Sassy Sophie Tucker was known as a risque performer in the Vaudeville days, singing somewhat bawdy songs and telling off-color jokes.
She somewhat reinvented herself on TV as a comedian for old folks by making her age and longevity the hook of her comedy. Here she is on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1960. She couldn't very well go on TV and tell dirty jokes now could she? She could NOW.
In her last network appearance on Ed Sullivan you can she's exhausted. Her accompanist and musical director Ted Shapiro started with her in 1921 and he's seen in this clip! Sophie Tucker collapsed after finishing the first night of her comeback engagement at The Latin Quarter in December 1965 and never fully recovered. She died in February of 1966 at age 80.
Bette Midler 1979 made Sophie relevant again in the 1970s when she incorporated some of the old gal's jokes in her act, and later used her as a jumping off point for more risque humor, there are examples in this interview from the early-eighties. The jokes start at 3:18.
Rap & Rhyme Movie!
Here's the trailer for 'Rap & Rhyme', I filmed a part for this movie sometime back and it looks great. It was written & directed by Maurice Hicks... the script is not what you'd expect. Look for it in the future...
Rap and Rhyme - official teaser from rex yau on Vimeo.
Captain Kangaroo
Watching an episode of Captain Kangaroo show from the early-sixties, one is struck by the achingly slow pace and overall gentle nature of the show.
Here's the classic Captain Kangaroo opening from the 1960s:
Episodes of Captain Kangaroo are very rare, CBS destroyed them all! Only a few have been unearthed, one black & white episode and a few colors. Here's an entire episode from 1976 after the production was updated and modernized. Notice how it starts with shout-outs from CBS primetime shows, Dolly Parton is the guest star:
Read all about the history of Captain Kangaroo at TVparty!
The Bette Davis Show?
Bette Davis really wanted a weekly TV series, primarily for the money and security it offered. By the mid-1950s her movie career had cooled considerably and offers weren't coming in.
Bette didn't want to be another dizzy dame on TV, she was no Lucy-type, she had a different idea for her television pilot in 1958. Paula was a light comedy/drama centered around a top Broadway theatrical agent, her agency and the eccentric writers they took on.
In this TV show, the women wouldn't be played for laughs, they would do the playing.
Bette's real life husband Gary Merrill was cast as Paula's husband, a playwright there to provide her with male eye candy for opening nights and provide some familial warmth for the closing of the show. Hey, he likes her... you will too.
There was no question who was in charge in front of and behind the camera. And with good reason. Davis's command of the medium far outstripped anyone else's and she knew it. I can think of no other actor working in television in the 1950s (except James Dean) who could touch her confident artistry.
Oddly, the night before Paula was filmed, Bette and her husband - who had a disastrously rocky relationship - were almost killed in a fire at LA's fashionable Chateau Marmont. The infamously contentious couple split soon after this pilot failed to get picked up.
Vivian Vance Was Almost a Regular on Rhoda?
Beloved TV icon Vivian Vance made one of her last appearances in primetime as the neighbor in a delightfully clever 1975 episode of Rhoda. She fell easily back into the sitcom rhythm, as if she'd never left our screens (she hadn't, really, with the popularity of I Love Lucy and The Lucy Show reruns).
This was when the series dropped the idea of the lead character having a husband, during season 2. Rhoda was a hit with lots of bits that caught on big (the mom, the sister, Carlton the doorman) but the husband was dragging down the comedy.
But divorce, and the fighting you'll see in this episode that led up to it, was still frowned upon in 1975. The writers knew it would be difficult to get that carefree Rhoda character back into the bottle after that. Hence the children performing the theme song, anything to take the edge off. They basically had to make Rhoda's husband such a jerk that no one could fault Rhoda for splitting with him.
Valerie Harper and the producers enjoyed the experience of working with Vivian Vance so much that they considered making her a regular on the series - but she'd been diagnosed with cancer in 1973 and was too fragile for the weekly TV grind, she'd left that behind a decade ago as the co-star of the number 1 show in the nation, The Lucy Show. If it wasn't worth it to her then...
Still, the addition of Vivian Vance might have saved Rhoda from the slow ratings death that was to come.
Her fragility was proven tragically true in 1977 when Vivian Vance suffered a debilitating stroke while filming a TV special, Lucy Calls the President, the first scripted show she'd done with Lucille Ball since her final appearance on Here's Lucy in 1972. A pro to the last, she finished filming the special before seeking medical attention.
