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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

The Saga of Steven Hill Part 2

In a sign of good faith, the network scheduled Mission for Saturday nights from 9 to 10 pm against strong competition like The Lawrence Welk Show and The Hollywood Palace on ABC, and NBC's Saturday Night Movie. The network even kicked in additional funds to help defray Desilu's enormous deficit.

CBS's main concern about Mission - perhaps its only one - was Steven Hill, who was perceived as bland and not commercial as a lead. Early in the season CBS vice-president Perry Lafferty held a luncheon for more than a dozen CBS and Desilu executives. The purpose of the lunch, says Lafferty, "was to try and get Steven Hill off the show. Lucille Ball was expected to show, but she didn't come. She had put down this ultimatum that he would stay." Evidently, Lucy - and Desilu - were still behind Geller and Solow.

"Bruce thought that Steven Hill was a very good actor with interesting, offbeat elements," according to (Producer Joseph) Gantman. "Bruce would often try to go offbeat, but he resisted for a long time from saying he made a mistake." Hill's contract put forth very specific requirements. "Everything that we had to do for him, including his shoes and hose, had to be kosher and sent from New York," says (Geller secretary) Olga Griffin. Those prerequisites were a mere annoyance compared to the clause which allowed Hill to leave the set before sundown every Friday, in accordance with his religion. It was so important that Hill would walk off the stage in the middle of a scene as Friday night approached. Friday is the last workday for television productions, a day when most companies work late to complete a show. Mission would often shoot through midnight and still be behind schedule. The disappearance of the leading man every Friday afternoon was yet another production hindrance. "Bruce's main beef was that Steve Hill would not work past sundown and he wouldn't break that rule," says director Charles Rondeau. "That was the agreement and it drove Bruce crazy. He wanted more out of Steven Hill."

"The production problems were unfortunate," says Gantman, who recalls the trouble intensifying as the season went on. "They developed; it became more to the letter of his contract. Being an Orthodox Jew, he'd insist on being at prayers at a certain time. He then begins to say, 'But I have to leave here in order to get where I have to pray. I can't work up until that time, you don't expect me to. . .' It was like that. What will happen is that people will disagree amiably, but then, over a period of time it becomes very disagreeable. If someone understands your problems and says he understands them, you feel better about it. But if he doesn't care about your problems, then you really begin to resent him. And I think that's what happened." Steven Hill may have felt exactly the same way.

At times Hill lived up to his reputation for being unpredictable. At times he was hypersensitive: Dust from the soundstage rafters would fall on him and he would become infuriated and threaten to complain to the Screen Actors Guild. At other times he could be insensitive, calling Barbara Bain unprofessional for humming prior to a close-up during which she was to make a light-hearted comment. "Geller would come down and say, 'Why are you causing so much damned trouble?'" Charles Rondeau recalls. Most of the time, however, Hill was preoccupied with his spiritual calling, trying to arrange praying meetings among Desilu's Jews, or attempting to persuade Mr. and Mrs. Landau to have a Kosher home. Landau remembers Hill (who always called him "Landau") testing him on Jewish history or pointing out how the Jewish people have been persecuted throughout history.

"As is the case with any convert, Steve was very involved," says Greg Morris, who was probably closest to him. "Steve was a very intense, nice man. He was not treated very well." Hill had to phone Greg to learn if the pilot had sold. "I was surprised that they did not inform Steven Hill," says Morris, who believes Hill may have had a misconception regarding the amount of work expected of him. "Whether someone gave him the wrong information or not, I don't know, but what he wanted to do was just deal with the apartment scene, and the four of us would deal with the rest."

The main beneficiary of Hill's absences was Martin Landau, which I believe I have discussed upthread in another "M:I" post.

End Part 2.
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 24
Originally aired February 19, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • The Four Tops - medley: "Reach Out, I'll Be There," "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)" and "Bernadette"; "Climb Every Mountain"
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  • Boots Randolph (saxophonist) - "Shadow of Your Smile" & a medley
  • Pat Boone sings an excerpt of "Soliloquy from 'Carousel' (My Boy Bill)," then does a soliloquy about his own daughters
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  • Frankie Michaels (Broadway actor) sings "Mame"
  • Morey Amsterdam (stand-up comedy) - topics include Ed Sullivan, show business, and travel
  • Joe E. Lewis (nightclub comedian)
  • The Martys (European acrobats)
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  • Audience bow: Allen Funt ("Candid Camera" host)

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"Killer Klink"
Originally aired February 24, 1967
IMDb said:
In using Schultz to deliver radio parts to the underground, Hogan causes a marital tiff, which, to fix, requires getting Klink to believe that his sergeant is dying from premature old age.

The prisoners need to get transmitter parts to an underground operative in Schultz's home town of Heidelberg, 106 km away, and the sergeant has a weekend pass. So Hogan lets Schultz win at poker, then asks him to deliver a gift to a girlfriend who lives there--telling the story of how he was shot down outside of Heidelberg, and met, fell in love with, and was turned in to the Gestapo by Leisl...all while LeBeau plays romantic harmonica in the background. Schultz buys it all hook, line, and sinker, of course, but when his wife, Gretchen (Barbara Morrison), picks him up at the gate, she assumes that the pot of flowers the parts are hidden in and accompanying romantic note are for his mistress, and the Schultzes quickly become too invested in fighting about it to let Hogan and LeBeau explain and patch things up between them...Schultz tearing up his pass in defiance along the way. When Hogan and Schultz go to Klink to replace it, he revokes Schultz's leave and puts the sergeant on 30 days' punishment for tearing up papers signed by him.

As Schultz is forced to march around the camp wearing a heavy pack, Hogan gets the idea of having him placed on medical leave, and contrary to a previous gag about Schultz's ability to pass physicals, he's now considered so fit that he couldn't fail one, so Hogan arranges for the elderly father of the conspiring kennel truck man, Schnitzer (Walter Janovitz), to show up for the exam impersonating the sergeant. Doctor Pohlmann (Parley Baer) subsequently visits the stalag to talk to Klink about the baffling phenomenon of Schultz's rapid aging, and assumes that the sergeant has only days to live. (Schultz is said to be in his 40s; John Banner was actually well into his 50s.) A guilt-ridden Klink has Schultz in his office for what he assumes are last goodbyes, though Schultz acts very cavalier about it because he thinks he's just there to get a new pass.

Klink is lamenting how he'd never say or do anything mean to Schultz again when the sergeant returns. At first Klink is overjoyed, but then the kommandant learns that Schultz never went for his physical, and puts the sergeant back on punishment.

Decades before Patrick Stewart became a meme:
HH03.jpg

_______

The Saga of Steven Hill, Part 1
Rocky Raccoon (Remastered 2009) - YouTube

Among his peers, Hill was considered nothing short of brilliant. Lee Strasberg, founder of the Studio, once called Hill "one of America's finest actors." "When I first became an actor," Martin Landau recollects, "there were two young actors in New York: Marlon Brando and Steven Hill. A lot of people said that Steven would have been the one, not Marlon. He was legendary. Nuts, volatile, mad, and his work was exciting."
While it's meant to be complimentary, comparing Hill to Brando isn't doing him any favors...

Not everyone agreed. Many CBS and Desiliu executives saw Hill as a liability. Despite a long and prolific career, he was largely unknown to the general public and considered too low key to carry a series.
Definitely.

