Explore Television

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 26 November 2012

An Interview with Will Jordan - Part Eleven

Posted on 00:00 by Unknown

Will Jordan: There were mistakes I made... like trusting Jack Carter. The thing I couldn't control was - why did I dry up? What happened? I talk more like a researcher. You're not hearing anything creative. The two biggest bits I did ended up stolen. Frankenstein and Hitler were my biggest bits aside from impersonations. The very first act I did had no impersonations. I did a thing on the Frankenstein movie with sound effects. When I did the hunchback I didn't imitate Dwight Frye, I just did a voice. That was the way I was. 


When I worked the Blue Angel the first time, it was not good. The second time was better. I didn't want to do impressions, but without the impressions I didn't have enough material. I hadn't enough experience. What I needed to do was go to some really unknown, obscure town and use a different name so people wouldn't judge me. I wasn't ready for comedy. I needed to do what Lenny Bruce did. 


Get up every single day, keep working on it, working on it, working on it, until you finally develop your own style. Very few comedians had their own style to begin with. Comedy is the one talent that you can't rehearse. You can't do lines in front of a mirror. Many of these comedians... you have no idea how bad Joan Rivers was. 


You have no idea how bad Rodney was. You have no idea how bad Jackie Mason was. Awful. Rickles - not quite that bad, but completely different. Rickles would do a [bit about] a guy in a movie theater sneaking a smoke. Nothing could be further from what you see today. And Joan Rivers was just bad. I thought she had a great body. I said to her, "You have a great ass. You should talk about that." And she had her old nose, but she was just terrible. But! Every single day she worked. She got writers. Endless, endless work. Rodney too. Rewrites, rewrites. Rodney did impressions and he was a singer originally!


Kliph Nesteroff: And that was as Jack Roy...

Will Jordan: Jack Roy - and before he was Jack Roy he was something else. That is an example of intense work. Constantly. I didn't work that hard. I wish I had. I worked hard at impressions, but impressions are so unfunny. In order to make them funny you need an audience to inspire you and alone I was just a Xerox machine, a tape recorder, that's all I was, doing the voices. It is a kind of talent to shape your muscles to reproduce a voice. Rich Little was very good at it. The only difference between Rich Little and I was... when I did an impression and it was no good, I stopped doing it.


Kliph Nesteroff: (laughs)

Will Jordan: Rich Little is not stopped by that. Rich Little can not get over how great he is.

Kliph Nesteroff: Ugh.

Will Jordan: He is overwhelmed by his talent. To give you an idea of Rich Little's ego, he would listen to tapes in his car and work on it. He didn't have humility and unselfishness. He would play a tape and then try to do Sinatra, which he did unbelievably bad. Unbelievably bad. Anyway, he somehow got the tape mixed up and Sinatra's voice came on and this egomaniac said, "Ah! Now I'm getting it!" Can you believe that? He heard Sinatra and he thought it was himself! You wanna talk about ego? How could this man have had this amazing career? 


There is some talent there, no question about it. I've never heard anybody who ever did Sinatra's voice. The closest thing was Vic Damone and Steve Lawrence and they weren't doing an imitation. For some reason imitating Sinatra seems to have escaped everybody. It is just out of everybody's range.

Kliph Nesteroff: I want to ask you about some other names.

Will Jordan: Sure.


Kliph Nesteroff: Joe Ancis.

Will Jordan: Ah, yes, that is such an interesting thing. Now, Ancis was really brilliant, but it's hard to see it. He won't do it in front of you. I asked Rodney, "But God, we've known each other for years." Ancis aside from everything else, being brilliant and a very big money maker and everything, he was handsome! I mean, you wanna talk about a guy that had everything? Unbelievably great guy. People would tell me various stories of things that he did. They say that one day he came in when all the comedians were around. He said, "Carry me! I'm too rich to walk!"


A brilliant guy - but - I never saw it. Then one day Rodney said, "Don't you know why? He's in awe of you." I said, "Are you kidding? He's in awe of me? I'm in awe of him." That happened with several people I knew. They wouldn't open up in front of me. In awe of me? Who the hell do you think I am? Nobody ever heard of me. There were many articles about Joe Ancis and there's no question - a lot of evidence. I still would have liked to have seen it first hand. 


