What's My Line? - 500th Episode! Julie Andrews; Martyn Green & Martin Gabel [panel] (Feb 7, 1960)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 687

  • @Airestotle09
    @Airestotle09 6 лет назад +244

    Im 25 years old and this is easily my favorite tv game show ever. Timeless classic

    • @donaldstanfield8862
      @donaldstanfield8862 4 года назад +17

      Isn't it great!?

    • @grantdavis5945
      @grantdavis5945 3 года назад +28

      I'm 36. Watching this show to relax before bed has become a new habit for me recently.

    • @shirleyrombough8173
      @shirleyrombough8173 3 года назад +13

      @@grantdavis5945 - I started watching these episodes to relax. It brings me to a state of well-being.

    • @miamars90
      @miamars90 3 года назад +9

      I'm 31 and have a great appreciation for these classics.

    • @JulianBlacket
      @JulianBlacket 2 года назад +6

      She’s 25 in this clip too haha

  • @Pennhnd1
    @Pennhnd1 7 месяцев назад +4

    I adore vintage jewelry...I'm just salivating!

    • @notpurrfect6397
      @notpurrfect6397 18 дней назад

      Arlene started a fad with a heart pendant she wore every week. Years after the show ended a thief ripped it from her neck in Manhattan. It was not recovered.

  • @adamhenwood581
    @adamhenwood581 4 года назад +123

    This show is way before my time but I love it. It’s got class, sophistication, it’s educational, and has manners. I just love the way the panel says goodbye to each other at the end of each episode.

  • @mothersuperior6751
    @mothersuperior6751 4 года назад +136

    Isn’t it lovely to see them introduce each other.
    So respectful. It is the manners that I love watching.

    • @shirleyrombough8173
      @shirleyrombough8173 3 года назад +4

      I have sung in many Gilbert and Sullivan operas. I just love them. The music is gorgeous and the script is hilarious. The audience always enjoys the performances. And I still quote lines from these works.

    • @Benyikoko
      @Benyikoko 2 года назад +2

      So do I. Unfortunately these times are long gone.

    • @maureenevegrowney2796
      @maureenevegrowney2796 2 года назад +2

      @@shirleyrombough8173 too bad in this these our times called bull sh t

    • @maureenevegrowney2796
      @maureenevegrowney2796 2 года назад

      No worries

    • @reyesplace1096
      @reyesplace1096 2 года назад +3

      Yes, tis delightful to witness such politeness

  • @marcusmedlock847
    @marcusmedlock847 3 года назад +39

    Julie’s radiant smile can illuminate any room. So elegant, so naturally beautiful inside and out.

    • @luigivincenz3843
      @luigivincenz3843 Год назад +2

      Im not even 40 but I am stunned how beautiful Julie Andrews was back then. Like wow.

  • @natebronson9916
    @natebronson9916 8 лет назад +335

    Julie Andrews has always been classy, but she was absolutely adorable in this clip!

    • @mckavitt
      @mckavitt 7 лет назад +16

      Nate Bronson She is always adorable. I adore her!

    • @JRobbySh
      @JRobbySh 6 лет назад +11

      Indeed.

    • @icturner23
      @icturner23 3 года назад +5

      The panel are always so delighted to see the mystery guest, which I love, but I think especially so here.

    • @cuttersboi08
      @cuttersboi08 3 года назад +4

      She's even classy when she's working a little blue. Check out her appearances with Craig Ferguson.

    • @janeleekeller
      @janeleekeller 3 года назад +1

      @@cuttersboi08
      Love Craig 😊
      Have Not seen him in ages.
      JaneLee 🕊️ - in Suburban Philadelphia Pennsylvania, USA
      10/9/21

  • @corymh9150
    @corymh9150 2 года назад +39

    Dorothy was really special. The other panelists are as well, but she is such a wealth of knowledge. Her discernment was second to none.

    • @nickhansen3127
      @nickhansen3127 Год назад +1

      Very true. So sad we lost her at age 52. I only discovered her and the show this year and as they say better late than never.

  • @avlasting3507
    @avlasting3507 Год назад +7

    They're so kind, polite and respectful of one another.

  • @voyaristika5673
    @voyaristika5673 2 года назад +29

    I was born in 1949 and remember my parents watching this. When I came of age the hippie thing exploded, then when I had my own family I remember thinking my generation didn't seem like "grown-ups." I wondered if all generations felt like this. However, watching this I know for sure my generation never became adult!! I was right! These people are so articulate and well mannered. A pleasure to watch.

    • @monicaclark9581
      @monicaclark9581 24 дня назад +1

      Glad to see a fellow Babyboomer to admit that fact. Though I have known many who didn't buy into the Rock & Roll, drug, and liberal mind set of that generation. Some had found God and his Son Jesus Christ
      .

  • @thehashearthasheart7146
    @thehashearthasheart7146 7 лет назад +356

    I find interesting that less than 5 years after this was aired Julie Andrews would be more known for her work in movies, rather than the theater.

    • @esmeephillips5888
      @esmeephillips5888 3 года назад +20

      She was the toast of Broadway. No female lead had captivated NYC theatergoers as much since Mary Martin 20 years earlier. 'My Fair Lady' was the biggest stage musical hit of the postwar period, and Julie was acclaimed as the Broadway equivalent of Audrey Hepburn- ironically, in view of the film version's casting.