Just because of his age or because he was a problem child?
I'm not following. His sister, Burkhalter's wife, was pulling strings to keep him off the Russian front, for the same reason nobody else in the show wants to be on the Russian front.

If the place is closed down, what are Sefra and his boys still doing there?
I was wondering that myself. They were there in an official capacity, though...having to comply with the fake magazine story because a district commissioner or somesuch had supposedly approved it.

Well, that's pretty nasty for M:I.
It was handled pretty mildly. He was tied to a chair so his back was protected; Sefra was flogging his chest.

I wonder what Sefra planned to do when journalist Rollin returned, since they had the blessing of the local authorities.
Good question. And of course, the IMF planning for Sefra to take exactly these actions makes it all the more important that they make some sort of sense.

It seems like the IMF could have just knocked out the generator in the prison and trapped everyone inside somehow.
Perhaps. It ultimately ended up being a convoluted demolitions job with poetic justice tossed in, which is more direct than the IMF came to usually operate. This roundabout way of going about it did allow for Barney to have a chance to get out, though. (They didn't get into how, he just suddenly popped up outside for the drive-off.)

Rollin invented the Roomba. :D
Barney did. Rollin was just operating it.

He had really good range, which is one of the things that made him perfect to play Mister Roarke. He could shift from benign to mysterious to ominous to threatening and back again in the course of a sentence. :rommie:
Good thing Steven Hill didn't have to share any scenes with him... :p

The Saga of Steven Hill Part 2
The Continuing Story Of Bungalow Bill (Remastered 2009) - YouTube

In a sign of good faith, the network scheduled Mission for Saturday nights from 9 to 10 pm against strong competition like The Lawrence Welk Show
That's okay, Grandma wouldn't have watched M:I anyway.

CBS's main concern about Mission - perhaps its only one - was Steven Hill, who was perceived as bland and not commercial as a lead.
So it's not just me...

Those prerequisites were a mere annoyance compared to the clause which allowed Hill to leave the set before sundown every Friday, in accordance with his religion. It was so important that Hill would walk off the stage in the middle of a scene as Friday night approached. Friday is the last workday for television productions, a day when most companies work late to complete a show. Mission would often shoot through midnight and still be behind schedule. The disappearance of the leading man every Friday afternoon was yet another production hindrance. "Bruce's main beef was that Steve Hill would not work past sundown and he wouldn't break that rule," says director Charles Rondeau. "That was the agreement and it drove Bruce crazy. He wanted more out of Steven Hill."
Now if Hill hadn't been so problematic in so many ways, and they really had something with him worth keeping, it seems like they could have worked out shooting around his availability. I'm thinking of cases like My Three Sons and Family Affair, which each involved the lead actor filming all of his scenes for a block of episodes at once, and stories being structured so that he was often not in scenes, so that the actor in question had time to do films.

The main beneficiary of Hill's absences was Martin Landau
And Peter Graves, of course.
 
I'm thinking of cases like My Three Sons and Family Affair, which each involved the lead actor filming all of his scenes for a block of episodes at once, and stories being structured so that he was often not in scenes, so that the actor in question had time to do films.

In theory that seems like a good idea. In practice, considering all the backstage chaos and struggles during the first season to get 'M:I' on the air on time, trying to shoot a block of scenes when you're constantly behind schedule and you don't know which episode might require a guest star for the apartment scene, and the availability of that actor later could be a potential issue.

A good example is an episode of 'Blake's 7' (the episode escapes me) where they did all of the location work with that week's guest star, and, in-between location and studio work, the actor died, so they had to get a replacement actor, who showed up on set drunk, they then had to hire a third actor and remount all of the location work.

The only thing that was shot in a block were the tape scenes shown at the beginning of the episode. They were done in two blocks of filming, one set would be done with Steven Hill, later Peter Graves, two to three days before principal photography was to start on the season; then another block of tape scenes would be shot midway through the season for the later half.
 
An Asian action romp from 1998ish.
Okay, thanks. I've never heard of it, but I see the Wiki page.

The purpose of the lunch, says Lafferty, "was to try and get Steven Hill off the show. Lucille Ball was expected to show, but she didn't come. She had put down this ultimatum that he would stay." Evidently, Lucy - and Desilu - were still behind Geller and Solow.
Lucy was pretty adamant about Star Trek, too. She was always all in behind her people.

Hill's contract put forth very specific requirements.
Something similar happened to the show Get Christie Love! when Teresa Graves got religion between the movie and the series. Her requirements made the show unsustainable-- but, unlike Steven Hill, she was irreplaceable.

Most of the time, however, Hill was preoccupied with his spiritual calling, trying to arrange praying meetings among Desilu's Jews, or attempting to persuade Mr. and Mrs. Landau to have a Kosher home. Landau remembers Hill (who always called him "Landau") testing him on Jewish history or pointing out how the Jewish people have been persecuted throughout history.
Okay, he really didn't have his mind on the job at all.

The Four Tops - medley: "Reach Out, I'll Be There," "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)" and "Bernadette"; "Climb Every Mountain"
Good stuff.

Pearl Bailey - "Who Cares?"; "Winchester Cathedral"; "Nothing for Nothing"
Nice cover of "Winchester Cathedral."

Morey Amsterdam (stand-up comedy) - topics include Ed Sullivan, show business, and travel
Heh. I'd like to see that. :rommie:

Audience bow: Allen Funt ("Candid Camera" host)
And suddenly everyone is on guard....

she assumes that the pot of flowers the parts are hidden in and accompanying romantic note are for his mistress
Hogan didn't sign his note?

As Schultz is forced to march around the camp wearing a heavy pack, Hogan gets the idea of having him placed on medical leave, and contrary to a previous gag about Schultz's ability to pass physicals, he's now considered so fit that he couldn't fail one
Marching around with a heavy pack does wonders. :rommie:

Klink is lamenting how he'd never say or do anything mean to Schultz again when the sergeant returns. At first Klink is overjoyed, but then the kommandant learns that Schultz never went for his physical, and puts the sergeant back on punishment.
But still, a heartwarming little peek beneath Klink's overbearing exterior. :rommie:

Decades before Patrick Stewart became a meme:
Now I'm picturing Klink in command of Enterprise. Actually he's not that different from that guy they had on Excelsior. :rommie:

While it's meant to be complimentary, comparing Hill to Brando isn't doing him any favors...
Snicker. :rommie:

I'm not following. His sister, Burkhalter's wife, was pulling strings to keep him off the Russian front, for the same reason nobody else in the show wants to be on the Russian front.
Yeah, but usually people are threatened with the Russian front as punishment for royally screwing up-- so I was wondering if the guy did something, or if his number just came up.

I was wondering that myself. They were there in an official capacity, though...having to comply with the fake magazine story because a district commissioner or somesuch had supposedly approved it.
Keeping out squatters or something? Weird.

