mleach said:
Lkeller said:
Super-wealthy TV actors are a more recent phenomenon. Suzanne Somers 70s era salary demands probably look laughable compared to the salaries received by the Seinfeld or Friends stars, not to mention Charlie Sheen before he blew it.
Part of what made the Somers episode a bit sleazy was the blatant attempts at string-pulling by her husband, a semi-talented and not very successful TV and commercial actor. I believe Alan Hamel was his name. In those days, he was all over the airwaves in Southern California as the commercial spokesman for Alpha-Beta supermarkets, a long-bankrupt chain.
Alan Hamel for the record was also the spokesman for Acme Supermarkets, back when they were a major chain in the mid-Atlantic.
...Hamel was also host, producer and co-creator of the 1971-72 "battle of the sexes" talk show wherein a male guest was quizzed by a panel of three female inquisitors, usually comprised of Nina Foch, Margot Kidder, Meredith MacRae and/or Ms. Somers (Carol Wayne, Selma Diamond and Pamela Mason each popped up on the panel a couple of times as well). The fantasy writer and sometime columnist Harlan Ellison, while as a TV critic for the
Los Angeles Free Press, wrote an interesting essay about his experience of traveling to Vancouver's CHAN/8 to guest on the program. As republished in his 1975 book
The Other Glass Teat, Ellison has nothing but praises for Kidder, is extremely friendly toward MacRae and seems somewhat lukewarm towards Somers and Hamel. In fact, about Hamel and co-producer Dick Clark, Ellison wrote that they "seem to be relatively decent human beings (I say 'relatively' because in a species that can produce Aquinas and Lieutenant [William] Calley,
everything is relative)"...