The Dean Martin Show: One Day of Work a Week

Our theme for March is “Variety is the Spice of Life.” We are looking at several variety shows that debuted in the sixties and seventies. After discussing three shows that weren’t super successful on television, today we look at a long-running show: The Dean Martin Show.

📷chrisnersinger.com

Debuting in 1965 and lasting nine seasons, The Dean Martin Show was on NBC. His theme song was the iconic “Everybody Loves Somebody.” For most of its life, it was on Thursday nights. Season nine brought a change of nights as well as a new format.

Like Judy Garland, whose show we learned about last week, Martin was not sure he wanted to commit to a television schedule, feeling as though he would not be able to take on his favorite movie roles and nightclub performances. So, he asked for a “list of musts” that he knew NBC would not agree to. He asked for a lot of money, a one-day-a-week work schedule of Sunday, and permission for him to only announce ads and sing when he felt like it. Imagine his surprise when they agreed to every demand.

Martin always presented as a shy, drunk playboy, and he continued with this image for the television show. He made it obvious that he was reading his lines from cue cards and if he goofed, it became part of the taped show.

📷imdb.com

The show had a few recurring features every week. Martin typically sang two songs per show. Sometime during the show, a knock on the closet door led to Martin opening the door to reveal a celebrity guest and Martin himself didn’t know who would be on the other side of the door. The show usually ended with a production number featuring Martin and his guests.

Cast members were hired who did sketches throughout the show. These stars included Tom Bosley, Rodney Dangerfield, Dom DeLuise, Kay Medford, Charles Nelson Reilly, and Nipsey Russell. In later seasons, The Golddiggers appeared. This was a group of chorus girls who first started on the summer replacement show. Not only were Martin’s goofs part of the show, but Charles Nelson Reilly once told a story that on the way to rehearsal, he was driving a convertible, and the script flew out of the car. He wasn’t too concerned though because he said the way the show was done, the script really didn’t matter much.

If you name a celebrity, they were probably on this show. Just a small sampling includes Eddie Albert, Steve Allen, Louis Armstrong, Lucille Ball, Tony Bennett, Rosemary Clooney, Sammy Davis Jr., Phyllis Diller, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Bob Hope, Ethel Merman, Bob Newhart, Dinah Shore, and Frank Sinatra.

The show was nominated for an Emmy 12 times including best variety, music or comedy series in 1968, 1969, and 1970.

📷wordpress.com Golddiggers

The show had decent ratings for the first year but after that it was never great, never awful. It was up against The Thursday Night Movie on CBS and a variety of different shows on ABC which changed from year to year all eight seasons. For the final season, the show was moved to Friday nights, against the popular Love American Style. From 1973-1974 it was titled The Dean Martin Comedy Hour and episodes were celebrity roasts.

The Television Academy did an interview with Greg Garrison, producer and director for The Dean Martin Show. He said there was some turmoil in the first year trying to figure out what this show was. He said they had Bertha the Elephant on one episode, and no adults were interested in that at 10 pm.

Garrison said Martin was extremely generous. Every year he gave Garrison a ten percent ownership in the show until he had 50%. Garrison then told him to stop offering him more because 50% was the most he would agree to. He described Martin as the kindest, nicest, and most generous man he knew. Garrison said he was able to do whatever he wanted to on the show and Martin never second-guessed him. Garrison said one of the hardest decisions he made was cutting Zsa Zsa Gabor’s sketch. He said she gave him no end of trouble, so he finally said they were done, and the sketch was cut. She protested and he told her she would get her check, but the skit was done and it was.

📷wikipedia.com

This was a successful show for almost a decade. It’s hard to find a lot of information about it though. Unlike The Carol Burnett Show where everyone was working together all the time, Martin only showed up on Sundays and most of the time it was the rest of the cast, so perhaps not as many stories were shared.

I watched an episode from 1970, and it was typical of a variety show for the time. Martin began by telling jokes like he put his contacts in backwards and looked at himself all night, so he got no sleep. He talked about going back to his neighborhood where the mayor had a car waiting for him, but luckily, he got out of the way just in time before getting hit. He also mentioned that he and his dog went to school together for years until they had to part because the dog graduated.

He then sang a song all the while holding onto his cigarette. In most of his appearances on the show he had a cigarette or a glass of apple juice purported to be alcohol. Ann Margaret and Bob Newhart were the guest stars in this one. He then went into a skit with Newhart. The show held up pretty well for being more than fifty years old. I admit I feel spoiled after watching The Carol Burnett Show, which I think is impossible to compete with for almost any other variety show, but Martin came across as likeable and the show was better than I anticipated. If you want to check out a few of them, you can get the “Best Of” his shows on Amazon.

While John Forsythe Chose “To Rome with Love,” The Network Let the Show Roam Without Much Love

We continue our series with a salute to fathers looking at one of my favorite actors, John Forsythe in a little-remembered show, To Rome with Love.

Photo: en.wikipedia.org

The show debuted on CBS in September of 1969 and aired until spring of 1971. In 1967 Forsythe had starred in The John Forsythe Show and in the successful sitcom, Bachelor Father, seven years before that.