This roundabout way of going about it did allow for Barney to have a chance to get out, though. (They didn't get into how, he just suddenly popped up outside for the drive-off.)
Being tied to a chair is child's play for Barney. That's part of his morning calisthenics. :rommie:

Good thing Steven Hill didn't have to share any scenes with him... :p
Ouch. :rommie:

And Peter Graves, of course.
And the audience. I wonder if M:I would have had the longevity under Steven Hill. Also, can you imagine Steven Hill in Airplane!?
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 25
Originally aired February 26, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • Nancy Sinatra - "My Buddy" & "Sweet Georgia Brown"
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  • Xavier Cugat Orchestra - "Tequila"
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  • Charo (playing guitar & singing) - "Shalom Aleichem" (backed up by Xavier Cugat's band)
  • Barbara McNair - "I Feel A Song Coming On" & "Somewhere Over The Rainbow" medley
  • The Romeros (four Flamenco guitarists)
  • The Steel Bandits (boys playing steel drums) - "Georgie Girl," "Spanish Flea" & "Colonel Bogey March"
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  • Henny Youngman (comedian) - joined onstage by 10 violinists
  • Corbett Monica - stand up comedian
  • George Campo (Vaudeville style routine)
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  • Pinky And Perky (frog puppet act)
  • Clair & McMahon (comedy team) - how a marriage can be ruined by commercials
  • Audience bows: Mrs. Marvin Shields (Navy hero's widow) and Kathleen Nolan
_______

Hogan's Heroes
"Reverend Kommandant Klink"
Originally aired March 3, 1967
IMDb said:
When Hochstetter works to lower a French pilot's resistance to interrogation, Hogan brings the man's fiancee to camp to have Klink marry them.

During a nighttime line-up, Klink raises an alarm about a plane having been shot down nearby and sends Schultz out to capture the pilot, Lieutenant Claude Boucher (Felice Orlandi), a Free French fighter flying with the British. Boucher is kept isolated and Hochstetter comes to interrogate him, claiming that Boucher's fiancee, Suzanne Martine (Susan Albert), has been consorting with German soldiers as a tactic to break his will. To foil this, Hogan sends LeBeau in a Gestapo uniform and sidecar-equipped motorcycle to run to Paris to retrieve Suzanne--because running to Paris for an errand is just that easy these days--so that they can arrange a wedding ceremony for the two of them...which Klink is supposedly qualified to conduct because of martial law. When the prisoners question the feasibility of the plan, Hogan briefly lists off a few of their operations in previous episodes.

Hochstetter is questioning Boucher about the location of his airfield when Hogan bursts into Klink's office demanding to see the new prisoner, then goes off on a tangent about the prisoners putting on a show in the rec hall, and recruits Boucher--a former actor--to star in it. Hochstetter, trying to win Boucher's confidence, actually goes along with this, and Hogan slips a mickey into Claude's water to keep him from talking in the meantime. Suspecting foul play, Hochstetter has the barracks inspected right after LeBeau and Suzanne have arrived from the tunnel, so they duck into Hogan's office...where LeBeau quickly changes clothes to appear for the count, while Hogan uses reverse psychology to stop the major from checking inside to find Suzanne. At the rehearsal for the show, Hilda is dressed as the bride Boucher will be married to onstage, but after Hogan gives careful instructions about how Claude should angle her when he lifts the veil, a switcheroo is made. Onstage, Claude realizes that it's Suzanne when she identifies herself by her own name, and the ceremony goes as planned, with Suzanne's face angled away from Klink and Klink blocking Hochstetter's view of her. When the curtain closes and Klink (who takes pride in having once played Peter Pan) remains in front of it, he's promptly booed offstage.

In the coda, Hochstetter remains suspicious; Boucher refuses to give anything but name, rank, and serial number; and Hogan handwaves at Klink concerning some regulations about prisoner transfer to prevent Hochstetter from taking Boucher to Berlin for more intensive interrogation.

_______

Nice cover of "Winchester Cathedral."
Her interaction with Ed is always a highlight.

Heh. I'd like to see that. :rommie:
I found this audio-only clip of a '68 appearance on Amsterdam's Topic account:
One-Liners About New York, Nixon, NY Ballet, Ed Sullivan (Performed live on The Ed Sullivan... - YouTube

Hogan didn't sign his note?
He signed it "Tiger".

Now I'm picturing Klink in command of Enterprise. Actually he's not that different from that guy they had on Excelsior. :rommie:
"Kirrrrrk...if you do this, you'll get thirty days...in the COOLerrrrr!"

Yeah, but usually people are threatened with the Russian front as punishment for royally screwing up-- so I was wondering if the guy did something, or if his number just came up.
He'd already done time there and apparently didn't want to go back.

Also, can you imagine Steven Hill in Airplane!?
I thought the exact same thing! :lol:

Not going to post--ah, screw it!

Have You Ever Seen a Grown Man Naked? - Airplane! (3/10) Movie CLIP (1980) HD - YouTube
 
Lucy was pretty adamant about Star Trek, too. She was always all in behind her people.

I find it interesting that as soon as Paramount bought Desilu, the studio interference started regarding the three shows that Desilu had in production at that time, 'M:I', 'Star Trek' and 'Mannix'; and we know the consequences of that interference - budgets slashed, cast members leaving (Landau and Bain), Producers leaving (Gene Roddenberry) or being barred from the lot (Bruce Geller). Basically, the quality of the shows suffered.
 
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Henny Youngman (comedian) - joined onstage by 10 violinists
And every violin makes him funnier. :rommie:

Klink raises an alarm about a plane having been shot down nearby and sends Schultz out to capture the pilot
That seems highly unlikely. :rommie:

Hochstetter comes to interrogate him, claiming that Boucher's fiancee, Suzanne Martine (Susan Albert), has been consorting with German soldiers as a tactic to break his will.
Interesting that Hochstetter had information about a random pilot's fiancee.

because running to Paris for an errand is just that easy these days
"Activate Commercial Break Drive!"

which Klink is supposedly qualified to conduct because of martial law.
I wonder if there's any truth to that.

When the prisoners question the feasibility of the plan, Hogan briefly lists off a few of their operations in previous episodes.
"There was that time in Paris, then there was the Paris operation, and of course our trip to Paris...."

LeBeau and Suzanne
Apparently LeBeau had no trouble convincing a civilian to accompany a complete stranger into the heart of darkness. :rommie:

Claude realizes that it's Suzanne when she identifies herself by her own name, and the ceremony goes as planned
That sounds like a nice moment.

In the coda, Hochstetter remains suspicious; Boucher refuses to give anything but name, rank, and serial number
Well, that was a really cool change-of-pace kinda plot.

I found this audio-only clip of a '68 appearance on Amsterdam's Topic account:
Speaking of Henny Youngman, he's got that same rapid-fire delivery.

He signed it "Tiger".
Ah, right.

"Kirrrrrk...if you do this, you'll get thirty days...in the COOLerrrrr!"
:rommie:

He'd already done time there and apparently didn't want to go back.
Yep, sounds like a troublemaker.

It never gets old. :rommie:

I find it interesting that as soon as Paramount bought Desilu, the studio interference started regarding the three shows that Desilu had in production at that time, 'M:I', 'Star Trek' and 'Mannix'; and we know the consequences of that interference - budgets slashed, cast members leaving (Landau and Bain), Producers leaving (Gene Roddenberry) or being barred from the lot (Bruce Geller). Basically, the quality of the shows suffered.
Do you have any behind-the-scenes info about that, like why Lucy decided to sell and why she didn't keep any creative control?
 
50 Years Ago This Week

June 10
  • Explorer 49 was launched as the last American space probe, for more than 20 years, to orbit the Moon. The U.S. would not send another probe to the Moon until the launch of Clementine on January 25, 1994.

