Mitchell Hadley's Blog: It's About TV!, page 101

February 13, 2021

This week in TV Guide: February 11, 1961

Until a few years ago, the most I could say about Peter Gunn was that Craig Stevens played a suave private eye, and it had one of the coolest themes of all time . I had to have seen it at some point in time, probably many years ago, before I was old enough to understand Lola Albright. But then I was able to get the complete series on DVD—and then I got Lola Albright.

Albright plays Edie Hart, the singer who's also Gunn's girlfriend. She works out of a bar called Mother's, which doubles as the place where Gunn meets his clients and conducts his business. She's a smart, sassy character* who's graced with some snappy dialogue, every bit Gunn's equal in the scenes in which they're matched. She has a fine singing voice, doing her own vocals in the occasional set pieces at Mother's. She exudes an adult sexiness that makes it impossible to take your eyes off of her when she's on screen. And she's a likable character, as is Gunn, making this one of the easier private eye shows to watch.

*Gunn's nickname for her was "Silly."

Off screen, Lola Albright has some things to say about what she sees as an unreasonable invasion of her privacy since her divorce from actor  Jack Carson . "To tell the truth, I'm sick and tired of the line 'Does Lola get what Lola wants?'* Every magazine and newspaper seems to leap on it as though discovering it for the very first time. I am equally sick and tired of the line 'Lonely Lola.'" Such are the curses of having an alliterative name, it would appear. "If my name were Betty, I'd be two cliches to the good." She struggles with the line between personal and public; while she understands the sacrifices of privacy that are part of stardom, she wonders "why does the press have to go so far? Why do they print things you never said, things they make up out of a blue sky? Why do they twist what you say into meanings you never meant?" Lola also denies she's dissatisfied with her role on Gunn; she likes how Edie got her own place in the third (and final) season, a plot devise that gives her a chance to sing more. "I don't want to dominate the show and I certainly don't want a series of my own."

*If you're unsure of the origin of the line, watch this.

People who work with her have nothing but good things to say. Frank Stempel, who was her ex-husband Carson's manager, says that "Even now that she's making good money, she doesn't really know what it is. She goes out of her way to help people. She'd give away her last dime if she thought it would help somebody." Press agent Bill Stein remembers how when his wife was in the hospital, "Lola must have called me a dozen times offering to come out and take care of the two kids while I was working. If you know her, you like her."

Peter Gunn, which ends its three-year run at the end of the current season, is probably the high point of Lola Albright's career, although she's hardly a recluse once the series ends, appearing in several big-screen movies and is a steady presence in guest roles on TV through the 80s. But there's no disagreeing that in a genre that often produces more than its share of annoying characters, Peter Gunn's Edie is one of the most enjoyable; in fact, after you've watched her in a few episodes, you'll probably be singing these words as well:


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I've mentioned in the past the snarkiness of TV Guide writers like Richard Gehman , and the Letters to the Editor section this week shows I'm not the only one who picks up on this. Apparently Gehman did another of his hatchet jobs a couple of weeks ago, this time on Bobby Darin, to coincide with Darin's upcoming network special. Carol Tuman of Great Neck, NY writes that Gehman's profile of Darin "is . . . full of unprecedented nastiness," while Donna Ott and Joyce D'Ambrosio of Fair Lawn, NJ say that "We have never read or heard so many degrading comments on this terrific star," and make the point that "we are not teen-agers; we are a single girl of 20 and a married woman of 23," possibly in response to a comment about the demographics of Darin's fanbase.

Now, it might be that Gehman's article is a fairly accurate portrait of Darin; Kevin Spacey's Darin biopic Beyond the Sea certainly demonstrated that Darin had a his share of warts, and maybe Gehman really does capture how the people who work with Darin feel about him. And clearly, Gehman is among the vanguard of writers turning TV Guide away from the studio-driven fan-type articles of its first few years towards more of a critical appraisal of the medium andits stars, and I think we should be grateful for that. But at the same time there's clearly something about Gehman's writing style, his choice of words and turn of phrase, that rubbed readers the wrong way.

In Glenn Altschuler and David Grossvogel's excellent  Changing Channels: America in TV Guide , the authors write that "Gehman believed that creative people were often emotionally insecure because of an unhappy childhood, and that those who became celebrities in the entertainment industry sometimes did so because their insecurity motivated them to succeed." I'm not surprised to read that; it's fairly typical of the amateur psychoanalysis that was so prevalent in the journalism of the time.

One could be tempted to suggest that Gehman was projecting his own insecurities onto his subjects; according to his entry in the always-reliable Wikipedia , he was married five times and fathered at least nine children, and wrote under a variety of pen names—all before his death at age 51. Perhaps he had an identity problem tied to a basic inferiority complex, causing him to tear others down in an attempt to elevate himself. Perhaps his experiences in the entertainment industry left him jaded and cynical, and ascribed those same motives to those he met.
I don't know, and it's not my place to say anything. Richard Gehman was also a talented and interesting writer who lent a much-needed seriousness to TV Guide. He was prolific to say the least; not only did he write 20 books, his friend Maurice Zolotow tells a story about how Gehman once wrote three of the principal articles for an issue of Cosmopolitan, each one under a different name, plus a record review and possibly another column. Now that takes something. And his daughter Pleasant, an artist, author and dancer (among other things) has had quite the career herself, both as herself and under her stage name.
You meet the most interesting people in TV Guide. Some of them even have articles written about them.
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Let's meet some more of those interesting people that fill the pages of this week's issue. Ed Sullivan leads off the star wars on Sunday night (7:00 p.m., CBS), with a fine lineup that includes Peggy Lee, Paul Anka, Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks, comedian Myron Cohen, the Wanderers vocal quartet, the Martelli Trio acrobats, and dancer Carmen de Lsvallade. I think Hollywood Palace would be hard-pressed to stand up to that. Next, G.E. Theater has some star power of its own; Ernest Borgnine stars as a has-been Hollywood director in the drama "The Legend that Walks Like a Man" (8:00 p.m., CBS), with Zsa Zsa Gabor, William Schallert, and Jason Robards Sr., and a script by Budd Schulberg. And on The Loretta Young Show (9:00 p.m., NBC), Darryl Hickman makes his television writing debut with "The Golden Cord," in which he also stars.
On Wednesday night, Bob Hope hosts the aptly-named Bob Hope Sports Awards (9:00 p.m., NBC), honoring the "best and brawniest athletes" of 1960. Being that it's a Bob Hope special, there are plenty of beautiful women among the presenters*—Julie London, Jayne Mansfield, Ginger Rogers, Jane Russell, Tuesday Weld, Esther Williams, Lucille Ball, Jane Wyman—but I wonder how many athletes were in attendance? The winners included Joe Bellino (college football), Norm Van Brocklin (pro football), Wilt Chamberlain (pro basketball), Pancho Gonzales (pro tennis), Dick Groat (National League baseball), Rafer Johnson (track), Roger Maris (American League baseball), Arnold Palmer (golf), Floyd Patterson (boxing), Jerry Lucas (college basketball), and Barry Mackay (amateur tennis). Might have been an interesting show; might not.

*Also among the presenters: Dean Martin, Dana Andrews and Ronald Reagan; obviously afterthoughts.

This didn't become an annual tradition (there are a lot of one-and-done sports awards shows in the history of television), but Bob did return with another version of the Bob Hope Sports Awards from 1973 through 1975. Hopefully, they didn't wait so long for an encore because the first one had been such a dud. . .
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   He gets by with a little help from his friendsWednesday's schedule also features taped coverage of President Kennedy's fourth press conference. (No details on which networks or what time it'll be shown.) I've mentioned before that these press conferences were quite the sensation, as Americans had never seen the president quizzed by reporters quite like this; President Eisenhower's conferences had been shown on same-day tape, but JFK had been the first to air live pressers on a regular basis, and it was his generous access to the press (at the time of his death, according to the JFK Library , he'd held 64 conferences, an average of one every sixteen days) that made those conferences popular viewing. "The first, less than a week after his inauguration, was viewed by an estimated 65 million people. A poll taken in 1961 indicated that 90 percent of those interviewed had watched at least one of JFK's first three press conferences. The average audience for all the broadcast conferences was 18 million viewers."

We shouldn't be too surprised; the medium loved JFK, and he loved to use the medium. The reporters loved him as well, for he was great copy: witty, quick, engaging, informative without necessarily saying anything. There's been a good deal of controversy over the amount of press access given by recent occupants of the White House, but there's little question Kennedy made himself much more accessible. And the viewing audience responded.
I would never make the link between a Kennedy and the playboy philosophy, so it's purely by chance that our next stop is Playboy's Penthouse (Thursday, 11:00 p.m., KMSP),where Hugh Hefner's guests are Tony Curtis (playing the flute!), Ray Charles, Gene Krupa and his trio, Phyllis Diller, and Frank D'Rone. I'm no fan of Hefner or his lifestyle, but the man certainly did a lot to give jazz musicians, especially black musicians, a media platform that they had a hard time getting otherwise.

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Thursday night's Ford Show with Tennessee Ernie Ford (8:30 p.m., NBC) offers a real change of pace: an adaptation of Bizet's opera Carmen. Ernie, who loved to play "The Ol' Pea-Picker," had in fact been classically trained at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, and he uses that rich bass-baritone of his to good use tonight in the role of the flashy torreador Escamillo. Karen Wessler plays the title role, John Guarnieri is Don Jose, and Ernie's house singers, the Top Twenty, provide the chorus. It's not the only time opera features on The Ford Show; in previous years, Ernie and the gang had done the Gilbert and Sulliven operettas The Mikado and HMS Pinafore.
On the other hand, you'd expect classical music from Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic, and on Sunday's Young People's Concert  and on Sunday you'll get it, with a tribute to the great American composer Aaron Copland, who celebrated his 60th birthday last November. (3:00 p.m., CBS; you can see a clip from the show  here .) I loved watching these concerts when I was young, although I doubt that, at nine months, I tuned it for this one. Bernstein, whatever his other faults, was an engaging and often brilliant teacher: in these telecasts (53 of them, which ran on CBS from 1958 to 1972) he never talks down to children, never dumbs the material down for them. He treats them, instead, as intelligent beings capable of understanding and appreciating music, and he does a wonderful job of making classical music accessible and exciting without resorting to gimmicks. If it is true that the audience for classical music is dying off (literally), much of the blame can be laid at the feet of an educational system that no longer values music appreciation classes, and an industry itself that thinks Star Wars-themed concerts and hyperactive experiences are the way to introduce kids to the classics.
Bernstein wasn't the only teacher of classical music, of course. Through the 70s there were various attempts to use television to spread music appreciation. The great Joan Sutherland, with her conductor husband Richard Bonygne, hosted a PBS series in the early 70s, Who's Afraid of Opera? which used puppets to help teach children (and adults!) about opera.