Vivian Vance died in 1979.
Soul Alive!
A staple of TV markets around the country in the 1960s, local dance shows fell out of favor at the end of the 1960s and we aren't likely to see a revival. (Then again, you never know. Similar in nature, nationally broadcast Dance Party USA was a hit in the 1980s.)
With the Disco craze in full swing and nationally syndicated Soul Train a hot commodity on Saturdays afternoons, WPIX saw an opportunity to bring that stone cold dead format back to TV screens.
The main feature on Soul Alive was the heated competition between dancers representing some of the City's top discotheques or local high schools. The winning couple's names were delivered via the 'Mechanical Hand' - they could collect a bounty of prizes including a trip, new sound system or they might end up with a package that included Bic disposable shavers. They were new then!
Big name guest stars frequented the program, after all, this was the number one TV market in the world and a lot of record albums were sold in the city of New York. A LOT! On this episode, Cissy Houston lip-synced her latest single while the Rolling Stones appeared in a video.
One unintentionally hilarious segment had the dancers revealing their working life in pictures that were mixed into their solo spots. Similarly, when schools competed, a profile of the student body was aired.
Batman TV Show Coming to DVD? No?
The show has been tied up for over a decade, in part because of a dispute with the William Dozier family, he was the creator / producer of the production. The Dozier's contend they are owed money from airings of the show on cable and won't release DVD rights until it is settled.
But the new Warner contract for the Batman TV show characters reportedly rules out home theater distribution, in other words, DVDs.
Click over for the story behind the Batman TV Show
The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie
Opening to the Saturday Superstar Movie
ABC Saturday Superstar Movie
9:30 Saturday Mornings 1972 - 73
TV-movies were big winners for ABC in primetime so they tried an anthology program for the kiddie set. It worked for CBS and the New Scooby Doo Movies.
ABC fielded a wide range of concepts for their cartoon movies -'Willie Mays and the Say Hey Kid', 'Yogi's Ark Lark', 'Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie Goolies', 'Oliver and the Artful Dodger', 'Lassie's and the Spirit of Thunder Mountain', 'That Girl in Wonderland' and 'Popeye'.
'The Brady Kids' starred the vocal talents of the original cast members, this was on the first episode of SSM to give a big launch for the new Brady cartoon series that started on Saturdays that fall.
Highlights for the first season included an animated reboot of 'Nanny and the Professor', again with the original cast of the ABC primetime series (Juliet Mills, Richard Long, etc) reunited. The family and Nanny got involved in a spy adventure that started when the boys found a stolen microdot. This was charming, as I recall, but then I loved the sitcom and was sorry to see it go the year before.
'Tabitha and Adam and the Clown Family' was based on the ABC hit 'Bewitched'.
'Mini-Munsters' was the first of MANY attempts to revive 'The Munsters', the only original cast member in this production was Al Lewis as Grandpa. The network failed to pick up this pilot.
"Gidget Makes The Wrong Connection" - an animated Gidget and her beach pals gets mixed up with gold smugglers.
Most if not all of these 'movies' were pilots for possible Saturday series, many (like Lassie) actually graduated to weekly status. These mini-movies were produced by Filmation, Rankin-Bass, Hanna-Barbera and others.
Still, the second season started with a bang - 'Space Family Robinson', the animated adventures of the 'Lost in Space' Robinson family... well, sort of. The original Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris) was on hand but (for legal reasons) this was a slightly different Robinson family he's now marooned with. Another possible Saturday morning series that was ultimately shelved from Hanna-Barbera.
This was a very weird production, guess they decided to do 'Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space' instead - it was basically the same concept. Clever character designs by Alex Toth made this (and Josie) watchable.
Other new features this season - 'Nanny and the Professor and the Phantom of the Circus', modeled on every Scooby Doo episode ever. The original cast of this much-loved primetime series (Nanny and the Professor, 1970-71) returned a second time in cartoon form.
'Luvcast, USA' was a 'Love American Style' cartoon-style with three segments about love potions and feminist werewolves. Now that's scary!
More Classic TV fun at TVparty!
Bob Barker's Game Show Fail

This weird format allowed the host to use one of his best skills, an opportunity to connect with ordinary people and elicit laughs, an ability he honed during his decades long run on Truth or Consequences.