June 12
  • Six people were killed and 33 injured by a terrorist car bomb after the Provisional IRA had placed a time bomb in an automobile parked on a busy street in the Northern Ireland town of Coleraine in County Londonderry. All of the dead were retired Protestants ranging in age from 60 to 76, and several of the injured survived with lost limbs or crippling injuries. A second time bomb exploded five minutes later, but caused no injuries.
  • Film actor Marlon Brando punched controversial celebrity photographer Ron Galella after the paparazzo had followed Brando and talk show host Dick Cavett to a restaurant. Galella's jaw was broken and he had five teeth knocked out; Galella had already been in the news for having a restraining order against him against close pursuit of Jacqueline Onassis.

June 13
  • The collision of the Soviet Navy submarine K-56 killed 27 people after it moved into the path of a research vessel, the Academician Berg, in the Petra Velikogo Gulf of the Sea of Japan. Those killed (16 officers, five warrant officers, five sailors and a civilian observer) died from chlorine gas that filled a compartment. The crew was able to steer K-56 to a sandbar, where the survivors were rescued.
  • U.S. President Richard Nixon ordered a 60-day freeze on prices for all groceries and for gasoline, to be increased to no more than the price they were on June 8. The measures were the last under "Phase III" of his price control measures authorized under the Economic Stabilization Act of 1970. Prices were allowed to rise again at 12:01 a.m. on August 13 with the beginning of "Phase IV".

June 14
  • Connecticut became the first U.S. state to recognize Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday as a state holiday as Governor Thomas Meskill signed a bill that had passed the state House of Representatives 124 to 17 and the state Senate unanimously. The law set aside the second Sunday in January, normally not a workday for most state employees, as the day of celebration.

June 15
  • The Soviet Union successfully launched an uncrewed Soyuz spacecraft into orbit, then brought it back to Earth two days later, designating it as Kosmos 573 to disguise its purpose. The Soyuz craft was not docked to the orbiting Salyut space station, but the results gave the Soviets reason to clear the launch of Soyuz 12, with a crew of two cosmonauts, on September 27.

June 16
  • Soviet Communist Party General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev arrived in the United States as an Ilyushin Il-62 brought him and his entourage to Andrews Air Force Base, where he was greeted by U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Brezhnev was then flown by helicopter to Camp David, the U.S. presidential retreat in Maryland.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "My Love," Paul McCartney & Wings
2. "Playground in My Mind," Clint Holmes
3. "Pillow Talk," Sylvia
4. "I'm Gonna Love You Just a Little More Baby," Barry White
5. "Daniel," Elton John
6. "Frankenstein," The Edgar Winter Group
7. "Will It Go Round in Circles," Billy Preston
8. "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)," George Harrison
9. "Kodachrome," Paul Simon
10. "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree," Dawn feat. Tony Orlando
11. "Right Place, Wrong Time," Dr. John
12. "Long Train Runnin'," The Doobie Brothers
13. "One of a Kind (Love Affair)," The Spinners
14. "Shambala," Three Dog Night
15. "Drift Away," Dobie Gray
16. "Hocus Pocus," Focus
17. "You Are the Sunshine of My Life," Stevie Wonder
18. "I'm Doin' Fine Now," New York City
19. "Wildflower," Skylark
20. "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown," Jim Croce
21. "Stuck in the Middle with You," Stealers Wheel

23. "Little Willy," The Sweet
24. "Natural High," Bloodstone
25. "Reelin' in the Years," Steely Dan
26. "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia," Vicki Lawrence
27. "No More Mr. Nice Guy," Alice Cooper
28. "Steamroller Blues" / "Fool", Elvis Presley

30. "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," Bette Midler
31. "Behind Closed Doors," Charlie Rich
32. "Daddy Could Swear, I Declare," Gladys Knight & The Pips
33. "Thinking of You," Loggins & Messina

35. "Smoke on the Water," Deep Purple

37. "The Right Thing to Do," Carly Simon
38. "Yesterday Once More," Carpenters
39. "So Very Hard to Go," Tower of Power
40. "Diamond Girl," Seals & Crofts

44. "Money," Pink Floyd

47. "Funky Worm," Ohio Players

50. "Time to Get Down," The O'Jays
51. "Monster Mash," Bobby "Boris" Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers

53. "Why Me," Kris Kristofferson

61. "You Can't Always Get What You Want," The Rolling Stones
62. "Touch Me in the Morning," Diana Ross

75. "Where Peaceful Waters Flow," Gladys Knight & the Pips

82. "I Like You," Donovan


Leaving the chart:
  • "The Cisco Kid," War (15 weeks)
  • "Out of the Question," Gilbert O'Sullivan (15 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Where Peaceful Waters Flow," Gladys Knight & the Pips
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(#28 US; #18 AC; #6 R&B)

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.

_______

And every violin makes him funnier. :rommie:
Ignoring Nancy won't make her go away...

That seems highly unlikely. :rommie:
Leading his men, of course.

I wonder if there's any truth to that.
My impression was that they were pulling it out of their ass. "He's like a captain at sea, right...?"

Apparently LeBeau had no trouble convincing a civilian to accompany a complete stranger into the heart of darkness. :rommie:
He connected with her by revealing that he was a Frenchman!
 
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The Saga of Steven Hill Part 3

Hill's absence was partially responsible for Landau's emergence as year one's star performer. Landau's semi-regular status killed the possibility of other guest spies, Geller's original intention.

The reasons behind the shift in emphasis became moot during the filming of "Action!", when Steven Hill cost the company two days' work by suddenly refusing to play a scene, retreating to his dressing room, and locking the door, forcing Bruce Geller and Herb Solow to come down to the set and ultimately suspend him.

Mission: Impossible "Action!" Originally aired March 4, 1967

The first draft of "Action!" cast Briggs in the role Rollin would ultimately play; less than a week later, Briggs was written out and Barney assumed his chores. But before shooting began on January 23, Briggs, was back, this time as the hidden photographer. Two days worth of film was shot of Steven Hill in and around the studio streets and the jungle set. Late on the second day, Hill brought production to a halt by refusing to play the scene in which Dan runs up the soundstage staircase and into the rafters. He gave no explanation to anyone, not even Geller and Herb Solow, who were called onto the set. Solo finally suspended Hill, who was replaced the next day by actor Tom Troupe, as David Day. Two days' worth of shooting was now unusable and would have to be reshot. So "Action!", which, because of its movie set locale, should have been inexpensive to film, went two days over schedule and almost $40,000 over budget.

This was apparently the last straw for Geller, Hill's staunchest supporter. Dan Briggs was then written out of the scripts whenever possible, his duties confined mainly to the tape, dossier, and apartment scenes. Even so, Hill was costing Desilu money, drawing a star's salary for what usually amounted to three short scenes, and forcing the hiring of an additional actor to play what would have Hill's role in the rest of the episodes.

"Steve acted up," Landau says. "He was suspended from that show for something so silly. . ." This escapade was the last straw in terms of Steven Hill's future on the show. In the episode prior to this one, ("Snowball in Hell"), Hill had crawled through dirt tunnels and climbed rope ladders without a complaint. Now he refused to ascend a staircase flanked with railings. For the rest of the rest of the season, the character of Briggs would be eliminated from the scripts whenever possible, his place taken by a series of one-shot IMF agents. Luckily, Mission's concept made even its leading man expendable - a fact which Geller and others in charge realized and would soon act upon.

