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The Jackie Gleason Show

The Jackie Gleason Show is the name of a series of American network television shows that starred Jackie Gleason, which ran from 1952 to 1970, in various forms.

The Jackie Gleason Show
Also known asCavalcade of Stars (DuMont)
GenreVariety
Presented byJackie Gleason
Opening theme"Melancholy Serenade" (CBS)
ComposerJackie Gleason
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes156 (list of episodes)
Production
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time47–50 minutes
Original release
NetworkDuMont
ReleaseJune 4, 1949 (1949-06-04) –
September 26, 1952 (1952-09-26)
NetworkCBS
ReleaseSeptember 20, 1952 (1952-09-20) –
June 22, 1957 (1957-06-22)

Cavalcade of Stars edit

Gleason's first variety series, which aired on the DuMont Television Network under the title Cavalcade of Stars, first aired June 4, 1949. The show's first host was comedian Jack Carter, who was followed by Jerry Lester. Lester jumped to NBC in June 1950 to host the late-night show Broadway Open House, and Gleason—who had made his mark filling in for William Bendix as the title character on the first television incarnation of The Life of Riley sitcom—stepped into Cavalcade on July 15, 1950 and became an immediate sensation.

The show was broadcast live in front of a theater audience, and offered the same kind of vaudevillian entertainment common to early television revues. Gleason's guests included New York-based performers of stage and screen, including Bert Wheeler, Smith and Dale, Patricia Morison, and Vivian Blaine. Production values were modest, owing to DuMont's humble facilities and a thrifty sponsor (Quality Drugs, representing most of the nation's drug stores).

In 1952, CBS president William S. Paley offered Gleason a considerably higher salary to move to that network. The series was retitled The Jackie Gleason Show and premiered on CBS Television on September 20, 1952.[1] In 1953, CBS' own orchestral accordionist John Serry Sr. made a cameo appearance.

While much of DuMont's programming archive was destroyed after they ceased broadcasting,[2] a surprising number of Cavalcade of Stars episodes survive, including several episodes at the UCLA Film and Television Archive. Additionally, at least 14 Gleason episodes survive at the Paley Center for Media.

In his book The Forgotten Network, author David Weinstein mentions an unusual aspect of the DuMont network. He notes that while Drug Store Productions was technically the sponsor, they in turn sold the commercial air time to various companies and products. Weinstein notes this as an early example of U.S. network television moving away from the single-sponsor system typical of the early 1950s. He quotes former DuMont executive Ted Bergmann describing the DuMont version as featuring six commercial breaks during the hour, with each break comprising a single one-minute commercial.[3]

Format edit

 
Gleason and June Taylor dancer Margaret Jeanne (1955)

The show typically opened with a monologue from Gleason, followed by sketch comedy involving Gleason and a number of regular performers (including Art Carney) and a musical interlude featuring the June Taylor Dancers. (Taylor later became Gleason's sister-in-law; he married her sister Marilyn in 1975.)

Gleason portrayed a number of recurring characters, including:

  • supercilious, mustachioed playboy millionaire Reginald Van Gleason III (Gleason's personal favorite)[4]
  • friendly Joe the Bartender
  • loudmouthed braggart Charlie Bratton
  • Rum Dum, a hapless dipsomaniac with a walrus mustache
  • mild-mannered Fenwick Babbitt
  • The Bachelor who was forever unmarried
  • bombastic Rudy the Repairman
  • a put-upon character known only as the Poor Soul, whom Gleason performed in pantomime.
  • Stanley R. Sogg, late-night movie pitchman for Mother Fletcher's products ("No-Cal Chicken Fat")
  • blowhard Brooklyn bus driver Ralph Kramden

