dave.

This is a strange week, isn't it? I know that Tiny Tim was big stuff back then; I even remember watching his marriage to Miss Vicki on Carson's show. But if they're headlining Sullivan, it doesn't speak well for the rest of the show, does it? I'd love to know what Ed thought of Tim personally - he was a shrewd judge of talent, but I can't help thinking that he looked at this as being something he had to do to keep the show on the air. Burt Bacharach is scheduled to do several of his own songs tonight, with the Ray Charles singers (not that Ray Charles), and while he's not a very good singer, he's written some wonderful songs that should make for a very good show, especially when someone else like Dusty Springfield is singing those songs. Angie could probably just stand there and look good, and it wouldn't hurt the show one bit. Tonight, Palace sits at the top of the heap.

◊ ◊ ◊

Throughout the 60s and early 70s, TV Guide's reviews were written by the witty and acerbic Cleveland Amory. Whenever we get the chance, we'll look at Cleve's latest take on the series of the era. 

Jim Nabors is one of those rarities in show business. He left a hit series, Gomer Pyle, USMC, at the height of its popularity, in order to star in his own variety show. According to Cleveland Amory, Nabors prefers his new series because (1) he likes to sing, and (2) the hours on this show are better. There's only one problem with this, says Amory: "a lot of us are learning, the hard way, the rigors of listening to Mr. Nabors sing. It's not that he's a bad singer - he's not. But he's just not a singer. He's a comedian." And what that means, for viewers of The Jim Nabors Hour, is that "every time he sings a serious song we (1) can't get out of our head that album of the New York Mets singing and (2) have an almost uncontrollable urge to grab Mr. Nabors, say 'Terrific game, Jim,' pour champagne on his head and push him into the showers."

Singing is one component of the three-legged variety show formula. The second leg is dancing, and Nabors is no dancer either. That leaves only the third leg, comedy. "And here let us say it does pass muster. Not only is Mr. Nabors a fairly funny fellow to begin with, he has a very funny way of making even unfunny stories come off funny." It helps that his former Pyle sidekick Frank Sutton is a regular on the show, and also that his guest stars, such as Carol Burnett, have been given very funny sketches to work in.

But then it comes back to singing, such as the duet he did with Kate Smith in which "Mr. Nabors deferred to Miss Smith so much that it was hardly a duet at all." Fortunately, this too was saved by what Amory refers to as "one of their typical unfunny funnies," to which Amory confesses, "well - OK. We laughed." A lot of people did when they were watching Jim Nabors, and plenty of people did like his singing, even if Cleve wasn't one of them. The Jim Nabors Hour survived on CBS for two seasons, and with its good ratings would probably have lasted longer were it not for the network's rural purge. Jim Nabors popularity, however, never waned.

◊ ◊ ◊

The Jim Nabors Hour airs Thursday night at 7:00 on CBS, and this week's guest is singer Barbara McNair, which I guess means that the travel medley that Jim and Barbara are doing is going to be only so-so, while the comedy bits will be pretty good. Guess we don't need to watch now, do we?

In fact, there are quite a few variety shows on this week. On Saturday (6:30 p.m., NBC), Andy Williams welcomes Cass Elliott, Arte Johnson, and Ray Stevens, with cameos by Lorne Greene and Sam Jaffe (who's playing his Ben Casey character of Dr. Zorba in a sketch).  At the same time on CBS, Jackie Gleason's guests are Milton Berle, Jackie Gayle, Irwin C. Watson, and Allan Drake. Meanwhile, Sunday at 8:00 p.m. on CBS, Glen Campbell has Roger Miller, Caterina Valente, and Henry Gibson.

Monday ABC's failed 45-minute experiment Music Scene (6:30 p.m.), with host David Steinberg, departs the scene with appearances from Bo Diddley, John Sebastian, Buffy Sainte-Marie and Randy Marr.* Carol Burnett is nowhere near failing, though, and her guests tonight are Nancy Wilson and Nanette Fabray. (CBS, 9:00 p.m.) Tuesday evening belongs to Red Skelton (7:30, CBS) with an excellent lineup featuring Duke Ellington and his orchestera, and comedianne Pat Carroll.

*ABC's other 45-minute series, The New People, also says farewell on Monday. The shows are replaced by It Takes a Thief and the Monday Night Movie.


I'm no country fan, but even I know that Hee Haw is famous for its big-name guest stars, and this Wednesday (6:30 p.m., CBS) is no exception, with Lynn Anderson, Hank Thompson, and Buck Owens' son Buddy Allen. NBC counters with a variety special at 7:00 p.m., "The Wonderful World of Girls," hosted by Gene Kelly, with Barbara Feldon, Ruth Buzzi, Kay Medford, Barbara Heller, Chanin Hale and Diane Davis, along with members of the Las Vegas Folles Bergere (right). At 9:00, Rowan and Martin are back - not as part of Laugh-In, but as hosts of a "satirical swipe at TV" with Carol Burnett, the Smothers Brothers, Sammy Davis Jr., and cameos by suprise stars.

Thursday also sees the final Christmas special of the year, 90 minutes of highlights from Bob Hope's 15-day tour of Vietnam, Germany, Italy, Turkey, Thailand, Taiwan and Guam. (NBC, 7:30 p.m.) He's brought along Connie Stevens, Suzanne Charney, Miss World Eva Reubar-Staier, the Golddiggers, Romy Schneider (in Germany only), comic jugglers the Pieros, and Teresa Graves. Following Bob, Dean Martin takes his turn (9:00 p.m., NBC), with Sammy Davis Jr., Andy Griffith, Paul Lynde, and comic-singer Glenn Ash. Meantime, over at ABC, Tom Jones is the man at 8:00 p.m., with George Gobel, Shani Wallis, Spanish singer Rafael, and the Rascals.

Finally, Friday rounds out the week with the final episode of Jimmy Durante Presents the Lennon Sisters, and their guests Ed Ames, David Frye, and Ferrante and Teicher. Jimmy and the Lennons sing "Try to Remember," and I wonder if that's the epitaph on their show?

◊ ◊ ◊

Buried in The Doan Report this week is a very interesting quote, another of those that convinces us there's nothing new under the sun. The debate is whether or not network commentary should be labeled as "editorial opinion." It's an issue that's been raised by Vice President Agnew, who cites unlabeled commentaries as evidence of a liberal network bias. One major station-ownership group, Storer Broadcasting, is threating to put their own superimpositions on screen, even if NBC and CBS refuse to do so. (ABC is currently the only network to clearly label commentary as such.)

Richard S. Salant, president of CBS News, is uncomfortable with the whole thing. "What a can of worms that opens up!" he says of the Storer threat. "The trouble these days is, everything somebody agrees with is fact, and anything they don't agree with is opinion. I wish I knew how they're going to define what is 'editorial'." Now, substitute "news" and "fake news" for "fact" and "opinion", and try that one on for size. With the proliferation of the internet and social media, I'd argue that things are worse today than they were in Salant's time - but it hardly began with Trump and Clinton.

◊ ◊ ◊

Finally, names.

There are plenty of them this week. On Sunday, ABC's movie is The House on Green Apple Road, which was the pilot for the Dan August series. Burt Reynolds plays police lieutenant Dan August when the series debuts in September 1970, but in this movie the role is played by Christopher George. The guest cast is Janet Leigh, Julie Harris, Tim O'Connor, Walter Pidgeon, Barry Sullivan, Keenan Wynn, Mark Richman, William Windom, Joanne Linville, Burr DeBenning, and Lynda Day. (She and Christopher George would be married in May 1970.)

The Friday night movie on CBS is Robin and the 7 Hoods, which has if anything an even better cast: Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Bing Crosby, Edward G. Robinson, Peter Falk, Barbara Rush, VIctor Buono, Hank Henry, and Allan Jenkins. It makes the rest of the night - Lee Meriwether, Yvonne DeCarlo, and cameos by Rudy Vallee, Edward Everett Horton, and Estelle Winwood on The Name of the Game (NBC, 7:30 p.m.), Bill Mumy, Harold Gould, and Larry Linville on Here Come the Brides (ABC, 8:00 p.m.) and Don Rickles on a rerun of Run For Your Life (WTCN, 8:30 p.m.) look shallow by comparison.

And then there's this ad touting Rosemary Prinz's debut on ABC's All My Children. The ad runs every day this week, giving you an idea of what a big deal this is. Prinz was famous for playing Penny Hughes on As the World Turns from 1956-68. She and her on-screen husband Jeff Baker were, according to the always-reliable Wikipedia, daytime television's first supercouple, although I might have suggested Mike and Sara Karr from The Edge of Night, but I digress.

Prinz was part of All My Children for six months, during which her name ran above the title, and she was the only cast member to have her picture in the opening credits. It was the first month for All My Children - not a bad way to make a splash, hmm? TV  

What's on TV? Wednesday, January 14, 1970

$
0
0
Back in the day, when schedules had room for the odd 10- or 15-minute program (usually around lunchtime or in the afternoon), you might well have run across Lucille Rivers. She wrote for Better Homes and Gardens and McCall, lectured around the country, appeared regularly on Arlene Francis' show Home, and eventually got her own program, Fashions in Sewing.


That ad is from Los Angeles, but it didn't matter where you lived - you probably had the chance to see Fashions in Sewing. You've seen the show in the TV listings throughout the '60s and into the  70s; in the listings below, you'll find her show in both the Duluth and Minneapolis-St. Paul markets.




2 KTCA (NET)

MORNING

     8:30
CLASSROOM – Education  -C-
Classroom runs until 2:45 P.M.

AFTERNOON

     2:45
FAMILIES ON THE GROW  -C-

     3:00
COMMUNICATION SKILLS

     3:30
TEACHING SPANISH – Education

     4:00
PARIS CALLING  -C-

     4:15
FRIENDLY GIANT – Children

     4:30
SESAME STREET  -C-
Guests: Pete Seeger, James Earl Jones

     5:30
MISTEROGERS – Children  -C-

EVENING


     6:00
IRISH DIARY

     6:30
SUPERVISORY PRACTICE

     7:00
NUCLEAR POWER AND THE PUBLIC

     8:00
LAW NIGHT  -C-

     8:30
PREVIEW: THE 70’s

     9:00
ECOLOGY: THE FINAL CRISIS

     9:45
ECOLOGY NEWS

   10:00
NET FESTIVAL  -C-



3 KDAL (DULUTH) (CBS)

MORNING


     6:55
FIVE MINUTES TO LIVE BY  -C-

     7:00
NEWS – Benti  -C-

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO  -C-

     9:00
LUCILLE BALL – Comedy  -C-

     9:30
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES – Comedy

   10:00
ANDY GRIFFITH - Comedy  -C-

   10:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial  -C-

   11:00
WHERE THE HEART IS – Serial  -C-

   11:25
NEWS – Edwards  -C-
         
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
TOWN AND COUNTRY  -C-

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial  -C-

     1:00
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING  -C-

     1:30
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial  -C-

     2:00
SECRET STORM – Serial  -C-

     2:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial  -C-

     3:00
GOMER PYLE, USMC – Comedy  -C-

     3:30
MIKE DOUGLAS – Variety  -C-
Co-host: Julie Budd. Guests: John Hartford, Troy Donahue

     4:50
FASHIONS IN SEWING  -C-

     5:00
FLINTSTONES – Children  -C-

     5:30
NEWS – Walter Cronkite  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
HEE HAW  -C-
Guests: Lynn Anderson, Hank Thompson, Buddy Allen

     7:30
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES – Comedy  -C-

     8:00
MEDICAL CENTER – Drama  -C-

     9:00
HAWAII FIVE-O – Crime Drama  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
MERV GRIFFIN  -C-
Guest: John Sebastian

   12:00
PERRY MASON – Drama



4 WCCO (CBS)

MORNING

     6:00
SUNRISE SEMESTER  -C-

     6:30
SIEGFRIED – Children  -C-

     7:00
CLANCY AND CARMEN  -C-

     7:30
CLANCY AND WILLIE  -C-

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO  -C-

     9:00
GAME GAME  -C-
Celebrities: Nancy Kulp, Scoey Mitchell, Donna Jean Young

     9:30
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES – Comedy

   10:00
ANDY GRIFFITH - Comedy  -C-

   10:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial  -C-

   11:00
WHERE THE HEART IS – Serial  -C-

   11:25
LIVE TODAY – Religion  -C-
         
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS C

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial  -C-

     1:00
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING  -C-

     1:30
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial  -C-

     2:00
SECRET STORM – Serial  -C-

     2:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial  -C-

     3:00
GOMER PYLE, USMC – Comedy  -C-

     3:30
LUCILLE BALL – Comedy  -C-

     4:00
MIKE DOUGLAS – Variety  -C-
Co-host: Julie Budd. Guests: John Hartford, Troy Donahue