Notice the announcer was Johnny Olson who joined Bob Barker just a year later on The New Price Is Right a 40 years later the show is still going strong.
Here's the very first episode of TNPIR from September 4, 1972 where Johnny Olson calls for the contestants to stand before he yells "C'mon down!" for the very first time. This is the actual network taping from the summer of '72 with the original slate and commercials...
Television's First Star: Broken and Abused!
As early as the 1920's, RCA engineers in New York were trying to develop a workable television broadcast - in 1926 they beamed this blurry picture of a rotating ceramic 'Felix the Cat' statue to the far reaches of Kansas.
The dozen or so primitive two-inch, 60 lines per screen receiving sets between those two points picked up the moving image with the same enthusiasm that you probably felt when you found a really cool website back in the mid-1990s.
Felix didn't reign as television's biggest (and only) star for long - as the months wore on he fell off his rotating pedestal one too many times and was replaced by a paper-mache Mickey Mouse.
As you can see in the promotional film below broadcasters had the technology to bring TV to the masses by the 1940s but war shortages made a television rollout impossible, no parts to make the sets. It wasn't until the prosperous nifty fifties that America - especially the kids at first - fully embraced this new technology.
- Scott Sherwood writes: "Of course, you didn't tell the real reason that Felix was replaced by the Mickey Mouse statue, and who can blame you? We've all heard the sordid stories of Felix and his drinking; the arguments with the RCA engineers; his inability to remain on the rotating platform. These are the stuff of tabloids, and the press of the 1920's had a field day with Felix's problems at the RCA test studios. Hopefully, though, a new generation will come to love and respect Felix's work at this point in his career. It was some of his finest work."
The dozen or so primitive two-inch, 60 lines per screen receiving sets between those two points picked up the moving image with the same enthusiasm that you probably felt when you found a really cool website back in the mid-1990s.
Felix didn't reign as television's biggest (and only) star for long - as the months wore on he fell off his rotating pedestal one too many times and was replaced by a paper-mache Mickey Mouse.
As you can see in the promotional film below broadcasters had the technology to bring TV to the masses by the 1940s but war shortages made a television rollout impossible, no parts to make the sets. It wasn't until the prosperous nifty fifties that America - especially the kids at first - fully embraced this new technology.
- Scott Sherwood writes: "Of course, you didn't tell the real reason that Felix was replaced by the Mickey Mouse statue, and who can blame you? We've all heard the sordid stories of Felix and his drinking; the arguments with the RCA engineers; his inability to remain on the rotating platform. These are the stuff of tabloids, and the press of the 1920's had a field day with Felix's problems at the RCA test studios. Hopefully, though, a new generation will come to love and respect Felix's work at this point in his career. It was some of his finest work."
The Brady Bunch Sex Dungeon?
I said, "Give me a hint." He indicated, "the person starred in two TV series at the same time in the 1970s, one a drama and one a comedy." I thought of Robert Reed immediately who was on The Brady Bunch and Mannix at the same time. His reaction didn't give anything away (he was a prostitute, after all, the original poker face) but I can't think of any other TV stars that fit that description... can you?
Concentration
Bud Collyer, the host, was the original voice of Superman on both radio and the TV cartoons from this time period. I can still remember the sound of the turning squares.
Here's an article on the guy who designed the Concentration puzzles.
Ben Stiller's First Network TV Appearance
Here's a July 1974 syndicated episode of the $25,000 Pyramid where something fairly remarkable happens. Well, a couple of things, watch the whole episode it's very exciting, William Shatner and Anne Meara are the celebrity players.
But at the very end comedian Anne Meara calls her son "Benny" to come join her on stage - and sure enough Ben Stiller, 8 years old, comes running into the scene. You won't see much of him, the camera misses him at every opportunity - ironic I guess. It would be another decade before he was hired as a TV actor.
But at the very end comedian Anne Meara calls her son "Benny" to come join her on stage - and sure enough Ben Stiller, 8 years old, comes running into the scene. You won't see much of him, the camera misses him at every opportunity - ironic I guess. It would be another decade before he was hired as a TV actor.
LaWanda Page's Dirty Filthy (Funny) Standup Act
Was there anything funnier than Redd Foxx's battles with 'Aunt Ester' aka LaWanda Page? Not for me.
'The Queen of Comedy' LaWanda Page was a nightclub comic with a decidedly dirty act, here's a bit from one of her comedy albums, a blue streak of dirty jokes. NSFW!