    • @elliotburing87
      @elliotburing87 3 года назад +3

      Interesting and completely INEVITABLE

    • @icturner23
      @icturner23 3 года назад +1

      That’s hardly a surprising development.

    • @shandagilmore9162
      @shandagilmore9162 3 года назад +1

      @@esmeephillips5888 ! I 1

    • @janeleekeller
      @janeleekeller 3 года назад +1

      @@elliotburing87
      What was inevitable ?! 🤨

  • @SnowWalker1
    @SnowWalker1 6 лет назад +234

    Omygosh. This is even before 'Mary Poppins' and 'The Sound of Music'. She is yet to become a super star.

    • @loissimmons6558
      @loissimmons6558 6 лет назад +26

      She was well on her way to become a super star by this point. IMHO, Jack Warner made a huge mistake picking Audrey Hepburn to supplant Miss Andrews as Eliza Doolittle in the film version of "My Fair Lady". For one thing, they would not have needed the talented Marni Nixon to overdub the singing. Julie Andrews would have still won her first Oscar, but for "My Fair Lady" instead of "Mary Poppins". (Miss Hepburn wasn't even nominated.)

    • @subliminalcity6892
      @subliminalcity6892 5 лет назад +10

      @@loissimmons6558 well but maybe then it hasnt been that much of a commercial hit. Moreover Audrey hepburn looks divine

    • @loissimmons6558
      @loissimmons6558 5 лет назад +15

      @@subliminalcity6892 Not much of a commercial hit? That is not the general opinion or supported by the facts. The movie had the highest budget of any movie of that time, ~$17 million and still made a huge profit, grossing over $72 million. As far as Audrey Hepburn's looks, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. The consensus is that she, in her mid-30's, looked far too old to play someone who was 19. And I have always found Julie Andrews to be far more attractive. I concede that others may think differently.

    • @subliminalcity6892
      @subliminalcity6892 5 лет назад +5

      @@loissimmons6558 God bless ur understanding. It was commercial hit coz of Aundrey. It would have been semi hit if julue was in lead. Aundrey is timeless beauty like liz and marilyn. Julie was not in that line

    • @loissimmons6558
      @loissimmons6558 5 лет назад +14

      @@subliminalcity6892 "My Fair Lady" was nominated for 12 Oscars and won 8. Miss Hepburn was not nominated. Brendan Gill of "The New Yorker": "Miss Hepburn isn't particularly convincing as a Cockney flower girl ..." Richard L. Coe of the Washington Post found the casting of Miss Hepburn to be the movie's "basic flaw" and described her as "recognizably exquisite-but not 21-as the flower girl and to the later scenes she brings a real flirtatiousness quite un-Shavian."
      Because "My Fair Lady" was such a smash on Broadway, it's film debut has been described as the most highly anticipated by the American public since "Gone With the Wind". Somehow GWTW was a commercial success even with a relative unknown (Vivian Leigh) playing Scarlett O'Hara. "Mary Poppins" made the same year as "My Fair Lady" did just fine with Julie Andrews as one of the co-stars. And American audiences would have been just as charmed by her and would have flocked to see her as Eliza Doolittle. She was well known by American audiences by this time. In addition to Broadway, an estimated 107 million viewers saw her on TV in 1957 in the lead role as "Cinderella". She was good enough to be nominated for an Emmy in that role. She had also been seen on "The Ed Sullivan Show" and other popular TV shows prior to "My Fair Lady" was cast. And after "Mary Poppins", her next five films were also hits. It is incredibly hard to believe that Julie Andrews would have hurt the box office for "My Fair Lady", regardless of what Jack Warner may have thought. And a lot of high profile people in the profession, like Alan Jay Lerner, lobbied hard for Julie Andrews to be the lead in the film.

  • @skeeterradar
    @skeeterradar 6 лет назад +186

    there has never been anyone past or present who exudes the radiant and natural beauty that Julie Andrews does.

    • @Cosmo-Kramer
      @Cosmo-Kramer 3 года назад +11

      It was great seeing her, but her appearance was a bit frustrating, to be honest. I love her speaking voice and she could barely get a word in edgewise, between all the motormouths on the panel and the one seated next to her. God they love to hear themselves talk. smh

    • @casvandijck9338
      @casvandijck9338 3 года назад

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Harlow
      Just saying.

    • @allenjones3130
      @allenjones3130 2 года назад +2

      Great job, Julie! Incidentally, Ms. Andrews and Martyn Green collaborated on an album of nursery rhymes set to music in the late 50s.

    • @patfromamboy
      @patfromamboy Год назад +2

      @@Cosmo-Kramershe looked different like she had dental work done sometime after the show and before her Mary Poppins/Sound of Music years.

    • @luigivincenz3843
      @luigivincenz3843 Год назад +4

      i knew the mystery guest was really popular judging by how crazy the audience got when the guest signed on the board. Julie Andrews smile just lit up the room

  • @RayNDeere
    @RayNDeere 6 лет назад +60

    One of the rare post 1955 shows where the panel was introduced while sitting. Done to accommodate Mr. Green, who had his leg amputated in an elevator accident the year before.

  • @purpletc1
    @purpletc1 Год назад +6

    A wonderful treasure…totally enchanting!

