Just a few random TV related events that happened on November 23. Discuss or comment as you please……
1912: Actor and voice artist George O’Hanlon (The Jetsons) is born in Brooklyn, New York.
1951: Actor David Rappaport is born in London, England. He would become one of the best-known and most successful dwarf actors (3’ 11”) in TV and film, but would sadly commit suicide in 1990 at the age of 38. (His death necessitated recasting for an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation for which he had already filmed some scenes.)
1953: WJBF-TV (channel 6) signs on in Augusta, Georgia.
1960: Journalist Robin Roberts (Good Morning America) is born in Alabama.
1963: That Was The Week That Was broadcasts its moving, non-satirical tribute to John F. Kennedy on the BBC. A telerecording (kinescope) of the show is flown to New York, and airs several times on NBC over the course of the weekend. The cast and the BBC garner praise and respect for their gesture. However, domestically the BBC also earns some brickbats in the U.K. for airing the premiere episode of Doctor Who the same evening, a program considered by some to be frivolous and inappropriate in light of the continuing world focus on the assassination of JFK.
1964: Actor Boyd Kestner (The Outsiders, Knots Landing) is born in Virginia.
1970: Rodgers and Hammerstein's “Oklahoma!” makes its network TV debut as CBS telecasts the 1955 film version as a three-hour Thanksgiving special.
1970: KNCT (channel 46) begins broadcasting from Central Texas College in Belton.
1975: NBC can’t win – as a result of the tumult over the infamous “Heidi Bowl” the previous Sunday, the network carries an NFL game that runs into overtime to its conclusion, then joins the scheduled Sunday night movie (“Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”) late, already in progress. This earns them some nasty phone calls and telegrams from NON-football fans (although nothing close to the scale of the previous week’s complaints).
1984: College football fans recall this day well (with delight in Boston, and dismay in Miami): the CBS broadcast of the Boston College-Miami (FL) game ends with Doug Flutie’s now legendary last-second “Hail Mary” pass to give the Eagles an improbable victory.
1986: Artist/writer/director/producer Norman Maurer dies in Los Angeles, aged 60. The son-in-law of The Three Stooges’ Moe Howard, he produced and directed most of the trio’s 1960’s theatrical films, as well as two unsold television pilots: Three Stooges Scrapbook (footage from which would be incorporated into the theatrical film “The Three Stooges in Orbit”) and Kook’s Tour (a project which was aborted when Larry Fine suffered a debilitating stroke in 1970).
1992: Singer/actress Miley Cyrus (Hannah Montana) is born (as Destiny Hope Cyrus) in Nashville, Tennessee.
(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…..)
1912: Actor and voice artist George O’Hanlon (The Jetsons) is born in Brooklyn, New York.
1951: Actor David Rappaport is born in London, England. He would become one of the best-known and most successful dwarf actors (3’ 11”) in TV and film, but would sadly commit suicide in 1990 at the age of 38. (His death necessitated recasting for an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation for which he had already filmed some scenes.)
1953: WJBF-TV (channel 6) signs on in Augusta, Georgia.
1960: Journalist Robin Roberts (Good Morning America) is born in Alabama.
1963: That Was The Week That Was broadcasts its moving, non-satirical tribute to John F. Kennedy on the BBC. A telerecording (kinescope) of the show is flown to New York, and airs several times on NBC over the course of the weekend. The cast and the BBC garner praise and respect for their gesture. However, domestically the BBC also earns some brickbats in the U.K. for airing the premiere episode of Doctor Who the same evening, a program considered by some to be frivolous and inappropriate in light of the continuing world focus on the assassination of JFK.
1964: Actor Boyd Kestner (The Outsiders, Knots Landing) is born in Virginia.
1970: Rodgers and Hammerstein's “Oklahoma!” makes its network TV debut as CBS telecasts the 1955 film version as a three-hour Thanksgiving special.
1970: KNCT (channel 46) begins broadcasting from Central Texas College in Belton.
1975: NBC can’t win – as a result of the tumult over the infamous “Heidi Bowl” the previous Sunday, the network carries an NFL game that runs into overtime to its conclusion, then joins the scheduled Sunday night movie (“Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory”) late, already in progress. This earns them some nasty phone calls and telegrams from NON-football fans (although nothing close to the scale of the previous week’s complaints).
1984: College football fans recall this day well (with delight in Boston, and dismay in Miami): the CBS broadcast of the Boston College-Miami (FL) game ends with Doug Flutie’s now legendary last-second “Hail Mary” pass to give the Eagles an improbable victory.
1986: Artist/writer/director/producer Norman Maurer dies in Los Angeles, aged 60. The son-in-law of The Three Stooges’ Moe Howard, he produced and directed most of the trio’s 1960’s theatrical films, as well as two unsold television pilots: Three Stooges Scrapbook (footage from which would be incorporated into the theatrical film “The Three Stooges in Orbit”) and Kook’s Tour (a project which was aborted when Larry Fine suffered a debilitating stroke in 1970).
1992: Singer/actress Miley Cyrus (Hannah Montana) is born (as Destiny Hope Cyrus) in Nashville, Tennessee.
(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…..)