It was the young people's concerts of the Minneapolis Symphony that first introduced me to classical music, and helped foster a lifelong interest in the classics. True, I didn't really develop this appreciation fully uintil the last 25 years, when I learned to embrace opera, but who knows if I would have been open to it at all without learning about it at a young age?

I'm put in mind of all this because of another letter this week, from Paul Winterhalter of Lincoln, NE, decrying the disappearance of Voice of Firestone. "The television 'brains' who presume to do all the thin king for the millions of viewers said that the Voice of Firestone lacked the quality for prime time, so we lost a fine program." Mr. Winterhalter said this in the context of criticizing Jackie Gleason's infamous You're in the Picture flop—"the most awful bunch of garbage*"—which those "brains" obviously considered a superior, or at least having the potential to be a more popular, show.
*Ah, but was Voice as entertaining as Gleason's apology the following week?

It's true that acclaimed music programs such as Voice of Firestone were never ratings hits, and it's also true that television—a medium designed primarily as a vehicle for moving the products of its advertisers—can't pay the bills solely from Peabody awards.  Nonetheless, as I mentioned a while back, the Golden Age referred to more than the quality of programs; it had to do with the variety as well.

This Friday, opposite the post-You're in the Picture Gleason show, NBC airs The Bell Telephone Hour (8:00 p.m.), one of those shows probably on Mr. Winterhalter's hit parade (as well as being a favorite of mine), presenting "The Sounds of America," a salute to American music taped at Disneyland and produced (and conducted) by Gordon Jenkins . The show features not only musical pieces but "sound-effects 'essays'" that bring, literally, the sounds of America—the West, the river, Main Street. There's a heavy emphasis on dance, with Gene Nelson, Jacques d'Amboise and the Earl Twins dancing to choreography by Hermes Pan , who collaborated so successfully for so many years with Fred Astaire. 
There's a sad irony in all that, don't you think? A program about America's long-gone past, told by a television genre on the way to being long-past itself. TV  
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Published on February 13, 2021 05:00

February 12, 2021

Around the dial




Idon't generally make a point of offering an extensive commentary on one of this week's links, but I'm going to make an exception for this excellent article by David at Comfort TV in which he discusses how Aspire TV recently censored an episode of Room 222 by blurring an image of a derogatory term scrawled on a locker, a term that they feared some viewers might find objectionable today. What I find objectionable is this quite deliberate campaign to apply today's standards to situations that occurred in the past. 
I've made this point many times, but it's quite dangerous to start down that road; after all, who's to say that something you say or do today might be censored by someone who comes along a few decades later, when society has supposedly become even more "enlightened" than it is today? Besides which, none of us today can know with absolute certainty what we may or may not have done in a different time and environment. I don't want to make too fine a point of this last part, but isn't it funny how some people of a particular political viewpoint find it quite easy to make excuses for a criminal based on the environment in which they may have grown up, but that same person will fail to give that same consideration to someone else because of what they may have said or done in the past, even though that might have been entirely consistent with the environment they grew up in? 
(This is also why I look warily at period pieces made today; no matter how hard they try, or how good their intentions might be, it's almost impossible to replicate the past without filtering it through the sensibilities of the present.) 
Well, down off the soapbox, and I'm sure that after reading Wednesday's entry, some of you might be thinking to yourselves, it's about time! I aim to please, so let's talk about television cameras instead. Every once in a while during a discussion of television's early days, we'll run across the term "compatible color" (and the obvious joke "incompatible color"). However, at Eyes of a Generation, we get a richly illustrated look at RCA's earliest compatible color cameras , which date to the late 1940s.  
I think we can all agree that a story called " The Last Dark Step " doesn't promise much in the way of laughs. In the hands of William Fay, it becomes a clever story of murder and betrayal. You can see it on Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and read about it in this piece by Jack at bare-bones e-zone
At Cult TV Blog, John introduces us to the 1972 British series Villains , a show with a simple but unique premise, following a gang of bank robbers individually after they escape prison. It's another series I've not heard of, which shouldn't be surprising considering it wasn't shown over here, but it has two very familiar faces, in Bob Hoskins and Martin Shaw.
Shadow & Substance recalls the pleasant "Eureka!" moment you get when you discover that someone from one of your favorite TV shows also appeared in one of your favorite movies, and you didn't recognize it until now. That someone: Kenneth Haigh, from The Twilight Zone and A Hard Day's Night
Did you ever wonder why a whole season of TV episodes of The Lone Ranger had someone else playing Our Hero? Wonder no more, as Martin Grams tells the true story of why John Hart replaced Clayton Moore for that one season. TV  
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Published on February 12, 2021 05:00

February 10, 2021

The Descent Into Hell: Darkness at Noon (1955)




P roducers' Showcase was one of the prestige anthologies that aired on NBC in the mid-1950s. It was a monthly, rather than weekly, series, which added to the gravitas it projected, the idea that its stories were distinctive, high quality, special. Over the course of three years and 37 episodes (all broadcast live and in color), Producers' Showcase won seven Emmys and presented acclaimed stories such as Peter Pan (with Mary Martin), The Petrified Forest (Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall and Henry Fonda), Our Town (Paul Newman and Eva Marie Saint), and Mayerling (Raymond Massey and Audrey Hepburn).
On May 2, 1955, as its tenth production, Producers' Showcase aired Darkness at Noon, an adaptation of Arthur Koestler's chilling 1940 novel about persecution in the Soviet Union during Stalin's Great Purge. Darkness at Noon was directed by Delbert Mann from a script by Robert Alan Aurthur (based in turn on the stage play by Sidney Kingsley), and starred Lee J. Cobb as Rubashov, a former high-ranking Party official now in prison, charged with treason for betraying the cause.
   Claude Rains (left) in the 1950 stage productionIn the Gulag, where prisoners communicate via tapping in code on the walls of their cells, Rubashov recalls through flashbacks his early involvement in the party as one of the so-called "Old Bolsheviks," those who were part of the movement prior to the revolution. "The party cannot be wrong," he tells his secretary Luba (Ruth Roman). "You and I can make mistakes—but not the party." Over the years, Rubashov commits many acts in the name of the party, acts which now cause him to doubt himself— particularly how he betrayed Luba (with whom he is in love) into taking the blame for the low productivity of the factories, rather than using his influence on her behalf. Because of this, Luba is imprisoned and eventually executed. 
Next, Rubashov is visited by his old friend Ivanof (Oscar Homolka), who urges him to confess to the trumped-up charges in return for a reduced sentence. By doing so, Rubashov will save his own life, and the two of them may yet be able to achieve the goals for which they originally worked. Rubashov admits the doubts that have overtaken him since Luba's execution, and how they have caused him to view the party differently.
Rubashov is interogated by Gletkin (David Wayne) a guard who epitomizes the next generation of party leadership. He tells Rubashov that Ivanof has been executed, and reads him the transcript of Luba's interrogation, in which she pleads for those being persecuted. Hearing this, Rubashov finally comes face to face with the consequences of his actions and what they have meant to his country. Accepting his fate, he is taken to his execution as the story ends.
The production boasted an impressive cast in addition to the leads, with Joseph Wiseman, Nehemiah Persoff and Henry Silva. Writing in The New York Times, Jack Gould praised Darkness at Noon's "provocative power" and Lee J. Cobb's "most impressive performance as the dedicated Red who is devoured by communism." Koestler's book remains one of the most praised political novels ever written; the Modern Library would rank it #8 on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th Century 
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That Darkness at Noon was intended to be a Cold War message piece could not be doubted. Immediately following the broadcast, Vice President Richard Nixon appeared in a brief film, commending the network for having aired the program. "NBC, the television industry and Producers' Showcase are to be congratulated for presenting this program to the American people, because in these times it is essential that we know our potential enemies, and the great moral of this play which you have had the opportunity to see is that we in the free nations must be eternally vigilant against the enemies from abroad and those from within," Koestler, Nixon said, had helped provide the answer to "one of the most intriguing questions which confronts the free world today": what makes a Communist tick?
For Arthur Koestler, himself a former Communist, one of the fundamental questions at the heart of Darkness at Noon was why so many victims of the Great Purge, like Rubashov, had refused to defend themselves against these fabricated charges. Had they simply been worn down by the constant interrogation and torture they faced in the Gulag? Were they worried about the safety of family members who faced retribution at the hands of Stalin? Or was there something more to it, something dark and sinister, as Adam Kirsh described in a 2019 New Yorker article . "[D]id they feel that, in some obscure way, they deserved punishment for crimes they hadn’t committed?"
Central to the understanding of communist philosophy is what Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels saw as the "historical imperative," socialism’s inevitable triumph. Any action which served to bring about this inevitability, no matter how ruthless, could be excused on such grounds. As Koestler put it, the member of such a movement "is forever damned to do what he loathes the most: become a butcher in order to stamp out butchery, sacrifice lambs so lambs will no longer be sacrificed." Indeed, as Rubashov says at one point, "Whoever proves right in the end must first be and do wrong."
Koestler believed, in Kirsh's words, that "every political creed must eventually face the question of whether noble ends can justify evil means." Communism's stated goal was "the permanent abolition of social injustince throughout the world." Would any price be too high for such a goal? "Maybe a million or ten million people would die today," Kirsh writes, "but if billions would be happy tomorrow wasn’t that worth it?" 
This is the language of what the philosopher Eric Hoffer called the "True Believer," one for whom core beliefs have become “dogma and absolutism” replacing everything else in life. Hoffer was fascinated by the propensity of mass movements to promote such single-mindedness, which served to foster, perfect and perpetuate a facility for united action and self-sacrifice”. For such a true believer, there is no such thing as the individual, only the overall good of the whole. As Rubashov tells Luba, the very concept of the individual was a way of thinking "that had to be overcome in order to achieve justice for the many." The very terms “I” and “me” were, he said, were nothing more than a “grammatical fiction.”
Mass movements often begin with what Hoffer termed “men of words” who identify a need to reform the social order. As such movements grow, however, the men of words are crowded out by fanatics, those who, initially attracted by "doctrines and slogans of the new faith", eventually evolve “an extremism against the social order.” Hoffer distinguished the fanatic by “his viciousness and urge to destroy. The fanatic feels fulfilled only in a perpetual struggle for power and change.” Such stridency typifies a philosophy known as "currentism," a philosophy whose leaders "arrogantly believe they have the keys to the perfect society; they regard as evil only those thoughts or things which impede their will." As  one professor astutely noted , "Such leaders are, they think, gods; but they are, in fact, mountebanks who, directly or indirectly, mutilate and murder, paying homage to the ubiquitous idols of the day." 
Eventually, says Hoffer, as the movement becomes institutionalized, “the focus shifts from immediate demands for revolution to establishing the mass movement as a social institution where the ambitious can find influence and fame.” The movement develops a hierarchy of classes, a bureaucracy, a structure of leaders and followers, and the consolidation of power in the hands of a select few at the top—in other words, it becomes the very thing it sought to overthrow. And when they themselves fall victim to a party purge, the true believers accept their unjust punishment as a necessary act, believing to the end that it somehow confirms the authority of the movement, and the advancement of the cause. They die because of a lie, which ultimately means they die for a lie.
And then there are those, like Rubashov, who realize how the movement has crushed the humanity of the people, and come to view their punishment as a form of atonement for their crimes. The fact that the charges against them are lies is not just ironic but appropriate. Everything about it is a lie.
At first glance, you might be tempted to see Darkness at Noon as an archival story of the Cold War, but it really isn’t so different from our own time, is it? You read about it every day: silencing dissent, censoring content, monitoring opponents, talking about reeducation, spreading fear, all in the name of the cause. It sounds so, so familiar, doesn't it? As is so often the case, the present is simply the past, dressed in slightly different costumes, spouting slightly different rhetoric, using slightly different terms. To those who point out such similarities, the response may be that today’s ideas have never really been tried before, that what one thinks they saw in the past was in fact something else, something that people weren’t quite ready for back then. This time things will be different. This time the purity of the cause will not be diluted; ideas will be fully formed, plans will be fully implemented. 
This time things will be different. This time. This time.
In fact, no matter what time it is, it’s always “this time.” Same as the last time, same as the next time. It never works, and they never stop trying. TV  
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Published on February 10, 2021 05:00