Photo: pinterest.com
The John Forsythe Show

After the acclaim of Bachelor Father, The John Forsythe Show was a big disappointment. The premise of the show was that Forsythe as retired US Air Force Major John Foster inherits a private girls’ school in San Francisco. A buddy of his and former sergeant helps him run the school and they have conflicts with the principal Miss Culver. Forsythe once commented on it, saying “I choose to froget about that one. It was a disaster from the start. I hope the world forgets it too, especially the name.”

To Rome with Love also had a school setting. Forsythe played Michael Endicott, a widow with three daughters. He accepts a teaching position at an American school in Rome and relocates his family there from Iowa. His sister Harriet (Kay Medford) comes with the family for season one to help out. Endicott’s father-in-law, Andy Pruitt (Walter Brennan), comes to Rome to visit and ends up moving there during the second season.

Photo: nndb.com

The oldest daughter is Alison (Joyce Menges), the middle is tomboy Penny (Susan Neher) and the youngest is Mary Jane, nicknamed Pokey (Melanie Fullterton). None of the girls continued in television past 1974. Menges had been a former tv and magazine model.  She appeared in two films, one before (1967) and one after (1972) the show. Fullerton made an appearance on High Chaparral before this show and appeared in two movies (1972 and 1974). Neher had the most productive acting career. She was cast on Accidental Family before appearing on To Rome with Love. After the show, she would guest star on Young Lawyers, Getting Together, Love American Style, The Partridge Family, with her last appearance was on Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers in 1974.

Photo: allstarpic.famousfix.com
Photo: famousfix.com


Photo: famousfix.com
Photo: pinterest.com

Rounding out the cast was Vito Scotti who played Mr. Mancini and Peggy Mondo who was Mama Vitale in Rome.

Photo: tvmaze.com

Photo: tvmaze.com

The show was on Sunday nights at 7:30 for the first year. It was up against Land of the Giants and The Wonderful World of Disney. The second year it switched to Tuesdays at 9:30 for the first half of the year on against movies of the week and then was moved to Wednesdays at 8:30 for the rest of the season. On Wednesdays it was up against The Smith Family and the Men from Shiloh. They were one-hour shows and To Rome with Love was on during the second half of both shows. The show never received the ratings the network had hoped for.

Photo: metv.com

Jack Gould reviewed the show before its debut. His comment was “the personable John Forsythe is the main asset of the series, but it is doubtful if he alone can overcome the handicap of imposing Hollywood nonsense on a city rich in drama and laughter and yet to be explored with understanding by TV. For the viewer, one solution is to turn off the sound and settle for incidental scenic background.” Donald Freeman from the San Diego Union called the show “all stereotyped and unfailingly pleasant.” Terrence O’Flaherty of the San Francisco Chronicle described it as a “giant pizza which appears to be filled with every situation comedy cliché in TV history and every Italian character actor south of San Luis Obispo. Dwight Newton of the San Francisco Examiner said it was “another little innocuous comedy drama series.” Apparently, viewers agreed with their opinions.

The combination of bad reviews and going up against Disney before moving to two different nights almost guaranteed its failure.

Photo: incredibleinman.com

Don Fedderson and Edmond Hartman produced the show. They were also the creative forces behind My Three Sons and Family Affair. An interesting concept was the cross-over episode. In season two, Anissa Jones and Johnnie Whitaker from Family Affair appear on the show on episode 4, “Roman Affair.” Episode 6 featured William Demarest, Don Grady, and Tina Cole from My Three Sons in “Rome is Where You Find It.”

After the show ended, Forsythe commented that his “fate is to be surrounded by ladies at home and at work which is not at all painful. I have a wife and two daughters at home. But on the television, I’ve always been unmarried. We might have started the single-parent trend with ‘Bachelor Father.’ Now the air is filed with widows and widowers raising children alone. There’s a reason for it. One unqualified parent dealing with children is more amusing because of the difficulty it presents.”

This sounded a bit exaggerated to me, so I went back to take a closer look at the shows that were on during the 1960s, and he was right. I always think of the typical sitcom as a nuclear family like the Donna Reed Show or Leave It To Beaver, but during this decade many shows were about adults. Think of Get Smart, The Joey Bishop Show, That Girl, The Odd Couple, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, or The Flying Nun. When shows were about families, the norm was almost to have a single parent. In addition to Bachelor Father, My Three Sons, and Family Affair, we had The Farmer’s Daughter, The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, The Doris Day Show, The Andy Griffith Show, Petticoat Junction, Gidget, and Julia. It wasn’t confined to sitcoms either; consider The Rifleman, Bonanza, and The Big Valley. The genre would continue into future decades as well. Some of the most popular shows featured single parents: The Partridge Family, The Courtship of Eddie’s Father, Nanny and the Professor, Diff’rent Strokes, One Day at a Time, Eight is Enough, and Alice.

Photo: dailymail.co.uk

Fortunately for viewers, Forsythe did not throw in the towel and retire into obscurity. Forsythe would go on to star as Blake Carrington on Dynasty.

DNX6N3 Jan. 1, 1976 – F3353.”Charlie’s Angels”.FARRAH FAWCETT, KATE JACKSON, & JACLYN SMITH. 1976(Credit Image: © Globe Photos/ZUMAPRESS.com)

The show he is best remembered for is Charlie’s Angels, continuing his tradition of being surrounded by beautiful women on television.