     5:30
NEWS – Walter Cronkite  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
HEE HAW  -C-
Guests: Lynn Anderson, Hank Thompson, Buddy Allen

     7:30
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES – Comedy  -C-

     8:00
MEDICAL CENTER – Drama  -C-

     9:00
HAWAII FIVE-O – Crime Drama  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:45
MERV GRIFFIN  -C-
Guest: John Sebastian

   12:15
NEWS  -C-

   12:25
MOVIE – Musical  -C-
“The ‘I Don’t Care’ Girl” (1953)



5 KSTP (NBC)

MORNING


     6:30
MINNESOTA TODAY  -C-

     7:00
TODAY  -C-

     9:00
IT TAKES TWO – Game  -C-
Celebrities: Amanda Blake, Tim O’Connor and spouses; Sandy Baron and date

     9:25
NEWS  -C-

     9:30
CONCENTRATION – Game  -C-

   10:00
SALE OF THE CENTURY – Game  -C-

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES – Game  -C-
Guests: Jim Backus, Nanette Fabray, Joyce Haber, Harvey Korman, Paul Lynde, Lou Rawls

   11:00
JEOPARDY  -C-
         
   11:30
WHO, WHAT OR WHERE – Game  -C-

   11:55
NEWS – Kalber  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
DIAL 5 – Variety  -C-

     1:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial  -C-

     1:30
DOCTORS  -C-

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial  -C-

     2:30
BRIGHT PROMISE – Serial  -C-

     3:00
NAME DROPPERS – Game  -C-
Guests: Joan Rivers, William Shatner, Alan Sues

     3:30
MOVIE – Comedy
“Heaven Can Wait” (1943)

     5:30
NEWS – Chet Huntley, David Brinkley  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
PILOT FILM   -C-
Special: “The Shameful Secrets of Hastings Corner”

     7:00
GENE KELLY   -C- 
Special: Guests: Barbara Feldon, Ruth Buzzi, Kay Medford, Barbara Heller, Chanin Hale, Diane Davis, Folles Bergere

     8:00
ROWAN AND MARTIN – Comedy  -C-
Special: Guests: Carol Burnett, Tom and Dick Smothers, Sammy Davis Jr. 

     9:00
THEN CAME BRONSON – Drama  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON  -C-
Guest: Willie Mays

   12:00
SKI SCENE – Morris  -C-



6 WDSM (DULUTH) (NBC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY  -C-

     9:00
IT TAKES TWO – Game  -C-
Celebrities: Amanda Blake, Tim O’Connor and spouses; Sandy Baron and date

     9:25
NEWS  -C-

     9:30
CONCENTRATION – Game  -C-

   10:00
SALE OF THE CENTURY – Game  -C-

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES – Game  -C-
Guests: Jim Backus, Nanette Fabray, Joyce Haber, Harvey Korman, Paul Lynde, Lou Rawls

   11:00
JEOPARDY  -C-
         
   11:30
WHO, WHAT OR WHERE – Game  -C-

   11:55
NEWS – Kalber  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS  -C-

   12:30
LIFE WITH LINKLETTER – Interview  -C-
Guest: Marc Copage

     1:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial  -C-

     1:30
DOCTORS  -C-

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial  -C-

     2:30
BRIGHT PROMISE – Serial  -C-

     3:00
NAME DROPPERS – Game  -C-
Guests: Joan Rivers, William Shatner, Alan Sues

     3:30
GALLOPING GOURMET – Kerr  -C-

     4:00
MR. TOOT – Children  -C-

     5:00
NEWS  -C-

     5:30
NEWS – Chet Huntley, David Brinkley  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS – Huntley/Brinkley  -C-

     6:30
PILOT FILM  -C-
Special: “The Shameful Secrets of Hastings Corner”

     7:00
GENE KELLY  -C-
Special: Guests: Barbara Feldon, Ruth Buzzi, Kay Medford, Barbara Heller, Chanin Hale, Diane Davis, Folles Bergere

     8:00
ROWAN AND MARTIN – Comedy  -C-
Special: Guests: Carol Burnett, Tom and Dick Smothers, Sammy Davis Jr.

     9:00
THEN CAME BRONSON – Drama  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON  -C-
Guest: Willie Mays



6 KAAL (AUSTIN) (ABC)

MORNING

     9:00
QUICK DRAW McGRAW  -C-

     9:30
ROMPER ROOM  -C-

     9:55
MARKETS

   10:00
MIKE DOUGLAS – Variety  -C-
Guests: Yves Montand, Ozzie and Harriet Nelson, Frank Hubbel and the Stompers

   11:00
BEWITCHED – Comedy  -C-
         
   11:30
THAT GIRL – Comedy  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
ALL MY CHILDREN  -C-

   12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL  -C-

     1:00
NEWLYWED GAME  -C-

     1:30
DATING GAME  -C-

     2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL  -C-

     2:30
ONE LIFE TO LIVE  -C-

     3:00
DARK SHADOWS  -C-

     3:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Racing Blood” (1954)

     5:00
NEWS – Reynolds/Smith  -C-

     5:30
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
FLYING NUN  -C-

     7:00
EDDIE’S FATHER  -C-

     7:30
ROOM 222 – Comedy  -C-

     8:00
MOVIE – Drama
“An Affair to Remember” (1957)

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
DICK CAVETT  -C-
Guests: John Lahr, F. Lee Bailey, Sacha Distel



7 KCMT (ALEXANDRIA) (NBC, ABC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY  -C-

     9:00
IT TAKES TWO – Game  -C-
Celebrities: Amanda Blake, Tim O’Connor and spouses; Sandy Baron and date

     9:25
NEWS  -C-

     9:30
CONCENTRATION – Game  -C-

   10:00
SALE OF THE CENTURY – Game  -C-

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES – Game  -C-
Guests: Jim Backus, Nanette Fabray, Joyce Haber, Harvey Korman, Paul Lynde, Lou Rawls

   11:00
JEOPARDY  -C-
         
   11:30
WHO, WHAT OR WHERE – Game  -C-

   11:55
NEWS – Kalber  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
PAUL HARVEY  -C-

   12:05
NEWS, WEATHER  -C-

   12:20
TRADING POST  -C-

   12:30
LIFE WITH LINKLETTER – Interview  -C-
Guest: Marc Copage

     1:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial  -C-

     1:30
DOCTORS  -C-

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial  -C-

     2:30
BRIGHT PROMISE – Serial  -C-

     3:00
NAME DROPPERS – Game  -C-
Guests: Joan Rivers, William Shatner, Alan Sues

     3:30
WELCOME INN – Variety  -C-

     4:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES  -C-

     4:30
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

     5:15
NEWS  -C-

     5:25
PAUL HARVEY  -C-

     5:30
NEWS – Chet Huntley, David Brinkley  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
PILOT FILM  -C-
Special: “The Shameful Secrets of Hastings Corner”

     7:00
GENE KELLY  -C-
Special: Guests: Barbara Feldon, Ruth Buzzi, Kay Medford, Barbara Heller, Chanin Hale, Diane Davis, Folles Bergere

     8:00
ROWAN AND MARTIN – Comedy  -C-
Special: Guests: Carol Burnett, Tom and Dick Smothers, Sammy Davis Jr.

     9:00
THEN CAME BRONSON – Drama  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON  -C-
Guest: Willie Mays

  

9 KMSP (ABC)

MORNING

     7:30
NEWS – Jerry Smith  -C-

     8:00
FARMER’S DAUGHTER  -C-

     8:30
GRANDPA KEN – Children  -C-

     9:00
ROMPER ROOM  -C-

     9:30
STEVE ALLEN – Variety  -C-
Guests: Bob Crane, Bill Daily, Arthur Connely, Ana Marie Alba

   11:00
BEWITCHED – Comedy  -C-
         
   11:30
THAT GIRL – Comedy  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
ALL MY CHILDREN  -C-

   12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL  -C-

     1:00
NEWLYWED GAME  -C-

     1:30
DATING GAME  -C-

     2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL  -C-

     2:30
ONE LIFE TO LIVE  -C-

     3:00
DARK SHADOWS  -C-

     3:30
PEYTON PLACE – Serial

     4:00
LOST IN SPACE – Adventure

     5:00
NEWS – Reynolds/Smith  -C-

     5:30
TO TELL THE TRUTH – Game  -C-
Panel: Orson Bean, Kitty Carlisle, Peggy Cass, Bill Cullen

EVENING

     6:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES  -C-

     6:30
FLYING NUN  -C-

     7:00
EDDIE’S FATHER  -C-

     7:30
ROOM 222 – Comedy  -C-

     8:00
MOVIE – Adventure  -C-
“Flight to Tangier” (1953)

     9:45
NEWS  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
DICK CAVETT  -C-
Guests: John Lahr, F. Lee Bailey, Sacha Distel

   12:00
MOVIE – Western
“Ride, Vaquero!” Part 1 (1953)



10 KROC (ROCHESTER) (NBC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY  -C-

     9:00
IT TAKES TWO – Game  -C-
Celebrities: Amanda Blake, Tim O’Connor and spouses; Sandy Baron and date

     9:25
NEWS  -C-

     9:30
CONCENTRATION – Game  -C-

   10:00
SALE OF THE CENTURY – Game  -C-

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES – Game  -C-
Guests: Jim Backus, Nanette Fabray, Joyce Haber, Harvey Korman, Paul Lynde, Lou Rawls

   11:00
JEOPARDY  -C-
         
   11:30
WHO, WHAT OR WHERE – Game  -C-

   11:55
NEWS – Kalber  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS  -C-

   12:20
MEMOS FROM MARY  -C-

   12:30
LIFE WITH LINKLETTER – Interview  -C-
Guest: Marc Copage

     1:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial  -C-

     1:30
DOCTORS  -C-

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial  -C-

     2:30
BRIGHT PROMISE – Serial  -C-

     3:00
NAME DROPPERS – Game  -C-
Guests: Joan Rivers, William Shatner, Alan Sues

     3:30
ROCKY AND HIS FRIENDS

     4:30
PERRY MASON – Mystery

     5:30
NEWS – Chet Huntley, David Brinkley  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
PILOT FILM  -C-
Special: “The Shameful Secrets of Hastings Corner”

     7:00
GENE KELLY  -C-
Special: Guests: Barbara Feldon, Ruth Buzzi, Kay Medford, Barbara Heller, Chanin Hale, Diane Davis, Folles Bergere

     8:00
ROWAN AND MARTIN – Comedy  -C-
Special: Guests: Carol Burnett, Tom and Dick Smothers, Sammy Davis Jr.