The series was a big hit for CBS, finishing at #8 in the Nielsen ratings for the 1953–1954 season and #2 in 1954–1955.[5] The Jackie Gleason Show also earned Emmy nominations for best variety series in 1953, 1954 and 1955, for Gleason as best star in 1954 and 1955, for Audrey Meadows as best supporting actress in 1954 and 1957, Art Carney for best supporting actor in 1957, June Taylor for best choreography in 1956, and best writing and best engineering effects in 1955. The series won Emmys for Meadows as best supporting actress in 1955, Carney as best supporting actor in 1954 and 1955, and Taylor for choreography in 1955. Gleason never received an Emmy.[6]

The Honeymooners edit

 
Gleason and Audrey Meadows as Ralph and Alice Kramden (1956)

By far the most memorable and popular of Gleason's characters was blowhard Brooklyn bus driver Ralph Kramden, featured originally in a series of Cavalcade skits known as "The Honeymooners", with Pert Kelton as his wife Alice, and Art Carney as his upstairs neighbor Ed Norton. These were so popular that in 1955 Gleason suspended the variety format and filmed The Honeymooners as a regular half-hour sitcom (television's first spin-off), co-starring Carney, Audrey Meadows (who had replaced the blacklisted Kelton after the earlier move to CBS), and Joyce Randolph. Finishing 19th in the ratings, these 39 episodes were subsequently rerun constantly in syndication, often five nights a week, with the cycle repeating every two months for decades. They are probably the most familiar body of work from 1950s television with the exception of I Love Lucy starring Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.

The show's original variety format and title returned in September 1956 and continued until June 1957. Then, in October 1958, Gleason debuted a half-hour version of The Jackie Gleason Show, with Buddy Hackett as a sidekick, but it was short-lived, cancelled in January 1959.

The Jackie Gleason Show (1961 revision) edit

The Jackie Gleason Show
GenreTalk show
Presented byJackie Gleason
Narrated byJohnny Olson
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8 (excluding You're in the Picture)
Production
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time24-25 minutes
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseFebruary 3 (1961-02-03) –
March 24, 1961 (1961-03-24)

In 1961, Gleason began an ill-fated stint as host of a game show called You're in the Picture, which lasted only one episode, and was so poorly received that it led to Gleason offering an on-air apology to his viewers the following week. Committed to filling a quota of episodes, Gleason renamed the series The Jackie Gleason Show and turned it into a short-lived talk show, featuring one-on-one informal interviews with Art Carney, Jayne Mansfield, Bobby Darin, and other friends and celebrities. It ran for eight episodes.

American Scene Magazine, 1962–1965 edit

 
Photo postcard in response to ticket requests after The Jackie Gleason Show moved to Miami in 1964. Note a very tanned Gleason.

In 1962, Gleason returned to the tried-and-true variety format with his American Scene Magazine. The official title of the show was, again, The Jackie Gleason Show. American Scene was initially taped in New York City; after two seasons, production moved to Miami Beach (1964), on Jackie's insistence. (This caused difficulties for announcer Johnny Olson, who had several other announcing jobs; Olson commuted frequently between New York City and Miami to accommodate Gleason.)

Gleason would begin his monologue each week and be surprised by the flamboyant jackets worn by bandleader Sammy Spear. (Beholding Spear's animal-print blazer, Gleason quipped, "I've heard of Tiger Rag, but this is ridiculous!") Ralph Kramden, Reggie Van Gleason, the Poor Soul, and the rest of Gleason's comic characters were regular attractions. Frank Fontaine, as bug-eyed, grinning "Crazy" Guggenheim (evolved from his John character from The Jack Benny Program), starred in the Joe the Bartender skits, delighting fans with his nutty speaking voice and goofy laugh, and charmed by his surprisingly mellow singing voice. June Taylor's chorus girl routines revived for the television generation the aerial pattern kaleidoscope formations made famous on film by Busby Berkeley. During this time, Gleason's show finished #17 for the 1962–1963 season, #15 for 1963–1964, #21 in 1964–1965 and #24 in 1965–1966.[5]

