Here's
the opening to a fondly remembered program The Hilarious House of
Frightenstein which was released on DVD recently. Yes, that's Vincent Price doing the opening.
This clever syndicated
60 minute comedy-variety kid show starred Price as the narrator and Billy
Van (Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour) as mad scientist Bwanna Clyde
Batty. Also seen:
Fishka Rais as Igor, Guy Big as Count Munchkinstein, Joe Torbay as Gronk,
and Julius Sumner Miller as The Professor.
Here's the
first episode from 1971 followed by an interview with Billy Van & the cast.
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Profiles in Beauty : Golddigger Robyn Whatley
Robyn Whatley-Kahn (a former Dean Martin Golddigger)
Rare Bootleg Lou Reed Performance from 1977
Lou Reed has died, no cause yet but he recently received a liver transplant. Rolling Stone can eulogize him better than I, he was one of those performers embedded in the Rock & Roll DNA and will be for generations. His best work will always crackle with life.
Here's a 1977 bootleg recording of Lou Reed from the Bottom Line New York, Satellite Of Love:
Here's a 1977 bootleg recording of Lou Reed from the Bottom Line New York, Satellite Of Love:
Failed Wonder Woman TV Show Pilots
by Billy Ingram
The hottest TV show in the nation in 1966 was Batman. Taken completely by surprise (it was so way-out everyone thought it would tank) the networks scrambled to find another established comic book character to capitalize on the craze.
In 1967, Batman's producer William Dozier put writer Stanley Ralph Ross on the spec pilot - it was his job to come up with a format to bring Wonder Woman to the home screen. A brilliant and prolific TV writer/producer/actor, Dozier also served as Batman's narrator who intoned, "Same Bat-time... same Bat-channel" at the end of each episode.
Stanley Ralph Ross was quoted as saying, "Professionally what happened was that, after writing for Batman, I became more or less known as a person who knew how to write adaptation of comic books for television."
This resulted in a dreadful five-minute film for Warner Bros., a domestic sitcom entitled Wonder Woman: Who's Afraid of Diana Prince? It was the story of a typical American super-powered housewife. Think Bewitched with a tiara. Wonder Woman was played by two different people - a homely gal in the role of Diana Prince (Ellie Wood Walker of The New Interns) and a beautiful woman (Linda Harrison) after she morphed into Wonder Woman.
Read more about WONDER WOMAN ON TV at TVparty!
and watch scenes from the 2011 Wonder Woman pilot!
The Latin Casino Nightclub in Cherry Hill, NJ
THE LATIN CASINO
I spoke in 2011 with guitarist Chuck Anderson who's had a remarkable career playing for some of the biggest names in show business. He got his big break as the house guitarist at The Latin Casino in Cherry Hill New Jersey; I've been fascinated by this legendary Dinner Theater lately. A 3,000 seater, people dressed to the nines and came from all over the Tri-State area to see the finest entertainment outside of New York City. Frank, Dean, Hope, Rickles, all the greatest Vegas performers would do a week or two a year at the Latin which opened in 1960 after moving from Philadelphia.
It was only when Atlantic City legalized gambling and opened huge showrooms with non-compete clauses that led to the club's reinvention as a discotheque in 1978. The place suffered a serious fire in the mid-1980s and never re-opened. People who lived in Philly and Cherry Hill at the time will always remember The Latin Casino, a place, ironically, where you could not gamble.
Here Chuck Anderson talks about the club and shares behind the scenes stories about some of the biggies that played the Latin like Anthony Newley, Wayne Newton, Perry Como, and Peggy Lee who employed a one-armed drummer. Chuck Anderson has a blog here that you should check out, especially if you're a jazz lover. If you have memories of The Latin Casino I'd love to hear them!
I spoke in 2011 with guitarist Chuck Anderson who's had a remarkable career playing for some of the biggest names in show business. He got his big break as the house guitarist at The Latin Casino in Cherry Hill New Jersey; I've been fascinated by this legendary Dinner Theater lately. A 3,000 seater, people dressed to the nines and came from all over the Tri-State area to see the finest entertainment outside of New York City. Frank, Dean, Hope, Rickles, all the greatest Vegas performers would do a week or two a year at the Latin which opened in 1960 after moving from Philadelphia.
It was only when Atlantic City legalized gambling and opened huge showrooms with non-compete clauses that led to the club's reinvention as a discotheque in 1978. The place suffered a serious fire in the mid-1980s and never re-opened. People who lived in Philly and Cherry Hill at the time will always remember The Latin Casino, a place, ironically, where you could not gamble.
Here Chuck Anderson talks about the club and shares behind the scenes stories about some of the biggies that played the Latin like Anthony Newley, Wayne Newton, Perry Como, and Peggy Lee who employed a one-armed drummer. Chuck Anderson has a blog here that you should check out, especially if you're a jazz lover. If you have memories of The Latin Casino I'd love to hear them!
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