     9:00
THEN CAME BRONSON – Drama  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON  -C-
Guest: Willie Mays



10 WDIO (DULUTH) (ABC)

MORNING

     8:30
CARTOON CARNIVAL  -C-

     9:00
ROMPER ROOM  -C-

     9:30
MOVIE – Drama  -C-
“All That Heaven Allows” (1955)

   11:00
BEWITCHED – Comedy  -C-
         
   11:30
THAT GIRL – Comedy  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
ALL MY CHILDREN  -C-

   12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL  -C-

     1:00
NEWLYWED GAME  -C-

     1:30
DATING GAME  -C-

     2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL  -C-

     2:30
ONE LIFE TO LIVE  -C-

     3:00
DARK SHADOWS  -C-

     3:30
F TROOP – Comedy

     4:00
MOVIE – Comedy
“Free for All” (1949)

     5:00
GILLIGAN’S ISLAND – Comedy

     5:30
NEWS – Reynolds/Smith  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
FLYING NUN  -C-

     7:00
EDDIE’S FATHER  -C-

     7:30
ROOM 222 – Comedy  -C-

     8:00
MOVIE – Adventure  -C-
“Flight to Tangier” (1953)

     9:45
FILM

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:35
MOVIE – Comedy
“My Favorite Brunette” (1947)



11 WTCN (IND.)

MORNING


     6:30
NEWS  -C-

     7:00
CASEY AND ROUNDHOUSE  -C-

     8:00
DAVE LEE – Children  -C-

     8:30
HOBO KELLY  -C-

     9:00
NEWS  -C-

     9:30
JACK LA LANNE – Exercise  -C-

   10:00
DEBBIE DRAKE – Exercise  -C-

   10:30
JOAN RIVERS  -C-

   11:00
GIRL TALK – Discussion  -C-
Guest: Coral Browne
         
   11:30
GALLOPING GOURMET – Kerr  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
LUNCH WITH CASEY  -C-

     1:00
MOVIE – Comedy  -C-
“Belles on Their Toes” (1952)

     2:50
FASHIONS IN SEWING  -C-

     3:00
HE SAID! SHE SAID! – Game  -C-
Guests: Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson, Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara, Ozzie and Harriet Nelson

     3:30
BEAT THE CLOCK – Game  -C-
Guest: Hugh O’Brian

     4:00
BATMAN – Adventure  -C-

     4:30
FLINTSTONES – Children  -C-

     5:30
STAR TREK – Adventure

EVENING

     6:30
PERRY MASON – Drama

     7:30
BIG VALLEY – Western  -C-

     8:30
RUN FOR YOUR LIFE – Drama  -C-

     9:30
NEWS  -C-

   10:00
FELONY SQUAD  -C-

   10:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Darby’s Rangers” (1958)

   12:30
NEWS  -C-




12 KEYC (MANKATO) (CBS)

MORNING

     7:00
NEWS – Benti  -C-

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO  -C-

     9:00
JACK LA LANNE  -C-

     9:30
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES – Comedy

   10:00
ANDY GRIFFITH - Comedy  -C-

   10:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial  -C-

   11:00
WHERE THE HEART IS – Serial  -C-

   11:25
NEWS – Edwards  -C-
         
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial  -C-

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS  -C-

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial  -C-

     1:00
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING  -C-

     1:30
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial  -C-

     2:00
SECRET STORM – Serial  -C-

     2:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial  -C-

     3:00
GOMER PYLE, USMC – Comedy  -C-

     3:30
AFTERNOON SHOW – Pasek  -C-

     4:00
BART’S CLUBHOUSE  -C-

     4:45
LUCILLE BALL – Comedy  -C-

     5:00
OUTLOOK  -C-

     5:30
NEWS – Walter Cronkite  -C-

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C-

     6:30
HEE HAW  -C-
Guests: Lynn Anderson, Hank Thompson, Buddy Allen

     7:30
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES – Comedy  -C-

     8:00
MEDICAL CENTER – Drama  -C-

     9:00
HAWAII FIVE-O – Crime Drama  -C-

   10:00
NEWS  -C-

   10:30
MERV GRIFFIN  -C-
Guest: John Sebastian

Keith Jackson, R.I.P.

$
0
0
H e was one of the very last of the Big Game Announcers, that genre I occasionally talk about (usually in obituaries, unfortunately). I know, many people might include Al Michaels, but to tell the truth I've never warmed to him; he's competent enough, probably more than competent, but the key word is "warmth," and I never felt it coming from him. Others might call Joe Buck a Big Game Announcer, but while I think he's better than his critics say, I don't include him in the list, either. Certainly Mike Emrick and Martin Tyler, probably Brent Musburger, perhaps Marv Albert, but after that the pickings are, as they say, slim.

Besides, this isn't about them. It's about Keith Jackson, who died last Friday after 89 (hopefully) good years, many of them spent creating memories for the millions of people who listened to him on baseball games, football games, basketball games, auto racing, golf, even boxing matches. It seemed as if he worked with everyone during his time on television; he called the first season of Monday Night Football and if anyone could have controlled Dandy Don and Cosell, it would have been him. ABC didn't want that, though - they were looking for a show. He also worked with Cosell on Monday Night Baseball, and though I really liked him on that, there's no doubt his home was with college football.

It was college football in which his greatness was made manifest. He sounded as if he was made for college football, with that down-home delivery and enthusiasm that nonetheless never went over the top. It's also true, though, that college football sounds as if were made for him; fumble, touchdown, Rodney Allison of Texas Tech - for other announcers those might simply have been functional words, but for Keith Jackson they became the paint and the brushes that artists use to craft their work on the electronic canvas.

For all of the palpable excitement in Jackson's voice, the love of the game, the Whoa Nellies and Fum-BLEs and Hold the Phonnnnnes for which he became so famous, he always remembered the golden rule of the golden age of sportscasters - you are never bigger than the event you cover. That shone most clearly in his decision to retire in 2006, despite ABC wanting him to continue, because he was disturbed over the increasing number of mistakes he was making during broadcasts. It's easy to see why he'd do that, even though Jackson at 85% was probably better than most other announcers at 110%.

He wasn't out to score points with a crack at the expense of someone down there on the field, just as he wasn't acting as if he were trying to win an audition during open mic night at the Improv. He called a game for the benefit of the viewers, and it was to them that he spoke, enveloping them all in his color and humor. He was authoritative and insightful, with a grace and elegance that merged smoothly with his passion to produce a perfect background to the unforgettable events he covered.

Yep, there weren't many like Keith Jackson, but then that's how it is with all the greats. He was a one-of-a-kind, and we were the beneficiaries.  TV  

Around the dial

$
0
0
F Troop Fridays are always a great way to wind down the week, and last Friday Hal at The Horn Section offers up "She's Only a Build in a Girdled Cage," a wonderful title (which not so many people would get today), starring Patrice Wymore as said build in said girdle. Alas, the story appears not to be quite as good as the title...

At The Twilight Zone Vortex, Jordan reviews "Cavender is Coming," the 1962 episode featuring Carol Burnett that demonstrates once again that Rod Serling, for all his talents, was not good a comedic writing; this episode, like his other comic efforts, falls flat. Jesse White co-stars as her guardian angel; perhaps it would have been better if she'd needed her Maytag repaired.

Ooh, "Incense for the Damned" - isn't that a great title for a movie? Add in Patrick Macnee, Edward Woodward, Peter Cushing, and Patrick Mower, and that makes it even better, don't you think? Read about this movieat Cult TV Blog, where John says that "if you're not a horror fan, but instead a lover of the TV of the sixties and seventies, this show may be right up your street."

The Hitchcock Project continues at bare-bones e-zine, with Jack's focus this week being the second season episode "The West Warlock Time Capsule," Marion Cockrell's droll story of what happens when an unwanted relative stays too long. . .

January 14 was the 66th anniversary of the first Today show, and at Garroway at Large, Jodie presents the product of years of research: a reconstruction of exactly what happened on that first show. Fascinating details!

Television's New Frontier: the 1960's turns its focus on the 1960 season of Dale Robertson's Western series Tales of Wells Fargo. Meanwhile, Television Obscurities reminds us of why some shows become obscure, with this rundown of the Nielsen Bottom Ten for January 15-21, 1973.

And coming up next month, The Classic TV Blog Association presents The Classic TV Villain Blogathon. Here's a preview of what to expect:


That's all next month, but in the meantime we've still got tomorrow, and you're welcome back then for a look at another TV Guide.  TV  

This week in TV Guide: January 17, 1959

$
0
0
We start off the week with Bob Johnson's very amusing article on James Garner and Jack Kelley, the "Maverick Brothers" of ABC's Sunday night series.

The two stars maintain separate lives; Johnson suggests that "the boys don't like to discuss each other," although I'm not sure that there's any particular animosity between them. Certainly Garner, who was the first Maverick, is also first among equals; his episodes have higher ratings, and his appearances outnumber Kelly's through the course of the season (of the 20 episodes so far this season, nine have starred Garner, six for Kelly, and five have featured both of them.

It's not hard to dissect Garner's popularity; his easy-going manner, the implicit humor he brings to the role, are all products of his acting talent - or, as he puts it, his lack of same. He's no actor, he insists, but a personality; in fact, he can't act. "I'll learn if I have to, but I haven't had to yet. I'm playing me. Bret Maveri k is lazy. I'm lazy. I like to get the bit over with at the studio and get out of there. I like being lazy." He adds that he's never taken a script home to study, "and I don't plan to."

You might be familiar with the story behind Maverick, of how the first few episodes were played straight - stock Westerns - until bored scriptwriter Marion Hargroves inserted a stage direction that changed the series forever. "Maverick," he wrote, "looks at him with his beady little eyes." Garner loved it. "You can't say that about a star," Garner says the research department told Hargroves. Nonsense, replied Hargroves; he'd met Garner, and he does have beady little eyes.

Soon the series had made the transformation to a comedy, and the Maverick boys "have been subjected to more house gags, in stage directions by Hargrove and other writers, than any two other actors living." For example, when Kelly leaves the saloon, he doesn't just leave. "He sees his horse. He smiles. His horse sees him and just nods." Garner is described  as "ahr hero" or "an itinerant clergyman," and when he considers a problem, "we can see his flabby little mind make a small connection." There's even a situation where "His face shows resentment, frustration, anxiety an danything else the director thinks he can get out of him." These directions don't explicitly show up on screen, of course, but it influences the way Garner and Kelly play their roles, and more important it indicates the spirit that has infected the entire show.

Interestingly, Kelly thinks the show can go three more seasons after this one, but "Garner has other ideas." As to what those ideas are, Johnson doesn't really say; instead, he captures Garner talking about the recent satire the show did on Gunsmoke. ("It's a classic.") Garner's other ideas, however, don't include three more seasons of Maverick; he quits the series in 1960 in a dispute with Warner Brothers, a case he wins in court. He's replaced by, at various times, Roger Moore and Robert Colbert; ultimately, in the fifth and final season (as Jack Kelly predicted), reruns of old Garner stories alternate with Kelly's new shows. Maverick ends its run with a secure place in TV history, and a warm spot in viewers' hearts.

◊ ◊ ◊

Before we get to this week's programs, I'd like to take a minute to mention the article on Bob Keeshen, aka Captain Kangaroo, talking about the philosophy behind his series. "One important lesson I try to teach my own kids is that gentleness in a person doesn't necessarily indicate weakness; and that good manners and thoughtfullness are necessary to a happy life."

He's an ambassador for UNICEF, and creator of the "Trick or Treat" campaign that encouraged kids to collect coins, rather than Halloween candy, for the UN organization. Its success had led him to travel to other countries, including a stop at the Brussels World's Fair, encouraging similar ideas. He has a long-term goal of creating a news show for children, explaining the issues of the day in a way that they can understand. (A forerunner of In the News, perhaps?) Says the good Captain, "Children are ain important part of the world - today's world. We owe them an honest explanation of what's happening to it."

It's also worth a moment to mention this week's starlet, Nancy Malone, the 23-year old who started out on Broadway ("Time Out for Ginger"), has guested in numerous television drama anthologies, and is currently appearing in the CBS sudser The Brighter Day, along with her dog, Miss Madrigal. Next year she'll take on her best-known role, that of Detective Adam Flint's girlfriend Libby, in Naked City, and later she'll appear in The Long Hot Summer.

After that she'll work her way up the entertainment ladder, moving into producing and directing (where she wins an Emmy and is nominated for two others), and does a stint as vice-president of television at 20th Century Fox. An example of a starlet who makes good.

◊ ◊ ◊

One of Ed Sullivan's first great on-air challenges came from Steve Allen, who left Tonight to take over an NBC variety show which, at the beginning, aired opposite Ed. It didn't run as long as Ed's, of course, but then Allen said his goal was never to conquer Ed, but to coexist with him, which he did for three seasons. Let's see who gets the best of the contest this week.

Sullivan: Ed's guests are actress Celeste Holm; French singer Edith Piaf; musical-comedy star Pat Suzuki; operatic soprano Antonietta Stella; musical-comedy writers Betty Comden and Adolph Green, currently appearing on Broadway in a two-man show; comedian Alan Drake; and juggler Francis Brunn.

Allen: Steve's guests are actress Esther Williams and singers Vic Damone and Jennie Smith. A large part of tonight's show takes place in and around a swimming pool located in the studio. Steve dons a bathing suit to join Miss Williams in an aquatic comedy routine.