The Jackie Gleason Show – 1966-1970 edit

In fall 1966, the show title reverted to simply The Jackie Gleason Show (dropping the American Scene format), and would remain so until its cancellation in 1970. By this point episodes included guest stars and skits. A component during this period was the musical Honeymooners episodes, which had first been tried on Gleason's variety show during the 1956–1957 season. These were later collected as The Color Honeymooners, with Sheila MacRae and Jane Kean as Alice and Trixie, respectively. The regular cast included Art Carney; Milton Berle was a frequent guest star. The show was shot in color on videotape at the Miami Beach Auditorium (today called the Fillmore at the Jackie Gleason Theatre), and Gleason never tired of promoting the "sun and fun capital of the world" on camera.[7] Hordes of vacationers took Gleason's advice, boosting Florida's economy. Later specials were taped at the Olympia Theatre's Gusman Center across Biscayne Bay in downtown Miami. The shows began with the television camera in front of a boat speeding toward the shore of Miami Beach, and ended with Gleason bellowing, "Miami Beach audiences are the greatest audiences in the world!"

During this period, The Jackie Gleason Show earned three more Emmy nominations, for Carney for special classification in 1966 and for variety series and writing in 1967. Carney won two Emmys for his work in 1967 and 1968.[6] The series also ranked at No. 5 in 1966-1967 and No. 9 in 1967-1968.[5]

At the end of the 1968–1969 season, The Jackie Gleason Show still garnered decent ratings, ranking at No. 25 in the Nielsens and CBS renewed it for an eighth season. The following year would bring a radical change to the series: Gleason went on a stringent diet in 1969 and lost approximately 60 pounds. When the show returned in September 1969, there was much publicity about Gleason's new slimmer look. To gracefully incorporate his weight loss into the show, it was explained that Ralph Kramden also had gone on a diet and lost weight.

This change proved to be somewhat of a detriment – especially since Carney had gained weight. Jokes about Kramden's weight had been a strong component of humor for the Honeymooners sketches.[7] A skinnier Ralph did not seem as funny to viewers and the overall ratings for the program began to slip. Coupled with the fact that the CBS network was concerned with demographics and wanted to change its image with more urban-oriented shows (to attract younger, more affluent audiences). In addition, CBS wanted Gleason to do only the hour-long Honeymooners and drop the variety episodes that garnered lower ratings. Gleason objected to this and, on February 16, 1970, CBS announced the cancellation of Gleason's series, during a time frame that also saw the cancellation of The Red Skelton Hour and Petticoat Junction, in the opening salvos of what would become popularly known as the rural purge.

Beginning in late December 1970 CBS began airing selected reruns of The Jackie Gleason Show (featuring only the color Honeymooners episodes) in prime time on Sunday nights at 10 p.m. which replaced the Tim Conway Comedy Hour.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Weiner, Ed; Editors of TV Guide (1992). The TV Guide TV Book: 40 Years of the All-Time Greatest Television Facts, Fads, Hits, and History. New York: Harper Collins. p. 217. ISBN 0-06-096914-8. {{cite book}}: |author2= has generic name (help)
  2. ^ Clarke Ingram. "Dumont TV".
  3. ^ Weinstein, David (2004). The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1-59213-245-6.
  4. ^ "The Great Drunkard" 2015-02-07 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b c "ClassicTVguide.com: TV Ratings".
  6. ^ a b "The Jackie Gleason Show".
  7. ^ a b Galbraith IV, Stuart (26 August 2008), The Color Honeymooners - Collection 4, dvdtalk.com, retrieved 23 July 2015
  8. ^ Brooks, Tim; Marsh, Earle (1964). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows (3rd ed.). New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-31864-1.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Cavalcade of Stars at IMDb  
    • Cavalcade of Stars 1950 episode at Internet Archive
    • Cavalcade of Stars 1951 episode at Internet Archive, with Gleason, Art Carney, Georgia Gibbs, and Arthur Lee Simpkins
  • DuMont historical website
  • The Jackie Gleason Show at IMDb  