  • @symonesworlddd5675
    @symonesworlddd5675 6 лет назад +57

    Julie Andrews was so young and beautiful and STILL is❤️❤️❤️Love her so much😍😍she is so talented and very bubbly in this video which is cute🎊

  • @upallnite88
    @upallnite88 10 лет назад +41

    Arlene is just great! And Julie Andrews is a blinding, brilliant light from heaven!

  • @JuanFernandez-jr2wz
    @JuanFernandez-jr2wz 6 лет назад +41

    A pleasure hear the voice of Julie Andrews. She is a lady in all the sense of the word.

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID 8 месяцев назад +1

      Much like my Mistress.

  • @paulinegail20
    @paulinegail20 5 лет назад +50

    The person who yelled "YEAAAAAHH" when Julie Andrews came in, that would've been me, had I been alive, that is. Lmao. Arlene and Dorothy looked especially pretty in this episode.

  • @zephyrr914
    @zephyrr914 5 лет назад +56

    Arlene is so incredible. She would always make joking comments and be spot on!!! Episode after episode!

  • @rtflone
    @rtflone 2 года назад +21

    The dedication it took from everyone on WML, from Daly and the panel on down to producers Goodson-Todman and crew, to do 50 shows/yr is nothing short of extraordinary. The standard season run now is 13 shows for newbies up to 30+ for a successful show. Thank you for making these shows available we will never see the like of them again..

  • @kentetalman9008
    @kentetalman9008 Год назад +4

    I'm so happy to share a birthday with the lovely Julie Andrews.

  • @tamiobannon
    @tamiobannon 5 лет назад +86

    Dorothy is just sharp as a tack. Love these old episodes!

  • @missmellie6335
    @missmellie6335 4 года назад +24

    It has been so much fun to discover this great program during the Pandemic. Everyday i watch one episode and it really brings joy & lots of laughs to some long dreary days.

    • @jacklightyear3smom
      @jacklightyear3smom Год назад +1

      Same here. It was perfect. I’m still watching!

    • @donnacook8994
      @donnacook8994 Год назад +2

      Just one? I can't stop at just one! So funny and I love the banter between cast and guests. It's a breath of fresh air after being stuck in a dank basement. Like night and day, and welcome light it is! 👏👏😍😍👍

  • @dovbarleib3256
    @dovbarleib3256 7 лет назад +72

    Yap, this was before Sound of Music too. And the "new musical in September" was...... Camelot. She was Guinevere!

  • @darnel322
    @darnel322 Год назад +5

    When I was 10 or 11 years old, I went with my family to see the movie Sound of Music. It was there, thanks to Miss Andrews (and Charmian Carr), I first came to appreciate beautiful women. She was - and is - absolutely stunning.

  • @jamesmorelandoliver8897
    @jamesmorelandoliver8897 2 года назад +4

    Julie Andrews is one of the most beautiful and brightest stars ever to grace the silver screen. The Sound Of Music will be enjoyed for as long as there are people who love great entertainment.

  • @BravosReviews
    @BravosReviews 2 года назад +7

    I appreciate how clearly they communicated

  • @franklesser5655
    @franklesser5655 Год назад +5

    Julie Andrews just shines!

  • @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr
    @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr 4 года назад +43

    Martin Gabel had the richest and most refined voice.. no wonder he was such a Lion in the world of theater (a Tony winner too!)

  • @kenyongray2615
    @kenyongray2615 3 года назад +9

    Julie Andrews is one of the greatest talents ever. Amazing that she had to answer no about being in movies. In just a few years, she becomes maybe the biggest star in the world. Dorothy looks great in this episode. 500 What's My Lines is a great accomplishment at the time and the show will go way beyond 500. Thanks for the video.

  • @markhine3232
    @markhine3232 2 года назад +4

    Julie Andrews was such a beautiful, talented lady
    The sound of music always one of my fave movies. I love these old shows and happy somebody back then had the foresight to keep the tapes secured and safe for future gens to experience.

  • @jmcieslak0
    @jmcieslak0 7 лет назад +41

    Julie Andrews is so adorable. It's great to see a mystery guest round go down to the wire like that. Only when Bennett Serf is absent can it make it that far!

  • @NondescriptMammal
    @NondescriptMammal 9 лет назад +229

    An actual person wearing an actual monocle in real life. Awesome.

    • @ih82r8
      @ih82r8 6 лет назад +2

      Nondescript lololol

    • @Tedybear315
      @Tedybear315 6 лет назад +20

      As is your comment.

    • @riversofjoy6529
      @riversofjoy6529 6 лет назад +7

      I worked with someone who wore a monocle about ten years ago. He was odd.

    • @wyatt_kincaid
      @wyatt_kincaid 6 лет назад +4

      Gene Chandler performs "Duke Of Earl" wearing a monocle ruclips.net/video/pkU6E1v4bhw/видео.html

    • @Kim-bp1kb
      @Kim-bp1kb 3 года назад +2

      I came to the comments just for this conversation.

  • @joswanell5792
    @joswanell5792 3 года назад +4

    Julie Andrew's was my favorite actress when I was a little girl. I remember watching The Sound of Music in the movie theater as a little girl in 1965. My eyes & ears were glued to the screen!

  • @captainnice9698
    @captainnice9698 8 лет назад +62

    Julie has one of the best profiles in show biz. Love the face

    • @robertfiller8634
      @robertfiller8634 4 года назад +5

      I never knew how spectacularly pretty Julie was at that young age, having only seen her when she was somewhat older.