"I felt that he was digging his own grave," says Martin Landau. "There was always something self-destructive, always a part of him that didn't want success, along with this very special talent. When he wanted to work, he was exceptional; when he didn't want to work, for whatever reasons, he was destructive to himself. I must say that he was troublesome at times, but basically he wasn't. Most of the time he was professional, he learned his lines and was there. But Bruce, who wanted him very badly, was fed up."

Evidently, Hill had no inkling his days were numbered. Script supervisor Allen Greedy recalls the actor asking about the rumors of his impending dismissal. "He was not expecting it to occur," says Allan. "I was amazed, because it was such common knowledge that even I knew it for at least a week beforehand."

Hill learned about his departure in a most unfortunate way. During the filming of Episode 26, "The Traitor," Daily Variety ran the following blurb in its March 6, 1967, issue: "In an attempt to soup up its Nielsens, CBS-TV is switching the series to 10 p.m. Sundays next semester and plans are also underway to change leads, with Steven Hill to depart and Peter Graves taking over his spot. These changes should help Mission." That is how Steven Hill learned he had been fired. Greg Morris relates what happened on set that day. "Bruce came down with this Rock of Gibraltar face on to apologize to Steve. He went over to Steve and Steve said, 'Look, I don't want to talk to you.' He walked away. And Bruce said, 'I can understand.' It was one of those distasteful moments that you don't wish to remember because Steve was a friend of mine, and I know how I'd feel if I'd found out that way." The secondhand manner in which Hill learned of the sale of the series and his dismissal from it were cruelly ironic. "He forced them to fire him," says Hill's friend Albert Paulsen. "He threw away millions of dollars. Millions."

End Part 3 of the Steven Hill saga. Later, the epilogue.
 
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U.S. President Richard Nixon ordered a 60-day freeze on prices for all groceries and for gasoline
It always amazed me that they were able to get away with this. I don't know if it was ever challenged in court.

"Where Peaceful Waters Flow," Gladys Knight & the Pips
I'm not sure if I recognize this or not. It's okay.

Ignoring Nancy won't make her go away...
It's worth a try, though. :rommie:

Leading his men, of course.
Less unlikely, I guess. :rommie:

My impression was that they were pulling it out of their ass. "He's like a captain at sea, right...?"
As long as the participants believe in it, that's what counts.

He connected with her by revealing that he was a Frenchman!
I figured that's why he was picked.

Two days' worth of shooting was now unusable and would have to be reshot. So "Action!", which, because of its movie set locale, should have been inexpensive to film, went two days over schedule and almost $40,000 over budget.
It's really kind of amazing that the show survived at all.

"I felt that he was digging his own grave," says Martin Landau. "There was always something self-destructive, always a part of him that didn't want success"
This definitely seems to be true.

"In an attempt to soup up its Nielsens, CBS-TV is switching the series to 10 p.m. Sundays next semester and plans are also underway to change leads, with Steven Hill to depart and Peter Graves taking over his spot."
Wow, so Peter Graves had been hired before even the end of season one. Was this done in complete secrecy? You'd think they'd want him to audition with members of the remaining cast.

End Part 3 of the Steven Hill saga. Later, the epilogue.
I can't wait to see how things turned out for him. It really seems like he was suffering from some kind of mental illness. I'll try to resist looking him up in the meantime.
 
Do you have any behind-the-scenes info about that, like why Lucy decided to sell and why she didn't keep any creative control?

(In mid-1967) Lucille Ball was being courted by Charles Bluhdorn, a vastly successful financier who in eight years had amalgamated sixty-five companies into a conglomerate called Gulf + Western Industries. Bluhdorn had just acquired Paramount Pictures and saw commercial possibilities in making Desilu's Paramount TV division and consolidating the two adjoining studio lots. Lucy, who saw that the days of the television independent were drawing to a close, carefully considered Bluhdorn's offer, and finally sold the studio for approximately seventeen million dollars.

In July 1967, Desilu Productions officially became Paramount Television, and the walls dividing the two lots were torn down. Not everyone was happy with the change; some felt that Desilu lost its Mom and Pop feeling.

The new management was than thrilled over Mission's (and Star Trek's) operating expenses. "They became very angry about the costs involved and I was told that (Paramount's executive Vice-President) Martin Davis wanted my head," states (producer) Joseph Gantman, who was not worried. "Nobody could have done it for less. And everyone knew, because no one came around and said, 'This is your last week.' Desilu sold the show for too little and promised what they promised. It was very easy to prove on paper that it couldn't be done for less. You are faced with making a series a success. That doesn't happen by trying to save money. You want the people to watch and start talking." That was beginning to happen, but more conflicts between show and studio were in the offing.
 
Wow, so Peter Graves had been hired before even the end of season one. Was this done in complete secrecy? You'd think they'd want him to audition with members of the remaining cast.

Between Steven Hill's suspension in late-January and the story in Variety in early-March, Bruce Geller and Herb Solow began their search for a new leading man. Gary Morton (Lucy's husband) wanted Stuart Whitman, but the actor wasn't interested. Also asked, John Forsythe, who wasn't ready for another series after 'The John Forsythe Show' fizzled after one season. CBS, which had fought to oust Steven Hill and had renewed Mission before a new lead had been chosen, had its own suggestion.

CBS executives showed Geller and Solow the unaired pilot for 'Call to Danger' (discussed earlier upthread). As Herb Solow recalls, "We looked at the pilot and said, 'Peter Graves!'".

"They said that Steve Hill was going out of it, and they wanted me to do it," says Graves. "I had seen it a couple of times and knew it was good. I really don't think it took me much time to make a decision. I don't think I said anything right then except 'Gulp'. But I thought about it, and within a day or so I knew it was the right thing for me." Graves met with Bruce Geller, whom he knew from an earlier project, in late-February. "We talked about this Mr. Phelps, although we didn't have a name yet. He was kicking around several names. One of them was Phillips. At the time there was a CBS executive named Jim Phillips, so Bruce said, 'Oh no, we can't have that name'. Eventually we decided on Jim Phelps."

Peter Graves was formally introduced to the cast and crew a few days before filming was to begin on the second season episode #29 'Trek', (filmed first, before episode #28, due to logistics) which took place during the Six-Day-War (5th-10th-June-1967).
 
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Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 26
Originally aired March 5, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • Dionne Warwick - "The Way You Look Tonight"
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  • Gwen Verdon - "If My Friends Could See Me Now" (from "Sweet Charity")
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  • Robert Horton - "The Impossible Dream"
  • Rodney Dangerfield - topics include girls, driving, NYC, lawyers, and his wife
  • Alan King - topics include airlines, Miami Beach, doctors, kids
  • Chris Kirby (British ventriloquist, assorted tongue twisters, sings "Old MacDonald")
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  • Norman Wisdom (stand-up routine includes playing clarinet, drums, singing)
  • Galla Shawn (trapeze artist)
  • Wychwoods (Poodle Act)
  • Audience bows: Sergio Franco and Bob Thomas

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Hogan's Heroes
"The Most Escape-Proof Camp I've Ever Escaped From"
Originally aired March 10, 1967
IMDb said:
The presence of a masterful escape-artist POW threatens to destabilize Hogan's set-up at Stalag 13.