Getting back to hard work... Rodney is an example of hard work. That was a man who really worked on his lines. When Johnny Carson stole one of his lines, oh boy. Although that's terrible, I don't think it's as bad as stealing a routine. The only way you could hurt Rodney was if you stole his character. But stealing one of his jokes - which is terrible - it's not life threatening. 


When you steal my Ed Sullivan, it's like stealing one of my children and you ruin me when you do that. Even when I imitate a hundred other people, how am I going to find that crazy chemistry that made the Sullivan a hit? It was because he was on TV for years and I was the first to make fun of him. Why wasn't there an impression of Steve Allen? Paul Newman was the biggest star, why wasn't there an impression of Paul Newman?


Kliph Nesteroff: Wait, what happened when Johnny Carson stole Rodney Dangerfield's joke?

Will Jordan: Oh, Rodney wouldn't do the show anymore. Later on he needed to and they finally made up. But I give Rodney credit. He had a lot more balls than I did. When he worked with Peggy Lee early on she said, "Let's get together." He said, "No, I'm not going to hang out with you to get famous." He was very, very proud. He had his weaknesses, but very proud. Of course I loved deep voices and boy, that was a natural, deep voice. He talked about that horrible father he had. Very, very wonderful. I asked him if I could break in my new act [at the comedy club Dangerfield's] and it didn't work there. 


That was not the place to do it. He said, "I'll give you twenty-five a night," and I said, "That's all right, I don't need to be paid. I'm getting five thousand a night doing General Patton [for corporate engagements]. Money is not the thing. I don't want to do Patton. I don't want to do Sullivan. I want to do Will Jordan. That's why I'm doing this shit." It was the right idea, but I just wasn't ready. And, of course, I was too old. It would take a lot of work. I would [have to] keep experimenting with a hundred different characterizations, rhythms and this and that until I found the thing that worked. Buddy Hackett didn't like to work [the way he did]. A lot of these people wanted to work far more literate, but the literacy didn't work. They became the dumb character. 


Of course, many of them were dumb, like Joe E. Ross, but many of them played these kinds of guys. Sheldon Leonard for example. A brilliant man and he played that [dumb] character, which he had been developing since the old days. Before the Method there was the Group Theater and that's where Sheldon Leonard came from and that was a great characterization. It was a great thing. I did that voice on a commercial once. I don't know why there weren't more people that imitated Sheldon Leonard, although they did use Sheldon himself in cartoons. It's not a hard voice to do. I thought he was brilliant.


The big rumor around him was, "Is he Arab or is he Jewish?" Of course he was Jewish, but his real name was Bershad and he helped Danny Thomas. Danny Thomas was a guy that was not Jewish, but had a Jewish name. Bershad sounds Arabic, but it was Jewish. For a second I wondered why he would help a guy that wasn't Jewish, although I admit it's all completely irrelevant. The story goes that at the very beginning Danny Thomas let the William Morris Agency think that he was Jewish to get Jewish agent support, Lastfogel and the big brains. 


Kliph Nesteroff: That's the crux of Shecky Greene's Danny Thomas impression. It's him doing a whole bit of Danny Thomas singing this Hebrew incantation and this Catskills crowd goes nuts for it. Shecky as Danny closes saying, "Thank you very much, you've made a Lebanese Catholic a very happy man."

Will Jordan: He also said, "You people helped me - but now that I'm a star - I don't need you!" (laughs) Typical Shecky. Very, very funny. The kind of thing that Danny Thomas did - and irritated me - he did a remake of The Jazz Singer. It was kind of strange casting, although, of course, Neil Diamond did it later on. At least Neil Diamond was Jewish and so was Jolson. Still, Thomas handled his career well. You know he was on radio? 


He did impressions of Eddie Cantor and everything. Did you know he was on The Lone Ranger show playing little bits? Well, it makes sense - Detroit. WXYZ, sure. That's where they did The Green Hornet, WXYZ. When I went there once, a lot of that was still there. The guys gave me a box of silver bullets and a couple albums and I met Fred Flowerday. When I went to Pittsburgh I saw part of KDKA. That was the first radio station. Very interesting. I would talk to these guys and they told me about the effects. 


They would stand on one leg to give them the feeling they were on a horse. Fascinating. This was one of the guys that did it. He was telling me about how those wonderful effects were done. He told me about a guy named Todd who was Tonto. Great Shakespearean actor with a fantastically resonant voice. Here's this great actor and all he says is, "Ugh, no." One sentence. However, he helped make Tonto a legend. Everyone knows kemosabe and all of that.