jackie, gleason, show, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Jackie Gleason Show news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Jackie Gleason Show is the name of a series of American network television shows that starred Jackie Gleason which ran from 1952 to 1970 in various forms The Jackie Gleason ShowAlso known asCavalcade of Stars DuMont GenreVarietyPresented byJackie GleasonOpening theme Melancholy Serenade CBS ComposerJackie GleasonCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons4No of episodes156 list of episodes ProductionCamera setupMulti cameraRunning time47 50 minutesOriginal releaseNetworkDuMontReleaseJune 4 1949 1949 06 04 September 26 1952 1952 09 26 NetworkCBSReleaseSeptember 20 1952 1952 09 20 June 22 1957 1957 06 22 Contents 1 Cavalcade of Stars 2 Format 3 The Honeymooners 4 The Jackie Gleason Show 1961 revision 5 American Scene Magazine 1962 1965 6 The Jackie Gleason Show 1966 1970 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksCavalcade of Stars editGleason s first variety series which aired on the DuMont Television Network under the title Cavalcade of Stars first aired June 4 1949 The show s first host was comedian Jack Carter who was followed by Jerry Lester Lester jumped to NBC in June 1950 to host the late night show Broadway Open House and Gleason who had made his mark filling in for William Bendix as the title character on the first television incarnation of The Life of Riley sitcom stepped into Cavalcade on July 15 1950 and became an immediate sensation The show was broadcast live in front of a theater audience and offered the same kind of vaudevillian entertainment common to early television revues Gleason s guests included New York based performers of stage and screen including Bert Wheeler Smith and Dale Patricia Morison and Vivian Blaine Production values were modest owing to DuMont s humble facilities and a thrifty sponsor Quality Drugs representing most of the nation s drug stores In 1952 CBS president William S Paley offered Gleason a considerably higher salary to move to that network The series was retitled The Jackie Gleason Show and premiered on CBS Television on September 20 1952 1 In 1953 CBS own orchestral accordionist John Serry Sr made a cameo appearance While much of DuMont s programming archive was destroyed after they ceased broadcasting 2 a surprising number of Cavalcade of Stars episodes survive including several episodes at the UCLA Film and Television Archive Additionally at least 14 Gleason episodes survive at the Paley Center for Media See also List of programs broadcast by the DuMont Television Network See also List of surviving DuMont Television Network broadcasts In his book The Forgotten Network author David Weinstein mentions an unusual aspect of the DuMont network He notes that while Drug Store Productions was technically the sponsor they in turn sold the commercial air time to various companies and products Weinstein notes this as an early example of U S network television moving away from the single sponsor system typical of the early 1950s He quotes former DuMont executive Ted Bergmann describing the DuMont version as featuring six commercial breaks during the hour with each break comprising a single one minute commercial 3 Format edit nbsp Gleason and June Taylor dancer Margaret Jeanne 1955 The show typically opened with a monologue from Gleason followed by sketch comedy involving Gleason and a number of regular performers including Art Carney and a musical interlude featuring the June Taylor Dancers Taylor later became Gleason s sister in law he married her sister Marilyn in 1975 Gleason portrayed a number of recurring characters including supercilious mustachioed playboy millionaire Reginald Van Gleason III Gleason s personal favorite 4 friendly Joe the Bartender loudmouthed braggart Charlie Bratton Rum Dum a hapless dipsomaniac with a walrus mustache mild mannered Fenwick Babbitt The Bachelor who was forever unmarried bombastic Rudy the Repairman a put upon character known only as the Poor Soul whom Gleason performed in pantomime Stanley R Sogg late night movie pitchman for Mother Fletcher s products No Cal Chicken Fat blowhard Brooklyn bus driver Ralph KramdenThe series was a big hit for CBS finishing at 8 in the Nielsen ratings for the 1953 1954 season and 2 in 1954 1955 5 The Jackie Gleason Show also earned Emmy nominations for best variety series in 1953 1954 and 1955 for Gleason