  • @Hydrosized
    @Hydrosized 2 года назад +2

    I’m 50 and I’m loving this sweet, wonderful production for the first time. My mom spoke about it when I was young.

  • @LarsRyeJeppesen
    @LarsRyeJeppesen 7 лет назад +14

    Weee 10 years , I've watched every episode so far... great show, thanks Gary

  • @sitarnut
    @sitarnut 9 лет назад +50

    A rare orchid of beauty and class is Julie…..

  • @Lambchop47
    @Lambchop47 9 лет назад +34

    Thank you for posting these shows. I'm feeling nostalgic lately (maybe because of the holidays?) and I remember watching this show in the '60's with my parents and grandparents. It brings back good memories and I enjoy seeing all these names from the past!

  • @doclawyer
    @doclawyer 10 лет назад +178

    Julie Andrews has such class. And all the panel members on the show were charming. Today, american pop culture is pockmarked by vulgarity.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 лет назад +6

      ***** Have to say, I think Jeff O's point is pretty easily understood. Yours is the one that escapes me.
      Does the fact that Julie Andrews did a brief topless scene imply that she lacked class? We should all be so lacking in class.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 лет назад +1

      ***** Glad to see that you didn't mean to imply otherwise about Julie Andrews.

    • @44032
      @44032 9 лет назад +3

      What's My Line? She had a classy chassis.

    • @stevefowler1787
      @stevefowler1787 9 лет назад +3

      Ain't that the truth...I'm a few years too young to remember these episodes but I completely concur.

    • @44032
      @44032 7 лет назад +3

      Yeah, modern celebrities never do anything like that. Yeesh.

  • @PeggyfromPorcupine
    @PeggyfromPorcupine 8 лет назад +19

    They started on February 2nd, 1950 - that is literally my birthday - the day I was born!

  • @ameliacastaneda8494
    @ameliacastaneda8494 2 года назад +2

    Nice to hear about Loretto Heights College in Denver. I graduated from Loretto Academy High School in El Paso, Texas in 1959.

  • @misternewoutlook5437
    @misternewoutlook5437 7 лет назад +41

    Easily one of the biggest names to emerge from the 1960s. Although she is among the greatest singers of the theater, she never became a recording artist in the conventional sense. Andrews maintained a unique construct to her career that didn't over-saturate with marketing. I think it adds to her regal icon that she went this route and also by avoiding too much kitsch, yet allowing a sprinkle here and there, just to show she could be fun and down-to-earth. Great to see her in this classic TV show.

    • @G6JPG
      @G6JPG 3 года назад +2

      Not sure what you mean by " never became a recording artist in the conventional sense". I don't _think_ she ever released any singles, and I'm pretty sure never appeared on TOTP or any similar prog., but she _has_ released quite a few albums - including in genres you might not expect. (Some, IMO, less successful than others: if a lyric includes a word like

    • @BTURNER1961
      @BTURNER1961 3 года назад

      Interesting point about not letting herself become involved in so many projects that people ever tired of her. At this point Americans only knew her from The Boyfriend, and MFL, Cinderella and a series of TV guest appearances on Ed Sullivan, Gary Moore, Dinah Shore, Jack Benny Show

  • @mkattn
    @mkattn 2 года назад +5

    This made me smile.

  • @zuzuspetals2003
    @zuzuspetals2003 7 лет назад +55

    If I could go back in time, I would very much like to be sitting front row seat for My Fair Lady at Broadway with Julie Andrews and Rex Harrison.

    • @nancysanders2398
      @nancysanders2398 6 лет назад

      Stone Salter Yes,so would I!!

    • @MA_C24
      @MA_C24 6 лет назад +5

      Here, here. When my friend went through her parents’ old mementos, she found several playbills from broadway musicals they had attended in the late 50s and 60s, extending up to the original Funny Girl production. Imagine living in a place and time allowing that to be a common activity. The My Fair Lady playbill was front and foremost and obviously the most viewed. I was downright jealous!

    • @mjm7471
      @mjm7471 5 лет назад +3

      @@MA_C24 It's "hear hear".

    • @m.e.d.7997
      @m.e.d.7997 5 лет назад +1

      Me too and she and Rex had incredible chemistry.

    • @josephpanzarella1417
      @josephpanzarella1417 4 года назад

      I saw Rex Harrison in "My Fair Lady" in San Francisco in 1980. By then he was way too old for the part.

  • @ronh8126
    @ronh8126 Год назад +7

    This, my internet friends, is an example of what is called class and decorum. It used to be required to be part of civil society.

  • @tvw4951
    @tvw4951 2 года назад +18

    God, I love how cordial they are.
    You just do not get this level of authenticity etc nowadays.
    One of my favorite shows now at 29 years.

  • @fairlyvague82
    @fairlyvague82 3 года назад +6

    Oh I just ADORE Arlene Francis! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @danacoleman4007
    @danacoleman4007 3 года назад +6

    Julie Andrews was and is such an absolute baby doll! what a wonderfully gifted woman in so many ways! I don't know much about her background but can you imagine when she was little and would begin singing just like a lot of kids do, if you were her parents and heard that voice coming out. I think I would have fainted!

    • @maryzorn3365
      @maryzorn3365 2 года назад

      She was a child star, a contemporary of Petula Clark. There is a cool film of her on RUclips doing a patriotic turn..can’t remember specifics.