Kliph Nesteroff: Well, you mentioned Joe E. Brown earlier.

Will Jordan: Yes.

Kliph Nesteroff: Apparently he is the one who convinced Jay Silverheels to move to Hollywood.

Will Jordan: Oh.

Kliph Nesteroff: Jay Silverheels was a lacrosse player. Joe E. Brown being the big sports fan that he was, had seen Jay Silverheels play lacrosse and wanted to cast him in some kind of shitty RKO film. And he did exactly that. He started playing Republic serials and things like that.

Will Jordan: I don't think he was in Republic serials, just on TV. Republic serials was Chief Thundercloud. Now that guy looked like a nickel. The one great serial - Lone Ranger 1937 - that's Republic. Now that guy really looked like Tonto.

Kliph Nesteroff: Right. Well, Jay Silverheels wasn't in the Lone Ranger serials - but he was doing other Republic serials not related to the Lone Ranger.


Will Jordan: Oh, yeah, okay. If you have ever seen the original Lone Ranger serials they are very interesting. Nothing like the radio show. The radio show was written by this guy Fran Striker. I think he also wrote The Green Hornet. The Green Hornet, it seems, was supposed to be the great grand nephew of the Lone Ranger. In the movie they went the other way. They were so obsessed with masks. The hero had a mask, the villain had a mask and in one satire they had a dog with a mask. The original serial was not that bad and the supporting players became big and not the Lone Ranger. 


Bruce Bennett, then known as Herman Brix, was the great olympic swimmer. George Montogomery later became a big star and married Dinah Shore. These were the rangers and with each chapter you never found out who the Lone Ranger was. His name was Alan King - obviously that was before [comedian] Alan King changed his name to Alan King. It's kind of nice for a dated serial of that type. It starts off with all of these rangers being killed. Each chapter another one of these rangers dies. One is still living. Tonto discovers him and nurses him back to health in the silver mine. 


That's where the Lone Ranger gets his silver bullets and everything else. Not quite the same as the radio show. At that time, if you go historically, they're all doing Zorro, they're all doing the Scarlet Pimpernel, it's the same character. In the day time he takes his mask off and he's a fag. It's like Clark Kent in Superman. At night they put on their cape or their mask and they become super. Same traditional gimmick still going on today. Now they have these movies of Spiderman that are unbelievable. You've got what looks like a fourteen year old girl playing Spiderman and Michael Keaton as Batman. What insane casting.


Kliph Nesteroff: You mentioned Alan King... 

Will Jordan: Brilliant. Nasty. Nasty, brilliant man. He started off as a mimic too. He definitely improved. He did all the old stuff, but he had a lot of friends. He had a very powerful manager named Adler. Adler got him with Tony Martin and Tony Martin helped out a lot of comedians. Also not a particularly brilliant man, Tony Martin, but a very nice guy and quite a good voice. 


Alan King said he was six months younger than me. That could be true, but I'm just stubborn. I think he was older. All these people today - they all sound like kids, but Alan King sounded like an old man when he was a kid! Even before he got his nose fixed he had that very deep voice and a great command.  
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • The Merv Griffin Show with guests Carol Burnett and Oscar Levant (1965)
  • Another Nice Mess starring Rich Little, Herb Voland, Bruce Kirby, Hal Smith, Bob Einstein and Steve Martin (1972)
    Here's a real rarity. It's Steve Martin's very first motion picture. That alone would make it notable. Add to the mix that the C...
  • The Today Show with Tom Snyder and guests Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn (1973)
  • Funnyman starring Peter Bonerz (1967)
    Peter Bonerz: This guy John Korty did two 16mm independent films in San Francisco that were highly acclaimed. Small films, almost European. ...
  • Woody Allen at the Hotel Diplomat (1965)
  • An Interview with Kliph Nesteroff (2004)
    Stumbled across this interview with this fella Kliph Nesteroff from 2004. I was twenty-four years old at the time. I listened to it yesterda...
  • An Interview with Lou Marsh - Part One
    Lou Adams: Tony Marsh and Lou Adams grew up in the same neighborhood in Boston. We went to see a friend of ours in a nightclub and he was ...
  • The Merv Griffin Show with guests Burt Ward and Adam West (1966)
  • An Interview with the Professor Irwin Corey
    Kliph Nesteroff: Damon Runyon once called you the funniest man in the world. Professor Irwin Corey: That is true. Runyon wrote in his column...
  • An Interview with Will Jordan - Part Twelve
    Kliph Nesteroff: We've been talking about how all performers are influenced by someone else. There's a historical precedent for ever...

