One of the Greatest Dramatic Scenes in Movie History


Any time I'm doing a close, dramatic scene, I watch this perfect piece of acting / cinematic magic. No cuts.

This scenario was all too true, Garland ended up in the hospital under these same circumstances. She and Dirk Bogarde re-wrote this scene themselves.

The entire role was most certainly based on Judy's downwardly spirally life, an okay film overall with a number of remarkable scenes - but then the star did walk away before it was finished. It was her last motion picture.

Reverend Ike & the Joy of Money!

Reverend Ike

Reverend Ike
"If you want 'pie-in-the-sky when you die' then Rev. Ike is not your man. If you want your pie now, with ice cream on top, then see and hear Rev. Ike on TV." So reads the copy from newspaper ads touting The Joy of Living with Rev. Ike

Millions of mostly poor people tuned in each week to hear the pleaful sermon from the flamboyant Reverend Ike, who drove flashy Cadillacs and stood at the pulpit dripping in gold chains and diamond rings.


No, this wasn't a sitcom, this show was a 'serious' Sunday morning religious show from the early Seventies.

Reverend Ike (real name Frederick Eikerenkoetter) was one of the first television evangelists who shamelessly pandered for cash and was openly proud of what he spent it on - sparkling jewelry, new cars and beautiful women.

The good reverend toned it down a bit in the late-seventies amid criticism that he was too much of a show-off - but he always defended himself by saying there was nothing wrong with a prosperous man of God.

After all, as Reverend Ike himself was quick to say, "The LACK of money is the root of all evil."

Amen, brother!

Early, Funny Woody Allen

Woody Allen's Early Days

This Woody Allen molestation thing - oy vey! I have nothing to say about that.

As a kid I liked the early Woody that appeared on TV in the 1960s and early 1970s. It was so infrequent - but he always delivered.

One of the first times America saw Woody Allen was this classic prank from Candid Camera:

 

In the 1960s Woody had to go on British TV to do his standup act, it was inspired hilarity!

 

More on Woody Allen's early TV career!

Wally Wood's Infamous Disney Orgy Illustration

In 1967 The Realist magazine published an unsigned cartoon that depicted the beloved Disney characters engaging in an orgy of epic proportions. Mickey shooting up, Snow White being attacked by the drawfs, Tinkerbell as a stripper, all courtesy of the twisted mind of MAD artist Wally Wood.

Disney chose not to sue in order to keep this under wraps - not so with The Air Pirates a decade later, now THAT was hilarious!

Wally Wood cartoon characters

Peggy from Mannix: The Spectacular Rise & Fall of Gail Fisher

MANNIX and GAIL FISHER

I've been watching the third season of Mannix on DVD. I liked this show as a kid, I was especially fond of Mannix' secretary Peggy played by Gail Fisher.

Some of the episodes are quite effective, many are boiler plate TV dramas of the era, but one thing that struck me was the superb cinematography with unusual camera angles and inventive setups.

No doubt about it, the Mannix theme song is one of the most exciting in TV history.



Gail Fisher one of the first blacks to ever have a major role on a TV program; Mannix aired from 1967-1975, Fisher joined the cast in 1878. She was also the first black female to be seen on camera and have lines in a national TV commercial, that was in the early-1960s.

In 1972 she stated, ''Well, certain people who had no knowledge of blacks have maybe -- maybe -- learned something because of 'Mannix's' Peggy Fair.' Blacks were pretty much alien objects on TV as recently as 10 years ago, you know, and now we're people. I think maybe before it's all over, it's going to be all right, and I'm proud I'm a part of that.''

She won an Emmy for the role of Peggy, the first black actress to do so, and was nominated another four times. She was nominated for a Golden Globe four times becoming the first black actress to win that award, she won it twice - and she couldn't get another TV gig? For whatever reason Gail Fisher virtually disappeared from TV after Mannix was cancelled in 1975.

She developed a troubled personal life including problems with bad marriages and drugs, no doubt fueled by the industry's lack of interest. She made headlines in 1978 when she was busted for possession of pot and coke and for using an illegal phone device.

