Tag golden age of television

Remembering A Genius

At the end, he was a joke. A mockery of himself, drunkenly slurring through commercial pitches for stupid things like cheap wine and frozen peas. And yet he had been so talented, so brilliant that at the beginning people were ready to pronounce that the very stage and screen themselves would never see anything as magnificent as his work ever again.

I have a pair of links that tell stories about Orson Welles that might help to mitigate the pathetic persona that defines him now, both of which brim with the promise that he might have brought his formidable talents to the medium of television the same way he did to film, radio, and stage.

This one appeared at Gizmodo back in December ’09. In it, the author, Frank Beacham (himself a movie producer, playwright, and writer) recalls a series of encounters with Welles in the mid-1980s, not long before his death in 1985, as Welles became obsessed with producing a film using the then-new half-inch videotape technology developed by Sony — the BetaCam. Beacham talks about Welles pushing the very limits of the technology, presaging many of the advances that would come to video in just a few years. His sudden death ended the project, but gave Beacham the inspiration to complete another unfinished Welles project, a film about Welles’s Broadway musical “The Cradle Will Rock”, on which he was the executive producer.

Also from last December, a much longer and more scholarly piece from media writer Ben Walters posted on Columbia University’s Teacher’s College website that rewinds the clock all the way back to the early days of television itself and looks at his 1953 production of “The Fountain Of Youth”, his involvement with Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz and their production company, Desilu, and how the business of network television, even in the 1950s, had no place for someone as disruptively creative as Welles.

If you have the time to read Ben Walters’s piece (it’s much longer than most web writing normally is), it is a brilliant bit of biography, history, and media criticism rolled into one. It would be wonderful if the Internet would be more open to revisiting Welles as a genuine artist and let the cheap jokes slide, but that might be asking a bit much of the gnat’s-life attention span of the online world.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

TV History Fans Rejoice!

Via MetaFilter comes this link to the Archive of American Television website. It’s an offshoot of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Foundation, better known as the organization responsible for the Emmy Awards. The Archive has existed for over 10 years, but has only recently completed its master project — more than 2000 hours of videotaped interviews with almost 500 performers, producers, production people, and other figures who have contributed to the 60+ year history of American television. Many of the interviews can be watched online via YouTube (such as the interviews I linked to recently when entertainer Edie Adams passed away).

You might, for example, enjoy this 1999 interview with the late Studs Terkel as he talks about his own involvement in the early days of Chicago television. The local stations in Chicago were a hotbed of programming innovation in the 1950s, launching the careers of people like Dave Garroway and Burr Tillstrom, and Terkel was part of the Chicago broadcasting scene for decades.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

The Mike Wallace Interviews

You probably saw this around the blogs on Friday, but I didn’t until after I’d done my posts for the day, and I would be incredibly remiss not to post about it given my own background with broadcasting history.

The University of Texas at Austin’s Harry Ransom Center, which collects cultural materials in a wide variety of disciplines, has recently made available most of its collection of kinescopes and videotapes of “The Mike Wallace Interview”. “The Mike Wallace Interview” was the national network version of Wallace’s first prime-time interview showon local New York TV, “Night Beat” (you can see clips from “NightBeat” on YouTube). It catapulted Wallace into celebrity and established the heavy-hitting no-holds-barred interviewing style that became his trademark and which he carried over a few years later to “60 Minutes”.

The interviews, which are mostly from 1957, feature a number of prominent people of the time — TV personalities like Steve Allen and Dagmar, Frank Lloyd Wright, Eleanor Roosevelt, political figures like Orval Faubus and Adlai Stevenson, and many others. Wallace recently donated a number of his own recordings of the program to the collection, along with his own production notes, interview questions and other materials. That the university has opted to share them online is an increidble bonanza for anyone interested in television or TV news or historical figures of the mid-20th century.

And if that’s not necessarily your cup of tea, the Harry Ransom Center is also the home of the David O. Selznick Archive (which is not yet really online, though you can search an online database of the materials), and collections of materials from noted actors such as Gloria Swanson, Robert DeNiro and Steve Martin.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

The Box They Buried Vaudeville In

Television genres come and go. Sitcoms rule the airwaves for a few years, then hour-long crime dramas take over, or doctor shows, or soap operas, or whatever. The current strength of “reality” TV is due in no small part to the surprise success of “Who Wants To Be A Millionaire”, which ushered in a slew of prime time game shows, which had been absent from television since the scandals of the 1950s. The game show craze spawned “Survivor” and “The Bachelor”, both of which were game-like, and so on and so on.

So it was inevitable that another hoary old television genre would work its way back — musical variety shows. If you are over the age of 40, you are old enough to remember at least some of the shows at the tail end of this genre in the late 1960s and 1970s like the last years of the Ed Sullivan Show, or possibly the Smothers Brothers or Carol Burnett. If you’re over the age of 50, you definitely remember those shows and probably a good deal more of them, as there were plenty to go around. TV historians like to say that the TV variety show was “the box they buried vaudeville in” because it was the last venue for that entire style of entertainment.

MIT media professor Henry Jenkins is back at his blog and lets us know that he recently was included in an upcoming PBS series about the history of early television, and wrote this article for the series’ website about the variety show episode. In that article he lays out his claim that the variety show has returned in its 21st century guise as a variation on reality shows; American Idol, America’s Got Talent, Bruno vs. Carrie Ann, etc. are quintessentially variety shows repackaged for contemporary tastes and sensibilities. To make the throwback complete, there are even off-air scandals about rigging, just like the quiz show scandals of yore.

You realize, of course, that this means we’re a bit overdue for the return of the Western. Deadwood did pretty well on HBO, and if they ever resolve the writers’ strike, maybe they’ll work in a few horse operas.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site