As far as stars go, it's hard to top Celeste Holm, Edith Piaf, and Comden and Green. As far as entertainment, Steve Allen in a bathing suit with Esther Williams, cavorting in a studio swimming pool - that says it all. It depends on what turns you on, which is why this week is a push.

◊ ◊ ◊

On a very quiet Saturday, I'll give the nod to Perry Como's show (7:00 p.m., NBC). Perry's guest stars are Nat King Cole, the McGuire Sisters, and Dick Van Dyke. At 11:30 p.m., KDAL in Duluth has the movie Michael Shayne, Private Detective, starring Lloyd Nolan. It's actually a pretty good movie if you forget both the novels by Brett Halliday and the series starring Richard Denning. Opposite that, on WTCN, is I Led Three Lives, and this week "Herb Philbrick becomes embroiled in a Communist plot to infiltrate a labor union." What a shock.

Sunday is a day of substance; Meet the Press expands to an hour on Sunday afternoon (5:00 p.m., NBC) for an appearance by Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, next to Khruschev the most powerful man in the Soviet Union. Mikoyan was a survivor if nothing else, serving Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev, and was one of the rare top Soviet officals to retire rather than meet a violent death at the hands of a rival; although he was forced out by Brezhnev, he died of natural causes in 1978. In the great panoply of Communist figures, Mikoyan was thought to be friendlier to the United States than most. He's being interviewed here on the occasion of his second trip to America.

Following Meet the Press, Nina Foch stars in a special presentation of Agatha Christie's famed mystery Ten Little Indians. (6:00 p.m., NBC) In today's politically correct times, it would probably be known by its alternate title, "And Then There Were None." Fine with me; the original title of the story is even more problematic.

At 8:00 p.m., it's G.E. Theater on CBS, starring Tony Curtis. In 1960, after doing "The Young Juggler" for Startime, Curtis will swear off television for the world of movies. That's a year away, though, and so we can apreciate him this Sunday on G.E. Theater's story of David and Goliath, "The Stone." (8:00 p.m., CBS)* If you care to check it out, here it is:


*It probably only amuses me that when Tony Curtis appeared on The Flintstones, his character was named "Stoney" Curtis. 


Is this the funniest hour on television? Is it even the funniest hour on Monday? I wouldn't know about that, not being a particular fan of Danny Thomas, but he does have Tennessee Ernie Ford, which counts for something. Meanwhile, Ann Sothern resurrects the old question facing women of the time: do you choose a career, or marriage? To find out, though, you'll have to pass up Peter Gunn on NBC and The Voice of Firestone on ABC. Meanwhile, Patti Page's guests on her 9:00 p.m. ABC show are singer Julius LaRosa and ventriloquist Shari Lewis. It's not known whether or not Lamb Chop is included.

If one night of Steve Allen is good, two nights must be better, right? Tuesday is the second night, and Love That Bob* is the show (8:30 p.m., NBC). Tonight, Bob tries to get rid of his girlfriend Betty (Joyce Jameson) by telling her that he can get her a job on Steve's show. Even more significant than a second night of Steve, though, is the first night of Alcoa Presents (9:00 p.m., ABC), which you'll probably recognize by its subtitle: One Step Beyond. The much-loved cult series will stick around for three seasons.

*Fun fact: According to the always-reliable Wikipedia, Love That Bob was the first series to debut as a midseason replacement. There's no citation to prove it, though. 

Wednesday night presents a stark reminder of what 1959 is like. Edward R. Murrow narrates "The Lost Class of '59" (7:00 p.m., CBS), a report on six high schools in Norfolk, Virginia, that have closed rather that submit to a federal court order to integrate. Murrow interviews local and state officials, as well as four local students discussing the situation. On a less dramatic note, The Lawrence Welk Show airs on ABC at 6:30 p.m. There's a note in the listings that viewers watching the show on WTCN, the ABC affiliate in Minneapolis-St. Paul, "can hear this program in stereophonic sound by also tuning to radio station WTCN*, operating on 1280 kilocycles." Watching TV with stereo sound must have been something in 1959!

*Fun fact: WTCN-TV is now KARE, while WTCN-AM is now WWTC 1280, The Patriot. It's all-talk radio, in case you hadn't figured that out.

On Thursday, Cesar Romero guest stars as "The Gay Caballero" (not to be confused with Guy Caballero) on Zorro (7:00 p.m., ABC). I'll bet he steals the show. At 8:30 p.m., CBS's Playhouse 90 presents "The Velvet Alley," a Rod Serling play about a struggling writer who may have finally gotten his big break when he sells a script to - Playhouse 90. Art Carney makes a rare dramatic appearance as the playwright who has to ask himself whether success is worth selling your soul.

Speaking of show-stealing, Phil Silvers is well-positioned to steal Friday in an expanded one-hour version of his series (8:00 p.m., CBS) which is wonderfully, bizarrely meta. In it, Sydney Chaplin (actor and son of Charlie), playing himself, plans to use Bilko's life story for an Army musical. Bilko travels to Hollywood to meet the actor chosen to play him: Phil Silvers! Diana Dors, also playing herself, guests; later this year, she'll marry an actor who'll do pretty well in an Army sitcom himself - Richard Dawson.

◊ ◊ ◊

As for sports this week, the PGA tour heads to Pebble Beach for the Bing Crosby Pro-Am, the final round of which is carried on ABC. (Sunday, 4:30 p.m.) Then, as now, the stars are part of the attraction, and this year's batch is expected to include Bob Hope, Phil Harris, Desi Arnaz, James Garner, Bob Crosby, Fred MacMurray, Randolph Scott and Dennis O'Keefe. And then there's Der Bingle, of course.

If golf's not for you, you can tune in the NBA Game of the Week on NBC (1:30 p.m.), although it's not shown locally in Minneapolis-St. Paul. It's a key matchup between two of the best teams of the era, the defending champion St. Louis Hawks meet the team they vanquished in the finals last year, the Boston Celtics. As for why this game wasn't on TV in the Twin Cities? Could be that the local team, the Minneapolis Lakers, were playing at the same time and the game was blacked out. (They were playing the Philadelphia Warriors in Minneapolis that day.) You'll here more from the Lakers in the playoffs, as they upset the Hawks in the Western finals before losing to the Celts for the championship.

There's also basketball on Saturday afternoon (3:30 p.m.), although it's on so many different stations I can't tell if it was a network broadcast or a syndicated hookup (I suspect the latter). It's the Big 10 Game of the Week, with the hometown Minnesota Gophers playing the Purdue Boilermakers. However, I vote for hockey, with the NHL Game of the Week on CBS (1:30 p.m.) featuring the New York Rangers and Chicago Black Hawks from Chicago Stadium.

◊ ◊ ◊

Some notes from the TV Teletype:

Bill Lundigan's new series Moon Flight, which is billed as a "new semidocumentary series abou tman's exploration of space," has gone into production. It will emerge with a new name, Men Into Space, when it airs this September on CBS. You can catch reruns of it on Comet if you're so inclined. And speaking of new series, Tennessee Ernie Ford recently guested on Danny Thomas' series. The producer liked the character Ernie played on the show, and thought it was a great idea for a new sitcom - not for Ernie, but for Andy Griffith. They're working on it now, and when it premieres as The Andy Griffith Show in October 1960, it will find a place in television history.

Dwayne Hickman is leaving The Bob Cummings Show at the end of this season for his own series, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, good for four seasons on CBS starting this fall. The detective series Peter Gunn, which debuted last September on NBC, has been picked up for the rest of the year - a ful 39 episodes. And Dave Garroway has postponed his trip to Paris from April until early May - there's a funny ancedote about that trip in my interview with Jodie Peeler.

Finally, a note from the local section that Miss America 1959, Carol Ann Mobley, "is in town to crown the North St. Paul Jaycee Queen," and will be appearing with Arle Haeberle on her WCCO afternoon show Around the Town. I don't see any "Carol Ann Mobley" as Miss America, in 1959 or any other year. There is, however, a Mary Ann Mobley, who happens to be Miss America 1959. I hope the Jaycees that were expecting Carol weren't too disappointed.

What's on TV? Monday, January 19, 1959

$
0
0
Even NBC, the color network, had very few color shows in 1959, though two of the three color broadcasts today are for daytime quiz shows. Says something about priorities, or the power of advertising, or the studios the shows happened to be shot in, or all three. On the other hand, CBS has but one colorcast, Lowell Thomas' special High Adventure, seen at 9:00 p.m. on three of the four CBS affiliates in this issue.

By the way, I don't usually do this, because the Minnesota State Edition has a lot of stations, but some of those stations don't yet exist in 1959. Therefore, you're seeing all the stations in this week's issue. 


 2  KTCA (Educ.)

AFTERNOON


    1:30
SING-A-SONG—2nd Grade

    2:00
LANGUAGE IN ACTION

    2:30
JAPANESE BRUSH PAINTING   DEBUT 

    3:00
TEA AT THREE—Jeanni K.

    3:30
PASING NOTES ON MUSIC   DEBUT 

    4:00
CREATIVE ART—Education

    4:30
SCULPTURE—Education

    5:00
MAGIC DOORWAYS—Education

    5:15
SING HI-SING LO—Music

    5:30
GREAT PLAINS TRILOGY

EVENING


    6:00
ATOMIC PRIMER—Education

    6:30
JUNIOR HIGH ON PARADE

    7:00
MUSIC FOR YOUNG PEOPLE   DEBUT 

    7:30
UN REVIEW—Education

    7:45
INDUSTRY ON PARADE

    8:00
PRIVATE COLLEGE HOUR

    8:30
PRIVATE COLLEGE HOUR

    9:00
AT HOME WITH MUSIC

    9:30
ADVERTISING TODAY—Education

   10:00
GREAT BOOKS—Education

   10:30
CHILDREN GROWING—Education


 3  KDAL (DULUTH) (CBS)

MORNING


    8:00
CAPT. KANGAROO—Kids

    8:45
NEWS—Richard Hottelet

    9:00
FOR LOVE OR MONEY

    9:30
ARTHUR GODFREY

   10:00
I LOVE LUCY

   10:30
TOP DOLLAR

   11:00
LOVE OF LIFE
       
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW—Serial

   11:45
GUIDING LIGHT—Serial

AFTERNOON


   12:00
NEWS—Walter Cronkite

   12:05
TOWN AND COUNTRY—Becker

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS

    1:00
JIMMY DEAN
Guest: Jill Corey

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY
Guest: Ann Richards

    2:00
BIG PAYOFF—Quiz

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY

    3:15
SECRET STORM

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT

    4:00
TV HOUR OF STARS—Drama

    5:00
BANDSTAND—Jim Rassbach

    5:30
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB

    5:45
NEWS—Doug Edwards

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS

    6:30
NAME THAT TUNE

    7:00
TEXAN—Western

    7:30
FATHER KNOWS BEST—Comedy

    8:00
DANNY THOMAS

    8:30
ANN SOTHERN

    9:00
HIGH ADVENTURE   SPECIAL    COLOR 

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
YOUR HIT PARADE—Music
Guests: Larry Blyden, Robert Clary

   11:00
MOVIE—Drama
“Dragonwyck” (1946)