She was an actress with grace and style at a time when you could count on one hand the number of black women who had ever been a regular on a network television show. Gail Fisher died in 2000 of kidney failure, she was 65.

The Mysterious Death Of Johnny Carson's Tea-Time Girl

You may find this story difficult to believe but it's true.

Carol Wayne and Johnny CarsonIf you watched the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson during the seventies, you may remember sexy Carol Wayne. She was the big-busted, bubbly Matinee Lady of the 'Tea Time Movies with Art Fern' sketches that began in 1971 and stayed popular throughout the decade.

The Art Fern sketches have been removed from You Tube, all but this little bit:



Carol Wayne was also a frequent guest on game shows like Celebrity Sweepstakes and The Hollywood Squares, she also made quite a bit of money doing personal appearances. She had the ability to make the most innocent remark seem like a dirty joke with her little girl voice, wide "innocent" eyes and ultra-ample bosom.



It was an oft-told joke that Carol Wayne could never drown with those large flotation devices of hers - but ironically that's exactly how she did die. To this day, the exact circumstances leading up to her death in 1985 remain a mystery.

CarsonandCarolWayneCarol Wayne had no way of knowing but her troubles began in 1980 when Johnny Carson threatened to quit his lucrative role as host of the popular 'Tonight' show. He wanted the show cut from ninety-minutes to sixty. The network was having a very bad year, and Carson was its biggest profit center at the time. NBC had no choice but to reluctantly agree, freeing up this time led to the creation of 'Late Night with David Letterman', which became another hot property for the network and Carson Productions - so everyone came out a winner.

Johnny Carson as Art FernEveryone but Carol Wayne. The new sixty-minute format meant less time for skits starring familiar characters like Aunt Blabby, Floyd R. Turbo, and Art Fern. As a result, Carol Wayne's appearances on the 'Tonight' show became fewer and farther between.

At the very same time the game show craze that hit so big in the 1970s was over, that work dried up as well. In 1980, she divorced her husband, bestselling writer Burt Sugarman, four years later a thin, pale Carol Wayne declared bankruptcy due in large part to a cocaine and alcohol problem. It was said the entertainer was working as an 'escort' for wealthy businessmen in order to make a living.

According to published reports, Carol Wayne was on vacation in Santiago Bay, Mexico with Los Angeles car salesman Edward Durston on January 10, 1985 when (it has been reported) the couple had a argument about where they were going to stay that evening (they were scheduled to fly back to Los Angeles the next morning).

Durston checked into a hotel and Wayne reportedly left to walk down the beach (to cool off?). That was the last time anyone saw her alive. Three days later a local fisherman found her limp body floating in shallow bay waters, four feet deep. She was fully clothed, no cuts or abrasions; a fall from the nearby rocks was ruled out. The coroner stated that death had occurred 3 - 4 days earlier and the body tested negative for drugs and alcohol. Carol Wayne could not swim, for that reason she did not like to go too near the water. How then did she happen to be found dead in calm and shallow waters?

Suspicions were raised almost immediately. The TV star had to be identified by workers at the Las Hadas resort where the couple had been staying earlier in the week. They discovered that Edward Durston had checked out three days earlier - leaving Wayne's luggage at the airport with a message that she would pick up her bags in the morning. "Carol Wayne's death is unsolved, certainly," the U.S. Consular William LaCoque was quoted as saying in 1990. "But I don't think it was a drowning. A drowning, yes, of course, but there is much more to it than that."

Art LinkletterWhat more, we may never know but the story does get weirder - in 1969 popular daytime TV host Art Linkletter's daughter Diane jumped - or fell - from a sixth floor apartment building. Art Linkletter's highly successful television career virtually came to an end after he started crusading against drugs.

Diane Linkletter's companion the night she was killed was Edward Durston.

Awesome 1988 McDonald's Commercial Packed with Classic TV Characters

Iconic TV characters like Jed Clampett, Mrs. Cleaver and Eddie Haskell, Grandpa Munster, and Gilligan all gathered together for this spot. Delightful!



Notice in the opening that Maxwell Smart is in the car but doesn't appear otherwise... there was a second version:

 
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