    • @devydu
      @devydu Год назад

      "Julie Andrews (Aged 13) Sings for King George VI (1948)"
      ruclips.net/video/SPnwENZaX8U/видео.html

  • @randylovering24
    @randylovering24 6 лет назад +21

    This was a double milestone 10 years and show # 500 in one program

  • @JamesVaughan
    @JamesVaughan 10 лет назад +39

    What a DISH was Julie Andrews in those days! The gents were obviously beside themselves, and I would be too!

  • @stephenmichalski2643
    @stephenmichalski2643 4 года назад +4

    Julie Andrews.......just seeing this lady fills one with joy and hope

  • @TheTardisDreamer
    @TheTardisDreamer 3 года назад +4

    I was born in 1997 and have absolutely adored Julie Andrews since I was a little kid. She really is a legend. I got to see her speak in Sydney and was one of the youngest in the audience. She was warm and sweet and also absolutely hilarious. The highlight was getting to sing Edelweiss with the audience to her. I belted my heart out. She also directed a new production of 'My Fair Lady' in Sydney too and I got to see that as well. It was very exciting.

  • @stephaniemccoy9602
    @stephaniemccoy9602 10 лет назад +41

    Arlene brightened this episode a lot

    • @dudleycunningham
      @dudleycunningham 6 лет назад +1

      Stephanie McCoy her “horse blanket” comment was hilarious!

  • @Rockaria23
    @Rockaria23 9 лет назад +20

    Just love watching this show. We here in England had a version in the 70's and 80s. 1 of my aunties appeared on it in the 80's.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  9 лет назад +1

      There was a long running BBC WML in the 50s as well, hosted by Eamonn Andrews. Sadly, almost the entire run of the series is lost, but I will be posting a very rare complete episode in April.

    • @Rockaria23
      @Rockaria23 9 лет назад +1

      Eamonn Andrews hosted it again when it came back in 84. Would be nice to find the episode with my auntie in it.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  9 лет назад +1

      Time Lord Victorious Unfortunately, I don't think there's much of the later series surviving today either. Probably more than the 1950s version, but not a lot.

    • @mja72
      @mja72 8 лет назад

      +Time Lord Victorious What was the name of the show?

    • @Rockaria23
      @Rockaria23 8 лет назад +1

      Same name. Eamonn Andrews brought it back between 1984 and 1987 over here in the UK.

  • @brookehanley3659
    @brookehanley3659 8 лет назад +160

    Julie is so pretty. She should have been in the movie version of My Fair Lady.

    • @jamesknoblock1064
      @jamesknoblock1064 7 лет назад +17

      Julie Andrews was passed over for movie version of My Fair Lady, as were most members of the Broadway production because, with the exception of Rex Harrison, they weren't film stars. When Warner Brothers bought the film rights to the play, Jack Warner insisted on having major film stars in the major roles. He wanted James Cagney for the role of Alfred Doolittle, but he declined. Audrey Hepburn got the role of Eliza Doolittle despite her limited singing experience. That's why Eliza's singing voice was provided by Marnie Nixon who also did the singing for Deborah Kerr in The King and I. The year My Fair Lady was up for Oscars so was Mary Poppins. When Julie Andrews won best actress for Mary Poppins, she thanked Jack Warner.

    • @mckavitt
      @mckavitt 7 лет назад +1

      James Knoblock Poor Warner Brothers, poor film-going public.

    • @57andstillkicking
      @57andstillkicking 7 лет назад +7

      She was in the play and the film version of Sound Of Music

    • @chrisnorton4382
      @chrisnorton4382 7 лет назад +15

      James - she thanked Jack Warner at the Golden Globes not the Oscars.
      Carole - Maria in the stage production of the Sound of Music was Mary Martin not Julie.

    • @57andstillkicking
      @57andstillkicking 7 лет назад +5

      Chris Norton
      Oh, that's right!! I used to listen to the album of the play with Mary Martin! My memory needs improvement.

  • @stephenvincent4989
    @stephenvincent4989 4 года назад +10

    A special talent in 1960 and with so much more deserved success to come. A truly unique artist.

  • @neilmidkiff
    @neilmidkiff 4 года назад +20

    We seem to have commented quite a bit on Martyn Green's monocle, his leg, and his teeth, as well as his Gilbert & Sullivan career (which I knew best, since I have many of his LP recordings with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, and have myself sung in and/or conducted lots of G&S shows). But I don't think anyone has mentioned that he did a terrific job as a first-time guest panelist. His questions were intelligent and helpful.

    • @Nicholas32906
      @Nicholas32906 3 года назад

      All I can find are mentions to his monocle, where did you find all the other stuff. I am also a huge G&S fan, I memorized the entire ENO production of ‘The Mikado’. So I am glad to find another G&S fan on a non G&S related video.

    • @neilmidkiff
      @neilmidkiff 3 года назад +2

      @@Nicholas32906 I'm not quite sure what you're asking -- but I was talking about the comments left here earlier, on this RUclips video. A couple of them mentioned that one of Green's lower legs was crushed in an elevator accident and had to be amputated, so he used an artificial leg thereafter (which is why the panel was shown seated from the start). One commenter jested that the monocle was to draw attention away from his bad teeth. Do you know Green's G&S performances, either on audio recordings or in the 1939 Technicolor movie of The Mikado? I would guess that someone will have uploaded those to RUclips.

