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April 30: This Day in TV History

Just a few random TV related events that happened on April 30. Discuss or comment as you please……

1908: Actress Eve Arden (Our Miss Brooks, The Mothers-in-Law) is born (as Eunice M. Quedens) in Mill Valley, California.

1923: Actor Al Lewis (Car 54, Where Are You?; The Munsters) is born (as Albert Meister) in New York City.

1926: Actress Cloris Leachman (The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Phyllis) is born in Des Moines, Iowa.

1938: Actor Gary Collins (The Sixth Sense, Hour Magazine, The Home Show) is born in Venice, California.

1939: NBC officially begins regularly scheduled 441-line electronic television broadcasts in New York over W2XBS with a transmission of the opening of the 1939 New York World's Fair. The next day, four models of RCA television sets would go on sale to the general public in various New York City department stores, promoted in a series of splashy newspaper ads. (Though it is to be noted that DuMont - and others - actually began offering home sets in 1938 in anticipation of NBC's announced April 1939 start-up.)

1941: The FCC announces approval of the NTSC black-and-white broadcast standards (525 lines, 30 fps) and authorizes the service to begin commercial operation starting July 1.

1947: RCA demonstrates a simultaneous color system at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. Color images are projected on an 8x10 foot screen using a closed circuit pickup from a film/slide scanner.

1948: Actor Perry King (Riptide) is born in Alliance, Ohio.

1954: A genre is born.....KABC-TV Los Angeles airs Dig Me Later, Vampira, a special introducing the character portrayed by actress Mala Nurmi. The following night would see the first regular broadcast of The Vampira Show, in which Nurmi would host (and mock) horror films. An instant cult hit, the show established the basic concept and format for many local horror movie shows to come. When KABC nonetheless canceled Vampira in late 1955 (primarily because Nurmi refused to sell the rights to her character to ABC), she took the character across town to independent KHJ-TV (where it aired briefly in 1956). She later appeared in movies, most famously in Ed Wood’s legendary bomb “Plan 9 From Outer Space.”

1957: In Portland, Oregon, Both KLOR (channel 12) and KPTV (channel 27) sign off the air. The following day, the two stations would merge into one, under KPTV's license and call letters and using KLOR's channel 12 assignment.

1959: Actor Paul Gross (Due South) is born in Calgary, Alberta.

1964: In the U.S., television sets manufactured as of this day are required to include UHF tuners.

1970: Actress Inger Stevens (The Farmer’s Daughter) dies in Hollywood, California, aged 35, due to an overdose of Tedral (a combination drug of theophylline, ephedrine and phenobarbital) washed down with alcohol. The death is ruled a suicide.

1972: Roger Mudd ends a 6-year stint as the weekend anchor of The CBS Evening News.

1974: Actress Agnes Moorhead (Bewitched) dies in Rochester, Minnesota of uterine cancer, aged 74.

1984: That’s Incredible! ends its 4-season ABC run.

1990: The long lost pilot film to I Love Lucy is broadcast for the first time (as a special on CBS).

1992: Eight years of colorful sweaters, rubbery faces, fatherly wisdom, and an impossibly perfect family come to an end with the final original episode of The Cosby Show on NBC.

1998: A bizarre and ultimately gruesome spectacle unfolds live on Los Angeles TV stations (and is picked up in the latter stages by some national cable news networks). A distraught man, Daniel V. Jones, suffering from cancer and HIV, leads police on a lengthy high-speed chase. He ends up on a deserted, barricaded stretch of freeway, holding police at bay. He proceeds to unfurl a large banner (apparently with the TV helicopter cameras in mind) criticizing his HMO’s coverage practices, then retreats to the cab of his pick-up truck where he sets off an incendiary device, engulfing the vehicle (and, briefly, himself) in flames. After frantically stripping off his burning outer clothes, he grabs his shotgun, calmly walks to a concrete barrier, braces the weapon...and blows his head off. The live coverage with its bloody finale begets a flurry of heated criticism aimed at the L.A. stations, both for interrupting (in some cases) afternoon programming aimed at children to carry the incident live, and for not cutting away when it became apparent that it was going to end so horribly. (The general explanation is that there wasn’t sufficient time for directors to anticipate the suicide. Yet at least one station’s helicopter crew did realize what was about to happen, quickly zooming the camera out seconds before the gunshot, and many believed the coverage should have been cut off even earlier, when the truck and Mr. Jones were set ablaze.)

2002: ABC broadcasts the last first-run episodes of Dharma & Greg and Spin City.

2007: Actor Tom Poston (The Steve Allen Show, The Bob Newhart Show, Mork & Mindy, Newhart) dies in Los Angeles of respiratory failure, aged 85.