From another raunchy LaWanda Page comedy album, Preach On Sister, Preach On!
More Classic TV fun at TVparty!
1981 Apple II Ad with Dick Cavett
Apparently it took 8-10 takes and the next day Dick Cavett said he had the worst case of constipation because of eating so many apples. According to the Ad Agency Dick was wonderful to work with, and had a high level of respect for Steve Jobs and what Apple was doing.
Sally Quinn's CBS Morning Show Debacle in 1973
40 years ago CBS re-booted their long running but low rated morning show and it was a true debacle. See for yourself in these excerpts from the August 6, 1973 airing of the "CBS Morning News," it was an historic broadcast in some ways.
CBS was sick of losing mornings to Barbara Walters an the Today show so they brought in all of the CBS News heavy hitters to cover the morning stories and hired Sally Quinn from the Washington Post to put a softer, feminine face on the show. With little (or no) broadcast experience on her part, this move turned out to be an expensive and embarrassing flop for the network in '73.
For starters, ninety minutes before this live broadcast, Quinn collapsed from the flu. On screen she said weird things like, "that was how I felt when my mother and father made me clean up my room" after a report on the brutal conditions suffered by child migrant farm workers. 6 months later she was gone.
Note the seriousness of the program compared to the fluff that's airing today, there's a depth to the stories you would expect only from 60 Minutes now.
There's an interview of Pat Buchanan playing apologist for Richard Nixon who would resign almost exactly a year later. Also you'll get to see the iconic Iron Eyes Cody anti-polution ad.
CBS was sick of losing mornings to Barbara Walters an the Today show so they brought in all of the CBS News heavy hitters to cover the morning stories and hired Sally Quinn from the Washington Post to put a softer, feminine face on the show. With little (or no) broadcast experience on her part, this move turned out to be an expensive and embarrassing flop for the network in '73.
For starters, ninety minutes before this live broadcast, Quinn collapsed from the flu. On screen she said weird things like, "that was how I felt when my mother and father made me clean up my room" after a report on the brutal conditions suffered by child migrant farm workers. 6 months later she was gone.
Note the seriousness of the program compared to the fluff that's airing today, there's a depth to the stories you would expect only from 60 Minutes now.
There's an interview of Pat Buchanan playing apologist for Richard Nixon who would resign almost exactly a year later. Also you'll get to see the iconic Iron Eyes Cody anti-polution ad.
More Classic TV fun at TVparty!
All Plinko Episode of The Price is Right

CBS aired an all Plinko episode of 'The Price is Right' on Friday, Sept. 27, 2013, the audience wasn't told that was going to be the case but it was the 30th anniversary of the game so host Drew Carey and the producers wanted to celebrate.
Did you ever see the episode where Snoop Dogg (Lion) played Plinko? It happened in 2012...
More Classic TV fun at TVparty!
More Las Vegas Legends!
The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis on DVD
This was a radical departure for sitcoms, teens on TV had always been portrayed with a distinct 1940's worldview, a ubiquitous anachronism. While the culture was undergoing an evolution, a revolution, TV teens were represented by guys dressed in sport coats, sweater-vests and ties, and gals in flouncy dresses sporting bobby socks and patent leather shoes.
It could be argued that Dobie broke the mold in a radical way, more animals than teens had a meaningful role on a television series in 1960. There hadn't been many shows (I can't think of any off-hand) that had been about someone other than an adult unless it was a little kid, think Leave it to Beaver - or Dennis the Menace which debuted the same year as Dobie.
More than any other series of the period Dobie reflected the youth culture as it existed - the casual dress, beatnik scene, the emerging me-first generation in full flower - all punctuated with a jazzy score.
Read the entire review of Dobie Gillis on DVD and
why Maynard was almost written out after episode 4!
Jim Kelly Kicks Bad Cop Ass
Football star, martial artist, and Blacksploitation film great Jim 'The Dragon' Kelly died on June 29, 2013. No Hollywood phony, before his acting career began Kelly won the World Middleweight Karate title.
Here's a scene that shows just how awesome he was on screen, from "Three the Hard Way," where corrupt cops (no!) try to set our man up. I love how this scene ends...
More on the death of Jim Kelly.
Here's a scene that shows just how awesome he was on screen, from "Three the Hard Way," where corrupt cops (no!) try to set our man up. I love how this scene ends...
More on the death of Jim Kelly.
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