Categories

  • $20000 Pyramid
  • 1929
  • 1930
  • 1931
  • 1935
  • 1938
  • 1939
  • 1940
  • 1941
  • 1942
  • 1943
  • 1944
  • 1945
  • 1946
  • 1949
  • 1950
  • 1951
  • 1952
  • 1953
  • 1954
  • 1955
  • 1956
  • 1957
  • 1958
  • 1959
  • 1960
  • 1961
  • 1962
  • 1963
  • 1964
  • 1965
  • 1966
  • 1967
  • 1968
  • 1969
  • 1970
  • 1971
  • 1972
  • 1973
  • 1974
  • 1975
  • 1976
  • 1977
  • 1978
  • 1979
  • 1980
  • 1981
  • 1982
  • 1983
  • 1984
  • 1987
  • 1989
  • 1990
  • 90 Tonight
  • abba
  • abe burrows
  • abe vigoda
  • ace trucking co
  • adam 12
  • adam west
  • aircheck
  • airchecks
  • Al Capp
  • al martino
  • alan hamel
  • alan king
  • alan thicke show
  • alan young
  • alan young show
  • Allan Melvin
  • allen ludden
  • american bandstand
  • amos n andy
  • andrews sisters
  • andy williams
  • andy williams show
  • arlene francis
  • Arnold Stang
  • art carney
  • arte johnson
  • arthur godfrey
  • Artie Dann
  • Bank On the Stars
  • barbara feldon
  • basketball
  • bbc
  • beat the clock
  • beatnik
  • Ben Gazzara
  • Bennett Cerf
  • benny rubin
  • bert convy
  • Bert Gordon
  • Bette Davis
  • betty grable
  • betty white
  • bewitched
  • bill anderson
  • Bill Cosby
  • Bill Cullen
  • bill dana
  • Bill Evans Trio
  • bill stern
  • billy crystal
  • billy curtis
  • Billy Halop
  • billy van
  • bing crosby
  • blake edwards
  • Blanchard and Morgan
  • blondie
  • bob barker
  • bob crane
  • bob crane show
  • Bob Denver
  • bob dylan
  • bob einstein
  • bob eubanks
  • Bob Hope
  • Bob Hope Chrysler Theater
  • Bob Newhart
  • bob saget
  • Bobby Darin
  • boris karloff
  • boston blackie
  • bowery boys
  • bowling
  • buddy greco
  • Buddy Hackett
  • burt ward
  • calvin and the colonel
  • canadian
  • Carl Reiner
  • Carol Burnett
  • carol burnett show
  • carpenters
  • carry on
  • cartoon
  • casey kasem
  • cavalcade of stars
  • cbc
  • cesar romero
  • charles nelson reilly
  • charlie chan
  • charlie weaver
  • Cher
  • Chesterfield Sound-Off
  • christian nut
  • christmas
  • chuck berry
  • cinema verite
  • civil rights era
  • clifton fadiman
  • cloris leachman
  • Cold War
  • colonel sanders
  • comedy records
  • concentration
  • connie stevens
  • conrad janis
  • Coronation Street
  • counterculture
  • country
  • Daniel Boone
  • Danny Thomas
  • dave garroway
  • dave madden
  • davey jones
  • David Burns
  • david frost
  • david frye
  • David Letterman
  • david susskind
  • dayton allen
  • Dean Martin
  • Dennis Hopper
  • Desi Arnaz
  • desilu playhouse
  • diana dors
  • Dick Cavett
  • Dick Clark
  • dick foran
  • dick gautier
  • Dick Gregory
  • dick martin
  • Dinah
  • dizzy gillespie
  • dom deluise
  • don adams
  • don defore
  • don knotts
  • Don Rickles
  • Donnie Osmond
  • Dragnet
  • drive
  • drive-in
  • Drugs
  • duke ellington
  • Earl Wilson
  • eartha kitt
  • ed asner
  • ed platt
  • Ed Sullivan
  • eddie anderson
  • Eddie Cantor
  • eddie quillan
  • Eddie Schaeffer
  • edgar bergen
  • edward g. robinson
  • edward r. murrow
  • elaine may
  • elsa manchester
  • Elton John
  • ernest borgnine
  • errol garner
  • eugene pallette
  • fabian
  • Fanny Brice
  • faron young
  • fernwood
  • firesign theater
  • flintstones
  • Flip Wilson
  • florence henderson
  • Ford Theater
  • Four Star Revue
  • Frank Albertson
  • frank blair
  • frank devol
  • frank fontaine
  • frank gallop
  • frank nelson
  • Frank Sinatra
  • frankie avalon
  • frankie laine