(Just a little featurette I hope to do as time permits. It’s an entirely random selection based on a quick Net search, and is not meant to be comprehensive. So, don’t post nasty messages about “you forgot THIS” or “how could you not mention THAT?” Do so, and I’ll just take my keyboard and go home…..) ;)
 
I always thought Eve Arden was as close to a female version of Jack Benny as I could imagine (without the violin of course).

And Tom Poston was the favorite on the old Steve Allen show (and on through 8 Rules).

Those people are what made the 'golden age of TV'.
 
Stanislav said:
Just a few random TV related events that happened on April 30. Discuss or comment as you please……


1998: A bizarre and ultimately gruesome spectacle unfolds live on Los Angeles TV stations (and is picked up in the latter stages by some national cable news networks). A distraught man, Daniel V. Jones, suffering from cancer and HIV, leads police on a lengthy high-speed chase. He ends up on a deserted, barricaded stretch of freeway, holding police at bay. He proceeds to unfurl a large banner (apparently with the TV helicopter cameras in mind) criticizing his HMO’s coverage practices, then retreats to the cab of his pick-up truck where he sets off an incendiary device, engulfing the vehicle (and, briefly, himself) in flames. After frantically stripping off his burning outer clothes, he grabs his shotgun, calmly walks to a concrete barrier, braces the weapon...and blows his head off. The live coverage with its bloody finale begets a flurry of heated criticism aimed at the L.A. stations, both for interrupting (in some cases) afternoon programming aimed at children to carry the incident live, and for not cutting away when it became apparent that it was going to end so horribly. (The general explanation is that there wasn’t sufficient time for directors to anticipate the suicide. Yet at least one station’s helicopter crew did realize what was about to happen, quickly zooming the camera out seconds before the gunshot, and many believed the coverage should have been cut off even earlier, when the truck and Mr. Jones were set ablaze.)

Many many years ago ( at least 25 ) there was book that was out titled "The TV Book". I have long forgot who had wrote it but there was a chapter in the book about a somewhat similar situation to this that had taken place in Indianapolis in the mid 70s involving their local TV and a man with issues. Forgive me if I had left something out since it has been many years since I have read the book but I seem to recall reading about some man with a history of mental problem ( and I believe he too had cancer ) was on top of a downtown building with a gun and a can of gas threatening to burn himself, screaming and cussing ( even using the F word on live Indy TV ) . The police and the public tried to talk him down but no dice. Someone at WRTV channel 6 felt this was enough and it was time to pull the plug so WRTV stopped the live broadcast and went back to regular programing. This upset the man..seeing WRTV putting away their gear and driving off so he shoots himself in the head and falls to the sidewalk below...LIVE on WISH-TV and WTHR !! Both WISH and WTHR were slammed by staying with this situation to the very end while many people ( including the then-mayor of Indianapolis ) went public and thanked WRTV for their decision to bail out.
 
landtuna said:
And Tom Poston was the favorite on the old Steve Allen show (and on through 8 Rules).

Not to mention his many years on the Bud Collyer version of To Tell the Truth, starting in 1959 and continuing until midway through the 1967-68 season, sitting on the panel along the likes of such names as Polly Bergen, Don Ameche, Ralph Bellamy, Peggy Cass, Orson Bean and, of course, Kitty Carlisle.
 
Stanislav said:
Just a few random TV related events that happened on April 30. Discuss or comment as you please……

1908: Actress Eve Arden (Our Miss Brooks, The Mothers-in-Law) is born (as Eunice M. Quedens) in Mill Valley, California.

1923: Actor Al Lewis (Car 54, Where Are You?; The Munsters) is born (as Albert Meister) in New York City.

1926: Actress Cloris Leachman (The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Phyllis) is born in Des Moines, Iowa.

In an era when so many actors changed their somewhat clunky sounding birth names to something more glamorous, it's interesting that Cloris Leachman decided to keep hers.

And here she is in the 1950s playing Timmy's mom on Lassie. How did they explain it when she turned into June Lockhart?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZnA...EEE9D9AB&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=52

Here's Cloris in 1972 - looking quite glamorous (about 46 years old):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fuYk6ypdBug
 
wbhist said:
landtuna said:
And Tom Poston was the favorite on the old Steve Allen show (and on through 8 Rules).

Not to mention his many years on the Bud Collyer version of To Tell the Truth, starting in 1959 and continuing until midway through the 1967-68 season, sitting on the panel along the likes of such names as Polly Bergen, Don Ameche, Ralph Bellamy, Peggy Cass, Orson Bean and, of course, Kitty Carlisle.