February 8, 2021

What's on TV? Tuesday, February 8, 1955




The last time we looked at an Iowa edition of TV Guide, almost five years ago , I made some most unflattering comments about our neighbors to the south. These "jokes" portrayed the state in a very unfavorable light, and for that unwarranted and completely uncharitable action I admit my guilt. Indeed, upon discovering that this week's issue would mark a return to the state, I could barely bring myself to look at it, let alone write about it, and there were late nights when I could be heard in my dimly-lit nook, mumbling in anguish that this chalice might pass from me. But I have learned my lesson—turned a new leaf, so to speak. So no more will you hear such jokes pass my lips as "What do you call an IQ of 76? Des Moines." or "Did you hear that the governor's mansion in Iowa burned down? It almost took out the whole trailer park." No, I must admit that a resident of Minnesota has no call to be making jokes about any other state. After all, the only reason Iowa doesn't have a professional football team is because then Minnesota would want one. 
  -2-  WMT (Cedar Rapids, Ia.) (CBS)   MORNING

       8:45

Tower Preview

       9:00

Garry Moore—Variety

       9:30

Arthur Godfrey Time

       9:45

Featurette

     10:00

Arthur Godfrey Time

     10:30

Strike It Rich—Quiz

     11:00

Valiant Lady—Serial

     11:15

Love of Life—Serial

       

   11:30

Search for Tomorrow

     11:45

Guiding Light—Serial

  AFTERNOON

     12:00

Noon News

     12:10

Weather and Markets

     12:15

Road of Life—Serial

     12:30

Welcome Travelers

       1:00

Robert Q. Lewis

       1:30

Home Fare

       2:00

Big Payoff—Quiz

       2:30

Bob Crosby—Music

       3:00

Brighter Day—Serial

       3:15

Secret Storm—Serial

       3:30

On Your Account—Quiz

       4:00

TV Playschool—Children

       4:30

Corral Club—Marshal Jay

       5:30

Gene Autry—Western

  EVENING

       6:00

Sports with Tait

       6:15

Iowa Dateline—Roberts

       6:25

Weather Roundup

       6:30

Doug Edwards

       6:45

Jo Stafford—Music

       7:00

LIFE WITH FATHER—Comedy

       7:30

HALLS OF IVY—Comedy

       8:00

MEET MILLIE—Comedy

       8:30

FORD THEATER—Drama

       9:00

BADGE 714—Police Drama

       9:30

SEE IT NOW—Murrow

     10:00

THE LONE WOLF—Drama

     10:30

NEWS—Bob Johnson

     10:45

WEATHER TOWER

     10:50

TOWER THEATER—Movie

“Shepherd of the Ozarks”

     11:00

Twenty Questions—Quiz

 

 

  -4-  WHBF (Rock Island, Ill.) (CBS)   MORNING

       7:00

Morning Show—Jack Paar

       8:25

News and Weather

       8:30

Morning Show—Jack Paar

       9:00

Garry Moore—Variety

       9:30

Arthur Godfrey Time

     10:30

Strike It Rich—Quiz

     11:00

Valiant Lady—Serial

     11:15

Love of Life—Serial

       

   11:30

Search for Tomorrow

     11:45

Guiding Light—Serial

  AFTERNOON

     12:00

Portia Faces Life—Serial

     12:15

Farm Almanac

     12:30

Welcome Travelers

       1:00

Robert Q. Lewis

       1:30

Linkletter’s House Party

       2:00

Big Payoff—Quiz

       2:30

Bob Crosby—Music

       3:00

Brighter Day—Serial

       3:15

Secret Storm—Serial

       3:30

On Your Account—Quiz

       4:00

Frankly Feminine—Ladies

       4:30

TV Classroom

       5:00

Magic Carpet—Kids

       5:30

Barker Bill’s Cartoons

       5:45

News

       5:55

Weather

  EVENING

       6:00

Wild Bill Hickok—Western

       6:30

Doug Edwards

       6:45

Jo Stafford—Music

       7:00

DISNEYLAND—Features

       8:00

DANNY THOMAS

       8:30

RED SKELTON—Comedy

Guest: Charles Coburn

       9:00

DANGER—Mystery

       9:30

SEE IT NOW—Murrow

     10:00

FAVORITE STORY—Drama

     10:30

TOPPER—Comedy

     11:30

Late News and Weather

 

 

  -6-  WOC (Davenport, Ia.) (NBC)   MORNING

       7:00

Today—Garroway

       9:00

Ding Dong School—Kids

       9:30

Way of the World

       9:45

Sheilah Graham

Guests: Art Linkletter, Helen Rose

     10:00

Home—TV Magazine

     11:00

Tennessee Ernie—Music

       

   11:30

Feather Your Nest—Quiz

  AFTERNOON

     12:00

Rural Roundup—Bill Gress

     12:15

At Home—Mary Marshall

     12:30

Especially for You—Ladies

       1:00

Matinee Movie—Film

       2:00

Greatest Gift—Serial

       2:30

One Man’s Family

       2:45

Miss Marlowe—Serial

       3:00

Hawkins Falls

       3:15

First Love—Serial

       3:30

Mr. Sweeney

       3:45

Modern Romance

       4:00

Pinky Lee—Variety

       4:30

Howdy Doody

       5:00

Singin’ Sheriff—Kids

       5:30

Circle “6” Ranch—Cowboys

  EVENING

       6:00

Bud Wilkinson—Sports

       6:15

Four Star Sports—Hal Hart

       6:20

Four Star News—Bill Mason

       6:25

Weather Tower—Danica

       6:30

Dinah Shore—Music

       6:45

News Caravan

       7:00

MILTON BERLE

Guest: Gloria De Haven

       8:00

FIRESIDE TEHATER

“Mr. Onion”

       8:30

CIRCLE THEATER—Drama

“No Room to Breathe”

       9:00

TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES—Quiz

       9:30

RACKET SQUAD—Police

     10:00

IT’S A GREAT LIFE—Comedy

     10:30

WEATHER—Phil Kane

     10:35

NEWS AND SPORTS

     10:45

CANDLELIGHT CAMEOS

     11:00

Tonight—Steve Allen

     12:00

Coming Attractions

 

 

  -7-  KWWL (Waterloo, Ia.) (NBC)   MORNING

       7:00

Today—Garroway

       9:00

Ding Dong School—Kids

       9:30

Film Subject

       9:45

Sheilah Graham

Guests: Art Linkletter, Helen Rose

     10:00

Home—TV Magazine

     11:00

Tennessee Ernie—Music

       

   11:30

Feather Your Nest—Quiz

  AFTERNOON

     12:00

Movie Matinee—Film

       2:00

Greatest Gift—Serial

       2:30

One Man’s Family

       2:45

Miss Marlowe—Serial

       3:00

Hawkins Falls

       3:15

School of the Air

       3:30

Mr. Sweeney

       3:45

Modern Romance

       4:00

Pinky Lee—Variety

       4:30

Howdy Doody

       5:00

Ranch Hand—Herb James

       5:15

Early Show—Movie

  EVENING

       6:15

News, Weather, Sports

       6:30

Dinah Shore—Music

       6:45

News Caravan

       7:00

MILTON BERLE

Guest: Gloria De Haven

       8:00

GREATEST STORIES

       8:30

THE RUGGLES—Comedy

       9:00

SONGS AND HOMES

       9:30

IT’S A GREAT LIFE

     10:00

WEATHER

     10:05

NEWS AND WEATHER

     10:15

INDUSTRY ON PARADE

     10:30

LATE SHOW

     11:30

Late News Capsule

 

 

