Tag: Television

  • Classic TV Theme Song Singalong This Friday!

    Classic TV Theme Song Singalong This Friday!

    This week on “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner,” there’s no homework for you, the viewer, as we’ll be playing to your innate knowledge of classic television themes.

    Roy and I have been busy assembling 20 of our favorites, taking into account viewer suggestions, and tomorrow night we’ll let slip the dogs of war. At least until Facebook A.I. shuts us down! Be advised that, for copyright reasons, there’s every possibility this show, if completed, will not be available from the archive. So it’s a matter of be there, or be square!

    Seemingly a lost art, the classic television theme is an elusive balance of melody, tone, and insistent memorability, serving as a kind of mini-overture, casting its spell in a minute or less – in the hope of reeling a prospective audience into the show and insidiously boring into its consciousness.

    Where are the Twilight Zones? The Hawaii Five-Os? The Bonanzas of yesteryear?

    Why, on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, of course! Sing along in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Ernie Kovacs Surreal TV Genius

    Ernie Kovacs Surreal TV Genius

    Yesterday I shared Ernie Kovacs’ irreverent demolition of Victor Herbert at the hands of an inexperienced Italian television crew (on “Enna-B-C,” no less), with an orchestra of improbable musical instruments, like a Gerard Hoffnung cartoon brought to life.

    Kovacs was born in Trenton, New Jersey, in 1919. He got his start in radio there, on WTTM, in 1941. It was in Philadelphia that he first broke into television, at WPTZ, in 1950. It wasn’t long before he moved into the New York and national markets. Though none of his shows seemed to last very long (the network quashed his morning show to make way for “Today”), it seems like he was everywhere at once, reincarnated on show after show, doing freeform television specials, appearing as a panelist on “What’s My Line,” and filling in for Steve Allen on “The Tonight Show.” There was no one zanier or more surreal on American television.

    As a young man doing summer stock in Vermont, in 1939, Kovacs became seriously ill with pneumonia and pleurisy – so ill, in fact, that he was not expected to survive. During his convalescence, he developed a lifelong love of classical music, thanks to broadcasts over the radio. Kovacs would go on to use or parody the classics in many of his silent skits and abstract visual routines.

    Here, Ernie puts some of the zing back into Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture”:


    PHOTO: Kovacs with Edie Adams, his wife

  • Hazel Scott: Swinging the Classics on TV

    Hazel Scott: Swinging the Classics on TV

    In 1950, Juilliard-trained pianist Hazel Scott became the first Black American to host her own television show. A born performer, she excelled in jazz, blues, boogie-woogie, ballads, Broadway, and classical music. It was by “swinging the classics” that she first achieved fame.

    Unusual for any performer in Hollywood, she had complete control over her image and music. She always spoke up, and she never backed down. When she criticized the House Un-American Activities Committee, doors began to close. Happily, she was able to reinvent herself with a glorious third act in Paris.

    You’ll find lots of great footage in this fascinating 20-minute documentary:

    Scott swings Liszt:

    Scott stops the show, playing black and white grand pianos, in “The Heat’s On” (1943):

    Vernon Duke’s “Taking a Chance on Love”:

  • Dudamel Joins Colbert!

    Dudamel Joins Colbert!

    Aaron Copland made The Late Show with Stephen Colbert last night. Chalk another one up for Colbert.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8jjhHmbmkU


    PHOTO: Stephen Colbert with his guest, Gustavo Dudamel

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