A plan to blow a supply train and railroad bridge are postponed when the prisoners get orders to bring in an underground contact who has intel about sub pens. Then General Burkhalter brings Colonel Stieffer of the SS (Edward Knight) to the camp with a "special prisoner" in need of an escape-proof stalag, as he's already escaped from nine others. After he manages to switch places with Schultz while nobody's looking--manacles and all--the prisoners recognize him as Malcolm Flood (Mickey Manners), an up-and-coming escape artist. Hogan buffaloes Klink into letting him see Flood in the cooler, where Hogan explains how he wants to avoid extra SS attention to what he's way behind the audience in realizing is a dummy left in the cot...but he continues talking for Schultz's benefit.

Hogan returns to the barracks to find Flood shaving in his office. Flood explains that he only lets himself get captured so he can escape from stalags, and that he thinks he's found his road to stardom with this gig. Hogan explains the situation to him for real this time, and orders him not to escape. But when Hogan leaves his office for a few, Flood offers to demonstrate an escape trick to Carter, whom Hogan subsequently discovers is in his footlocker. Flood's absence is discovered, and Hogan gets Klink to agree to letting him out to bring Flood back in, but he instead brings in the underground agent, Max Huebler (Karl Bruck), and initially tries to pass him off as Flood. Huebler is being let go as an innocent civilian when Flood returns, having allowed himself to be recaptured by Schultz, and hinting to Hogan that he had a change of heart. Stieffer takes custody of Flood, ominously hinting that he plans to stop the escapes via firing squad.

In the coda, Hogan is lamenting the situation that he left Flood in when the escape artist reveals that he's lying in a top bunk.

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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 27
Originally aired March 12, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • Lou Rawls - "Yesterday"
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  • Nancy Ames - "Cherish" & "They Can't Take That Away From Me"
  • The Kessler Twins - "Moulin Rouge" (with dancers)
  • Grainne Yeats (harpist and singer) - performs Irish folk song
  • Emerald Society Pipe Band (bag pipe & drum music)
  • Jack Carter (stand-up routine) - topics include California, politics, fatherhood, hippies, 1960's music
  • Smith And Dale (comedy team) - tax lawyer routine
  • Jimmy Joyce (stand-up routine) - re: airlines; priests
  • Dick Albers (comic trampoline act)
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Hogan's Heroes
"The Tower"
Originally aired March 17, 1967
IMDb said:
Hogan enlists an attractive agent's help in blackmailing Gen. Burkhalter so Klink won't be punished for the destruction of a newly built radio tower.

Some of the men sneak out into the woods by night to meet an underground contact named Lili (Elisa Ingram), who shows them a new radio tower of unknown purpose nearby. The men later listen in as Burkhalter and Captain Berger (Willard Sage) visit Klink to inform him that the tower serves an early warning / fighter coordination function; and while the Germans believe that its proximity to the stalag will keep it safe from bombing, they put Klink in charge of guarding it from sabotage. Hogan gets to work on a scheme that involves having a reluctant Lili write an admiring letter to Klink, and steering the kommandant into having Burkhalter present for a dinner with her, with LeBeau as chef and Carter as waiter...all so that Kinch can snap photos through a window of Lili being overly friendly with the general.

The prisoners proceed to lead Schultz and his men on a wild goose chase so they can blow the tower. Burkhalter is furious with Klink and threatens to relieve him of his command, but Hogan delivers the photos to Burkhalter with a note from Lili, offering to destroy the negatives if the general doesn't hold her true love, Klink, responsible for the destruction of the tower. In the coda, Burkhalter releases Klink from a stay in the cooler upon receiving the negatives.

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It always amazed me that they were able to get away with this. I don't know if it was ever challenged in court.
Economics is above my pay grade, but I have to wonder about it as well. I can imagine what later Republicans would say if Democrats pulled something like that.

I'm not sure if I recognize this or not. It's okay.
Guess I'll be getting it for consistency, though it doesn't make much of an impression. Looks like I missed a top 30 charter by Gladys & the Pips in late '71 as well.

It's worth a try, though. :rommie:
I thought she got an interesting showcase, between the pictures of her shows in 'Nam and the musical production.

I can't wait to see how things turned out for him. It really seems like he was suffering from some kind of mental illness. I'll try to resist looking him up in the meantime.
Steven Hill, tired and despondent over the weekend and unable to raise any friends, went home and, tragically...accepted a teaching post in Australia.
 
Steven Hill, tired and despondent over the weekend and unable to raise any friends, went home and, tragically...accepted a teaching post in Australia.

I get that reference.

Anyway. . . The Saga of Steven Hill Epilogue

After his firing from the show, Hill left acting and devoted more time to religion. In addition to living in a community of Jews in Upstate New York, Hill dabbled in writing and selling real estate. In the mid-seventies the urge to perform returned. "They say you can't quit show business," he told a reporter in 1977, "and it took ten years, but I couldn't get it out of my system. So, I called an agent and put him to work."

By the mid-eighties, Hill was in great demand as one of the screen's busiest character actors, with plum roles in features like Eyewitness (1981), Rich and Famous (1981), Yentl (1983), Legal Eagles (1986), Heartburn (1986) and many more including a supporting role in the television series Law & Order (1990).

Hill remains as devotedly Orthodox as he was in 1966, but there are no reports of strange, paranoid behavior anymore. "Twenty years ago, people in the business thought I was off on some religious kick," he says. "Well, that kick has gone on for twenty years."

"I don't think an actor should act every single day. I don't think it's good for the so-called creative process. You must have periods when you leave the land fallow, let it revitalize itself. . . I think probably because of all the years and time that have gone by; I enjoy my work more than I ever did before - certainly more than I did in my early years when it took a lot of effort to do the best job I wanted to do. Now, it is more a joy and much more exciting."

Hill would continue to act on Law & Order as District Attorney Adam Schiff, earning an Emmy nomination as Best Supporting Actor in 1999, until his retirement in 2000.

Hill died of cancer in a New York hospital on August 23, 2016, at the age of 94 surrounded by family and friends.
 
I find it interesting that as soon as Paramount bought Desilu, the studio interference started regarding the three shows that Desilu had in production at that time, 'M:I', 'Star Trek' and 'Mannix'; and we know the consequences of that interference - budgets slashed, cast members leaving (Landau and Bain), Producers leaving (Gene Roddenberry) or being barred from the lot (Bruce Geller).
Minor correction: Paramount didn't buy Desilu per se. The conglomerate Gulf+Western acquired Paramount in 1966. In 1967, Lucille Ball sold her shares of Desilu to Gulf+Western, which then transformed Desilu into the television production arm of Paramount Pictures, rebranding the company as Paramount Television.
 
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Gwen Verdon - "If My Friends Could See Me Now" (from "Sweet Charity")
No selfies in those days.

a "special prisoner" in need of an escape-proof stalag, as he's already escaped from nine others.
Apparently he escapes well but doesn't get away very good.

Flood explains that he only lets himself get captured so he can escape from stalags, and that he thinks he's found his road to stardom with this gig.
Ohhh.

Stieffer takes custody of Flood, ominously hinting that he plans to stop the escapes via firing squad.
They probably would have tried that a while ago.