as best star in 1954 and 1955 for Audrey Meadows as best supporting actress in 1954 and 1957 Art Carney for best supporting actor in 1957 June Taylor for best choreography in 1956 and best writing and best engineering effects in 1955 The series won Emmys for Meadows as best supporting actress in 1955 Carney as best supporting actor in 1954 and 1955 and Taylor for choreography in 1955 Gleason never received an Emmy 6 The Honeymooners editMain article The Honeymooners nbsp Gleason and Audrey Meadows as Ralph and Alice Kramden 1956 By far the most memorable and popular of Gleason s characters was blowhard Brooklyn bus driver Ralph Kramden featured originally in a series of Cavalcade skits known as The Honeymooners with Pert Kelton as his wife Alice and Art Carney as his upstairs neighbor Ed Norton These were so popular that in 1955 Gleason suspended the variety format and filmed The Honeymooners as a regular half hour sitcom television s first spin off co starring Carney Audrey Meadows who had replaced the blacklisted Kelton after the earlier move to CBS and Joyce Randolph Finishing 19th in the ratings these 39 episodes were subsequently rerun constantly in syndication often five nights a week with the cycle repeating every two months for decades They are probably the most familiar body of work from 1950s television with the exception of I Love Lucy starring Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz The show s original variety format and title returned in September 1956 and continued until June 1957 Then in October 1958 Gleason debuted a half hour version of The Jackie Gleason Show with Buddy Hackett as a sidekick but it was short lived cancelled in January 1959 The Jackie Gleason Show 1961 revision editThe Jackie Gleason ShowGenreTalk showPresented byJackie GleasonNarrated byJohnny OlsonCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons1No of episodes8 excluding You re in the Picture ProductionCamera setupMulti cameraRunning time24 25 minutesOriginal releaseNetworkCBSReleaseFebruary 3 1961 02 03 March 24 1961 1961 03 24 In 1961 Gleason began an ill fated stint as host of a game show called You re in the Picture which lasted only one episode and was so poorly received that it led to Gleason offering an on air apology to his viewers the following week Committed to filling a quota of episodes Gleason renamed the series The Jackie Gleason Show and turned it into a short lived talk show featuring one on one informal interviews with Art Carney Jayne Mansfield Bobby Darin and other friends and celebrities It ran for eight episodes American Scene Magazine 1962 1965 edit nbsp Photo postcard in response to ticket requests after The Jackie Gleason Show moved to Miami in 1964 Note a very tanned Gleason In 1962 Gleason returned to the tried and true variety format with his American Scene Magazine The official title of the show was again The Jackie Gleason Show American Scene was initially taped in New York City after two seasons production moved to Miami Beach 1964 on Jackie s insistence This caused difficulties for announcer Johnny Olson who had several other announcing jobs Olson commuted frequently between New York City and Miami to accommodate Gleason Gleason would begin his monologue each week and be surprised by the flamboyant jackets worn by bandleader Sammy Spear Beholding Spear s animal print blazer Gleason quipped I ve heard of Tiger Rag but this is ridiculous Ralph Kramden Reggie Van Gleason the Poor Soul and the rest of Gleason s comic characters were regular attractions Frank Fontaine as bug eyed grinning Crazy Guggenheim evolved from his John character from The Jack Benny Program starred in the Joe the Bartender skits delighting fans with his nutty speaking voice and goofy laugh and charmed by his surprisingly mellow singing voice June Taylor s chorus girl routines revived for the television generation the aerial pattern kaleidoscope formations made famous on film by Busby Berkeley During this time Gleason s show finished 17 for the 1962 1963 season 15 for 1963 1964 21 in 1964 1965 and 24 in 1965 1966 5 The Jackie Gleason Show 1966 1970 editIn fall 1966 the show title reverted to simply The Jackie Gleason Show dropping the American Scene format and would remain so until its cancellation in 1970 By this point episodes included guest stars and skits A component during this period was the musical Honeymooners episodes which had first been tried on Gleason s variety