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:

Unseen Holocaust documentary directed by Alfred Hitchcock

A long forgotten about documentary on the Holocaust directed by Alfred Hitchcock and suppressed for political reasons is about to be restored and released for the first time in complete form. Here's more on the story.

 

Will Smith on the Death of Uncle Phil



 James Avery, the wonderfully funny actor who played Uncle Phil on The Fresh Prince of Bel Air has passed, here's the reaction from co-star Will Smith.


"Some of my greatest lessons in Acting, Living and being a respectable human being came through James Avery," Smith wrote. "Every young man needs an Uncle Phil. Rest in Peace."

Avery died Dec. 31 at age 68 in Glendale.


Jackie Gleason's TV Mega-Bomb

Gleason ShowThe original 'Jackie Gleason Show' aired on CBS from 1952-1955 as a traditional hour-long variety show. In 1955, the series was pared to thirty-minutes and featured exclusively one of the regular sketches from the show - 'The Honeymooners. The show returned to an hour format in the fall of 1956 for one season.

"The Great One" (as he was known) returned to television in October of 1958 in a live, thirty-minute variety show - but Gleason stopped production after a three-month run stating: "Anytime quality has a deadline, it's got to deteriorate. You can strive for quality week in and week out, but you won't often get it because it can't be manufactured within a specific time."

Switching gears, Gleason's next TV project was a game show. Games were big in the ratings, Groucho was having tremendous success with You Bet Your Life on NBC. You're in the Picture was added to the CBS schedule on January 20, 1961 to replace the poorly performing sitcom 'Mr. Garland', Friday nights at 9:30. How's this for a premise - celebrity contestants stick their heads into a painted scene, and they have to guess what the scene is, or what historical figure they represent by asking the emcee questions.

The celebrity contestants for that first (and as it turned out ONLY broadcast) episode included Jan Sterling, Keenan Wynn, Aurthur Treacher, and Pat Carroll.


Jackie Gleason : "You're in the Picture" by werquin

Jackie Gleason
Cope Robinson writes: "Well, I saw 'You're In The Picture' too. From the control room at some CBS theatre for I had bought the program. I, or rather my company, was the sponsor.

"Jackie and the people at William Morris, his agency, had put the production together. Together with CBS, they pitched the program to me and a few others at Liggett & Myers. I remember thinking that the show could be risky for it was quite removed from anything that Gleason had done and the premise of celebrities sticking their heads through a painted plywood board and quessing what historical character they were supposed to be was pretty shaky.

"But I think I thought that since Jackie Gleason was at the peak of his career, he could pull off a silly game show with the same success Groucho Marx was enjoying on NBC.

"It was a huge bomb! Everybody knew it. Gleason, William Morris, CBS, and, for sure, Liggett & Myers. The real question after the first show was what do we do now.

"I don't remember who came up with the idea for the second show, probably Gleason himself. Nor do I recall that CBS wanted to continue with the game show. If they did, they didn't tell me and I can add if they had they would have done so without this sponsor.

"I should have known that things would go wrong when at the first script rehearsal, the first meeting for the show, Gleason asked before the start, "Who is the GREAT ONE?" A chorus rang out, "You are!" That began an association with the greatest egotist I have ever known."

Selling this military collectible - Stars & Stripes signed by Bob Hope


This copy of Stars & Stripes was signed by Bob Hope, my grandfather was in JAG during WWII and met Bob. All he had on him for an autograph was that morning's fresh copy of Stars & Stripes. It sat folded in a drawer until I found it. My mother told me this story and that is Bob Hope's signature.

July 13, 1945 - the war is ours to win, this date is significant in that it was the day of the Oak Ridge Petition in which atomic scientists approved the use of atomic bombs, "particularly against cities, be sanctioned by you as the Chief Executive." Basically giving the green light to drop the bombs. Of course, you wouldn't have read about THAT anywhere!
On the cover - Admiral Halsey - (apparently he did get to sea.)

Here's the Ebay listing!

Hilarious 1970s Game Show

Geoff Edwards

The New Treasure Hunt with Geoff EdwardsOne of my guilty pleasures from years past was The New Treasure Hunt from the mid-1970s starring Geoff Edwards, a master at wringing comical moments and over-the-top reactions out of the contestants.

The premise could not have been simpler or more random - each audience member opened a package to determine which one of them will be invited on to the stage for a chance to win cars, boats or even $25,000. That was huge money for a game show in the 1970s.
1970's The new  treasure hunt
Based on a game show from the fifties (Treasure Hunt), this Chuck Barris production is my favorite game show of all time. This was Geoff Edwards' shining moment - emotionally torturing his overly-excited contestants for laughs.


The New Treasure Hunt
No skill or knowledge was needed on The New Treasure Hunt, it was a lot like Deal or No Deal - two contestants on each episode got to choose from thirty wrapped packages displayed center stage.



They had a shot at the usual game show prizes (washer-dryers and Turtle Wax) or a chance at the grand prize - a check for $25,000 (that's about $125,000 in today's dough). It later increased to $50,000. Quite a few people found the check which heightened the excitement. There were also booby prizes called "clunks" interspersed with the prizes. The way Edwards would tease the contestants mercilessly before delivering the verdict was nothing short of brilliant. And the silly skits somehow worked when Geoff Edwards performed them.



To prolong the suspense, the host would peek into the boxes before the contestant got a look and go through a number of fake-outs before he sprung the actual prize on them. In so many cases, the contestant would be a large black woman who went absolutely berserk at the prospect of winning a big prize, jumping up and down, screaming at the top of her lungs and pummeling the poor host.

Part game show, part wrestling match - Geoff Edwards often ended the show on the floor or off to the side of the stage. This led to some degree of criticism that the show was overly exploitive.



The announcer on The New Treasure Hunt was Johnny Jacobs. Game show producer / host Chuck Barris wrote the show's lovely, melodic end theme.

Awesome New Movies Added to Netflix Streaming

These incredible movies were added to Netflix streaming on January 1 including:

"West Side Story" (1961)
"American Psycho" (2000)
"Raging Bull" (1980)
"The Brady Bunch Movie"
"Bull Durham"
"Juice"
"Three coins in the Fountain" "Thelma And Louise" (1991)
"What's Eating Gilbert Grape?" (1993)
"Big Trouble In Little China" (1986)
"Breakfast At Tiffany's" (1961)
"3 Women"
"The Amityville Horror" (1979) "Bull Durham" (1988)
"Red Dawn" (1984)
"Spaceballs" (1987)
"Star Trek: The Motion Picture" (1979)
"The Chinese Connection" (1972)
"Grapes Of Wrath" (1940)
"Planes, Trains, And Automobiles" (1987)
"Harlem Nights"
"High Anxiety"
"The Day The Earth Stood Still" (1951)
"The Talented Mr Ripley" (1999)
"Tora! Tora! Tora!" (1970)
"Death Race 2000" (1975)

ALSO: Dexter seasons 5-8
 
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