    • @allenjones3130
      @allenjones3130 2 года назад

      Mr. Green collaborated with JA on an album of nursery rhymes in the late 50s.

  • @Dani-nd9kd
    @Dani-nd9kd 9 лет назад +44

    Dorothy looks particularly great in this episode.

    • @JohnMiller-uc6oc
      @JohnMiller-uc6oc 9 лет назад +9

      Yes she does.

    • @anntaylor2039
      @anntaylor2039 4 года назад +3

      Her hair was so pretty and full. very becoming. I think Arlene glowed!

  • @serpinastellaluna7781
    @serpinastellaluna7781 8 лет назад +40

    • @glendale6
      @glendale6 7 лет назад +4

      Julie says had she been given the fair lady role she wouldn't have been abl to to Mary poplins

    • @elizabethbowen7094
      @elizabethbowen7094 4 года назад +3

      Let it go. That's a long time to be sour grapes. No one "owns" a role. Audrey Hepburn brought enormous grace and beauty to the role.... she made look like a boy. Each had a gift.

  • @itsgleneaton4883
    @itsgleneaton4883 Год назад +4

    By far John is the best host I’ve ever seen.

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID 8 месяцев назад

      Those WML names defined in full (continued)
      Daly - (i) An extremely verbose fellow. (ii) Mildly creepy, especially around beautiful young women (iii) A corn merchant.

  • @loydnewman4857
    @loydnewman4857 Год назад +2

    think im addicted to this show. wish i lived at this time.

  • @catsarereallycool
    @catsarereallycool 6 лет назад +8

    Oh my gosh is she beautiful and what an artistic genius!

  • @moonday4868
    @moonday4868 4 года назад +11

    Julie Andrews was 24 years old in this clip, and a huge star of the musical theater already, after four record breaking seasons on Broadway in New York and London's West End.

  • @smadaf
    @smadaf 3 года назад +4

    Oh, man. I can go years without thinking of those single-serving boxes of Kellogg's cereal-and then I see them and it takes me back!

  • @neilmidkiff
    @neilmidkiff 6 лет назад +8

    In case anyone is wondering why Julie Andrews *seemed* to have been unemployed for the past year according to the questioning, it's because My Fair Lady played in London beginning in April 1958 with the principal stars of the Broadway production. The London cast album was recorded February 1, 1959, in stereo (the 1956 Broadway recording was mono). Andrews continued in the London cast until August 1959.

  • @morussell4033
    @morussell4033 2 года назад +4

    Ms Andrews wow what a performer 💖💯

  • @TheGadgetPanda
    @TheGadgetPanda 10 лет назад +16

    One of my all time fave mystery guest segments, I've long wanted to see the rest of this episode. Thanks! Again!

  • @joeseabert8391
    @joeseabert8391 6 лет назад +34

    I see why this show was on for 10 years. It’s interesting and funny

    • @darinkakralj4347
      @darinkakralj4347 6 лет назад +7

      it was on for 25 years!

    • @blueelkmarketing3436
      @blueelkmarketing3436 3 года назад +5

      @@darinkakralj4347 Actually it went from 1950 to 1967. It was revived in 1972 with a color version and Bennet Cerf and Arlene. Not as good.

    • @terencedove5047
      @terencedove5047 3 года назад +2

      @@blueelkmarketing3436 ...maybe not as good, though Wally Bruner and Larry Blyden gave the hosting job fair shakes. The fact that it was revived for another seven televised years (1968-1975) is really a testimonial of how much people really loved the game itself. But there's no denying that the original was the best...

  • @curlysue3919
    @curlysue3919 4 года назад +8

    Julie Andrews is so adorable and beautiful!❤️❤️❤️

  • @TomBarrister
    @TomBarrister 10 лет назад +12

    At the time of this show, Julie Andrews had only a handful of TV credits, mainly the TV version of Rogers and Hammerstein's "Cinderella" in 1957. Of course, she was well-known on stage, having appeared on Broadway in "My Fair Lady," and was soon to open in what would be another Broadway hit: "Camelot."

    • @JamesVaughan
      @JamesVaughan 10 лет назад +1

      Don't forget "The Boy Friend", which came a year or so before "My Fair Lady".

    • @vincentdaly78
      @vincentdaly78 2 года назад

      I saw her in Camelot.

  • @terrencejohnson85
    @terrencejohnson85 4 года назад +5

    Not something that I’ve ever seen before, Julie Andrews with a frown. We love you Julie!

  • @joserobertomm7871
    @joserobertomm7871 2 года назад +4

    this is really a historic episode, I was mouth open to know Julie wasn't known to be in movies.

  • @earltrombley7646
    @earltrombley7646 10 лет назад +22

    There's some videos on youtube of Julie Andrews when she was 12, 13, and 15. Fascinating.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 лет назад +7

      Fifteen going on sixteen. . . .

    • @ANTINUTZI
      @ANTINUTZI 10 лет назад +5

      I've seen (by now) very old B&W film footage of Ms. Andrews singing as a child-- *with her 3 octave range.* Jaw-dropping.