 3  KGLO (Mason City) (CBS)

MORNING


    8:00
CAPT. KANGAROO—Kids

    8:45
NEWS—Richard Hottelet

    9:00
FOR LOVE OR MONEY

    9:30
ARTHUR GODFREY

   10:00
I LOVE LUCY

   10:30
TOP DOLLAR

   11:00
LOVE OF LIFE
       
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW—Serial

   11:45
GUIDING LIGHT—Serial

AFTERNOON


   12:00
NEWS

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS

    1:00
JIMMY DEAN
Guest: Jill Corey

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY
Guest: Ann Richards

    2:00
BIG PAYOFF—Quiz

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY

    3:15
SECRET STORM

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT

    4:00
BOB CAVANAUGH—Variety

    5:00
BART’S CLUBHOUSE—Kids

EVENING


    6:00
FARM REPORTER—Al Helms

    6:05
SPORTS, NEWS, WEATHER

    6:15
NEWS—Doug Edwards

    6:30
NAME THAT TUNE

    7:00
WHIRLYBIRDS—Adventure

    7:30
FATHER KNOWS BEST—Comedy

    8:00
DANNY THOMAS

    8:30
ANN SOTHERN

    9:00
HIGH ADVENTURE   SPECIAL    COLOR 

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
DR. CHRISTIAN—Drama

   11:00
NEWS


 4  WCCO (CBS)

MORNING


    7:00
CARTOONS—Siegfried

    8:00
CAPT. KANGAROO—Kids

    8:45
REUBEN K. YOUNGDAHL

    9:00
FOR LOVE OR MONEY

    9:30
ARTHUR GODFREY

   10:00
I LOVE LUCY

   10:30
TOP DOLLAR

   11:00
LOVE OF LIFE
       
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW—Serial

   11:45
GUIDING LIGHT—Serial

AFTERNOON


   12:00
NEWS

   12:15
TAKE FIVE—Cedric Adams

   12:20
WEATHER—Kraehling

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS

    1:00
JIMMY DEAN
Guest: Jill Corey

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY
Guest: Ann Richards

    2:00
BIG PAYOFF—Quiz

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY

    3:15
SECRET STORM

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT

    4:00
AROUND THE TOWN—Haeberle
Guest: Carol Ann Mobley [sic]

    4:30
COMM. CAPPY—Kids

    5:00
AXEL AND DOG—Clellan Card

    5:30
POPEYE CLUBHOUSE—Kids

    5:45
WEATHER, NEWS, SPORTS

EVENING


    6:15
NEWS—Doug Edwards

    6:30
NAME THAT TUNE

    7:00
TEXAN—Western

    7:30
FATHER KNOWS BEST—Comedy

    8:00
DANNY THOMAS

    8:30
ANN SOTHERN

    9:00
HIGH ADVENTURE   SPECIAL    COLOR 

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
VANGUARD—Drama

   11:00
MOVIE—Comedy
“Dixie Dugan” (1943)


 5  KSTP (NBC)

MORNING


    6:05
DAVID STONE—Variety

    6:30
CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM—Education
“Hysteresis”

    7:00
TODAY—Garroway

    9:00
DOUGH-RE-MI

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

   10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

   10:30
CONCENTRATION

   11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH
       
   11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


   12:00
NEWS

   12:15
TREASURE CHEST—Quiz

    1:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES—Quiz   COLOR 

    1:30
HAGGIS BAGGIS—Quiz   COLOR 

    2:00
YOUNG DR. MALONE

    2:30
FROM THESE ROOTS—Serial

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:30
COUNTY FAIR

    4:00
MY LITTLE MARGIE—Comedy

    4:30
HAWKEYE—Adventure

    5:00
SHERWOOD FOREST—Adventure

    5:45
NEWS—Huntley, Brinkley

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS

    6:20
YOU SHOULD KNOW—Quiz

    6:30
BUCKSKIN—Western

    7:00
RESTLESS GUN—Western

    7:30
WELLS FARGO

    8:00
PETER GUNN

    8:30
GOODYEAR THEATER
“Afternoon of the Beast”

    9:00
ARTHUR MURRAY   COLOR 
Guest: Pat Stanley

    9:30
HIGHWAY PATROL—Police

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
BADGE 714—Jack Webb

   11:00
JACK PAAR—Variety
Guest host: Dick Van Dyke

   12:00
NEWS—Roger Krupp


 6  WSDM (DULUTH) (NBC)

MORNING


    6:30
CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM—Education
“Hysteresis”

    7:00
TODAY—Garroway

    9:00
DOUGH-RE-MI

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

   10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

   10:30
CONCENTRATION

   11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH
       
   11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


   12:00
NEWS

   12:05
MOVIE—Drama
“Dr. Monica” (1934)

    1:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES—Quiz   COLOR 

    1:30
HAGGIS BAGGIS—Quiz   COLOR 

    2:00
YOUNG DR. MALONE

    2:30
FROM THESE ROOTS—Serial

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:30
COUNTY FAIR

    4:00
POPEYE—Cartoons

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS

    6:15
NEWS—Huntley, Brinkley

    6:30
BUCKSKIN—Western

    7:00
RESTLESS GUN—Western

    7:30
WELLS FARGO

    8:00
PETER GUNN

    8:30
GOODYEAR THEATER
“Afternoon of the Beast”

    9:00
ARTHUR MURRAY   COLOR 
Guest: Pat Stanley

    9:30
PATTI PAGE—Variety

   10:00
NEWS

   10:15
SCIENCE FICTION THEATER

   10:45
JACK PAAR—Variety
Guest host: Dick Van Dyke


 6  KMMT (AUSTIN) (ABC)

MORNING


   10:30
HERALD OF TRUTH—Religion

   11:00
HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE—Comedy
       
   11:30
PETER LIND HAYES

AFTERNOON


   12:30
PLAY YOUR HUNCH

    1:00
LIBERACE—Variety

    1:30
NEWS, WEATHER

    1:40
MATINEE WITH MARGE

    2:00
DAY IN COURT—Drama

    2:30
MUSIC BINGO—Quiz

    3:00
BEAT THE CLOCK—Collyer

    3:30
WHO DO YOU TRUST—Quiz

    4:00
AMERICAN BANDSTAND
Guest: Ronnie Dee

    5:30
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS

    6:15
NEWS—Don Goddard

    6:30
WOODY WOODPECKER

    7:00
THIS IS ALICE—Comedy

    7:30
BOLD JOURNEY

    8:00
VOICE OF FIRESTONE
Guests: Paul Whiteman, Mindy Carson, Earl Wild

    8:30
DR. I.Q.—Quiz

    9:00
PATTI PAGE—Variety
Guests: Julius LaRosa, Shari Lewis

    9:30
TARGET—Adolphe Menjou

   10:00
NEWS

   10:15
NEWS—John Daly

   10:30
MOVIE—Drama
“Three Desperate Men” (1950)


 8  WKBT (LaCrosse) (CBS)

MORNING


   10:30
TOP DOLLAR

   11:00
LOVE OF LIFE
       
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW—Serial

   11:45
COUNTRY STYLE, U.S.A. —Music

AFTERNOON


   12:00
NEWS

   12:05
HONEYMOONERS—Gleason

   12:30
TOP PLAYS—Drama
“Mr. Onion”

    1:00
JIMMY DEAN
Guest: Jill Corey

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY
Guest: Ann Richards

    2:00
BIG PAYOFF—Quiz

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY

    3:15
SECRET STORM

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT

    4:00
COUNTERPOINT—Drama

    4:30
FILM FEATURE

    5:00
HAWKEYE—Adventure

    5:30
ADVENTURE TIME—Kids

EVENING


    6:00
FARM DIGEST—Martin

    6:05
SPORTS, NEWS, WEATHER

    6:30
NAME THAT TUNE

    7:00
TEXAN—Western

    7:30
FATHER KNOWS BEST—Comedy

    8:00
DANNY THOMAS

    8:30
ANN SOTHERN

    9:00
ERNIE FORD—Variety
Guest: Lloyd Bridges

    9:30
GROUCHO MARX—Quiz

   10:00
NEWS

   10:20
LAWMAN—Western

   10:50
SAN FRANCISCO BEAT

   11:20
BENGAL LANCERS—Adventure


 9  KMSP (Ind.)

AFTERNOON


    1:55
CHAPEL OF THE AIR

    2:00
MOVIE—Drama
“The Bamboo Blonde” (1946)

    3:30
BINGO—Joe Cooper

    4:30
TV READER’S DIGEST—Drama

    5:00
SUSIE—Comedy

    5:30
OUR MISS BROOKS—Comedy

EVENING


    6:00
LOONEY TUNERS CLUB

    6:30
MEN OF ANNAPOLIS—Drama

    7:00
CAPTURED—Police

    7:30
CONFIDENTIAL FILE—Drama

    8:00
SHERIFF OF COCHISE—Western

    8:30
SAN FRANCISCO BEAT—Police

    9:00
MOVIE—Drama
“Background to Danger” (1943)

   10:30
NEWS—David Lee

   10:45
SPORTS—Tony Parker

   10:50
OPEN HOUSE—Mel Jass

   11:55
NEWS—Joe Cooper



10 KROC (Rochester) (NBC)

MORNING


    6:30
CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM—Education
“Hysteresis”

    7:00
TODAY—Garroway

    9:00
DOUGH-RE-MI

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

   10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

   10:30
CONCENTRATION

   11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH
       
   11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


   12:00
NEWS

   12:15
CHANNEL 10 CALLING

   12:30
CHRISTOPHERS—Religion

    1:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES—Quiz   COLOR 

    1:30
HAGGIS BAGGIS—Quiz   COLOR 

    2:00
YOUNG DR. MALONE

    2:30
FROM THESE ROOTS—Serial

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:30
COUNTY FAIR

    4:00
WHAT’S NEW?—Don Perry

    4:30
TEN FOR SURVIVAL—Education

    5:00
JUNGLE JIM—Adventure

    5:30
MUSIC TIME—Variety

    5:45
LOONEY TUNES—Cartoons

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS

    6:15
NEWS—Huntley, Brinkley

    6:30
SHERLOCK HOLMES—Mystery

    7:00
RESTLESS GUN—Western

    7:30
WELLS FARGO

    8:00
PETER GUNN

    8:30
GOODYEAR THEATER
“Afternoon of the Beast”

    9:00
ARTHUR MURRAY   COLOR 
Guest: Pat Stanley

    9:30
AFRICAN PATROL—Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
JACK PAAR—Variety
Guest host: Dick Van Dyke


11 WTCN (ABC)

MORNING


    9:00
FILM SHORT

    9:20
FARM NEWS—Stuart A. Lindman

    9:30
ROMPER ROOM—Miss Kay

   10:20
MARK STEVENS

   10:25
AMOS ‘N’ ANDY—Comedy

   10:55
STAR AND THE STORY—Drama

   11:25
MARK STEVENS
       
   11:30
PETER LIND HAYES

AFTERNOON


   12:30
PLAY YOUR HUNCH

    1:00
LIBERACE—Variety

    1:30
MARK STEVENS

    1:35
BURNS AND ALLEN—Comedy

    2:00
DAY IN COURT—Drama

    2:30
MUSIC BINGO—Quiz

    3:00
BEAT THE CLOCK—Collyer

    3:30
WHO DO YOU TRUST—Quiz

    4:00
AMERICAN BANDSTAND
Guest: Ronnie Dee

    5:30
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS

    6:30
FILM FEATURE

    7:00
JEFF’S COLLIE—Drama

    7:30
BOLD JOURNEY

    8:00
VOICE OF FIRESTONE
Guests: Paul Whiteman, Mindy Carson, Earl Wild

    8:30
DR. I.Q.—Quiz

    9:00
PATTI PAGE—Variety
Guests: Julius LaRosa, Shari Lewis

    9:30
NEWS—Chick McCuen

    9:45
MOVIE—Drama
“Little Caesar” (1930)

   11:30
I LED THREE LIVES—Carlson


13 WEAU (Eau Claire) (NBC)

MORNING


    6:30
CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM—Education
“Hysteresis”

    7:00
TODAY—Garroway

    9:00
DOUGH-RE-MI

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

   10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

   10:30
CONCENTRATION

   11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH
       
   11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


   12:00
EXTENSION DIVISION

   12:15
FILM FEATURE

   12:45
MARKETS, NEWS

    1:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES—Quiz   COLOR 

    1:30
HAGGIS BAGGIS—Quiz   COLOR 

    2:00
YOUNG DR. MALONE

    2:30
FROM THESE ROOTS—Serial

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:30
COUNTY FAIR

    4:00
CARTOONS—Kids

    4:30
MOVIE—Western
“Eyes of Texas” (1948)

    5:30
CARTOONS—Kids

    5:45
TELEVISITS—Bye Napier

EVENING


    6:00
CARTOONS—Kids

    6:10
NEWS, WEATHER

    6:30
WALT DISNEY—Adventure

    7:30
WELLS FARGO

    8:00
PETER GUNN

    8:30
SHERIFF OF COCHISE—Western

    9:00
ARTHUR MURRAY   COLOR 
Guest: Pat Stanley

    9:30
SCIENCE FICTION THEATER

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
MOVIE—Drama
“Fifty Roads to Town” (1937)

Naked City and the existence of a man

$
0
0
It is our wont, in the Hadley household, to watch Naked City on DVD Friday nights. (Perhaps it also says something about our social lives that we spend Friday nights watching TV, but I'll let that pass for now.) And a couple of weeks ago, we saw an extraordinary episode; I know that I use this phrase from time to time, and perhaps overuse it, but in this case I thought it really was extraordinary, even as the episode was unfolding. It was called "Which Is Joseph Creeley?" and while sometimes the titles of '60s dramas get a bit pretentious, I thought this one meant exactly what it said, though we'll get to that in a moment.