Fred Silverman was the genius (sarcasm) behind the decision to drop Tom
Poston from TTTT. He wanted a younger panelist in the first chair; it turned
out to be Bert Convy. Odd, considering that Poston was only in his 40s. But
Silverman was doing everything he could to get TTTT off CBS's daytime schedule:
changing the set, adopting a forgettable Score Productions theme song (not the "It's a lie, lie" of the Garry Moore/Joe Garagiola version), and having more segments where the panel had to guess which of three people was the spouse of a celebrity.
He also made frequent use of Joanna Barnes in Peggy Cass's chair. The last CBS
broadcast was on September 6, 1968; on September 9 "The Secret Storm" took
over the 3 PM Eastern/2 PM Central slot (that's also the same day "Search For
Tomorrow" and "Guiding Light" expanded from 15 minutes to 30, and "Art Linkletter's House Party" moved to 4 PM Eastern as Silverman set up a noon-4 PM
soap block, expanded to 11:30 AM-4 PM in 1969, with 1 PM Eastern going to the
affiliates).
 
firepoint525 said:
Lkeller said:
And here she is in the 1950s playing Timmy's mom on Lassie. How did they explain it when she turned into June Lockhart?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZnA...EEE9D9AB&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=52
Don't know what they called it back then, but now that switcheroo is called "jumping the shark"! ;D

Ironically, June Lockhart was a cast member of Petticoat Junction when that show was cancelled in 1970 and replaced by . . . the Mary Tyler Moore show, on which Cloris Leachman was a co-star in the early years. I presume this would be under the category of "turnabout is fair play" . . .
 
firepoint525 said:
Lkeller said:
And here she is in the 1950s playing Timmy's mom on Lassie. How did they explain it when she turned into June Lockhart?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZnA...EEE9D9AB&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=52
Don't know what they called it back then, but now that switcheroo is called "jumping the shark"! ;D

Actually, Cloris Leachman didn't "jump the shark" since her career really took off after Lassie, and Lassie (the show) didn't "jump the shark" since it continued for 9 years after Leachman left. Lassie (the dog) did jump the fence, if you remember the opening title sequence. ;D

According to an online source (a blog about the show, yet), Cloris was difficult to work with, didn't like George Chandler, and actually dissed Campbell's Soup (the sponsor). So the decision was made to fire her and the actor playing Dad.


http://www.squidoo.com/legacyoflassie
 
You say that "Lassie" lasted 9 years after Cloris
Leachman left. If that's true, she left in either
1962 (if you figure that the CBS run ended in 1971)
or 1965 (if you count the 1971-74 syndicated run).
June Lockhart was definitely on the show in 1962, and
by 1965 Lassie was staying with Ranger Corey Stuart
(Robert Bray). I'd say "Lassie" lasted more like 19
years after Ms. Leachman left. (In fact, she left in 1958,
so the show lasted another 16 years without her.)
 
bpatrick said:
You say that "Lassie" lasted 9 years after Cloris
Leachman left. If that's true, she left in either
1962 (if you figure that the CBS run ended in 1971)
or 1965 (if you count the 1971-74 syndicated run).
June Lockhart was definitely on the show in 1962, and
by 1965 Lassie was staying with Ranger Corey Stuart
(Robert Bray). I'd say "Lassie" lasted more like 19
years after Ms. Leachman left. (In fact, she left in 1958,
so the show lasted another 16 years without her.)

Leachman did leave in 1958.
 
bpatrick said:
You say that "Lassie" lasted 9 years after Cloris
Leachman left. If that's true, she left in either
1962 (if you figure that the CBS run ended in 1971)
or 1965 (if you count the 1971-74 syndicated run).
June Lockhart was definitely on the show in 1962, and
by 1965 Lassie was staying with Ranger Corey Stuart
(Robert Bray). I'd say "Lassie" lasted more like 19
years after Ms. Leachman left. (In fact, she left in 1958,
so the show lasted another 16 years without her.)

Uh, okay - ya got me there. I miscounted. But my point was that the show couldn't have been considered to have "jumped the shark" if it lasted a whole bunch of years (9, 16 or whatever) after Leachman left.
 