  -9-  KCRG (Cedar Rapids, Ia.) (ABC, DuM)   MORNING

       8:00

Breakfast Club—Variety

Guests: Bill Lawrence, Dolores Martel

  AFTERNOON

       4:00

Mother Wilson’s Kitchen

       4:30

Cowboy Club—Movie

       5:30

Captain Video—Space

       5:45

Music Hall Varieties

  EVENING

       6:00

Iowa Newsreel

       6:15

John Daly—News

       6:30

Your TV Playhouse

       7:00

BISHOP SHEEN—Talk

       7:30

MEET CORLISS ARCHER

       8:00

DANNY THOMAS

       8:30

ELGIN HOUR—Drama

“Days of Grace”

       9:30

STOP THE MUSIC—Quiz

     10:00

TOMORROW’S WEATHER

     10:05

NIGHT BULLETIN AND SPORTS SCORES—Ware

     10:15

JERRY FRONEK SHOW

 

 

  13  WREX (Rockford, Ill.) (CBS, ABC)   MORNING

     10:30

Strike It Rich—Quiz

     11:00

Movies for Mom

  AFTERNOON

     12:00

Markets and News

     12:15

Road of Life—Serial

     12:30

Love of Life—Serial

     12:45

Search for Tomorrow

       1:00

Robert Q. Lewis

       1:15

TV Presents

       1:30

Helen Bale Show

       2:00

Big Payoff—Quiz

       2:30

Tuesday Special

       2:45

Bob Crosby—Music

       3:00

Valiant Lady—Serial

       3:15

Secret Storm—Serial

       3:30

Meditation Time

       3:35

Let’s Talk It Over

       3:45

Cartoon Time

       4:00

Roddy Mac Show

       4:30

Stand By For Action

       5:00

Trail Times—Western

  EVENING

       6:00

Kukla, Fran and Ollie

       6:15

Weather, Sports, News

       6:30

Doug Edwards

       6:45

Jo Stafford—Music

       7:00

BISHOP SHEEN—Talk

       7:30

DANNY THOMAS—Comedy

       8:00

MEET MILLIE—Comedy

       8:30

ELGIN HOUR—Drama

“Days of Grace”

       9:30

WATERFRONT—Drama

     10:00

WEATHER

     10:05

NEWS—Natl. and Internatl.

     10:20

SPORTS

     10:30

LIFE WITH FATHER

     11:00

Movie Time

     12:00

Late News

 

 

  39 WTVO (Rockford, Ill.) (NBC, DuM)

  AFTERNOON

       3:00

Hawkins Falls

       3:15

First Love—Serial

       3:30

Mr. Sweeney

       3:45

Modern Romance

       4:00

Pinky Lee—Variety

       4:30

Howdy Doody

       5:00

Fun Time—Children

       5:30

Captain Video—Space

       5:45

Dick Russell Show

  EVENING

       6:00

Early Edition—News

       6:15

Sports Hi-Lites

       6:25

TV Weatherman

       6:30

Industry on Parade

       6:45

News Caravan

       7:00

MILTON BERLE

Guest: Gloria De Haven

       8:00

FIRESIDE THEATER

“Mr. Onion”

       8:30

HEART OF THE CITY

       9:00

TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES—Quiz

       9:30

IT’S A GREAT LIFE

     10:00

NIGHTCAP NEWS

     10:15

TV WEATHERMAN

     10:20

SPORTS REVIEW

     10:30

PLAYHOUSE THEATER

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Published on February 08, 2021 05:00

February 6, 2021

This week in TV Guide: February 5, 1955

Remember a few weeks ago when I referred to the week's programming as "putting the classic in classic TV"? Well, we've got another example of that this week, and so why don't we start things off with NBC's Kraft Theater and its encore showing of Rod Serling's Patterns. (Wednesday, 8:00 p.m. CT) 
I think everyone would agree that Patterns made Rod Serling famous overnight, or at least close to it. It's spellbinding drama, an intense, forceful story about the cutthroat world of business, and three men caught in it: the ruthless corporate boss, the aging executive being phased out, and the junior executive unwittingly brought in to replace him. When it was first broadcast. live on January 12, it won nearly universal praise for its writing, production (directed by Fielder Cook), and especially the acting of the three leads: Everett Sloane, Ed Begley and Richard Kiley. Jack Gould, the New York Times television critic (perhaps the most influential in the country) called Patterns "one of the high points in the TV medium's evolution," comparing it favorably to the movie Executive Suite (Executive Suite "might be Babes in Toyland without a score."), and urging a repeat performance of the live broadcast "at an early date." 
Of course, in these days before videotape, you can't just pop a cassette in the machine and show it again. There's only one way to repeat a live broadcast, and so this week, in an unprecedented move, NBC takes up Gould's suggestion and stages Patterns a second time, live and with the original leads. This performance is recorded on kinescope, and it's the one you can watch for yourself today.

The fact that network repeats the broadcast less than a month after the original is testimony to the impact that Patterns makes. Serling wins the first of his six Emmys for his writing, and to this day Patterns is considered one of the great television dramas ever aired, often mentioned with Serling's next big TV triumph, Requiem for a Heavyweight, which would air the following year. (Serling could really write, couldn't he?) The live performance crackles with energy, creating a dynamic atmosphere that, Gould says, "underscore[s] how little the TV artistic horizons really have been explored." There was a tangible excitement within the industry at the suggestion that a new form of drama, combining the environment of live theater with the intimacy of live television, had been born. The prospects were unlimited! 
And then, of course, videotape came along and film became a way of life; the intensity of live television took a backseat to the ability to tweak and perfect a performance, doing a scene over and over until it was just right (not to mention the economy of being able to repeat a show an unlimited number of times), and before anyone knew it, the new era of television was over.  But what a time it was!  
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Speaking of classics, that's Edward R. Murrow on the cover, "whose slow, pedantic voice is as familiar to Americans as that of the President of the United States." It was only last year that Murrow took on Senator Joseph McCarthy, and the resulting brouhaha left Murrow both tarred as a communist and hailed as "the greatest champion of freedom since Patrick Henry." 
Murrow is neither, but he is a believer in freedom. However, with freedom comes responsibility, and one thing he's adamant about is his belief that "TV is [not] a pulpit from which to preach his own 'prejudices'." "If we snuck our own ideas in," he says, "it would be an abuse of a monopolized opportunity." (I wonder what he'd have to say about today's newspeople?) Not that you have to be completely void of opinions, though; "Everyone is a prisoner of his own experiences. No one can eliminate prejudices—just recognize them." 
Murrow has no time to waste on trivial things like ratings; "If I got involved in ratings I might be tempted to 'hot up' the copy. And I never want to do that." Neither does he have time for those in the press who are free with their opinions. "The basic obligation of anybody of the press is not to say, 'This is what I think,' but 'These are the basic facts which led me to this conclusion.'" Crucially, though, he doesn't think you should take what he and his colleagues say as the last word. "If their conclusion is different from yours, that's okay, too."
Although Murrow's greatest achievements are in the newsroom, his most popular program is his Friday night show Person to Person, where he gets to visit "the homes of the great, the near-great or the well-known." Murrow attributes the show's success to people's natural curiosity, the urge to "look into open windows." Says Murrow, "we decided to show unordinary people doing ordinary things. The show is dramatic only because people are dramatic." And while there are some who complain that Murrow's interviews on P to P are softball, he replies, "I always act like a guest in the house. I wouldn't dream of throwing anyone a curved question." He loves the contrasts he's able to present by matching unlikely interview subjects on a particular show; in the past he's had comedienne Martha Raye and Pakistani President Mohammad Ali, Washington hostess Perle Mesta and Cowardly Lion Bert Lahr, and Archbishop Richard Cushing and fashion designer Lilly Dache.
For all of his professional accomplishments and personal hobbies (he considers himself an outdoorsman), he thinks of himself first and foremost as a reporter. It is, he believes, a fleeting fame. "A reporter is always concerned with tomorrow. There's nothing tangible of yesterday. All I can say I've done is agitate the air 10 or 15 minutes and then boom!—it's gone."
t  t  t
Don't change that dial; we've got more classics in store this week, starting on Saturday with The Jackie Gleason Show, tonight featuring The Honeymooners! (7:00 p.m., CBS) Remember, this is prior to The Honeymooners airing as a weekly series, so the listing is particularly descriptive. "Jackie plays the burly bus driver, Art Carney plays his upstairs neighbor and Audrey Meadows and Joyce Randolph portray the long-suffering wives." That's about it in a nutshell, isn't it? No word on what tonight's story was about.
At 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, CBS's Omnibus show a feature film culled from the various Abraham Lincoln segments presented on the show over the years. Royal Dano stars as Lincoln, with Joanne Woodward as Ann Rutledge and Joanna Roos as Mary Todd Lincoln. The Lincoln stories were written by James Agee, and were inseperable from the political climate of the times; a few years ago, I took a closer look at them here . Later, on Ed Sullivan's Toast of the Town (7:00 p.m., CBS), it's a salute to the history of Columbia Pictures, with an Oscar-worthy montage of clips, and stars including Eddie Fisher, Teresa Brewer, Marge and Gower Champion, Tyrone Power, Maureen O'Hara, Kim Novak, Jack Lemmon, and others.
In 1945, Ray Milland won an Academy Award for his magnificent performance as an alcoholic writer in the movie The Lost Weekend, which also won Oscars for Best Picture, Best Director (Billy Wilder) and Best Adapted Screenplay (Wilder and Charles Brackett). On Monday night's Robert Montgomery Presents (8:30 p.m., NBC), the story comes to the small screen, with Montgomery himself portraying Don Birnam, the man who'd do "anything for a drink." The cast includes Leora Dana, Edward Andrews, and, in one of his early television apperances. Walter Matthau. The hour-long production caps off a quality night on the Peacock Network, one which started with Producers' Showcase (7:00 p.m.), featuring a production of Clare Booth Luce's biting comedy "The Women," with an all-female cast headed by Shelley Winters, Paulette Goddard, Ruth Hussey and Mary Astor. If your tastes run more to music, then check out the great American mezzo-soprano Rise Stevens, star of the Metropolitan Opera and one of the most popular singers of the day (that's her playing the opera star in Going My Way) on Voice of Firestone (7:30 p.m., ABC).  
A show we haven't talked about here is the anthology series Fireside Theater (not to be confused with Firesign Theatre , which is a horse of a different color), which ran on NBC from 1949 to 1958 and, according to the always-reliable Wikipedia, was the first successful filmed series on American television, debuting two years before I Love Lucy. It's also known as The Jane Wyman Show, probably because the longest-running host of the show was Jane Wyman. It doesn't have the prestige (or the critical acclaim) of other, better-remembered anthologies, but it did well enough for NBC; it was never out of the top 25 during the six seasons it ran. The point of all this is Tuesday's story, "Mr. Onion" (8:00 p.m.), starring William Bendix and Dorothy Malone, and you certainly can't complain about that cast. It's one of a number of similar anthologies tonight, including Ford Theater, Armstrong Circle Theater, The Elgin Hour and Danger.
Rocky with the man who portrayed him onscreen,
Paul Newman
Wednesday's feature is CBS's Pabst Blue Ribbon Bouts (9:00 p.m.), tonight featuring a middleweight showdown between #1 ranked Joey Giardello and Al Andrews. This is a rematch of a fight that took place, believe it or not, just two weeks ago. (No wonder so many of these guys wound up punch-drunk.) Boxing happens to be the subject of an article by Frank De Bois, who laments the effect television is having on the sport. Part of the problem, De Bois says, is that today's fighters don't stand in there and slug it out; instead, they "mug, posture, strut, telegraph their punches and dance before the camera." (Cassius Clay, call your manager.) Some old-timers even complain that today's fighters "don't even want to be fighters. They want to be TV actors—like Rocky Graziano." On the other hand, there's agreement that "bleeders" aren't popular now, what with the "millions of women converted to fight fans by TV." And flamboyant fighters have always been big with the public—so maybe this is just a case of "back in my day" syndrome, something you never see at this website.
There are some nice guest star turns in Thursday's programming; Ross Bagdasarian, minus his Chipmunks, appears on an episode of The Ray Milland Show (7:00 p.m., CBS), Robert Young stars as a Navy skipper in the mystery anthology Climax (7:30 p.m., CBS), Gary Merrill is the guest in the legal drama Justice (7:30 p.m., NBC), character actor Charles Coburn features in Ford Theater (8:30 p.m., NBC), and a very young Dennis Hopper appears in the Public Defender episode "Mama's Boy." (9:00 p.m, CBS) I wonder if David Lynch saw that episode. . .
We should stop in at Ed Murrow's Person to Person on Friday, since we talked about it earlier; Ed's guests tonight (9:30 p.m., CBS) are actress/swimmer Esther Williams (complete with tax-deductible pool) and New York restaurateur Toots Shor. Meanwhile, Steve Allen and the Tonight gang—Steve Lawrence, Eydie Gorme, Andy Williams, Pat Marshall, Skitch Henderson and Gene Rayburn, along with their guests Lulu Belle and Scotty from the Grand Ole Opry—are taking the show on the road, to National Cash Register Theater in Dayton, Ohio. (11:00 p.m., NBC)
t  t  t
I don't know if these were a thing back in the day, but it's a great idea nonetheless: a TV Guide theme party, sponsored by WMT, the CBS affiliate in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where you dress up as your favorite character from the magazine. The pictures and text might not be too clear, but my point in including this is to show how pervasive television—and TV Guide—have become in a very short time.