It's an unusual episode in many respects, not the least of which being that of the Naked City regulars, only Detective Adam Flint (Paul Burke) and his girlfriend Libby Kingston (Nancy Malone) appear in the episode; none of the other detectives are shown, or even mentioned in the opening credits - but then, this is not their story. The cold open gives us Adam and Libby headed up the steps to where some type of legal proceeding is being held. Adam is clearly tense, with Libby providing moral support. She heads into the courtroom, while Adam first detours to another room, where he meets with Joseph Creeley and Creeley's defense attorney. At this point we still have no real idea what the episode is about, except for this intriguing tidbit: Creeley tells Adam that if he, Creeley, is guilty, then he wants to be punished for it.

The story is dominated by Martin Balsam's performance as Creeley, a man who finds himself at a crossroads few of us should ever hope to face. He's on death row, awaiting execution for a murder committed during a botched robbery, when he collapses from what turns out to be a brain tumor. The doctor gives him two choices: undergo an operation to remove the tumor, which may or may not succeed, or do nothing and see whether it kills him before the electric chair does. Adam, who was the original arresting officer and has been guarding Creeley in the hospital, is thrown into the maelstrom when Creeley asks him what he should do. For Adam, life is precious because it allows for hope, and he urges Creeley to undergo the surgery even if it changes nothing in the long run. Creeley signs over a Power of Attorney, and Adam authorizes the surgery.

And now it gets interesting.

As it turns out the surgery is a success, with one caveat: in removing the tumor, the operation also wipes clean about ten years of Joseph Creeley's memory. He has no recollection of the crime, of his wife having divorced him, (or even having been married), of the circumstances that led him in desperation to the robbery that killed a man and left him on death row. It's as if his entire life ended ten years ago and has now started up again, with a giant hole in the middle. Furthermore, his doctor believes the tumor was probably responsible for his behavior up to and including the time of the robbery, which means he may not have been legally responsible for his actions.

All of this we learn from flashbacks generated by Adam's testimony on the stand, and now we understand just how we've gotten to this courtroom, on this date. Creeley's attorney has successfully won a new trial based on the doctor's opinion, and he's now going about demonstrating that there were two Joseph Creeley's: the one before the tumor, and the one after. He uses the testimony of people who have known Creeley throughout his life to demonstrate how his behavior had changed; a priest remembers him as a studious, polite boy; his ex-wife says that she divorced him because he was no longer the man he had been when she married him (a phrase which we often hear but in this case is meant to be taken literally), even Adam says that Creeley had the look of a wild man (i.e. crazy) when Adam arrested him.*

*Key point in understanding Adam: despite this wild look, Adam did not shoot (and risk killing) Creeley; he wouldn't take such action if he didn't have to, and in this case he didn't think he had to. 

The defense's insanity plea is an unusual one, in that the attorney suggests not only that Creeley was not legally responsible for his actions at the time due to the tumor, but that his memory loss (likely permanent) means he can never be that man, and that punishing him would be an injustice. The prosecution does not contest the notion that Creeley is a different man today, but their contention is that this is all immaterial: the Creeley who committed the crime did understand, for the purposes of the legal definition, the difference between right and wrong, and whether or not he remembers it today is beside the point as far as the administration of justice is concerned.* He calls as a witness the widow of the man Creeley killed, who herself was seriously injured in the attack, to share how her life has forever changed as a result of Creeley's actions.

*It's a line of thinking that invokes Dismas, the Good Thief who confessed the divinity of Christ on the Cross. Christ promises salvation for Dismas - but does not pardon him the from earthly punishment for the crimes he had committed.

Quite a conundrum, isn't it? As the defense attorney says in his closing summation, the jury has now heard two versions of who Joseph Creeley is. According to one, he's a man who poses absolutely no threat to society, who has no memories of the man he was, and who should be allowed to live to be the man he is today. According to the other, he's a man who robbed and murdered, who knew that it was wrong regardless of why he did it, and who now must pay the penalty. The question for the jury to decide: which of these is Joseph Creeley.

We never find the answer to that question; the episode ends with the verdict yet to be given. It's an appropriate way to end the story, I think, because the answer to this question really lies within ourselves, how we see and define the humanity of an individual.

Is it true that a man is the sum total of his memories? The philosopher John Locke used, as the criterion for personal identity (the self), not the substance of either the soul or the body, but the psychological continuity of consciousness - the memory. In other words, you are what your memory shows you to be.* Locke contends that you "are in truth only responsible for the acts for which you are conscious," which lies at the heart of the insanity defense, that if you are not aware (or conscious) of an act, you cannot be held accountable for it. Without that memory of who he was, he is not the same man. The court would, in effect, be punishing the wrong man for having committed the crime.

*Displayed in his analogy of "The Prince and the Cobbler," where a prince, whose soul (and memories) were transferred to the body of a cobbler (whose soul had departed), would continue to think of himself as a prince, even though he finds himself in appearance to be a cobbler. Think Here Comes Mr. Jordan, or its remake, Heaven Can Wait, as examples. This is, of course, the same premise upon which Doctor Who is based.

Against this, the argument can be made that Locke has no lock on the truth. In discussing the concept of "identity over time," the Catholic philosopher Peter Geach denies the idea "that there is a single absolute relation of identity rather than a host of relative identity relations." In other words, it is impossible to say that the prince is identical to the cobbler. "Instead there must be a concept of a kind of thing, a so called sortal concept, that serves to answer the question." We would have to ask: is the prince the same what as the cobbler? The same man? The same thinker? The same craftsman? The same husband? The same leader? Likewise with Creeley: Is he the same man? The same murderer? The prosecution might well contend that while he is not the same man, he is the same murderer, and must be punished accordingly.

It's no surprise that Naked City could generate this type of discussion. In the book The Philosophy of TV Noir, Robert E. Fitzgibbons labels Naked City as an example of a "relativist" television series, one that insists that there is no clear definition of the truth at any given time. Dr. Wirtz, Creeley's doctor in the episode, says as much: "Sanity is a relative term." Even when someone in the program does something we might define as "wrong,"Fitzgibbons insists, the viewer "was left - indeed almost forced - by the end of many episodes to wonder whether perhaps these choices might not have been right in some way." The concept of moral relativism, expressed in this manner, dovetails with Locke's would-be insistence that Creeley today cannot be judged as if he were Creeley yesterday - because that man no longer exists at this moment in time.

So what does this all mean? There is no closure to this question, since we never see the verdict come in. Gilbert Ralston, the writer of this episode, almost certainly intended for the viewer to be the jury, and to let each one of us make the decision for ourselves. Although I am not a moral relativist, I find myself for the most part agreeing with Creeley's attorney that it would not be in the interests of justice to hold Creeley accountable for a crime which he has no memory of, which in fact he may not have been legally responsible for having committed in the first place. And yet justice does demand an answer; it's similar to a terrorist who commits suicide after having perpetrated his mass murder. We're left with an empty feeling, a sense that the circle has not been squared.

Ultimately, what I love about this episode is not just the lack of a neat conclusion, but that it dares to raise this kind of a question in the first place. Had the story ended with a jury verdict, we need not have agreed with that verdict to have been stimulated by the questions presented in the episode. Perhaps only The Defenders would have dared to go into this type of territory at the time; most of the discussions offered in contemporary television usually consist of straw man arguments that are eventually knocked down by the cast member acting as surrogate for the writer. I never got that feeling from "Which is Joseph Creeley?" Regardless of how Ralston wanted us to think about Creeley, and whether or not he should be punished, he gave us more than enough to chew on, more than enough for us to come to our own conclusion about just how it is that we define the existence of a man.  TV  

Around the dial

$
0
0
One of our favorites, the Oscar-winning actress and star of Peyton Place Dorothy Malone, died over the weekend at the ripe old age of 92. (I wrote about her here.) The British always have a wonderful way with obituaries, so here's hers, from The Guardian.

Also passing on this week was Bradford Dillman, who always seemed to be guesting on a classic television program (usually as the bad guy) whenever you turned around. I always enjoyed his work.

Not to make this morbid, but I ran across this last week quite by accident, and found it rather charming. It's the 2010 obituary for Dorothy M. Provine Day, who as Dorothy Provine was in many a show of the '50s and '60s, most notably The Roaring Twenties.. There's no question she was a star, and you can find the star obituaries out there, but reading this she could havAe been your next-door neighbor, or the woman you saw in the grocery store; yes, she was a singer, dancer and actress, but she also was a wife, mother, grandmother, and aunt, and moved back to the Pacific Northwest to be near family. As I said, charming.

At Cult TV Blog it's a look at The Avengers episode "Take-Over," with an interesting tie-in to a couple of movies at the end. It's another strong episode of a series that is almost always great fun to watch.

David at Comfort TV remembers some top moments from the career of the very funny Paul Lynde. I was watching some clips of him on The Hollywood Squares the other day, and he always made me laugh out loud. It's one thing to have funny lines, it's another to deliver them for maximum impact.

July 19 was the birthday of Edgar Allen Poe, and Jordan at The Twilight Zone Vortex examines Poe's influence on The Twilight Zone. As he writes, "one could safely say that without Edgar Allan Poe there would be no Twilight Zone."

You'll recall that back in 2015 Television Obscurities did an entire year of TV Guide, from the beginning of the 1964 season to just before the start of the 1965 season. Now he's given us an index to each installment in the series - if you haven't read it before, or if it's been a while, I think you'll really enjoy it.

At The Lucky Strike Papers, Andrew views Dion's 1968 Smothers Brothers appearance, in which he performs "Abraham, Martin and John," in the year that both Abraham and John's brother Bobby were assassinated. It's a very intense moment.

We're always sharing fashion layouts from the pages of TV Guide, so it seems appropriate to look at Garroway at Large, where Jodie shares the proof that Dave was something of a fashion plate himself!

Classic Film and TV Café presents seven things to know about Chuck Connors. I particularly like number four, his friendship with Soviet premier Leonid Brezhnev, which I first learned about in this TV Guide.

And finally, Hal at The Horn Section takes us on a tour of the latest episode of Love That Bob!, in which Mr. Cummings is surrounded by contestants from the Miss Perfect Body pageant. In other words, he's right where he wants to be!

And you'll want to be here tomorrow, when we browse through the pages of another TV Guide. See you then.  TV  

This week in TV Guide: January 31, 1959

$
0
0
I don't usually write about purely local events, let alone lead off with them, but this is an unusual week; we're interested in just a few specific shows, and most of our attention goes to things philosophic rather than the content on the tube, so there's no reason why we shouldn't start with a look at the big event in the Twin Cities: the St. Paul Winter Carnival.

1959 marks the 73rd edition of the great winter celebration, and even if you're not one for enjoying cold weather, you'll be able to stay in touch with the week-long excitement. It all starts at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday with the Winter Carnival Parade, covered on all four Twin Cities channels. (The listings even give the locations from which each station will be broadcasting.) The parade begins at the State Capitol and runs for two hours and 1.3 miles before ending at the St. Paul Auditorium, with 60 bands and 35 floats.* There are stars aplenty as well, including Jimmy Dean, Ronnie Burns (son of George), Arnold Stang, and George Montgomery.

*In the post-WWII period, over 250,000 lined the streets to watch the parade.

Jimmy's doing his CBS morning variety show from the Carnival all week; he'll be broadcasting from the Auditorium Tuesday and Friday, the skating plaza on Wednesday, and the toboggan slides on Thursday. The future sausage king isn't the only one who's brought his cameras to St. Paul, though: on Saturday following the parade, George Montgomery stops in to visit the teens on KSTP's Hi-Five Time (4:30 p.m.), and Wednesday, ABC's Wednesday Night Fights comes to you live from the Auditorium, as local favorite Del Flanagan takes on Ralph Dupas in a welterweight bout, with Carnival dignitaries taking part in the pre-fight ceremonies. One of the big events of the Carnival is the crowning of the Carnival Queen of the Snows, and KMSP's matinee movie hostess Mary Jo Tierney will be interviewing the candidates during the movie intermissions Monday and Tuesday. There won't be live coverage of the actual pageant and crowning, but the winner will be making the rounds of the local shows for the rest of the week.