Lkeller said:
firepoint525 said:
Lkeller said:
And here she is in the 1950s playing Timmy's mom on Lassie. How did they explain it when she turned into June Lockhart?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZnA...EEE9D9AB&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=52
Don't know what they called it back then, but now that switcheroo is called "jumping the shark"! ;D
Actually, Cloris Leachman didn't "jump the shark" since her career really took off after Lassie, and Lassie (the show) didn't "jump the shark" since it continued for 9 years after Leachman left. Lassie (the dog) did jump the fence, if you remember the opening title sequence. ;D
According to an online source (a blog about the show, yet), Cloris was difficult to work with, didn't like George Chandler, and actually dissed Campbell's Soup (the sponsor). So the decision was made to fire her and the actor playing Dad.
http://www.squidoo.com/legacyoflassie
No, you misunderstood. There is a category on the "jump the shark" website (or at least there used to be) for different actors playing the same part. One of the worst examples of this type of casting was both Dixie Carter and Mary Ann Mobley playing the wife of Conrad Bain (Philip Drummond) on Diff'rent Strokes. I don't know how they explained that one away. Maybe they didn't! :eek:
 
firepoint525 said:
Lkeller said:
firepoint525 said:
Lkeller said:
And here she is in the 1950s playing Timmy's mom on Lassie. How did they explain it when she turned into June Lockhart?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZnA...EEE9D9AB&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=52
Don't know what they called it back then, but now that switcheroo is called "jumping the shark"! ;D
Actually, Cloris Leachman didn't "jump the shark" since her career really took off after Lassie, and Lassie (the show) didn't "jump the shark" since it continued for 9 years after Leachman left. Lassie (the dog) did jump the fence, if you remember the opening title sequence. ;D
According to an online source (a blog about the show, yet), Cloris was difficult to work with, didn't like George Chandler, and actually dissed Campbell's Soup (the sponsor). So the decision was made to fire her and the actor playing Dad.
http://www.squidoo.com/legacyoflassie
No, you misunderstood. There is a category on the "jump the shark" website (or at least there used to be) for different actors playing the same part. One of the worst examples of this type of casting was both Dixie Carter and Mary Ann Mobley playing the wife of Conrad Bain (Philip Drummond) on Diff'rent Strokes. I don't know how they explained that one away. Maybe they didn't! :eek:

Okay - double mea culpa. I can't count, and I'm not adequately educated on the various "jump the shark" subsets. Again, I'm not sure if Cloris fits - all that I've read indicated that the reason for her firing was her uncooperative behavior, not that she was miscast in any way. The few clips I've seen seem to indicate that she was appropriately wholesome and motherly.

Actually, there was something about June Lockhart - a certain bearing and precise way of speaking - that made her seem a little too aristocratic to be a farmer's wife. She really didn't alter her acting at all for that role. June always played pretty much the same person, whether she was on the farm, in space, or in Petticoat Junction.

Of course, I didn't care about that when I was a little kid watching Lassie. And I realize you were just having fun with it, so nevermind... :-\
 
Lkeller said:
Again, I'm not sure if Cloris fits - all that I've read indicated that the reason for her firing was her uncooperative behavior, not that she was miscast in any way. The few clips I've seen seem to indicate that she was appropriately wholesome and motherly.

Actually, there was something about June Lockhart - a certain bearing and precise way of speaking - that made her seem a little too aristocratic to be a farmer's wife. She really didn't alter her acting at all for that role. June always played pretty much the same person, whether she was on the farm, in space, or in Petticoat Junction.

There was something of a reversal of some kind 12 years after this Lassie cast change, when in 1970 Petticoat Junction on which Miss Lockhart co-starred in its final two seasons was cancelled (or to put it another way, the entire series was fired), and replaced in its time slot by . . . the Mary Tyler Moore show, one of whose co-stars was . . . Miss Leachman.
 
wbhist said:
Lkeller said:
Again, I'm not sure if Cloris fits - all that I've read indicated that the reason for her firing was her uncooperative behavior, not that she was miscast in any way. The few clips I've seen seem to indicate that she was appropriately wholesome and motherly.

Actually, there was something about June Lockhart - a certain bearing and precise way of speaking - that made her seem a little too aristocratic to be a farmer's wife. She really didn't alter her acting at all for that role. June always played pretty much the same person, whether she was on the farm, in space, or in Petticoat Junction.

There was something of a reversal of some kind 12 years after this Lassie cast change, when in 1970 Petticoat Junction on which Miss Lockhart co-starred in its final two seasons was cancelled (or to put it another way, the entire series was fired), and replaced in its time slot by . . . the Mary Tyler Moore show, one of whose co-stars was . . . Miss Leachman.

Good point. Cloris is terrific, and really excels at comic roles that are offbeat and unsympathetic - Phyllis on MTM being a perfect example. I also loved her as Nurse Diesel in Mel Brooks' High Anxiety, and as Malcolm in the Middle's absolutely awful grandmother. I can see how playing Timmy's mom would have annoyed her.

And here's a reminder that she used to be pretty hot:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fuYk6ypdBug
 
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