t  t  t
Finally, talking as we have been about anthologies, there's this note from New York in the Teletype: "Alfred Hitchcock, ace director of suspense-type movies, close to a deal to produce a half-hour telefilm mystery series. It would take over the Sunday night CBS period now occupied by Stage 7."
Alfred Hitchcock Presents does indeed premiere on October 2, 1955. By the time the last first-run episode of airs on NBC on June 26, 1965, ten seasons and 361 episodes later, Alfred Hitchcock Presents and its successor, the hour-long Alfred Hitchcock Hour, will be tied as the third-longest running dramatic anthology series in the history of American television. I'd say that deal worked out pretty well for everyone concerned, especially the viewers. Wouldn't you? TV  
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Published on February 06, 2021 05:00

February 5, 2021

Around the dial




Let's start off the week with a question from one of our readers. Mark is a fan of Mission: Impossible, and wonders if there's any information about the music from the first season episode "The Short Tail Spy," which has Eric Braedon (who was then going by Hans Gudegast) romancing Barbara Bain's Cinnamon Carter. "I love it, but can't find it anywhere. Can you help?" I don't see a separate music credit for the episode, which means either than it was done by Lalo Schifrin or, more likely, was from CBS's music stock. It's possible that it could be on this boxed set of music from the show, but I'm throwing it out there to my knowledgeable readers to see if one of you might have further information, and I know you won't let me down. Now, on to this week's features.
No sooner did I wrap up last week's feature, musing about the legends who'd recently passed on, then news kept coming about more of them: Cicely Tyson , the trailblazing actress; Allan Burns , writer for some of television's best shows; and the legendary Hal Holbrook , who was Mark Twain and a whole lot more. At A Shroud of Thoughts, Terence has thoughtful appreciations of them all. The toll this year just keeps rising, doesn't it?
I don't know why, but I've always had a fondness for banks, and that's even before I started keeping my money in them. To a kid, there's something very impressive about them: clean, institutional. And, of course, money. It's not quite the same now with ATMs and direct deposit and online banking, but the fascination with banks continues. That's the focus of this week's Comfort TV, as David looks at classic TV episodes that take place where you keep your cash .
It's taken awhile, but at The Horn Section, Hal's taken us all the way through the 17 episodes of Hondo, and now it's time to take stock and rank those episodes in order, along with other links of note regarding this short-lived but enduring series and its star, Ralph Taeger.
At Garroway at Large, Jodie shares a wonderful hour of conversation that resulted when Dave stopped by to talk with his old friend Studs Terkel on his Chicago radio series back in 1974. They don't make 'em like that anymore—either the shows or the people on them.
There was a time when Disney used to make quite a few exciting adventure movies that weren't simply live-action remakes of their cartoons; they'd often wind up on TV in two- or three-part stories.  Third Man on the Mountain , starring James MacArthur and James Donald, Michael Rennie, Laurence Naismith and Herbert Lom, is one of them, and at Classic Film & TV Café, Rick tells us what to expect from it.
When I started slumming around YouTube channels like FredFlix , I ran across all kinds of shows I'd never heard of before. One of them was It's A Man's World, starring Glenn Corbett, Ted Bessell, Mike Burns and Randy Boone. To learn more about it, I went to the some of obscure TV shows, TV Obscurities, where Robert tells me all about it.
At Shadow & Substance, Paul revisits one of the most beloved Twilight Zone episodes, "Night of the Meek," and revisits his interview with  Larrian Gillespie —the elf who welcomes Art Carney's Santa to his sleigh for a return to the North Pole. TV  
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Published on February 05, 2021 05:00

February 3, 2021

February 1, 2021

What's on TV? Monday, January 31, 1966




It isn't always the case that the celebrity guests on game shows and variety shows just happen to have shows of their own on the same network. For example, the guests on Password this week are Ross Martin, who's also on The Wild Wild West, and June Lockhart, star of Petticoat Junction, both of which are on CBS—as is Password. Or that Eve Arden (The Mothers in Law), Ed Ames (Daniel Boone), and You Don't Say! are all on NBC. It does make things convenient though, don't you think? But if this kind of thing bothers you, stick around for Rita Moreno and Abe Burrows on Match Game, and the rest of Monday's listings, from the Minnesota State Edition. 
   2  KTCA (EDUC.)

  Morning

      9:00

CLASSROOM

  Afternoon

      5:00

KINDERGARTEN—Education

      5:30

CINEPOSIUM

  Evening

      6:00

ANTIQUES—Art

      6:30

CONTINENTAL COMMENT

      7:00

SECONDARY EDUCATION

      8:00

ARTS COUNCIL

      8:30

COLLEGE OF ST. CATHERINE—Latin America

      9:00

REVOLUTION IN THE SCHOOLS

      9:30

WORLD AFFAIRS

    10:00

MONDAY FOR MEDICINE

 

 

   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—Game

Celebrities: Ross Martin, June Lockhart

      1:30

HOUSE PARTY   COLOR  Guest: Hedda Hopper

      2:00

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      2:25

NEWS—Edwards

      2:30

EDGE OF NIGHT—Serial

      3:00

SECRET STORM—Serial

      3:30

ROUTE 66—Drama

      4:30

SUPERMAN—Adventure

      5:00

WOODY WOODPECKER—Cartoon 

  COLOR        5:30

NEWS—Walter Cronkite 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:30

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      7:00

I’VE GOT A SECRET—Panel

      7:30

LUCILLE BALL—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY GRIFFITH—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:30

HAZEL 

  COLOR        9:00

TALENT SCOUTS 

  COLOR      10:00

NEWS

    10:15

MOVIE—Police

“Criss Cross” (1949)

 

 

   3  KGLO (MASON CITY) (CBS)

  Morning

      7:30

NEWS—Mike Wallace

      7:55

NEWS

      9:00

SPANISH

      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

LANDMARKS IN IOWA—History

      1:30

HOUSE PARTY   COLOR  Guest: Hedda Hopper

      2:00

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      2:25

NEWS—Edwards

      2:30

EDGE OF NIGHT—Serial

      3:00

SECRET STORM—Serial

      3:30

PASSWORD—Game

Celebrities: Ross Martin, June Lockhart

      4:00

BART’S CLUBHOSUE—Children

      4:30

ROCKY AND HIS FRIENDS

      4:45

BART’S CLUBHOUSE

      5:00

WOODY WOODPECKER—Cartoon

      5:30

NEWS—Walter Cronkite 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:30

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      7:00

I’VE GOT A SECRET—Panel

      7:30

LUCILLE BALL—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY GRIFFITH—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:30

HAZEL 

  COLOR        9:00

TALENT SCOUTS 

  COLOR      10:00

NEWS

    10:30

MOVIE—Adventure

“Nightfall” (1957)

 

 

   4  WCCO (CBS)

  Morning

      6:00

SUNRISE SEMESTER—Education

      6:30

SIEGFRIED—Children

      7:00

AXEL AND DEPUTY DAWG

      7:30

CLANCY AND COMPANY

      9:00

DR. REUBEN K. YOUNGDAHL

      9:05

NEWS—Dean Montgomery

      9:10

MIKE DOUGLAS—Variety

Co-host: David Fronst. Guests: Lainie Kaan, Maury Wills, Robert Ettinger

 