As you can tell if you followed the link above, the St. Paul Winter Carnival continues to this day - this year the dates have been altered to coincide with the Super Bowl festival. Television stars aren't sent by sponsors to be part of the festivities, and in fact I'm not sure how much attention local TV even pays to it anymore. But there are concerts, ice sculpture contests, a triathlon and a parade; and even as we speak, the giant ice castle is under construction. In fact, it's kind of like television itself; it may have changed over the years, but it's still alive and kicking.

◊ ◊ ◊

What's Erle Stanley Gardner have to say about television? Since it's featured on the cover, we'd better take a look.

Not surprisingly considering the existence of a TV series based on Gardner's most famous literary character, the author of Perry Mason is positive about the medium. Right off the bat Gardner concedes television is a factor in juvenile delinquency - just one factor, though. "I think that where impressionable young people see violence on television, when they see wrongs being righted by means of the blazing six gun, they are tremendously impressed."

That's only 1% of America's young people, though; what about the other 99%? According to Gardner, these same forces "are at work today producing an overwhelming majority of outstanding young individuals who are the best weapons democracy has in its arsenal." For them, television serves as "a stimulant to constructive imagination," learning everything from analytical thinking to problem solving. As an example, he tells the story of a nine-year-old who recently submitted a script for a Perry Mason episode; while it reflected what Gardner calls "a juvenile turn of mind," it also indicated a remarkable understanding of plotting a complicated mystery show. "The swing and rhythm of plot development were there, the clue sequence, the motivation." It was so impressive that Gardner's publisher decided to put the script in print. "That couldn't have happened before the days of television," Gardner writes, and not just because television scripts didn't exist. "It couldn't have happened because a nine-year-old child wouldn't have developed that amount of constructive imagination."

Science, astronomy, even the field of law: all will be major beneficiaries of the constructive imagination developed as a result of television. "We learn as we are interested," Gardner writes. "The individual who watches a mystery story unfolding on television and is pitting his wits against those of the detective, is engaged in study." Great scientific discoveries, the understanding of the very solar system, come "because of detective ability, a shrewd reasoning from clues." Concludes Gardner, "[I]f anyone doesn't think this person is learning at a great pace, let him talk with some of the youthful fans who watch the mystery television shows today."

I have a great deal of respect for Gardner's analysis; television served much that function in my own youth. I think even today's television can provide the stimulation needed to develop the imagination, to teach the young to think outside the box, to give them knowledge about various aspects of history, science, and culture. It may not do it as well as it used to, but we should never underestimate the power of television to provide such stimulus - nor should we be afraid to use it more often.

◊ ◊ ◊

One of Ed Sullivan's first great on-air challenges came from Steve Allen, who left Tonight to take over an NBC variety show which, at the beginning, aired opposite Ed. It didn't run as long as Ed's, of course, but then Allen said his goal was never to conquer Ed, but to coexist with him, which he did for three seasons. Let's see who gets the best of the contest this week.

Sullivan: Ed presents a filmed repeat of his show of June 29, 1958 when the entire program was devoted to a performance by the Moiseyev Dance Company.

Allen: Steve's guests are comedienne Martha Raye, magician Mr. Ballantine, singer Danny Staton, and jazz musicians Eddie Condon, Woody Herman and Gerry Mulligan.

It's a special Sullivan show this week, an entire hour with the famed Russian dance troupe during last year's historic tour of the United States, the first cultural offering by the Soviet Union in an exchange program with the U.S. I like Russian dancing, and ordinarily I'd say that this would be good enough to carry the week. On the other hand, Steverino has a top-flight show of his own, and Condon, Herman and Mulligan - not just jazz musicians, but greats (with Allen probably joining in) - is very, very hard to beat. Too hard, I'm afraid; for the second week running, it's Heigh-Ho Steverino.

◊ ◊ ◊

It isn't often that we have one television show that was the subject of a book, but such is the case this week, with Sunday afternoon's Omnibus broadcast of "Abraham Lincoln: The Early Years." (4:00 p.m., NBC) The story of this program actually goes back to 1952, the inaugural season of Omnibus, and a series of five films entitled "Mr. Lincoln," written by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author James Agee and directed by the renowned Norman Lloyd. The series was a huge success; one critic called it "the most beautiful writing ever done for television," and another classifies it as "among the finest - perhaps the finest - film about Abraham Lincoln ever made."But as William Hughes' book James Agee, Omnibus, and Mr. Lincoln: The Culture of Liberalism and the Challenge of Television 1952-1953 details, Agee's presentation of Lincoln and the Civil War is not simply a presentation of history; rather, it is an interpretation that was heavily influenced by the times, in particular the Cold War, not to mention Agee's strong personal identification with Lincoln.

As just one example. Hughes examines Agee's treatment of the alleged romance between Lincoln and Ann Rutledge, one of the pivotal stories in the series.. As Agee's Lincoln embarks on his political career, serving in the Illinois legislature, he grows ambivalent about his relationship with Rutledge; in one of their final meetings he "asserts his need for independence," According to Agee, Lincoln has begun to "realize the size of his vocation and the size of his responsibility toward it." In other words, as Hughes puts it, "The gifted must give priority to their gifts," and Lincoln realizes he must "redirect his misplaced love for Ann back onto the people he would serve."*

*As Hughes points out, "Given the writer's powerful identification with his hero, and the conflict between love and vocation in his own life, Agee's reworking of the Ann Rutledge story was a projection that owed as much to his personal story as to Lincoln's."

On the other hand, writes Hughes, the culture of Cold War liberals, prevalent particularly in the TV-Radio Workshop of the Ford Foundation, the underwriter of Omnibus, "were wary of the masses, with their immaturity, their volatility, and their potential susceptibility to totalitarianism," and Agee himself was scornful of what he called "common-man sentimentalists." How to reconcile this attitude with Lincoln's seeming self-sacrifice in order to serve those very people, whom Lincoln calls his "one great concern" and "his surest support"? It can be done only by looking at the environment in existence during the Cold War, and the vision of the heroic leader, the single-combat warrior. It is, after all, a distinctly American tendency, to elevate a single individual to the heights of national savior, the "Leader of the Free World," whether it be Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower, or John F. Kennedy.

Lincoln, therefore, serves as a surrogate for this necessary Cold War leader, and in seeing his growth from small town lawyer in New Salem to something more, Lincoln's words - or, rather, Agee's, since we don't really know how accurate they are - suggest the need for the public to understand the role they must play, that "the common people are capable of collective wisdom, but only when they recognize, nurture, and stand by those uncommonly gifted individuals who emerge in their midst." Perhaps we aren't meant to be moved by Lincoln's words about those who supported him during his formative years, but instead we congratulate those people for realizing Lincoln's nascent greatness and doing what is necessary to nurture it for future greatness. Whew.

What we see this Sunday is a segment of "Mr. Lincoln" entitled "The Early Years," with Royal Dano (St. Peter in King of Kings) as Lincoln and the young Joanne Woodward as Ann Rutledge, narrated by Martin Gabel, which presumably deals heavily with this relationship. Agee's portrayal was controversial even at the time, (host Alistair Cooke read one letter from a viewer that chastised Agee for treating the relationship "as gospel rather than gossip."* In a 1953 episode of Omnibus, Cooke broaches the subject in a debate between Agee (who died in 1955) and Civil War historian Allen Nevins, who said of Agee's characterization of the Lincoln-Rutledge relationship, "Our count against him is simply this: That he has tampered with the truth."

*Of course, we can guess that Agee's real purpose was to use the relationship as a metaphor for his view on Cold War leadership.

In addition to the book, the movie-length, condensed edit of Agee's film is now available on DVD, with one of the extras being the Omnibus debate between Agee and Nevins. As an example of how television's storytelling fits into the large picture of the political, economic, and cultural forces of the time*, this is incomparable.

*On Sunday alone, the topic on Religious Town Hall is "Democracy," and that afternoon Channel 5 has a special called For God and Country, produced by the American Legion.

◊ ◊ ◊

You might remember that in last week's TV Guide we read about "The Lost Class of '59," which detailed the controversy around school desegregation in Norfolk, Virginia. This week the focus is on the Second Agony of Atlanta (Sunday, 5:00 p.m., NBC), and a strange law that mandates that if one school desegregates, all public schools in the city must be closed. Now, I've never heard of a law like that, but again, consider the times. Now, however, the people of Atlanta are faced with the choice between integrating and closing the schools. It's appropriate in some ways that this is following Omnibus, because this is the Civil War in practical terms. On the one hand you've got people looking at the Federal government coming in and overturning the laws they've made, the way of life they've lived; on the other, you've got people being discriminated against, feeling as if their own government sees them as the enemy, wondering if anyone will come and rescue them. Setting aside the human element of it for a moment, it strikes at the fundamental question regarding the founding of the United States: who has the power? Under whose rules do the citizens live? Who has the last word? Of course, it's the very human element that makes it all tragic.

This is one reason why by 1959 the relevance of "Mr. Lincoln" is not limited simply to the Cold War. As the debate around civil rights grows, as the Federal government takes a more active role in school desegregation (remember, Brown v. Board occurs only two years after the initial airing of "Mr. Lincoln), the idea of a prophet-leader such as found in Agee's vision of Lincoln takes on even greater social significance. Critics blame Richard Nixon for the creation of the "Imperial Presidency," but I wonder if the hagiography surrounding the life of Lincoln, playing off the larger-than-life presidency of FDR, doesn't have something to do with it as well.

Edward R. Murrow was the host of that Norfolk special; this week, back on Person to Person (Friday, 9:30 p.m, CBS), Murrow has one of the oddest combinations one could ever ask for: "Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro and artist-illustrator Norman Rockwell." The anti-American and the all-American. Not at the same time, of course; that's not the way Person to Person worked, although it's interesting to think of Rockwell sketching an illustration of Castro during the show. Who could have imagined that in the next decade, Castro's Cuba would be the cause of a near-war and implicated in a presidential assassination, while Rockwell would be seen as the chronicler of an America that was old-fashioned and out of touch, one that had ceased to exist.

◊ ◊ ◊

"Television Diary," something of a predecessor to The Doan Report, tells us of a spat between, of all people, John Frankenheimer and Art Linkletter. Seems that one of the kids from the Linkletter show wandered on the set of a Playhouse 90 that Frankenheimer was working on, and the director chased him off. Linkletter responded, on-air, that Frankenheimer was "a young genius who takes himself too seriously," who which Frankenheimer replied that Linkletter is "one of the outstanding examples of TV's rush toward mediocrity." The "brickbats," apparently, are still flying. I've always enjoyed Frankenheimer's work, but judging from the defensiveness of his overheated retort, it sounds as if he does indeed take himself a bit too seriously.

And speaking of Playhouse 90, one of the last of the great dramatic anthology series, faces the ax at the end of the season. Finally Hubbell Robinson, speaking for CBS, says that the series will return for the 1959-60 season, but perhaps on a reduced schedule. In fact, the coming season will be the fourth and final for the series, and when it comes to an end so will an era. For now, though, this week's Playhouse 90 ("Child of Our Time") is up against NBC's Hallmark Hall of Fame (Thursday, 8:30 p.m.) presentation of "Berkeley Square," based on the Broadway play and movie of the same name, starring John Kerr and Jeannie Carson; and "introducing" Janet Munro - who appeared in the MST3K fave "The Crawling Eye" and was once married to Ian Hendry, an early partner of Patrick Macnee's John Steed in The Avengers.

◊ ◊ ◊

Finally, in the "Late and Exclusive" section, a report that George Burns is doing his show live for the next four weeks, apparently to get over with his contractual commitment to doing six live shows for the season. The report adds that Burns "was 63 years old last Jan. 17." Could they have known then that Burns' career hasn't even reached its high point yet, and that he'll go on performing for another 37 years?  TV  

What's on TV? Saturday, January 31, 1959

$
0
0
Since we visited the January 1959 listings just last week, not much has changed as far as the daily programs - so let's take a look at Saturday! As I mentioned when we looked at this issue, the big event is the St. Paul Winter Carnival Parade, but that's only on in the Twin Cities. That leaves plenty of other programs from plenty of other areas that we can peruse for our general amusement and edification.




