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50th Anniversary Viewing
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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 21, episode 2
Originally aired October 6, 1968
As represented in
The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show
Our
Best of installment opens with Tony Bennett performing "Get Happy" backed by the Woody Herman Band, including a clarinet solo by Woody. Tony then switches to the gentler "Hushabye Mountain," accompanied by an acoustic guitarist. The song appears to have been from a 1968 album of his, and Tony says that it's about visiting San Francisco, name-dropping his signature hit along the way. Woody Herman & Band then perform an instrumental called "Hard to Keep My Mind on You".
On to the Goetchis, two men wearing white Spanish-style suits performing unicycle stunts, aided by a female assistant.
Flip Wilson tells a story about how Ray Charles came to his base when he was serving in the Air Force to perform in a parade and a friend named Freddy got in trouble with the commanding general for not saluting.
tv.com has Tiny Tim listed as performing other songs on this date, but I wasn't able to find a date on which he did perform these, and as everything else in the
Best of installment lines up with this date, including that Tiny Tim appeared, I'm treating the following as being from this date. In his intro, Ed describes Tim as "the first...the real love child." Tim then performs "I Wonder How I Look When I'm Asleep," which appears to be an old 1920s number, followed by "a little duet with myself," the Sonny & Cher hit "I Got You Babe," which he does using two voices.
Tony Bennett returns to perform an uptempo song called "There Will Never Be Another You" (not to be confused with "I'll Never Find Another You" by the Seekers), followed by "Who Can I Turn To," a slower song with lots of held notes. Afterward Ed offers some praise from Jerry Vale that "with all singers, you are automatically classified as number one."
Also in the original episode according to tv.com:
Music:
--Dionne Warwick sings "The Impossible Dream" and "Promises, Promises."
--Tiny Tim sings a medley of "Hello, Hello," "As Time Goes By" and "I Gave Her That."
--The Kessler Twins (singers-dancers) - "Lili Marlene" production number with male dancers.
--The cast of the off-Broadway musical "You're A Good Man Charlie Brown" performs "You're A Good Man Charlie Brown" and "Happiness." (The performers include Bob Lydiard as Charlie Brown, Boni Enten as Lucy, Gene Kidwell as Linus,Don Potter as Snoopy, Jimmy Dodge as Schroeder,and Karen Johnson as Patty.)
Also appearing:
--Audience bows: Tillie and Butris Khaury (Tiny Tim's parents).
--Cameos (possibly audience bows): Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting (actors, stars of the 1968 movie "Romeo and Juliet").
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Mission: Impossible
"The Contender: Part 1"
Originally aired October 6, 1968
Wiki said:
Barney impersonates a boxer to prevent gangsters (Ron Randell, John Dehner) from corrupting U.S. sports. Sugar Ray Robinson guest stars as a gangster's henchman; Robert Conrad has a cameo as Barney's sparring partner. The IMF will return to the boxing ring in the seventh season episode "The Fighter" (S07/E17).
This time Jim has a contact (Bruce Geller) and codephrase so he can take a small rental boat out to get his assignment.
The reel-to-reel tape in the boat said:
Please dispose of this recording in the usual manner. Good luck, Jim.
And the usual manner is...throwing the tape spool in the water. It doesn't smoke up, fizz, or anything...it just sinks. And the portfolio is back in this one.
The basic mission premise seems a bit lame. Stop mob-rigged fights because they could be used as a propaganda tool by our enemies? And there's nothing to back up the claim that the guy they're after, Buckman, is cornering the market on professional sports...all we see is one penny-ante rigged boxing operation.
The IMF enlists the help of Richy Lemoine, an ex-fighter with injured hands, whom Barney is going to impersonate. Disguised Barney is actually Greg Morris in makeup, not the actor playing Lemoine. They try to lampshade this by having one of the thugs of the week notice that he looks different, chalking it up to his injuries, but it seems unlikely that Barney could fool a room full of sports reporters. Likewise, Rollin claims to be the guy that Lemoine injured himself saving in the Army, but you'd think that person's identity would be a matter of public record.
Willy gets to put his physicality to good use as Barney's workout buddy. And "Bobby" Conrad has more than a cameo--he factors into two full scenes and an after-commercial continuation of one of them...and knocks Barney out along the way!
Sugar Ray gets a pretty meaty bad guy role as the henchman, at one point offing an honest boxer who won't throw a fight by pushing him into an empty elevator shaft.
Ernie, one of the guys that Cin latches onto, is Robert Phillips (not to be confused with the titular character in this week's
Ironside), who played "Space Officer" in the Orion illusion in "The Cage"; and washed-up ex-boxer turned janitor Kid Wilson is Biff Elliot, a.k.a. Schmitter from "The Devil in the Dark".