In the coda, Hogan is lamenting the situation that he left Flood in when the escape artist reveals that he's lying in a top bunk.
They should have made him a recurring character for the rest of the series. :rommie:

Lou Rawls - "Yesterday"
That was interesting.

all so that Kinch can snap photos through a window of Lili being overly friendly with the general.
And she thought Klink was bad. :rommie:

Hogan delivers the photos to Burkhalter with a note from Lili, offering to destroy the negatives if the general doesn't hold her true love, Klink, responsible for the destruction of the tower. In the coda, Burkhalter releases Klink from a stay in the cooler upon receiving the negatives.
I don't think blackmail would have worked on Burkhalter. And isn't Klink being Lili's true love a bit of a loose end? And Hogan didn't put the moves on Lili? Inferior episode! :rommie:

Economics is above my pay grade, but I have to wonder about it as well. I can imagine what later Republicans would say if Democrats pulled something like that.
Exactly. It was kind of a Commie move. :rommie:

Steven Hill, tired and despondent over the weekend and unable to raise any friends, went home and, tragically...accepted a teaching post in Australia.
I don't get that reference. In fact, I wouldn't have known it was a reference if Darren hadn't said it was a reference. :rommie:

After his firing from the show, Hill left acting and devoted more time to religion.
Not surprising.

By the mid-eighties, Hill was in great demand as one of the screen's busiest character actors, with plum roles in features like Eyewitness (1981), Rich and Famous (1981), Yentl (1983), Legal Eagles (1986), Heartburn (1986) and many more including a supporting role in the television series Law & Order (1990).
None of which I've seen, and apparently none of his other work either-- at least nothing where I recognized him.

Hill died of cancer in a New York hospital on August 23, 2016, at the age of 94 surrounded by family and friends.
Well, he was apparently able to find some peace of mind along the way and have himself a good acting career, so good for him. I wonder if he always remained friends with Greg Morris.
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 28
Originally aired March 19, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • The Lovin' Spoonful - "Bald Headed Lena," "Do You Believe in Magic?" and "Daydream"
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For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
  • Johnny Rivers - "Baby I Need Your Lovin'"
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  • Cab Calloway - "Minnie the Moocher" (with special lyrics to introduce his daughter Chris)
  • Chris Calloway - "I'm Not At All In Love"
  • Cab and Chris Calloway - "Side by Side"
  • Jane Powell (singer) - operatic medley from "Porgy and Bess"
  • George Carlin - takes a look at daytime TV
  • Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara (comedy team) - portray a couple at a high school reunion
  • Alan Drake - routine about an Italian neighborhood, with singing
  • The Trio Hoganas (acrobatic act from Europe) - woman performs stunts on tightrope, while two men hold the ends of the rope in their mouths
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  • Audience bow: Carol Channing (from Broadway's "Hello, Dolly!")
_______

Hogan's Heroes
"Colonel Klink's Secret Weapon"
Originally aired March 24, 1967
IMDb said:
To improve the camp's inspection rating, Klink transfers in a stern German sergeant who quickly makes life miserable for staff and prisoners alike with his overly strict and unwavering adherence to all regulations. All want him gone.

Hogan, Kinch, and guest Lieutenant Bigelow (Stewart Moss) are gathering intel about a formation of tanks moving past the stalag via periscope from an unstable section of tunnel when Klink visits the barracks to inform the prisoners that the Inspector General, who visited the previous week, has given the camp a rating of G-minus; and Klink complains that the barracks look like a pig sty. But the prisoners are suspicious that Klink's up to something because he acts pleased about the situation. When Hogan follows up, Klink introduces his titular solution to getting a perfect rating--Sergeant Reinhold Franks (Milton Selzer), a strict, by-the-book disciplinarian who literally runs the prisoners ragged and conducts white-glove barracks inspections, meting out harsh punishments for any lapse in regulations. Hogan tries to get the equal-ranking Schultz to stand up to Franks, but Franks cows Schultz by writing up his own violations. Klink is basking in it all until Franks--who has a cousin in Göring's office--also writes him up for not filing his paperwork properly, burying the kommandant in make-up office labor.

Meanwhile, Hogan learns from a visiting contact, Max (Sidney Clute), that Bigelow never made it out of the tunnel, causing the colonel to belatedly realize that he must have been caught when the unstable section collapsed. Hogan goes to Klink to conspire about getting rid of Franks, learning that Klink can't get rid of the sergeant because all of the other camps know about him. The prisoners dig out Bigelow, who's been surviving on rations. Then for some nonsensical reason, they bring up bags of dirt into the barracks, motivating them to try to stop Franks from inspecting them, but when he does, Bigelow has taken the bags back into the tunnel, where they logically should have stayed in the first place. When the Inspector General (John Stephenson) comes later for a second inspection, the grounds are a disaster, the prisoners are not acting rank-and-file, and Franks's uniform--sabotaged when he had LeBeau clean it--falls apart on him, revealing on his long johns a hand drawn in temporarily invisible ink making a V for Victory sign--which the IG considers to be treason. The IG holds Franks solely responsible for the condition of the camp; and Bigelow, dressed as a Gestapo agent, arrives in a truck to take Franks away as a prisoner.

Seems like the show has already gone to this plot well a few too many times...and "just fail the inspection" seems like too easy a solution.

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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 29
Originally aired March 26, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:

Easter Show
  • Dave Clark Five - "I've Got To Have A Reason" & "You Got What It Takes"
Additional guests (scheduled to appear):
  • Eddie Albert (actor) - recites "The Creation" by James Weldon Johnson
  • Pat Buttram (comedian, played Mr. Haney on 'Green Acres')
  • London Lee (stand-up comedian)
  • Sergio Franchi
  • Anna Moffo (soprano, of the Metropolitan Opera)
  • The Rhos Male Choir from Wales
  • Didier Danion (glass balancer)
  • Jim Henson's Muppets

I'm not sure what was going on with this one, but the Sullivan account has no clips specific to the date.

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Hogan's Heroes
"The Top Secret Top Coat"
Originally aired March 31, 1967
IMDb said:
The Allies give Hogan a solo mission: attend a baron's party as Commandant Klink. Burkhalter gets involved when he learns that Klink's name sits at the very top of the guest list.

Hogan gets socks from his "Aunt Alice" in the mail that, when the yarn is run onto a spool in a machine hooked into the coffee pot, play a message assigning him to attend the party of Baron von Aukburg posing as Klink so the baron can turn over plans concerning a German operation. LeBeau fixes up a uniform for Hogan and Hilda gives him Klink's invitation. Then the prisoners listen in as Burkhalter questions Klink about why he was invited to the party, which Klink doesn't know about; and the general confides to Klink about the baron's intelligence-selling, which indicates a leak. Burkhalter wants to attend the party with Klink as part of a Gestapo trap for the baron. Hogan subsequently "finds" Klink's invitation and returns it to him.

Not being eager to participate in the sting, Klink enthusiastically responds when Newkirk calls him posing as a guard informing him of an escape attempt. The prisoners subsequently get word from the underground that the baron has gone in hiding, and per the plan, the baron's maid (Inger Wegge) titularly put the plans in the lining of Klink's overcoat. Hogan pays a visit to Klink's quarters to try to get him out of the overcoat so he can pass it out the window to LeBeau, but Burkhalter interrupts to inform Klink that the Gestapo will be coming to interrogate him about his role in the baron's escape. Hogan decides to kill two birds with one stone, arranging to be in Klink's office when a disguised Carter arrives posing as a Gestapo agent. He keeps the questioning very brief and simple, then casually leaves while taking the relieved Klink's coat. Afterward, Hogan shares his suspicion that the Gestapo agent was the baron fishing for information, and helps Klink discover planted plans in the topcoat that the imposter left behind.