 3  KDAL (DULUTH) (CBS)

MORNING


    8:30
CAPT. KANGAROO

    9:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

   10:00
HECKLE AND JECKLE

   10:30
ROBIN HOOD—Adventure

   11:00
MOVIE—Comedy
"Dixie Dugan" (1943)

AFTERNOON


   12:00
MOVIE—Mystery
“The Undying Monster” (1942)

   12:45
PRO HOCKEY CONTEST

    1:00
ICE HOCKEY—Red Wings vs. Bruins

    3:30
COLLEGE BASKETBALL—Minnesota vs. Ohio State

    5:30
SUPERMAN—Adventure

EVENING


    6:00
FOREIGN LEGIONNAIRE

    6:30
PERRY MASON—Mystery

    7:30
SUGARFOOT—Western

    8:30
HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL—Western

    9:00
GUNSMOKE—Western

    9:30
WYATT EARP—Western

   10:00
U.S. MARSHAL—Western

   10:15
MOVIE—Drama
“The Purple Heart” (1944)

   10:30
MAVERICK—Western

   11:30
MOVIE—Drama
“Quiet Please, Murder” (1942)



 3  KGLO (Mason City) (CBS)

MORNING


    8:30
CAPT. KANGAROO

    9:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

   10:00
HECKLE AND JECKLE

   10:30
ROBIN HOOD—Adventure

   11:00
MOVIE—Musical
“Week-end in Havana” (1941)

AFTERNOON


   12:30
INDUSTRY ON PARADE

   12:45
PRO HOCKEY CONTEST

    1:00
ICE HOCKEY—Red Wings vs. Bruins

    3:30
COLLEGE BASKETBALL—Minnesota vs. Ohio State

    5:30
LONE RANGER—Western

EVENING


    6:00
O. HENRY PLAYHOUSE—Drama

    6:30
PERRY MASON—Mystery

    7:30
WANTED—DEAD OR ALIVE—Western

    8:00
U.S. MARSHAL—Western

    8:30
HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL—Western

    9:00
GUNSMOKE—Western

    9:30
STATE TROOPER—Police

   10:00
NEWS



 4  WCCO (CBS)

MORNING


    7:30
AXEL AND DOG—Clellan Card

    8:30
CAPT. KANGAROO

    9:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

   10:00
HECKLE AND JECKLE

   10:30
FARMER AL FALFA—Kids

   11:00
WILD BILL HICKOK—Western
       
   11:30
SKY KING—Adventure

AFTERNOON


   12:00
LONE RANGER—Western

   12:30
S.S. POPEYE—Kids

    1:00
WINTER CARNIVAL PREVIEW—St. Paul   SPECIAL 

    2:00
WINTER CARNIVAL PARADE   SPECIAL 

    3:30
COLLEGE BASKETBALL—Minnesota vs. Ohio State

    5:30
CHAMPIONSHIP BOWLING

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

    6:30
PERRY MASON—Mystery

    7:30
WANTED—DEAD OR ALIVE—Western

    8:00
GAIL STORM—Comedy

    8:30
HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL—Western

    9:00
GUNSMOKE—Western

    9:30
DEATH VALLEY DAYS—Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
MOVIE—Comedy
“Apartment for Peggy” (1948)



 5  KSTP (NBC)

MORNING


    7:20
WILLIE WONDERFUL—Cartoons

    8:00
MOVIE—Western
“Empty Saddles” (1937)

    9:00
HOWDY DOODY—Kids

    9:30
RUFF AND REDDY—Kids

   10:00
FURY—Adventure

   10:30
CIRCUS BOY—Adventure

   11:00
TRUE STORY—Drama
       
   11:30
DETECTIVE’S DIARY

AFTERNOON


   12:00
TALK BACK—Panel

   12:30
HOBBY SHOWCASE—Kids

    1:00
WINTER CARNIVAL PREVIEW—St. Paul   SPECIAL 

    2:00
WINTER CARNIVAL PARADE   SPECIAL 

    4:00
WOMEN’S BOWLING

    4:30
HI-FIVE TIME—Zimmerman
Guest: George Montgomery

    5:30
ANNIE OAKLEY—Western

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

    6:30
PEOPLE ARE FUNNY—Art Linkletter

    7:00
PERRY COMO   COLOR 
Guests: Patti Page, Tab Hunter, Rowan and Martin

    8:00
BLACK SADDLE

    8:30
CIMARRON CITY

    9:30
D.A.’s MAN—Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
DECOY—Policy

   11:00
BOSTON BLACKIE—Mystery

   11:30
LEONARD LEIGH—Music



 6  WSDM (DULUTH) (NBC)

MORNING


    9:00
HOWDY DOODY—Kids

    9:30
RUFF AND REDDY—Kids

   10:00
FURY—Adventure

   10:30
CIRCUS BOY—Adventure

   11:00
TRUE STORY—Drama
       
   11:30
DETECTIVE’S DIARY

AFTERNOON


   12:00
MR. WIZARD—Education

   12:30
U. OF MINN CLOSE-UPS

    1:00
JUBILEE U.S.A.—Red Foley

    2:00
COLLEGE BASKETBALL—Colorado vs. Kansas

    3:30
HORSE RACE—Hialeah
Bougainvillea Turf Handicap

    4:00
WOMEN’S BOWLING

    4:30
MOVIE—Musical
“Dance, Charlie, Dance” (1937)

    5:30
DRAGNET—Jack Webb

EVENNG


    6:00
BOLD JOURNEY—Documentary

    6:30
PEOPLE ARE FUNNY—Art Linkletter

    7:00
PERRY COMO   COLOR 
Guests: Patti Page, Tab Hunter, Rowan and Martin

    8:00
BLACK SADDLE

    8:30
CIMARRON CITY

    9:30
D.A.’s MAN—Drama

   10:00
HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE—Comedy

   10:30
DANCING PARTY—Welk

   11:30
MOVIE—Drama
“Four Daughters” (1938)



 6   KMMT (AUSTIN) (ABC)

AFTERNOON


    2:45
INDUSTRY ON PARADE

    3:00
MOVIE—Mystery
“Death Valley” (1941)

    4:30
UNCLE AL—Kids

    5:00
ALL-STAR GOLF—Sea Island, Ga.

EVENING


    6:00
SUPERMAN—Adventure

    6:30
DICK CLARK—Music
Guests: Mitch Miller, Gordon MacRae, Dave Apple and his Applejacks, 
Earl Grant, Quaker City Boys

    7:00
JUBILEE U.S.A.—Red Foley
Guests: Jimmy Dickens, Johnny Horton, Pete Stamper

    8:00
DANCING PARTY—Welk

    9:00
SAMMY KAYE—Music

    9:30
HOW TO MARRY A MILLIONAIRE—Comedy

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
MOVIE—Drama
“Almost a Gentleman” (1939)



 8  WKBT (LaCrosse) (CBS)

MORNING


   10:30
ROBIN HOOD—Adventure

   11:00
MIGHTY MOUSE—Cartoons
       
   11:30
FURY—Adventure

AFTERNOON


   12:00
TRUE STORY—Drama

   12:30
DETECTIVE’S DIARY—Mystery

    1:00
ICE HOCKEY—Red Wings vs. Bruins

    3:30
JUBILEE U.S.A.—Red Foley

    4:30
ALL-STAR GOLF—Sea Island, Ga.

    5:30
FILM FEATURE

EVENING


    6:00
DANCING PARTY—Welk

    7:00
LORETTA YOUNG—Drama

    7:30
WANTED—DEAD OR ALIVE—Western

    8:00
GAIL STORM—Comedy

    8:30
HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL—Western

    9:00
GUNSMOKE—Western

    9:30
PETER GUNN—Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:15
BOB CUMMINGS—Comedy

   10:45
MOVIE—Mystery
“Down Three Dark Streets” (1954)



 9  KMSP (Ind.)

AFTERNOON


    2:00
WINTER CARNIVAL PARADE   SPECIAL 

    4:00
RECORD HOP—Dan Anderson

    5:00
JOE PALOOKA—Drama

    5:30
CHUCK CARSON—Variety   SPECIAL 

EVENING


    6:00
MOVIE—Comedy
“Way Out West” (1936)

    7:00
BENGAL LANCERS—Adventure

    7:30
CITY DESK—Drama

    8:00
WINTER CARNIVAL PARADE   SPECIAL 

    9:35
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

    9:45
MOVIE—Drama
“No Minor Vices” (1948)

   11:55
NEWS—Joe Cooper



10  KROC (Rochester) (NBC)

MORNING


   10:00
MOVIE—Double Feature
“Just Off Broadway” (1942)
“Ellery Queen’s Penthouse Mystery” (1941)

AFTERNOON


   12:30
MOVIE—Double Feature
“Forever Amber” (1947)
“The Soul of a Monster” (1944)

    3:15
SEARCH FOR HEALTH

    3:30
COLLEGE BASKETBALL—Minnesota vs. Ohio State

    5:30
CHAMPIONSHIP BOWLING

EVENING


    6:30
PEOPLE ARE FUNNY—Art Linkletter

    7:00
PERRY COMO   COLOR 
Guests: Patti Page, Tab Hunter, Rowan and Martin

    8:00
BLACK SADDLE

    8:30
CIMARRON CITY

    9:30
D.A.’s MAN—Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:20
MOVIE—Comedy
"Three Blind Mice" (1938)



11  WTCN (ABC)

MORNING


   11:00
UNCLE AL—Kids

AFTERNOON


   12:00
FARM FORUM—Agriculture

   12:30
NAVY REPORTER—Talk

    1:00
TEL-A-STORY PLAYHOUSE

    1:30
CORLISS ARCHER—Comedy

    2:00
WINTER CARNIVAL PARADE   SPECIAL 

    4:00
FILM FEATURE

    4:30
KIT CARSON—Western

    5:00
ALL-STAR GOLF—Sea Island, Ga.

EVENING


    6:00
OPINION PLEASE—Horning

    6:30
DICK CLARK—Music
Guests: Mitch Miller, Gordon MacRae, Dave Apple and his Applejacks, 
Earl Grant, Quaker City Boys

    7:00
JUBILEE U.S.A.—Red Foley
Guests: Jimmy Dickens, Johnny Horton, Pete Stamper

    8:00
DANCING PARTY—Welk

    9:00
BURNS AND ALLEN—Comedy

    9:30
NEWS—Stuart A. Lindman

    9:45
MOVIE—Drama
“The Tender Years” (1947)

   11:30
I LED THREE LIVES—Carlson




13 WEAU (Eau Claire) (NBC)

MORNING


    7:00
EXTENSION DIVISION

    7:15
SACRED HEART—Religion

    7:30
FILM FEATURE

    8:00
KINGDOM OF THE SEA

    8:30
CARTOONS—Kids

    9:00
FLASH GORDON—Adventure

    9:30
WOODY WOODPECKER

   10:00
FILM FEATURE

   10:30
MOVIE—Western
“Singing Hills” (1941)
       
   11:30
FURY—Adventure

AFTERNOON


   12:00
THROUGH THE PORTHOLE

   12:15
CARTOONS—Kids

   12:30
MOVIE—Western
“Come On, Rangers”

    1:30
ROUGH RIDERS—Western

    2:00
CARTOONS—Kids

    2:30
ALL-STAR GOLF—Sea Island, Ga.

    3:30
COLLEGE BASKETBALL—Minnesota vs. Ohio State

    5:30
PATTI PAGE—Variety
Guests: Julius La Rosa, Shari Lewis

EVENING


    6:00
CARTOONS—Kids

    6:15
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

    6:30
PEOPLE ARE FUNNY—Art Linkletter

    7:00
PERRY COMO   COLOR 
Guests: Patti Page, Tab Hunter, Rowan and Martin

    8:00
PAT BOONE—Variety
Guest: Ginger Rogers

    8:30
CIMARRON CITY

    9:30
D.A.’s MAN—Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
DANCING PARTY—Welk

   11:30
MOVIE—Comedy
“Mad Martindales” (1942)
Viewing all 2481 articles
Browse latest View live