"To Be Continued Next Week" hits the screen as it looks like Phelps is going to be caught hiding under the ring, where he was planting a gas device of Barney's.
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The Avengers
"You'll Catch Your Death"
Originally aired October 7, 1968 (US); October 16, 1968 (UK)
Wiki said:
Empty envelopes are delivered to top Government officials, who are then found dead. The only clue is that each man seems to have died from a fit of sneezing. Steed investigates a clinic for researching the common cold, which seems to have purchased some unusual stationery supplies.
This time around we're back to the usual repetitive series of deaths, involving a virus powder being sent to people in otherwise-empty envelopes. At one point they tease us into thinking that Steed's stupid enough to open one of the suspicious envelopes that's sent to him, but pan up to reveal that he's wearing a gas mask.
Col. Timothy (Roland Culver, who played the Foreign Secretary in
Thunderball) funds the clinic, but isn't in on the scheme and quickly falls in with Steed for the bad guy-busting in the climax...even getting in a knockout blow via what appears to be another hardened derby like Steed's. Steed kills the doctor in charge with one of the envelopes that he had on him.
We learn here that Mother answers to somebody named "Grandma".
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Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 2, episode 4
Originally aired October 7, 1968
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Robert Culp, Arlene Dahl, Kirk Douglas, Lena Horne, Liberace, France Nuyen, Otto Preminger, Sonny Tufts, Flip Wilson, Catherine Reid
Liberace said:
For those of you poor, unfortunate people watching in black and white, you're missing one of my most beautiful jackets.
Dan & Dick allude to
The Jerry Lewis Show being on NBC Tuesday nights.
The news intro is done in the style of a Bond song, and includes France Nuyen.
This week's Fickle Finger of Fate goes to the Senate Judiciary Committee:
I hadn't mentioned it before, but in the season premiere, Dave Madden introduced a running gag of people throwing rice to indicate being turned on. They're starting to get a lot of use out of it at this point.
Super Nude Potpourri:
A song paying tribute to the Fourth Estate:
France Nuyen's "That's Not Funny" Joke Wall:
The episode also had several bits of France and Goldie one-on-one, doing what I'd have to describe as a "dueling airheads" schtick. (Mind you, I'm describing the material they were being given, not the women themselves.)
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"Eleven Angry Men and That Girl"
Originally aired October 10, 1968
Wiki said:
Ann is selected for jury duty.
Ann's taking her civic duty very seriously, studying up on court cases, while Donald's more concerned about Ann not being done in time to go on a trip to see her parents. As one might have guessed, Ann is the holdout who causes the jury to be sequestered in a hotel overnight. A hippie juror named Talley accidentally goes to her room thinking it's his; while another juror, an older man named Packard, comes by trying to hit on Ann. The hippie comes back over for his toothbrush just as she's showing Mr. Packard out, while a prudish older female juror across the hall looks on, aghast.
The jury is deliberating as to whether a man hit his wife with an ashtray. Ann acts out a demonstration that swings everyone on the jury into declaring him not guilty, based on his handedness and the side of the face that she lost teeth from. But when Mr. Franklin is declared not guilty, Mrs. Franklin loudly protests in the courtroom, upon which Mr. Franklin spontaneously recreates the incident, hitting her with another ashtray, but in a backhanded manner, which proves that he could have done it in the first place and probably did. I guess I shouldn't find this funny given the subject matter, but conceptually it was a good comedic twist.
Donald's parents aren't actually in the episode, but his mother maintains an offscreen presence via one-sided telephone conversations.
"Oh, Donald" count:
1
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Ironside
"Robert Phillips vs. the Man"
Originally aired October 10, 1968
Wiki said:
Ironside finds himself caught between white and black extremists as he attempts to clear a black militant charged with murder.
Guesting Paul Winfield as the character in the title, a black activist who's charged with murdering an appliance store co-owner named Stavely during a recent riot that Phillips incited. The episode opens with what looks like a mix of actual riot footage and some more obviously shot for the episode.
The activists are reluctant to talk in order to help Phillips for fear of incriminating themselves or others who were involved in the looting. The episode plays up Mark being caught in the middle of the racial tensions. He takes a hard time from the activists for being Ironside's "fetchit boy"; while some of the white folks in the story question his loyalties, including Gene Lyons's Commissioner. One scene begins with Stavely's widow refusing to let Mark in her house. At the end of the scene, she asks Ironside for a ride into town, but...