In the coda, the plans pass muster with the actual Gestapo agent (David Wiley), who burns them. After he leaves, Hogan brings Klink's attention to how he set his own office on fire when he put the burning plans in his wastebasket.

Hogan, you're dis-MISSED!

_______

That was interesting.
The arrangement was a mess to my ear.

I don't think blackmail would have worked on Burkhalter.
He has a wife...whom he described in a previous episode as "the highest authority in the Third Reich".

I don't get that reference. In fact, I wouldn't have known it was a reference if Darren hadn't said it was a reference. :rommie:
It came up last year when I did the 55th anniversary news post covering Brian Epstein's death.

Not surprising.
I was trying to find a good YouTube clip of Gomer spouting a catchphrase to that effect.
 
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Now I remember. :rommie:

The Lovin' Spoonful - "Bald Headed Lena," "Do You Believe in Magic?" and "Daydream"
I'm not sure if I've heard "Bald Headed Lena" before. Not one of their Greatest Hits. :rommie:

Johnny Rivers - "Baby I Need Your Lovin'"
Good one.

a strict, by-the-book disciplinarian who literally runs the prisoners ragged and conducts white-glove barracks inspections, meting out harsh punishments for any lapse in regulations.
That trick never works.

Meanwhile, Hogan learns from a visiting contact, Max (Sidney Clute), that Bigelow never made it out of the tunnel, causing the colonel to belatedly realize that he must have been caught when the unstable section collapsed.
Way to keep track of your men, Hogan.

Seems like the show has already gone to this plot well a few too many times...and "just fail the inspection" seems like too easy a solution.
And they didn't really accomplish much. All they got was some low-level functionary. They should have blown up the tanks or something.

Eddie Albert (actor) - recites "The Creation" by James Weldon Johnson
I'm pretty positive we've seen that before.

Pat Buttram (comedian, played Mr. Haney on 'Green Acres')
I wonder what Pat Buttram stand up looks like. :rommie:

I'm not sure what was going on with this one, but the Sullivan account has no clips specific to the date.
Obviously some kind of cover up going on.

Hogan gets socks from his "Aunt Alice" in the mail that, when the yarn is run onto a spool in a machine hooked into the coffee pot, play a message
These guys are definitely the predecessors of CONTROL. :rommie:

assigning him to attend the party of Baron von Aukburg posing as Klink
Seems more like a job for Newkirk.

The prisoners subsequently get word from the underground that the baron has gone in hiding, and per the plan, the baron's maid (Inger Wegge) titularly put the plans in the lining of Klink's overcoat.
You'd think the baron would hang on to the plans if he was going to bug out.

The arrangement was a mess to my ear.
I said interesting, not good. :rommie: Actually, I didn't think it was bad, just odd.

He has a wife...whom he described in a previous episode as "the highest authority in the Third Reich".
Seems more likely he'd torture Lili or threaten to shoot a prisoner every hour or something.

It came up last year when I did the 55th anniversary news post covering Brian Epstein's death.
Last year was a long time ago. :rommie:

I was trying to find a good YouTube clip of Gomer spouting a catchphrase to that effect.
"Sur-PRIZE, sur-prize." I got that reference. :rommie:
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

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Hogan's Heroes
"The Reluctant Target"
Originally aired April 7, 1967
Season finale
IMDb said:
Klink nabs a spy, so Hogan takes the focus off his catch by making Klink think someone's trying to kill the commandant himself, leading Klink to have Hogan become a decoy commandant.

Hogan shares troop deployment intel with an underground contact named Pierre (Theo Marcuse), but when the spy leaves the tunnel, the dogs inadvertently draw attention to the area by chasing a rabbit and Schultz catches him. The prisoners pass around his gun and map to keep them from being found on a search--with Hogan tossing them up onto a roof in a blink-and-miss it moment, and notably without setting the gun off--but Klink is still convinced that the man is a spy. Hogan has just maneuvered Klink into interrogating Pierre himself instead of turning him over to the Gestapo when a couple of the others, trying to fish the gun off the roof, drop it--setting it off this time. Seeing Klink's reaction to the shot gives Hogan an idea to lighten the guard on Pierre.

The prisoners arrange failed attempts on Klink's life, including explosives going off and poisoned coffee that kills a plant. Hogan gives Klink the idea of using a decoy to flush out the assassin, and Klink chooses Hogan, switching outfits with him (pictures on IMDb). Hogan-as-Klink receives a visit from SS General Brenner (Larry D. Mann), who informs him that he'll be using the stalag to host a secret meeting the following day. Hogan works out the distances that Brenner casually listed off on a map and deduces that the meeting pertains to the very intel that they just gave Pierre. Conferring with Klink, Hogan plants suspicion regarding Brenner and his guests...then tricks Klink into sharing his dinner on the basis that it may be poisoned.

As an alternative to the usual bug, which the prisoners have apparently cleared out to avoid it being found by Brenner (who does check for listening devices), LeBeau plants a walkie talkie outside of Klink's office through which Hogan relays what he hears over Klink's open phone line...though Hogan has to clumsily barge into the office to identify a place that Field Marshall Von Galter (John Hoyt) points to on a map. The prisoners get Pierre out with the new intel, with Klink--back in his old identity--holding Schultz responsible for the spy's escape...though Hogan saves Schultz from demotion by convincing Klink that Pierre wasn't a spy after all.

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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 19, episode 30
Originally aired April 16, 1967

Performances listed on Metacritic:
  • Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood - "Summer Wine"
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  • Nancy Sinatra - "Love Eyes"
  • Tony Bennett and the Count Basie Orchestra - "Sunny Side Of The Street," "I Left My Heart In San Francisco," "Don't Get Around Much Any More" & "The Lady's In Love With You"
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  • Count Basie Orchestra - "Edward Great Saxophone"
  • Alan Kogosowski (14-year-old Australian pianist) - plays Chopin's Polonaise
  • Los Indio Tabajaras - South American Indians play guitars
  • Totie Fields - "I'm Perfect" routine
  • Hendra & Ullet (comedy team) - a Mets fan tries to explain baseball to an Englishman
  • Peter Gennaro (dancer-choreographer with other dancers) - "Alouette" (with cameo by Totie Fields)
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  • The Mecners (acrobats) - girl does mid-air somersaults on pole held by 2 men
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I'm not sure if I've heard "Bald Headed Lena" before. Not one of their Greatest Hits. :rommie:
Apparently it was originally a single for Dr. Feelgood & the Interns; and a track on the Spoonful's Daydream album.

Good one.
The Johnny Rivers cover has its own oldies radio cred, I guess, but it's hard to get enthusiastic about it compared to the Four Tops' original.

I'm pretty positive we've seen that before.
I think it came up before, but the only clip of it was from a different date.

These guys are definitely the predecessors of CONTROL. :rommie:
Kinda had the M:I vibe at the same time.

Seems more likely he'd torture Lili or threaten to shoot a prisoner every hour or something.
Hogan handwaved Burkhalter from taking action againt Lili to avoid the scandal; and Hogan played go-between for delivering the package without claiming any responsibility on the part of the prisoners.

"Sur-PRIZE, sur-prize." I got that reference. :rommie:
I believe that it traditionally comes in threes.
Surprise-Surprise-Surprise.flv - YouTube
 
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