  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—Game

Celebrities: Ross Martin, June Lockhart

      1:30

HOUSE PARTY   COLOR  Guest: Hedda Hopper

      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—Drama   COLOR  “Law and Order” (1953)

      5:30

NEWS—Walter Cronkite 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:20

DIRECTIONS—Religion

      6:25

WEATHER—Don O’Brien

      6:30

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      7:00

I’VE GOT A SECRET—Panel

      7:30

LUCILLE BALL—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY GRIFFITH—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:30

HAZEL 

  COLOR        9:00

TALENT SCOUTS 

  COLOR      10:00

NEWS

    10:30

MOVIE—Adventure

“Inferno” (1953)

    12:00

MOVIE—Drama

“ ‘Neath Brooklyn Bridge” (1942)

 

 

   5  KSTP (NBC)

  Morning

      6:00

CONTINENTAL CLASSROOM

      6:30

CITY AND COUNTRY 

  COLOR        7:00

TODAY   COLOR  Guests: Langston Hughes, Carlos Montoya

      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      11:55

NEWS

  Afternoon

    12:00

NEWS AND WEATHER 

  COLOR      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  Celebrities: Eve Arden, Ed Ames

      3:00

MATCH GAME   COLOR  Celebrities: Rita Moreno, Abe Burrows

      3:25

NEWS

      3:30

DIALING FOR DOLLARS—Game 

  COLOR        4:30

CHEYENNE—Western

      5:25

DOCTOR’S HOUSE CALL—James Rogers Fox 

  COLOR        5:30

NEWS—Chet Huntley, David Brinkley 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS 

  COLOR        6:30

HULLABALOO   COLOR  Host: Frankie Avalon. Guests: the T-Bones, the Miracles, the Brothers Four, Judi Rolin

      7:00

JOHN FORSYTHE—Comedy 

  COLOR        7:30

DR. KILDARE 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY WILLIAMS—Awards   COLOR  23rd annual Golden Globe Awards

      9:00

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE—Drama 

  COLOR      10:00

NEWS 

  COLOR      10:30

JOHNNY CARSON 

  COLOR      12:15

MOVIE—Mystery

“Trapped by Boston Blackie” (1948)

 

 

   6  KDSM (DULUTH) (NBC)

  Morning

      7:00

TODAY 

  COLOR  Guests: Langston Hughes, Carlos Montoya       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      11:55

NEWS

  Afternoon

    12:00

TO BE ANNOUNCED

    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  Celebrities: Eve Arden, Ed Ames

      3:00

MATCH GAME   COLOR  Celebrities: Rita Moreno, Abe Burrows

      3:25

NEWS

      3:30

JACK LA LANNE 

  COLOR        4:00

BOZO AND HIS PALS 

  COLOR        5:30

NEWS, ROCKY TELLER 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS—Chet Huntley, David Brinkley 

  COLOR        6:30

HULLABALOO   COLOR  Host: Frankie Avalon. Guests: the T-Bones, the Miracles, the Brothers Four, Judi Rolin

      7:00

JOHN FORSYTHE—Comedy 

  COLOR        7:30

DR. KILDARE 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY WILLIAMS—Awards   COLOR  23rd annual Golden Globe Awards

      9:00

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE—Drama 

  COLOR      10:00

NEWS 

  COLOR      10:20

JOHNNY CARSON 

  COLOR 

 

 

   6  KAUS (AUSTIN) (ABC)

  Morning

 

  10:00

SUPERMARKET SWEEP—Game

    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

      2:30

YOUNG MARRIEDS

      3:00

NEVER TOO YOUNG

      3:30

WHERE THE ACTION IS—Variety

Guests: The Kingston Trio

      4:00

CAPTAIN ATOM—Children

Movie: “San Francisco Valley”

      5:30

RIFLEMAN—Western

  Evening

      6:00

NEWS—Peter Jennings

      6:10

NEWS, SPORTS, WEATHER

      6:30

MOVIE—Science Fiction

“The Day the Earth Stood Still” (1951)

      8:00

SHENANDOAH

      8:30

PEYTON PLACE—Drama

      9:00

BEN CASEY—Drama

    10:00

NEWS

    10:30

UNTOUCHABLES—Drama

    11:30

NEWS

 

 

   7  KCMT (ALEXANDRIA) (NBC, ABC)

  Morning

      7:00

TODAY   COLOR  Guests: Langston Hughes, Carlos Montoya

      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      11:55

NEWS

  Afternoon

    12:00

NEWS

    12:15

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  Celebrities: Eve Arden, Ed Ames

      3:00

MATCH GAME   COLOR  Celebrities: Rita Moreno, Abe Burrows

      3:25

NEWS

      3:30

GENERAL HOSPITAL—Serial

      4:00

FATHER KNOWS BEST—Comedy

      4:30

BUGS BUNNY—Cartoons

      5:00

TAMMY—Comedy

      5:30

NEWS—Chet Huntley, David Brinkley 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:30

FARMER’S DAUGHTER—Comedy

      7:00

JOHN FORSYTHE—Comedy 

  COLOR        7:30

DR. KILDARE 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY WILLIAMS—Awards   COLOR  23rd annual Golden Globe Awards

      9:00

SURVIVAL!—Documentary

      9:30

HAVE GUN—WILL TRAVEL

    10:00

NEWS

    10:30

12 O’CLOCK HIGH—Drama

    11:30

PIONEERS—Drama

 

 

   8  WDSE (DULUTH) (EDUC.)

  Morning

      9:00

CLASSROOM

  Afternoon

      5:00

KINDERGARTEN—Education

      5:30

DISCOVERING AMERICA

  Evening

      6:00

TO BE ANNOUNCED

      6:30

WHAT’S NEW—Children

      7:00

JAMES RESTON—Interview 

  SPECIAL        8:00

MUSIC FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

      8:30

COLLEGE OF ST. CATHERINE—Latin America

      9:00

TRIO

      9:30

WORLD AFFAIRS

    10:00

MONDAY FOR MEDICINE

 

 

   8  WKBT (LA CROSSE) (CBS)

  Morning

      7:30

NEWS—Mike Wallace

      7:55

NEWS

      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—Game

Celebrities: Ross Martin, June Lockhart.

      1:30

HOUSE PARTY   COLOR  Guest: Hedda Hopper

      2:00

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      2:25

NEWS—Edwards

      2:30

EDGE OF NIGHT—Serial

      3:00

SECRET STORM—Serial

      3:30

TV BINGO—Game

      4:00

GENERAL HOSPITAL—Serial

      4:30

MICKEY MOUSE CLUB—Children

      5:00

MAGILLA GORILLA—Cartoons

      5:30

NEWS—Walter Cronkite 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:30

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      7:00

I’VE GOT A SECRET—Panel

      7:30

LUCILLE BALL—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY GRIFFITH—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:30

HAZEL 

  COLOR        9:00

FBI—Drama

    10:00

NEWS

    10:25

SNOWFLAKE SKI CLUB

    10:30

THE BARON—Adventure

    11:30

ZANE GREY—Western

 

 

   9  KMSP (ABC)

  Morning

      7:30

MY LITTLE MARGIE—Comedy

      8:00

RILEY ‘ROUND THE DOWN

      8:30

GRANDPA KEN—Children

      9:00

ROMPER ROOM—Miss Betty

    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

      2:30

YOUNG MARRIEDS

      3:00

NEVER TOO YOUNG

      3:30

WHERE THE ACTION IS—Variety

Guests: The Kingston Trio

      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

YOGI BEAR—Cartoons 

  COLOR        6:30

12 O’CLOCK HIGH

      7:30

JESSE JAMES—Western

      8:00

SHENANDOAH

      8:30

PEYTON PLACE—Drama

      9:00

BEN CASEY—Drama

    10:00

NEWS

    10:30

ARREST AND TRIAL—Drama

    12:00

PETER GUNN—Mystery

 

 

  10 WDIO (DULUTH) (ABC)

  Morning

    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

      2:30

YOUNG MARRIEDS

      3:00

NEVER TOO YOUNG

      3:30

WHERE THE ACTION IS—Variety

Guests: The Kingston Trio

      4:00

MOVIE—Police

“A Life in the Balance” (1955)

      5:45

NEWS—Peter Jennings

  Evening

      6:00

REBEL—Western

      6:30

12 O’CLOCK HIGH

      7:30

JESSE JAMES—Western

      8:00

SHENANDOAH

      8:30

PEYTON PLACE—Drama

      9:00

BEN CASEY—Drama

    10:00

NEWS

    10:15

MOVIE—Drama

“Violent Road” (1958)

 

 

  10 KROC (ROCHESTER) (NBC)

  Morning

      7:00

TODAY   COLOR  Guests: Langston Hughes, Carlos Montoya

      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      11:55

NEWS

  Afternoon

    12:00

NEWS

    12:15

SHOW AND TELL—Mary Bea

    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

  COLOR        2:30

YOU DON’T SAY!—Game   COLOR  Celebrities: Eve Arden, Ed Ames

      3:00

MATCH GAME   COLOR  Celebrities: Rita Moreno, Abe Burrows

      3:25

NEWS

      3:30

BAHELOR FATHER—Comedy

      4:00

LONE RANGER—Western

      4:30

LEAVE IT TO BEAVER—Comedy

      5:00

SERGEANT PRESTON

      5:30

NEWS—Chet Huntley, David Brinkley 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:30

HULLABALOO   COLOR  Host: Frankie Avalon. Guests: the T-Bones, the Miracles, the Brothers Four, Judi Rolin

      7:00

JOHN FORSYTHE—Comedy 

  COLOR        7:30

DR. KILDARE 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY WILLIAMS—Awards   COLOR  23rd annual Golden Globe Awards

      9:00

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE—Drama 

  COLOR      10:00

NEWS

    10:30

JOHNNY CARSON 

  COLOR 

 

 

  11 WTCN (IND.)

  Morning

      9:15

NEWS

      9:30

MOVIE—Drama

“My Sin” (1931)

    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—Western   COLOR  “Pawnee” (1957)