  • Fred Allen
  • fred astaire
  • fred clark
  • fred macmurray
  • fred willard
  • freddie prinze
  • gabe dell
  • Gale Gordon
  • game show
  • garage rock
  • garry
  • garry moore
  • gary morton
  • gary mule deer
  • gene baylos
  • gene rayburn
  • gene shalit
  • gene wood
  • general electric theater
  • general hospital
  • George Burns
  • George Carlin
  • george gobel
  • george jessel
  • george raft
  • george s kaufman
  • geraldo
  • Get Smart
  • gilda radner
  • ginger rogers
  • gore vidal
  • gracie allen
  • groucho
  • Groucho Marx
  • gunsmoke
  • halloween
  • hans conreid
  • harry morgan
  • harry shearer
  • Harry von Zell
  • harvey lembeck
  • have gun will travel
  • Henny Youngman
  • Henry Morgan
  • herb alpert
  • Herbie Faye
  • Here's Hollywood
  • here's lucy
  • hippies
  • hockey
  • hollywood a go go
  • Hollywood Squares
  • home
  • howard cossell
  • howard keel
  • Howell and Radcliff
  • Huell Howser
  • Hugh Downs
  • hugh hefner
  • Hullabaloo
  • huntz hall
  • hy gardner
  • hy gardner calling
  • i've got a secret
  • imogene coca
  • Iris Adrian
  • isaac hayes
  • It's Anybody's Guess
  • Jack Benny
  • jack carter
  • jack cassidy
  • Jack Dempsey
  • jack elam
  • Jack Kerouac
  • jack klugman
  • jack lescoulie
  • Jack Oakie
  • Jack Paar
  • jack sheldon
  • jack webb
  • jackie cooper
  • Jackie Gleason
  • jackie miles
  • jackie wilson
  • James Brolin
  • James Brown
  • James Burke
  • james coburn
  • James Earl Jones
  • Jane Dulo
  • Jane Fonda
  • jane wyman
  • janet leigh
  • jay lawrence
  • jayne meadows
  • jazz
  • jean carroll
  • jerry lester
  • Jerry Lewis
  • Jerry Rubin
  • jesse white
  • jfk
  • Jim Backus
  • jim lange
  • jimmy durante
  • jimmy martinez
  • jimmy smith
  • jimmy walker
  • joan crawford
  • joan davis
  • Joan Rivers
  • Joanne Worley
  • joe besser
  • Joe E. Ross
  • joey adams
  • Joey Bishop
  • john byner
  • john carradine
  • John Cassavetes
  • john coltrane
  • john lennon
  • Johnny Carson
  • Johnny Cash
  • johnny mercer
  • johnny olson
  • Jonathan Winters
  • Judy Collins
  • judy garland
  • julie andrews
  • julie london
  • kate smith
  • kate smith evening hour
  • Ken Berr Wow Show
  • ken berry
  • kent mccord
  • Kitty Carlisle
  • kitty wells
  • Kraft Music Hall
  • KTLA
  • Larry Hankin
  • larry king
  • larry storch
  • laugh-in
  • lavern baker
  • Lawrence Welk
  • Lee Marvin
  • lena horne
  • lenny bruce
  • leo gorcey
  • leonard barr
  • les brown
  • Les Crane
  • leslie nielsen
  • liberace
  • Likely Lads
  • lionel atwill
  • Little Rascals
  • liza minnelli
  • lloyd thaxton
  • lloyd thaxton presents
  • Lola Falana
  • lon chaney
  • Lord Buckley
  • loretta lynn
  • louis armstrong
  • louis nye
  • Lucille Ball
  • lulu
  • make me laugh
  • mama cass
  • mamie van doren
  • Marilyn Chambers
  • marlo thomas
  • marshall mcluhan
  • Martha Raye
  • martha raye show
  • martin balsam
  • martin mull
  • mel blanc
  • mel brooks
  • Merv Griffin
  • mickey dolenz
  • Mike Douglas
  • mike mckean
  • mike nichols
  • milt kamen
  • Milton Berle
  • milton frome
  • Minnie Pearl
  • monica lewis
  • monkees
  • monty hall
  • Morey Amsterdam
  • mort sahl
  • mousie garner
  • movi
  • movies
  • Muhammad Ali
  • music acts
  • my three sons
  • myron cohen
  • Nancy Kulp
  • Nat Hiken
  • nat king cole
  • natalie wood
  • NBC
  • new years
  • newlywed game
  • news
  • norm crosby
  • norman mailer
  • odd couple
  • olsen and johnson