show during the 1956 1957 season These were later collected as The Color Honeymooners with Sheila MacRae and Jane Kean as Alice and Trixie respectively The regular cast included Art Carney Milton Berle was a frequent guest star The show was shot in color on videotape at the Miami Beach Auditorium today called the Fillmore at the Jackie Gleason Theatre and Gleason never tired of promoting the sun and fun capital of the world on camera 7 Hordes of vacationers took Gleason s advice boosting Florida s economy Later specials were taped at the Olympia Theatre s Gusman Center across Biscayne Bay in downtown Miami The shows began with the television camera in front of a boat speeding toward the shore of Miami Beach and ended with Gleason bellowing Miami Beach audiences are the greatest audiences in the world During this period The Jackie Gleason Show earned three more Emmy nominations for Carney for special classification in 1966 and for variety series and writing in 1967 Carney won two Emmys for his work in 1967 and 1968 6 The series also ranked at No 5 in 1966 1967 and No 9 in 1967 1968 5 At the end of the 1968 1969 season The Jackie Gleason Show still garnered decent ratings ranking at No 25 in the Nielsens and CBS renewed it for an eighth season The following year would bring a radical change to the series Gleason went on a stringent diet in 1969 and lost approximately 60 pounds When the show returned in September 1969 there was much publicity about Gleason s new slimmer look To gracefully incorporate his weight loss into the show it was explained that Ralph Kramden also had gone on a diet and lost weight This change proved to be somewhat of a detriment especially since Carney had gained weight Jokes about Kramden s weight had been a strong component of humor for the Honeymooners sketches 7 A skinnier Ralph did not seem as funny to viewers and the overall ratings for the program began to slip Coupled with the fact that the CBS network was concerned with demographics and wanted to change its image with more urban oriented shows to attract younger more affluent audiences In addition CBS wanted Gleason to do only the hour long Honeymooners and drop the variety episodes that garnered lower ratings Gleason objected to this and on February 16 1970 CBS announced the cancellation of Gleason s series during a time frame that also saw the cancellation of The Red Skelton Hour and Petticoat Junction in the opening salvos of what would become popularly known as the rural purge Beginning in late December 1970 CBS began airing selected reruns of The Jackie Gleason Show featuring only the color Honeymooners episodes in prime time on Sunday nights at 10 p m which replaced the Tim Conway Comedy Hour 8 See also editList of programs broadcast by the DuMont Television Network List of surviving DuMont Television Network broadcastsReferences edit Weiner Ed Editors of TV Guide 1992 The TV Guide TV Book 40 Years of the All Time Greatest Television Facts Fads Hits and History New York Harper Collins p 217 ISBN 0 06 096914 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author2 has generic name help Clarke Ingram Dumont TV Weinstein David 2004 The Forgotten Network DuMont and the Birth of American Television Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 1 59213 245 6 The Great Drunkard Archived 2015 02 07 at the Wayback Machine a b c ClassicTVguide com TV Ratings a b The Jackie Gleason Show a b Galbraith IV Stuart 26 August 2008 The Color Honeymooners Collection 4 dvdtalk com retrieved 23 July 2015 Brooks Tim Marsh Earle 1964 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows 3rd ed New York Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 31864 1 Bibliography editBrooks Tim Marsh Earle 1964 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows Third ed New York Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 31864 1 McNeil Alex 1980 Total Television Fourth ed New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 024916 8 External links editCavalcade of Stars at IMDb nbsp Cavalcade of Stars 1950 episode at Internet Archive Cavalcade of Stars 1951 episode at Internet Archive with Gleason Art Carney Georgia Gibbs and Arthur Lee Simpkins DuMont historical website The Jackie Gleason Show at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Jackie Gleason Show amp oldid 1202494531, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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