      2:45

MEL’S NOTEBOOK—Interview

      3:00

GIRL TALK—Panel

      3:30

AMOS ‘N’ ANDY—Comedy

      4:00

POPEYE AND PETE—Children

      4:30

CASEY AND ROUNDHOUSE

      5:15

ROCKY AND FRIENDS 

  COLOR        5:30

BACHELOR FATHER—Comedy

  Evening

      6:00

RIFLEMAN—Western

      6:30

BOLD JOURNEY—Travel

      7:00

WILD CARGO—Travel 

  COLOR        7:30

DARING VENTURE 

  COLOR        8:00

WRESTLING—Minneapolis

      9:30

NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

    10:00

MOVIE—Comedy

“Bell, Book and Candle” (1959)

    12:00

SLEEPY TIME

Time approximate

 

 

  12 KEYC (MANKATO) (CBS)

  Morning

      7:30

NEWS—Mike Wallace

      7:55

FILM SHORT

      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—Game

Celebrities: Ross Martin, June Lockhart

      1:30

HOUSE PARTY   COLOR  Guest: Hedda Hopper

      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

CARTOONS—Children

      4:15

BART’S CLUBHOUSE—Children  

      4:30

ROCKY AND HIS FRIENDS

      4:45

BART’S CLUBHOUSE

      5:00

WOODY WOODPECKER—Cartoon

      5:30

NEWS—Walter Cronkite 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:30

TO TELL THE TRUTH—Panel

      7:00

I’VE GOT A SECRET—Panel

      7:30

LUCILLE BALL—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:00

ANDY GRIFFITH—Comedy 

  COLOR        8:30

HAZEL 

  COLOR        9:00

BANDWAGON—Earl Lamont

      9:30

BATTLE LINE—Documentary

    10:00

NEWS

    10:30

MOVIE—Adventure

“Nightfall” (1957)

 

 

  13 KEAU (EAU CLAIRE) (NBC)

  Morning

      7:00

TODAY   COLOR  Guests: Langston Hughes, Carlos Montoya

      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

BINGO—Eau Claire

  Afternoon

    12:00

FARM AND HOME—Discussion

    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  Celebrities: Eve Arden, Ed Ames

      3:00

MATCH GAME   COLOR  Celebrities: Rita Moreno, Abe Burrows

      3:25

NEWS

      3:30

FATHER KNOWS BEST—Comedy

      4:00

MODERN SUPERVISION

      4:30

BUGS BUNNY—Cartoons

      5:00

HUCKLEBERRY HOUND

      5:30

NEWS—Chet Huntley, David Brinkley 

  COLOR    Evening

      6:00

NEWS

      6:30

HULLABALOO   COLOR  Host: Frankie Avalon. Guests: the T-Bones, the Miracles, the Brothers Four, Judi Rolin

      7:00

JOHN FORSYTHE—Comedy 

  COLOR        7:30

ADDAMS FAMILY—Comedy

      8:00

ANDY WILLIAMS—Awards   COLOR  23rd annual Golden Globe Awards

      9:00

RUN FOR YOUR LIFE—Drama 

  COLOR      10:00

NEWS

    10:30

SHENANDOAH—Western

    11:00

MOVIE—Drama

“Saigon” (1948)

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Published on February 01, 2021 05:00

January 30, 2021

This week in TV Guide: January 29, 1966

I'm generally not one to make hay of other people's misfortunes—at least not most of the time—but there's a line in Robert De Roos' cover story profile of Pat Crowley that shouts out for contextualization.

The actress, currently starring with Mark Miller in NBC's Please Don't Eat the Daisies, is talking about her marriage to attorney Ed Hookstratten. De Roos asks her if the marriage, now eight years long, will last now that she's working on a weekly series. "It sure is," she tells him. "We are Catholics and there is a little solidity there."

That sounded like such a refreshing attitude to me that I immediately went to Google, only to find that the Hookstrattens had divorced sometime in the 70s or 80s—Crowley remarried in 1986, to producer Andy Friendly.*

*Fun fact: Andy Friendly's father is legendary TV newsman Fred Friendly; his brother, David Friendly, was nominated for an Oscar in 2006 as producer of Little Miss Sunshine.

I hasten to say here that I have no knowledge of why Crowley and Hookstratten divorced*, and I don't want to play either a pop psychologist, a pop marriage counselor, or a pop theologian. After all, I haven't stayed at a Holiday Inn Express lately. But one of the many tragedies of the Catholic Church in the latter half of the 20th Century—particularly the post-Vatican II turmoil, which reached a peak in 1968 with Paul VI's encyclical Humanae Vitae—is the breakdown of basic Catholic beliefs. By the late '60s, Catholic doctrine had become a smorgasbord; if you didn't like what one priest had to say on birth control, for example, you could shop around and find a priest who would readily sanction it. Similar situations existed for everything from premarital sex to divorce and remarriage to a whole host of previous elements of Catholic teaching that had rarely been questioned. Inevitably, this kind of confusion among the faithful led many to doubt the Church's sincerity, authority, what have you. Bottom line: no solidity.

*Hookstratten, Elvis Presley's personal attorney, represented The King in his divorce from Priscilla, which certainly suggests mixed feelings regarding divorce.  
Again, I have no reason to think that this might have had any role to play in Pat Crowley's divorce from Ed Hookstratten. But I do think it's part of this blog's narrative to fit these kinds of things into the larger cultural environment. The 1960s were already a period of flux by now, and they were headed toward even more cataclysmic change. (Of course, considering the utter chaos of the Church today, the '60s look like a model of stability by comparison.) Understanding the climate of the times (even though the insufficient space here hardly scratches the surface) puts little moments like this into some sense of context. It even adds, I think, a note of poignancy. 

t  t  t
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: Scheduled guests: Dinah Shore; puppet Topo Gigio; comic Jackie Vernon; the rock'n' rolling Four Tops; Les Feux Follets, Canadian folk dancers; guitarist José Feliciano; comic Dick Capri; Markworth and Mayana, trick bow-and-arrow act; and Army sergeant Barry Sadler, who sings "The Ballad of the Green Berets."  In a special film segment, Sir Laurence Olivier is seen in excerpts from his film of Shakespeare's Othello.
  
Palace: Host Arthur Godfrey presents comedian Sid Caesar; singer Abbe Lane; The Mamas and the Papas, rock 'n' roll group; comic Corbett Monica; the Berosinis, Czechoslovakian acrobats; and Les Apollos, balancing act.

Now, it's true that nothing could be finer than Dinah, and you can't beat Olivier doing Shakespeare (nor the beat of "The Ballad of the Green Berets"), but it's offset by The Old Readhead and and Sid Caesar, with a little help from Abbe Lane. I almost went with the Palace, but this time the only fair decision is to call it a Push.

Now, as sometimes occurs, it just so happens that we have access to another Palace episode in this week's issue; if you lived in LaCrosse, Wisconsin and were so inclined to tune to WKBT, Channel 8 (the NBC affiliate, but Western Wisconsin lacked an ABC affiliate at the time), you would have been able to catch last week's episode of Palace at 10:30 p.m. CT on Tuesday night. Fred Astaire hosts this night at the Palace making a rare TV appearance with dancer Barrie Chase. Guests include Mickey Rooney and his nightclub partner Bobby Van; British singer Petula Clark; the Nitwits, musical cutups; the Lenz Chimps; and comedian Ray Hastings.

Yes. It definitely does make for a better show. See?


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Throughout the 60s and early 70s, TV Guide's weekly 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 shows of the era. 

Mister Roberts started out life as a book, became an enormously successful Broadway play and movie, and has now made it to the small screen in a weekly series of its own on NBC. And Cleveland Amory has a suggestion for you: if you liked the book, play or movie, do not under any circumstances watch the series. "In fact you're probably better off not even reading this—it will just make you mad."
Mister Roberts—book, play, movie and series—tells the story of the men onboard the USS Reluctant, a naval cargo ship, during World War II. True, the ship performs a vital function, but it is far from the battle, and the executive officer, Doug Roberts, itches to see action—however, to his dismay, his transfer requests are never approved. All well and good, and one would think this, combined with the popularity of the various versions, would make for a decent series. One vital ingredient missing is, of course, the star; and in both the play and the movie, that star was Henry Fonda, and while the absense of Henry does not make the heart grow fonda*, even with 77 Sunset Strip's Roger Smith in the title role, Cleve acknowledges that the likeable Smith does grow on you. And Steve Harmon, who plays Ensign Pulver, has pretty big shoes to fill, (David Wayne on Broadway, Oscar winner Jack Lemmon in the movie) as does Richard X. Slattery, who takes over from James Cagney as Captain. But Harmon does well, and Slattery is at least equally funny. 
*I'll bet you thought Amory came up with that one, but no—I take the credit or the blame for it myself.
No, the cast isn't the problem here; there's more to it than that, something elemental about the story itself, as Amory shrewdly understands. The strength of the original story lies in the fact that these men are in war but not at war; they're apparently condemned, for the duration, to suffocating boredom, "all of the frustration and none of the action; all of the tensions and none of the release." Men with nothing else to do create their own dramas, and the ensuing interactions within that shipboard family—the incident of the captain's palm tree being the most famous—mean nothing without the attendant boredom as the backdrop. "And it was there—in the book, in the two-and-a-half hour play, in the two-hour movie. In the TV show it is not there. An hour's show might have had a chance. This half-hour job has none."
Recent episodes have given Amory hope that the producers might have figured out, if not the solution to their problems, at least a way to make them more bearable. It isn't the real Mister Roberts, Cleve notes, "but then, these days what is?"
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In the early days of this blog, I did a piece on the short-lived Sammy Davis, Jr. Show , which featured the oddity of its star having to sit out nearly a month's worth of shows immediately following the premiere, due to a no-compete clause. Seems that Sammy had done a special for ABC, and the terms of that contract prohibited him from appearing on any other network for the three weeks immediately preceding the show. The Sammy Davis, Jr. show was on NBC. You can, of course, see the problems coming a mile away.