  • On Broadway Tonight
  • orson bean
  • orson welles
  • oscar levant
  • OTR
  • pantomime quiz
  • Parade of Stars
  • Partridge Family
  • pass the buck
  • password
  • password plus
  • pat boone
  • Pat Boone in Hollywood
  • pat buttram
  • Pat Carroll
  • pat harrington
  • Pat Paulsen
  • patti page
  • paul krassner
  • paul lynde
  • Paul Reubens
  • peanuts
  • pearl bailey
  • Peggy Cass
  • perry como
  • perry como show
  • Pert Kelton
  • peter bonerz
  • peter gzowski
  • Peter Lawford
  • peter leeds
  • peter marshall
  • Peter O'Toole
  • Phil Collins
  • phil donahue
  • phil foster
  • phil harris
  • phil hartman
  • Phil Silvers
  • Phyllis Diller
  • phyllis kirk
  • pigmeat markham
  • pilot
  • pinky lee
  • polly bergen
  • porter wagoner show
  • Price is Right
  • Professor Irwin Corey
  • punk rock
  • racist
  • ralph bellamy
  • ralph edwards
  • Ralph Emery
  • ramones
  • Ray Conniff
  • red buttons
  • red buttons show
  • red skelton
  • red skelton show
  • Redd Foxx
  • Redd Foxx Comedy Hour
  • Regional Television
  • Regis Philbin
  • religion
  • ricardo montalban
  • Richard Dawson
  • richard nixon
  • richard pryor
  • Rip Taylor
  • Rip Torn
  • Roasts
  • rob reiner
  • robert blake
  • robert goulet
  • robert klein
  • robert reed
  • rod serling
  • rodney dangerfield
  • roger corman
  • Roger Miller
  • rolling stones
  • rowan and martin
  • rudy vallee
  • sal mineo
  • sally field
  • sam cooke
  • Sandler and Young
  • sanford and son
  • Schlitz Playhouse
  • scoey mitchell
  • Second City
  • see it now
  • senor wences
  • Shelley Berman
  • shirley jones
  • sid gould
  • sitcom
  • slappy white
  • Sly Stone
  • snl
  • soap operas
  • Sonny Bono
  • soul
  • Soul Train
  • Soupy Sales
  • Spanky McFarland
  • spike jones and his city slickers
  • spike jones show
  • spinal tap
  • standells
  • sterling hayden
  • Steve Allen
  • steve and eydie
  • Steve Martin
  • stiller and meara
  • stingray
  • stubby kaye
  • Studs Terkel
  • Sue Randall
  • Superman
  • supremes
  • suzanne sommers
  • tattletales
  • tennessee ernie ford show
  • terry thomas
  • test pattern
  • thanksgiving
  • That Regis Philbin Show
  • The Colgate Comedy Hour
  • the committee
  • the dating game
  • the david frost show
  • The Dick Cavett Show
  • the doors
  • The Ed Sullivan Show
  • the farmers daughter
  • the garry moore show
  • the george burns and gracie allen show
  • The Jerry Lewis Show
  • The Joe Pyne Show
  • The Lawrence Welk Show
  • The Lucy Show
  • The Merv Griffin Show
  • The Mike Douglas Show
  • The Phil Silvers Show
  • The Smothers Brothers
  • The Steve Allen Show
  • The Tomorrow Show
  • The Turtles
  • this is show business
  • This is Tom Jones
  • this is your life
  • Three Stooges
  • Thriller
  • Timmie Rogers
  • today show
  • tom brokaw
  • Tom Snyder
  • Tonight Show
  • tony bennett
  • Tony martin
  • tony randall
  • Top of the Pops
  • totie fields
  • truman capote
  • Twilight Theater
  • twilight zone
  • ugliest girl in town
  • vampira
  • Van Harris
  • victor buono
  • vivian vance
  • wagon train
  • We Interrupt This Week
  • Weird
  • western
  • What's My Line
  • wide wide world
  • wide world of sports
  • william bendix
  • william f. buckley
  • william powell
  • william schallert
  • william shatner
  • Willie Mays
  • willie tyler and lester
  • wilt chamberlain
  • Woody Allen
  • woody woodpecker
  • Words About Music
  • xavier cugat
  • yippies
  • yoko ono
  • zacherele