    • @ANTINUTZI
      @ANTINUTZI 9 лет назад +5

      I've always had the greatest respect for Julie Andrews; she is forever one of the absolutely greatest "Stealth Genius" Artists. I'm 64, so when I first experienced her incredible virtuosity, I was completely "taken in" for a number of delightful years.
      As I grew older and, who knows, perhaps a little bit wiser, I started to realise that she was strategically satirically self-strafing her performances with a brilliance second to none. My epiphany came during *The Sound of Music,* when I was thunderstruck by how obviously she played the entire film for laughs. I later learned that she'd asked director Robert Wise, "How can we kill all this schmaltz before it kills *us*?" She went on to elfinly absolutely *slay* that role, and hardly anyone even had the first clue.
      Cutting to the chase ... her collaboration with real-life husband Blake Edwards on the much-suppressed *S.O.B.* stands as the greatest comedy ever filmed. If anyone cares to know why, I'll continue this.

    • @ANTINUTZI
      @ANTINUTZI 6 лет назад +1

      @gcjerryusc ... Hey, gcy. I don't really understand it either. I'll try to explain that, lol. A professional singer-teacher heard me singing when I was in college, locked onto me, and told me she wanted to evaluate my voice professionally because she thought I had something worthwhile. After she tested me (using a piano) she explained that "3-octave range" thing to me, and her explanation was dizzyingly complex. She pressed me to become one of her (paying) students, but I demurred, because 1) I didn't have the money, and 2) I wasn't interested in going in that direction with my Life.
      It all boils down to I just really like singing, and when I do, people react very warmly to it, which is quite nice. But I was always cautious about all that. The only thing I'm really good for is painting, sculpting and writing, which suit me perfectly, because I can lock myself away in my Fortress Of Solitude Studio. The World has always scared the living shit outta me.

    • @ANTINUTZI
      @ANTINUTZI 6 лет назад

      @gcjerryusc ... Wonderful response, much appreciated :))) I have an older sister who has always made me wish that I had been an only child. Ah, well. All we can ever do is to play the hand we're dealt as ethically as possible ...

  • @TheMikester307
    @TheMikester307 3 года назад +3

    Good Grief!! I checked out Martyn Green's big book on Gilbert and Sullivan from the grade school library a bunch of times in the 60s! I loved the pictures! Then i got into G & S big in College. I think i have a used copy of that book now!

    • @Nicholas32906
      @Nicholas32906 3 года назад

      I love that book, the notes are so interesting

    • @jennifersheffield
      @jennifersheffield Год назад +1

      Oh! That's why I know his name, thank you. I have that book myself; brought it back from my parents' house a few years ago. Learned a bunch of songs from it as a kid.

    • @TheMikester307
      @TheMikester307 Год назад

      @@jennifersheffield Green was quite the interesting fellow! Look him up! :)

  • @pauledelsteinstudiogallery6397
    @pauledelsteinstudiogallery6397 7 лет назад +40

    Dorothy has a lot of class

  • @allenjones3130
    @allenjones3130 2 года назад +3

    When Julie came in, she got lots of well-deserved applause!

  • @joycejean-baptiste4355
    @joycejean-baptiste4355 3 года назад +3

    My, my, they all have such respect and dignity in their comments about each other.

  • @louiso.4325
    @louiso.4325 9 лет назад +16

    Wow. Julie Andrews was very beautiful. My parents met her around 9 years ago and she was allegedly somewhat snobbish to my mother when she mentioned her love of the sound of music. My father mentioned a play of hers he attended and she acted warm towards them once again.

    • @brookehanley3659
      @brookehanley3659 8 лет назад +1

      +Barney Os. Maybe because he was a man?! Women are like that sometimes.

  • @vickisotomayorleroy6147
    @vickisotomayorleroy6147 3 года назад +4

    I would like to give a shout out to the Arlene Francis Family for donating the Arlene Francis Center to the people of Santa Rosa California.

  • @oobaka1967
    @oobaka1967 5 лет назад +12

    Julie was just 25 years old here. Gorgeous.

  • @kepckatherinec805
    @kepckatherinec805 3 года назад +3

    Julie was so pretty, young and excited as the mystery guest. What a classy, talented lady.

  • @Guardmn
    @Guardmn 8 лет назад +98

    John Daly was a class act.

    • @pauledelsteinstudiogallery6397
      @pauledelsteinstudiogallery6397 7 лет назад +3

      Guardmn 7315 he had a bromance with Bennett

    • @Teri_Berk
      @Teri_Berk 4 года назад +3

      Moderating the show is the hardest part and he handled it very successfully.

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 3 года назад +4

      No one like him on Television now. Civility in language is an artifact and a thing if the past.

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID 8 месяцев назад

      Those WML names defined in full (continued)
      Daly - (i) An extremely verbose fellow. (ii) Mildly creepy, especially around beautiful young women (iii) A corn merchant.

  • @deaded5040
    @deaded5040 2 года назад +3

    Practically perfect even then..... my goodness

  • @Merrida100
    @Merrida100 6 лет назад +8

    Wait a second. I've just watched 500 episodes back to back? Uh oh....

    • @loissimmons6558
      @loissimmons6558 6 лет назад

      Alas some of the 500 have been lost, especially in the early years.

    • @davidsanderson5918
      @davidsanderson5918 4 года назад +1

      Merrida100 No you haven't. :) I'm doing it chronologically too.

  • @DonnieReno
    @DonnieReno 3 года назад +8

    Dorothy was very knowledgeable to know immediately that a specific college in far-away Denver was a girl’s college.