Well, this is the week that Sammy and His Friends, the ABC special in question, airs, and he hangs out with a pretty cool bunch of people: Frank Sinatra, Count Basie, Edie Adams and Joey Heatherton. It's on Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m., up against Red Skelton on CBS (with guests George Gobel and The Hollies) and Dr. Kildare on NBC.* As for Sammy's own show, it airs its fourth episode on Friday night, the third to feature a guest host—this week it's Sammy's old friend Jerry Lewis, who welcomes Peggy Lee, the comic Weire Brothers, singer Danny Costello, and The Skylarks. Debuting your own show and then having to follow it up with three weeks' worth of guest hosts doesn't seem to me to be a successful formula, but to each its own. I said it before and I'll say it again here: what a strange, strange situation.

*I wonder how NBC felt about all this? On the one hand, a ratings win for Sammy could bode well for the ratings of his NBC series; on the other, the network  probably wanted to see Kildare beat Red Skelton. Should such an absurd thing happen nowadays, I wonder if the network would consider airing a Kildare rerun in order to preserve its Davis investment?

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Sammy's show probably didn't stand much of a chance anyway; it's opposition was Hogan's Heroes and Gomer Pyle on CBS, The Addams Family and Honey West on ABC. But later on that Friday night, we'll see another oddity: Garry Moore on a network other than CBS.

Moore had been a fixture on the network since his radio show debuted in 1949; from 1950 on he'd had both morning and evening variety programs, as well as his long-running emcee duties on I've Got a Secret. But Moore's prime-time show had been cancelled by the network in 1964, after which he'd left Secret and the network. Now, a year and a half later, Moore's ready to come back. There's only one problem: CBS, to whom he's still under contract, doesn't want him. Or, to be precise, they don't want what he has to offer.

Moore acknowledges that the variety format he'd been so successful with has seen better days, and he's ready for something new and different. He thought he'd found the answer when CBS news chief Fred Friendly approached him about working on some public affairs programs, but the network's policy forbade entertainers from working in news or public affairs. In later years, Moore will talk with TV Guide about his desire to move into news and "people" programming, even becoming a news reporter, and his immense frustration at CBS's reluctance to see him in that light. You can see the seeds of that disappointment here, as Moore chafes at being paid "to sit around and do nothing." His exclusive contract with CBS, which prevents him from doing a series for any other network and requires him to give CBS first refusal on any one-shot special, still has nine years to run. He's asked the network to release him from the contract, but they refuse to do so. His only recourse is to sue, an option he says he'd consider.

In the meantime, an agency came up with an idea right up Moore's alley—Garry Moore's People Poll, a special in which he gets to travel around the country interviewing ordinary people and asking them basic questions: Do you kiss your wife when you get up in the morning? Are you stricter than your own parents? Are you satisfied with your life—and what changes would you make if you could start over? Things like that. Per the provisions of the contract, the show is first offered to CBS, which turns it down. So he turned elsewhere. "We were delighted," Moore says, "to find a more flexible policy at ABC." It airs Friday at 9:00 p.m.

Earlier in the article, Moore mentions a project he and Jay Ward are working on for CBS, a comedy-variety program. It debuts in the fall, and is quickly wiped out by Bonanza. Moore will eventually come back to regular television as host of the syndicated To Tell the Truth (with CBS's approval) in 1969, and will host it until 1977, after which, suffering from throat cancer, he'll retire for good, dying in 1993. It is, really, kind of a sad story for a man who was once one of the biggest stars on television.
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There are still a few days we haven't looked at yet, so let's get to it. Sir John Gielgud stars in part two of Ages of Man (CBS, Sunday, 3:30 p.m.), in which he gives dramatic readings from Shakespeare's works. CBS split the original two-hour version of Gielgud's one-man Broadway show into two parts and broadcast them on Sunday afternoons, presumably because they worried viewers wouldn't be able to sit still long enough to listen to a longer show, and wouldn't tune in if it were on prime-time. At least they showed it at all; I doubt they would today. 
Andy Williams and Friend.Monday night it's the Golden Globe Awards, presented on The Andy Williams Show (NBC, 8:00 p.m.) and hosted by Andy himself. The Golden Globes have always had something of a checkered past, with a longstanding reputation for awarding performances based on suspicious criteria. (See: Pia Zadora .) At this point very few nominees appeared for the show, and those who did were invariably the winners, which led more than one person to suspect that the only way to induce stars to show up was to promise they would win; in 1968, the FCC ruled that this practice constituted "mis[leading] the public as to how the winners were determined," which in turn led NBC to drop coverage of the show until 1975.
Wednesday, Eddie Albert does double duty; on his own Green Acres (CBS. 8:00 p.m.), he falls through the roof while attempting to put up a TV antenna; I hate to see anyone injured while trying to promote television. Then, after a half-hour break for The Dick Van Dyke Show, Albert returns as a guest on The Danny Kaye Show (9:00 p.m., CBS), where he's joined by singer Morgana King. If that doesn't do it for you, switch to Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theater (NBC, 8:00 p.m.), as Jane Wyman makes a rare network TV appearance in "When Hell Froze," a drama that co-stars Leslie Nielsen and Martin Milner.  
And on Thursday night, NBC's Hallmark Hall of Fame presents a rerun of "The Magnificent Yankee" (7:30 p.m.), a biography of the Washington years of Supreme Count justice Oliver Wendell Holmes starring the husband-and-wife team of Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, two of the greats of the theater. "The Magnificent Yankee" won five Emmy awards when it was originally broadcast in 1965, including Best Actor (Lunt), Best Actress (Fontanne) and Best Drama. (As you can see, this is back when Hallmark cared enough to show the very best.) It also features Eduard Franz, Robert Emhardt and James Daly. 
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John Schneider, president of CBS, had this to say at the recent convention of the Association of National Advertisers:
By 1975 virtually every television home in the United States will be capable of receiving programming from six times as many sources as today!. . .
By 1975 it looks as if three out of four homes will own at least two sets. . . No longer will every member of the family be forced to look at the same program.  Viewing will become fractionalized and selective. . . 
The teen-ager, the intellectual, the tired businessman, the housewife - each will be able to tune in the particular kind of entertainment, information, music or discussion that suits his or her respective desires.

Now, I don't know how things were by 1975, but his predictions become very interesting when viewed in light of today's cultural norms. For example, every home today has at least six times as many programming sources, but Schneider couldn't have anticipated how they would shake out. Anyone can stream video on devices from laptops and tablets to iPhones; they can subscribe to services like Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, Disney+ and HBO Max that allow them to catch original programming as well as classics; they can binge-watch an entire season of a series over a weekend if they want, or watch their favorites whenever they choose; they can even utilize old school medial like DVDs. Cord-cutting has become commonplace, and cable subscriptions continue to plummet. 
But even more, technology has forever changed the impact of television viewing. Because people can watch whatever they want whenever they want, the shared experience of watching television has virtually disappeared, except for the Super Bowl. Schneider did indeed foresee this kind of individual viewing, with the concurrent result that programs no longer had to appeal to a broad audience, but could he have predicted the kind of Balkanization that resulted?
In "As We See It," TV Guide wonders about this vision of the future. The author (probably Merrill Panitt) looks at the current state of television in Los Angeles, where numerous multi-TV homes and ten stations have merely produced programming "given over to hundreds of old movies and old TV series." And isn't that what we have today? I've made this complaint before so I won't belabor the point, but who can tell TNT from TBS from USA from FX from Bravo from Sundance from Hallmark? What's the difference between A&E and History and TLC and Discovery?

Reality programming of one kind or another dominates networks as diverse as E! and HGTV MTV is all about lifestyle, and news networks spend their time on opinionated shoutfests geared toward satisfying their particular ideological niche. Cultural programming, which used to be seen at least occasionally on some of these networks, is all but gone. And overnight hours (on both cable and OTA stations) is dominated by informercials and replays of previously broadcast shows. Is this really what the future was supposed to give us?

Panitt compares Schneider's view of TV's future to the state of radio in 1966, "which long since has become fractionalized (several sets per home) and selective (there's a choice of many stations everywhere). In most areas these days, once you've heard the news, radio offers records, talking disc jockeys and very little else." Is TV today any more diverse than that?

TV Guide's conclusion is this: "Improvement and variety in programming will not just happen in television any more than they happened in radio. There must be planning. There must be direction. So far we have neither." I'll end by asking the question: is there any evidence that television executives are doing any planning today? Or are they simply waiting for things to happen? TV  
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Published on January 30, 2021 05:00

January 29, 2021

Around the dial




This picture is an anachronism, but why? Is it because we see a family watching television together, or is it because people are watching baseball on television? Only AC Nielsen knows for sure. One thing I am sure about, though, is that there's plenty here worth reading.
We'll start with bare-bones e-zine and part three of Jack's look at the Hitchcock scripts of William Fay. This week, it's the fourth season comedy " Safety for the Witness ," adapted from a story by John De Meyer, and starring Art Carney. Does the adaptation work? Read and find out.
Some class acts passed away this week. The great Cloris Leachman, who stared in movies and television and excelled in both, died at 94; The Last Drive-In has a pictoral look back at some of her best-known roles. 
Meanwhile, at A Shroud of Thoughts, Terence has a couple of typically thoughtful retrospectives: first, on Bruce Kirby (father of Bruno), age 95, who was a familiar face on television for decades, and who's probably best-remembered as Sergeant Kramer, a recurring character on Columbo. And then, for people of my generation, there's Mr. Allakazam himself, the magician Mark Wilson , who died at 91. I still can't figure out how to produce a quarter from behind a small child's ear, by the way.
At The Hits Just Keep On Comin', JB takes a moment to look back at other icons of the 1950s who've passed on this month, Jimmie Rodgers and Phil Spector, and what they meant to the times. I don't think we're on a death kick here, by the way; I look at it as a chance to fondly appreciate the careers of great artists.
On the radio side, Once Upon a Screen looks at the radio career of Alan Ladd , an actor whose movies I've always enjoyed. I'm a relative newcomer to his radio apparances, but it can't surprise you that he was talented here, too.
And over at Classic Film & TV Cafe, it's time for the "film" part of the title, as Rick looks at the five best inspirational sports movies , inspirational being the key word here. With that as the criteria, I have no arguments with his list, which brings out everything we love about sports. That's a list that ought to be able to take you to tomorrow's TV Guide. TV  
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Published on January 29, 2021 05:00

It's About TV!

Mitchell Hadley
Insightful commentary on how classic TV shows mirrored and influenced American society, tracing the impact of iconic series on national identity, cultural change, and the challenges we face today.
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