The Chief said:
I'm sorry, Mrs. Stavely. Mr. Sanger doesn't want you in his car.
I recognized Jack Hogan, who plays surviving store owner Ed Barnard, from his role as a recurring police detective introduced in this week's
Adam-12. It turns out that Barnard had been selling inventory and making large withdrawals, planning to run off with his mistress, the store's bookkeeper, who briefly appeared early in the episode. Ironside coerces a confession out of him with the alternative of leaving him to a small mob of activists waiting outside, but it turns out that the Chief had two undercover officers in the crowd keeping things under control.
Davis Roberts (Dr. Ozaba from "The Empath") has a small role as Phillips's attorney, Peters; while Arnold Williams, who'll go on to play the cab driver in
Live and Let Die, appears in several scenes as a very vocal but unnamed activist.
Evoking MLK in contrast to the activists; protesters facing off against police in riot gear; a local group of racists who call themselves the "Law and Order Commission"...this episode feels
very 1968.
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Star Trek
"And the Children Shall Lead"
Originally aired October 11, 1968
Stardate 5029.5
H&I said:
The Enterprise travels to a planet where a scientific team has killed themselves except for the children, who began to act oddly.
See my post here.
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Adam-12
"Log 131: Reed, the Dicks Have Their Job and We Have Ours"
Originally aired October 12, 1968
Wiki said:
Reed learns about how important his job is and why detectives are called to investigate homicides when he and Malloy are called to a fatal shooting.
This episode introduces us to Reed's envy of police detectives, which will factor into his future. Jack Hogan's Sgt. Miller and his partner serve as the object of Reed's envy for the purpose of this week's story. Watching them, I can't help but think that it might have been cool to have Friday and Gannon as the guest detectives, though I can see why they didn't go there...the friendly ribbing going on between the patrol officers and detectives might have made one duo or the other look bad.
This episode also marks the first appearance of Robert Donner as recurring stool pigeon Teejay.
We get more beats of Reed in training as Malloy has to repress his eagerness to investigate a murder scene, for fear of tainting the crime scene before the dicks get there. Later, Malloy makes the point that the detectives are committed to particular cases on a much longer basis, contrasting it to the usual variety of calls that he and Reed respond to in any given episode. Cases in point: dealing with an irate snack bar proprietor who wants Malloy and Reed to do something about the people parking in his lot but won't post the proper signs; intervening in the comical feuding of a married couple, the Beuhlers (Bob Hastings and Eunice Christopher), who'll be popping up again in this year's Christmas episode; and chasing a suspicious vehicle belonging to some parole violators, who are caught in possession of smack. Reed is satisfied in the climax that the latter is purely their bust.
The coda has Malloy and Reed touching base with the detectives at HQ to find that their colleagues wasted a lot of time investigating only for the killer to walk into the station and voluntarily confess.
I recognized Joseph Mell, who plays the manager of the seedy hotel where the body is found, as "Earth Trader" from the aforementioned Orion illusion in "The Cage".
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Get Smart
"The Secret of Sam Vittorio"
Originally aired October 12, 1968
Wiki said:
Gangster Sam Vittorio is dying, and he will only reveal the location of his stolen loot to his proteges Connie and Floyd... who look suspiciously like 99 and Max. (This episode is a Bonnie and Clyde parody; the title is a parody of The Secret of Santa Vittoria.)
This one proved to be quite timely, coming on the heels of my having belatedly watched the film. The most noteworthy differences here are that Connie and Floyd have been in jail for 30 years, rather than dead; and Connie wears pants.
The narrator of the home movie footage that Max and 99 watch at the beginning evokes the lyrics of "Route 66" in describing Connie and Floyd's trail of robberies.
Connie and Floyd are being transferred wearing their old gangster clothes? Holy Gotham penal system!
The episode gets in a dig at
My Mother the Car.
The climax is cute, involving Max, 99, Connie, and Floyd inadvertently exchanging places one at a time in a room with multiple doors. I hadn't been watching for it, but it may have all been done in one take.
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Hogan's Heroes
"How to Catch a Papa Bear"
Originally aired October 12, 1968
Wiki said:
The Gestapo’s well laid plan to catch Col. Hogan results in them bagging Newkirk instead.
Newkirk is captured while attending a meeting with resistance leaders in Hogan's place, and the Germans try to use him as bait to lure in Hogan. Meanwhile at the camp, the guys perpetrate a ruse to make Klink and Schultz think that Newkirk is sick in bed. By contrast, the operation to free Newkirk and blow a munitions dump along the way plays relatively straight, if a little implausibly easy.
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