    • @lisahinton9682
      @lisahinton9682 3 года назад +1

      Dorothy was Catholic, as was that school, and Dorothy was an investigative reporter and journalist. It surprises me not one bit that she knew of this college and its specifics.

  • @fweddyfwintsone4491
    @fweddyfwintsone4491 4 года назад +9

    They just don't make them like Julie Andrews anymore. Such a talent and such a natural beauty. Please don't tell my wife.

  • @franklesser5655
    @franklesser5655 4 года назад +3

    Love the horse blanket guessing!

  • @aintgotnotltc
    @aintgotnotltc 8 лет назад +18

    I wish Audrey would have been a guest on this show :)

  • @libertyann439
    @libertyann439 6 лет назад +10

    I remember Loretto Heights School from when I lived in Denver. And as a Catholic Dorothy would be aware of it too. I think the girls may have played basketball but I'm not sure.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 4 года назад +10

    Wow! Martyn Green wearing a monocle! You don't see that anymore.

    • @karldelavigne8134
      @karldelavigne8134 3 года назад +2

      You do, but it is rare. I know two people who wear one (I'm in the UK). Of course, Green's predecessor at the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, Sir Henry Lytton, also wore a monocle.

    • @Nicholas32906
      @Nicholas32906 3 года назад

      @@karldelavigne8134 Thank you for acknowledging Martyn’s career. All people talk about is his monocle instead of his work, which I think is sad considering his contributions.

    • @karldelavigne8134
      @karldelavigne8134 3 года назад

      @@Nicholas32906 I have known about Green since I was a child and nobody ever talked about his monocle, especially as he was usually seen on stage in character where a monocle was sometimes part of the costume. I am sure that his eyeglass was never meant to draw attention and his talent spoke for itself.

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID 8 месяцев назад

      On the contrary. I wear one and pince-nez. Along with a bow tie and waistcoat. We are not all baseball caps, jeans and t-shirt dummies.

  • @AxelQC
    @AxelQC 3 года назад +5

    She wasn't in a Broadway musical in February 1960, but she opened in December as Guinevere in "Camelot".

  • @kev3d
    @kev3d 9 лет назад +53

    Julie Andrews, what a lady and fox.

  • @wandertree
    @wandertree 3 года назад +4

    Oh my goodness, Julie Andrews is such an intelligent, sensitive beauty.

  • @TheWriterWalker
    @TheWriterWalker 6 лет назад +18

    Kilgallen has brilliant perception.

    • @sdne1959
      @sdne1959 Месяц назад

      .
      At times, it's almost spooky how perceptive she could be (assuming, of course, she (and anybody else on the panel) didn't get any "help" from the producers of this show)........and if you believe in conspiracies, it's that same perceptive 'curiosity' that may have ended up getting her killed......if, in fact, she was.... 🤨
      .

  • @ANTINUTZI
    @ANTINUTZI 10 лет назад +19

    Kudos Forever to Julie for backing up her real-life husband Blake Edwards, by creatively conspiring with him to rip Hollywood up one side and down the other as much as it could ever possibly deserve to be. Their film *S.O.B.* may very well eventually prove to be the Mt. Everest Summit of Satire and Comedic Vindication.

    • @SandySaunders9142
      @SandySaunders9142 7 лет назад

      Thomas Cervasio Touché!

    • @lisahinton9682
      @lisahinton9682 3 года назад +1

      @@SandySaunders9142
      I don't think you're using that word correctly, dear.

  • @joycejean-baptiste4355
    @joycejean-baptiste4355 3 года назад +1

    They even compliment the audience and recognized their contribution. Very polite indeed! Also very true what he said after the intro.

  • @AlexSadof
    @AlexSadof 4 года назад +3

    That monocle is BOSS.

  • @willrothfuss8470
    @willrothfuss8470 7 лет назад +53

    God, I love Julie Andrews. I love Audrey Hepburn too, but not giving Julie Andrews the part in the movie MFL is possibly the greatest travesty in film history. Notice that when they ask her if she had appeared in film, she said no? That's why they gave the part to Audrey- Julie was unknown to most of the American public. Of course, the producers of My Fair Lady had no idea how big a star she would become. But looking at her, she oozes appeal, so I don't know how they could have missed it!

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 7 лет назад +6

      Will Rothfuss
      Audrey Hepburn was one of the biggest stars at that time, and is great in that movie.

    • @paacer
      @paacer 7 лет назад +10

      I think getting the main part in Sound of Music would more then compensate . Saying that I would love to have seen Julie in the stage version of My Fair Lady .

    • @wyatt_kincaid
      @wyatt_kincaid 6 лет назад +4

      Julie already was busy being Mary Poppins while the movie version of My Fair Lady was being filmed

    • @nancysanders2398
      @nancysanders2398 6 лет назад

      Will Rothfuss Yes,I Completely agree with you.Mr.Rothfuss!

    • @Poetic_Justice1962
      @Poetic_Justice1962 5 лет назад

      Imagine telling Audrey Hepburn that her iconic appearance in My Fair Lady was "the greatest travesty in film history"... You'd have to be stupid and rude at the same time... to Audrey Hepburn... which makes it unbearably stupid and rude.

  • @brookehanley3659
    @brookehanley3659 8 лет назад +3

    It's been said before but I really love that Kelloggs is still getting free ad for appearing on this show. Really all the sponsors of the show.