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (2)
    • ►  January (2)
  • ►  2013 (289)
    • ►  December (31)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (4)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  August (13)
    • ►  July (47)
    • ►  June (42)
    • ►  May (43)
    • ►  April (34)
    • ►  March (12)
    • ►  February (6)
    • ►  January (55)
  • ▼  2012 (209)
    • ►  December (68)
    • ▼  November (61)
      • I Thought I Was Taller: A Short History of Mel Bro...
      • Woody Allen: The World's Funniest Anhedoniste (1979)
      • The Jerry Lewis Show with guests Rowan and Martin,...
      • An Interview with Will Jordan - Part Eleven
      • US Magazine Looks at the 70s with host David Lette...
      • The 20,000 Pyramid with celebrity contestant David...
      • The 20,000 Pyramid with celebrity contestant David...
      • The 20,000 Pyramid with celebrity contestant David...
      • An Interview with Kenny Colman
      • The Merv Griffin Show with guests Kitty Carlisle a...
      • Concentration (1963)
      • Concentration (1963)
      • Calvin and the Colonel (1961)
      • The TV Show featuring Billy Crystal, Michael McKea...
      • Celebrity Secrets with guests Robert Reed, Lee Mer...
      • The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson with guest Car...
      • The PTL Club with guest Colonel Sanders (1979)
      • Fernwood 2 Night (1977)
      • Jackpot Bowling with guests Jack Dempsey and Diana...
      • Alfred Hitchcock Presents with special guest stars...
      • Dragnet with special guest stars Peter Leeds and L...
      • Boston Blackie with special guest stars Billy Halo...
      • The Merv Griffin Show with guests David Burns, Lai...
      • Thriller with special guest star Mort Sahl (1960)
      • Hy Gardner Calling with guest Ed Sullivan (1958)
      • The Phil Silvers Show with special guest star Davi...
      • This is Your Life (1953)
      • Stars in the Eye (1952)
      • Home with host Arlene Francis and guests Jacquelin...
      • The Red Buttons Show featuring Pat Carroll and gue...
      • Chesterfield Sound-Off starring Fred Allen with gu...
      • Four Star Revue featuring Jimmy Durante, Eddie Can...
      • The Merv Griffin Show with guests Roger Vadim and ...
      • Jimmy Smith in Europe (1965)
      • BBC Monitor with guests Peter O'Toole and Orson We...
      • The Redd Foxx Comedy Hour with guest Don Knotts (1...
      • Jack Benny's Second Farewell Special with guests G...
      • The Larry Kane Show (1959)
      • Pantomime Quiz featuring Phyllis Kirk, Hans Conrei...
      • The Alan Young Show with guests Monica Lewis and W...
      • The Merv Griffin Show with guests Dennis Hopper an...
      • Feast of Friends - Jim Morrison and the Doors (1970)
      • Tragedy or Hope (1970)
      • The David Frost Show with guests Jerry Rubin and t...
      • Take 30 with guest Bill Cosby (1969)
      • Close-up featuring Woody Allen (1967)
      • It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World - the CBC Cinema Veri...
      • CBS News Election Night (1972)
      • WTOP TV Election Coverage (1972)
      • ABC News Election Promo (1972)
      • Pat Paulsen for President (1968)
      • Irwin Corey for President - Pat Paulsen for Presid...
      • Gracie Allen for President - Eddie Cantor for Pres...
      • Now! (1965)
      • Here's Lucy (1968)
      • Disc-O-Teen (1967)
      • Jazz 625 (1965)
      • Cinéastes de notre temps: John Cassavetes (1968)
      • The Brass Are Coming (1969)
      • The Steve Allen Show with guests Jerry Lewis and P...
      • WRCA-TV Station Launch (1958)
    • ►  October (65)
    • ►  September (15)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile