Makes me weepy eyed watching all these old shows with all these great actors and actresses outside of their work and see them as regular folks having fun
Every time I watch something like this, I realize how much I miss the days of great comedy, humor, and real entertainment. Red Skelton was always one of my favorites. He had many talents -- as a clown (see Lois Simmons' excellent comment below), a mime, and he even sang on his show. I'm glad RUclips is here to allow us to relive some of that great entertainment. Thank you for posting this!
JOHN Helfrick...absolutely correct...the caliber of people and show biz media not even the same. Those in the limelight for 2022 have nothing to which others can aspire.
true however watch an episode or two when Fred is on the panel & the contestant is elderly, overweight &/or not the most attractive your opinion may change
Roy and Dale were international stars. For 21 years I lived about 1.5 miles from them in Apple Valley Ca. Where they lived until their passing for about 50 years. Very kind and beloved by everyone who came in contact with them.
Listen to his radio show. The jokes come fast and furious and many are cheesy but the overall effect is pretty funny. The ad libs alone make the show worthwhile.
And even Arlene stood up to shake their hands! Very rarely did either of the ladies on the panel do that, it says a lot about how respected they were. Roy and Dale were legends, and made a difference in countless children's lives (including those with special needs thanks to their book Angel Unaware).
Wonderful mystery guests! Roy Rodgers was amazing. Though I am not a firearms enthusiast, I did happen to watch him on a television show where he did some skeet shooting. Until that time, I had considered him to be a TV cowboy. On this program, he was drawing his pistol from a holster and skeet shooting (obviously not an easy task). He only missed one out of about 12 shots. Roy Rogers was not just a kind man who used his position of popularity to help others, but regarding cowboys, he was the real thing!
And Roy was also known as a singing cowboy. He used to be with Sons of the Pioneers. Saw Roy and Dale in person at show at Indiana State Fair in Indianapolis as a kid.
I had the pleasure of seeing Roy, now years ago, in Victorville. Trigger was there, in his own showcase. Nellybelle was there. Many other things from his show l had seen and loved were there. It was wonderful. Thanks Roy, Mr. Slye, for being there for us. You gave us many beautiful, memorable moments.
May he Rest In Peace! He absolutely was one of the funniest (& such a natural) comedians that ever lived! A amazing man too! May his memory live forever! Amen!♥️
@@brunoantony3218 Fred Allen had a unique style of humor that was widely admired. But not universally -- some people found it irritating, and you represent them. I think most humorists have to deal with that -- some people just won't see them as funny. Lots of people admire Jimmy Durante, for example, but he leaves me cold. But I do find Fred Allen hilarious. If we all liked the same things, it would be a dull world.
Dorothy is a very good player... easy to see why she was a top reporter of the day. She always has a purpose to her questioning... Very penetrating and deliberate. Easily the best player this game ever featured.
Sadly she passed away, shortly after this episode..... barbiturates / alcohol OD........ (** some believe conspiracy theory abt JFK death) she was a good reporter....)
true she was 90% brains, 10% personality but many times her co-panelists set her up & when everyone knew what the line/who the mystery guest was she would pad her time but continuing to ask questions maybe ego trip?
Red Skelton was one of a kind he lived to make people happy Love red Skelton he was the greatest.comic loved his show he was gone to soon good night and may god bless rip
And a pretty good horse that would climb four flights of stairs for any reason other than some outstanding horse training, probably done by someone other than Roy Rogers himself. There were several 'Triggers,' all palominos, each with a specialty--like run fast, do tricks, etc. There was a little bit of phony there, but I still believe that Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were sincerely sweet people. They never stepped out of character.
slaytonp Never anything phony about Roy & Dale. There was only one Trigger who played in the movies. Roy helped a lot with the training. There was Trigger Jr and Little Trigger that travelled with Roy. Didn’t want to risk hurtingTrigger
@@mssuzieq312 That showed Roy and Dale's genuine love for Trigger. I would have loved to have met Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, and Trigger while they were still alive. I know that the original Trigger died in 1965. I think that he was in his 30s. Maybe 35.
I've actually heard that Trigger was so well trained that he could actually "sign" autographs for people (really a rough x-mark, but still). An insanely smart horse, Roy and Dale were lucky to have him.
What a wonderful and funny episode! Like many others I'm truly dismayed that we never got to see Steve Allen's final jaunt with the WML gang, but this great episode nearly makes up for it. Thanks very much for all you do, curating and maintaining this important, intriguing, and entertaining slice of history.
I had to stay with Roy Rodgers when he headlined the last Hero Scholarship Thrill Show before The?JFK Stadium in Philadelphia closed and was demolished and what a nice man he was. The next day he was opening the Roy Rogers restaurant in Deptford N.J. and he invited me their when he found out i lived in the next town over. And we got alot of pictures together and they are one if my great pleasures in photos I have. Roy and Dale were such class acts you never heard any bad stuff about them like you hear from so many other celebrities.
@@karenstrycharz1499 I still can't explain why when he simply read off names and phone numbers, it just got funnier and funnier. There have been many comedians I've heard over the years that I like a lot better, but I doubt that one of them could have made a telephone book side-splitting funny.
@@bskelton8712 There are so few left who are old enough to know what you're saying anymore, you're chances for using that repost must be getting distressingly rare. 😢
I love the way the said good night to each other at the end of the show. Those days are sadly gone. No one does that hardly anymore. If they do, it is very rare. My opinion only.
I remember watching Roy Rogers every Saturday on TV when I was a kid. He and Dale would always sing "Happy Trails to You" during the show's closing credits.
TY for this old show featuring my childhood hero, Roy Rogers❤Watched him & Dale during my young years...wanted a horse like Trigger for my own or a dog like Bullet...sigh😊
Even in the UK the name Roy Rogers was as revered as The Lone Ranger in the 50s/early 60s Instant identification with good Cowboy heroes! We had the annuals and the toy gun outfits and we could go riding off into the sunset in our dreams! Wonderful days!
One can plainly see that looks were not necessarily the main focus like it had become in the 1990s and early 2000s. One can see that presentation and style were very much in vogue. Many of the people in the limelight for 2022 do not even have the look or the style. They have nothing to which youngsters can aspire. Kudos to those in this program who knew how to conduct themselves on national television.
I love these wonderful shows. I was 6 years old when this was broadcast... probably didn't even see it at the time because we didn't have a tv, I don't think. Thank you so much for the uploads. In these troubled times, they are a blessing, and we can remember the times of fun, sophistication, and class. Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were beautiful souls, and so was Red Skelton.
Since Trigger got a mention from the brilliant, beloved Fred Allen, I must do a call out to Buttermilk, Dale's faithful horse. Dale, of course, was the lyricist/composer of "Happy Trails to You," often referred to as the happiest cowboy song ever written. LOL.
I really enjoyed watching Roy Rogers and Dale Evans perform. I also watched Roy Rogers bowl on Celebrity Bowling with Jed Allen as the moderator. Roy Rogers was a superb bowler!! 🎳. He could easily bowl a 200 game if he bowled 🎳 by himself! After the bowling game was over Jed Allen asked Roy if it was true that Trigger was stuffed after he died. Roy said "Yes, and I told Dale after I die, you can stuff me and put me on Trigger." Roy's sense of humor was overlooked and underappreciated.
While Red Skelton's "no" answer to the question "Are you a comedian?" was primarily for comic effect, it was not a totally false answer by him. He preferred to be known as a clown rather than as a comedian, because he felt a clown employed a broader range of talents to touch the audience, using pathos as well as comedy. Clowns were the subject matter of his paintings. When he introduced his character "Freddy the Freeloader" wearing clown makeup, the makeup was inspired by the clown makeup his father had used, helped by his mother's recollections as to how he had done it. For many, calling someone a clown is meant to be derogatory. To Red, it was a compliment.
Excellent observation! He could be a clown, he had his own style of mime, he sometimes even sang on his show. When his son was dying from cancer, he sang a very touching song in his inimitable style (I'm certain it brought tears to the viewers who were familiar with some of his personal challenges). He was one of a kind, and did it all.
Lois Simmons - You are so right. For those of us in the performing arts, a clown carries layers of talent and meaning in all that s/he does. Skelton was superior. What the general public means by the term diva or the term clown is not what a performing artist would quite recognize. Both huge carry depths and breadths.
Is there anyone today who is beloved and revered from "Coast-to-Coast"? Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were role models for my generation. What has happened to us?
Red Skelton had such a hard life, worked so hard....raised enough money to buy a fighter plane for our allies, The Soviet Union in 1943...his biography goes on and on
It is an amazing show.I love the cultivated way of conversation in it.It's a shame,that the society today had not that fine respect that those people had back in those days.It is so warm and kindly.But it's nice to see that it is possible to live.May be it becomes a time that the people realise how good it feels and come back to this kind of respect.It may help to have a better feeling in live.💋😎
Roy Rogers & Dale Evans ~ 'loved from one end of our "Countries" 🇨🇦 to the other' & Red Skelton, the beloved comic entertainer & very talented artist of clowns. Our family loved them all! ❤
I met one of his distant relatives and he sort of resembles him and also has a sense of humor. He said that Red was a distant relative through his mothers side of the family. Loved them both.
Although there were a handful that were even bigger stars (Bob Hope) I personally thought Red Skelton was THE funniest comedic actor that was in films in the 40s. ( Danny Kaye may have had a wider range of skills ...comedy,singing ,dancing, )but for the sheer skill of making people laugh ,I thought Red was the best of the 40s movie stars.
Indeed Roy and Dale were fine folk. In 1948 or 1949 Roy Rogers stopped for gas at a station in our very small rural California town. I was a child in a wheel chair with my parents also getting gas. Mr Rogers spontaneously gave me a large photo of him and personally autographed it on the spot, while chatting with me briefly. He was my idol then so I was one thrilled child. Unfortunately that photo has disappeared amid many many moves.
"When country music performers from Nashville's Grand Ole Opry appeared in concert at Carnegie Hall to benefit New York's Musicians Aid Society in 1961, Kilgallen dismissed them as "hicks from the sticks". In her column she advised that "everyone should leave town. The hillbillies are coming". Patsy Cline, one of the headliners, responded that "Miss Dorothy called us Nashville performers 'the gang from Grand Ole Opry - hicks from the sticks.' And if I have the pleasure of seeing that wicked witch, I'll let her know how proud I am to be a hick from the sticks.""
The announcer blooper at the beginning was funny, saying the panel "was broadcasting to you...." It's obviously something he said all the time for another show. It's easy to press the wrong button in your mind sometimes.
Skelton's response to question "Are you a man" was "I don't think I just returned from Copenhagen" referred to the then current story of Christine Jorgensen, the first sex change operation.
Red Skelton died on September 17, 1997, at the Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, California, at the age of 84, from pneumonia. Red Skelton was an American comedy entertainer who had a net worth of $30 million. Red Skelton was born in Vincennes, Indiana in July 1913.
At the beginning of the show, Fred Allen notes the same thing I mentioned when he had been part of the panel a few weeks earlier: that WML could use the same sign as they did for Steve Allen.
In November, Skelton fell down stairs and injured an ankle, and he nearly died after a "cardiac-asthma" attack on December 30, 1957. He was taken to St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, where, his doctors said, "if there were ten steps to death, Red Skelton had taken nine of them by the time he had arrived". Skelton later said he was working on some notes for television and the next thing he remembered, he was in a hospital bed; he did not know how serious his illness was until he read about it himself in the newspapers. His illness and recovery kept him off the air for a full month; Skelton returned to his television show on January 28, 1958. His young son Richard & Red’s 2nd wife info is below
1:23: "Would you please state in your column if Fred Allen is the father of Steve Allen of What's My Line?" Cut To: Steve Allen: (after Fred's death) "The answer was obviously no, but last night when I heard the sad news, I couldn't have been more depressed if the answer had been yes."
12:51 Dorothy by far the best at playing the game(due to her line of work) but one of many examples where she took the game too seriously with a crass reply
If I'm not mistaken, correctly guessing Red Skelton marks the first and I believe the only time that Fred Allen "ran the table" with a mystery guest, i.e., having the questions begin with him and never passing to another panelist before correctly guessing the MG.
Comments left on prior version of this video: Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago The show before this (sep 19, 1954) was broadcast in color but doesn't exist any more. A color photo of the panel was taken and used on a LP. It was also Steve Allen's last program as a regular panelist. home.comcast.net/~s.astorino/WML.LP.1958.Dot.jpg What's My Line? 10 months ago A pretty terrible loss that this particular show isn't available. I would have liked to have been able to see Steve's send off. Why couldn't it have been the show the week before with Robert Q. sitting in that got lost? ;) Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago +What's My Line? I have understood that you are not a fan of Robert Q. :) I Think he is all right. But as you say, it's a terrible lost that the show is lost. Robert Melson 4 months ago +What's My Line? Hear! Hear! While I came to your channel to watch Fred Allen, I've developed an even greater appreciation for Steve Allen. I really, Really, REALLY appreciate the time and effort you've put into creating and developing this channel. Thank you very much! What's My Line? 4 months ago +Robert Melson My pleasure, Robert-- thanks for the kind comment, and I'm glad you enjoy the videos! David Von Pein 1 year ago (edited) This episode is an absolute treasure. Great fun all around. I love it! 4.bp.blogspot.com/-twmvOdL1AN0/U57FuI1WwVI/AAAAAAAA0_Y/9_GgRbAYkts/s1600/WML-9-26-54.png DVP-Potpourri.blogspot.com/2014/05/whats-my-line-september-26-1954.html TehJew22 5 months ago Thank you for your Price is Right videos of the 1950's and 1960's. :) Joe Postove 1 year ago Hmmmm. Even Fred Allen calls it "Daylight Savings Time" when we all know it is "Daylight Saving Time". No "s" at the end of "Saving". corner moose 3 months ago Concerning Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, I love to see the MG turn and acknowledge the audience as they leave the stage. I think Red Skelton was one of the funniest people in show business. A great ad libber, and when he got to laughing at his own jokes it was very contagious. ("Don't get me laughing, we'll never get out of here!") Denny Law 1 month ago Simply legends in their time as they brought so much happiness for so many yeas and STILL doing that here in 2015 in re-runs..... They don't make them like this anymore. Beautiful!! MattTheSaiyan 4 months ago It has been raining where I live. I like it when it rains, particularly when I'm watching this show. The mix of rain while watching black-and-white images is very atmospheric. Bigstooler0 7 months ago I believe Roy Rogers was one of the nicest human beings ever to grace the planet Earth Donald Kershayn 6 months ago And I believe that you are correct. A nice person and a shrewd businessman. Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago Roy Rogers had a horse named Trigger and a dog named Bullet. BOB ROCK 4 months ago +Johan Bengtsson and you left out a side kick named Pat & a jeep named Nellie Bell for what reason ? balconi71 5 months ago The back and forth between Skelton and Allen was great. Jill Gordon 5 months ago 9:14 "There are swimming pools, John" ;) Can you imagine a person running a pool that's strictly for skinny dipping? Actually...is that a thing nowadays? robert cornish 5 months ago Mrs Rowen was fun.. GodsFavoriteBassPlyr 6 months ago "How's Mr. Rowen?" LOL Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago When Red Skelton says: "- With a voice like this I don't think I've just returned from Copenhagen no." he must have been thinking of Christine Jorgensen who in the early 50's became famous for her sex reassignment surgery. PepsiMama2 11 months ago LOVE Fred Allen... mrpuniverse2 1 year ago Wonder if the panel were aware of the meaning and origin of the term sticky wicket as it is generally related to the sport of cricket that is not generally well known to Americans joed596 9 months ago thanks very much croozer11 10 months ago Loved everything Red Skelton did. A marvelous comedian who always used clean humor to make people laugh. His kind is sorely missed today.
A great many swimming pools were single-sex rather than coed in those days. I can't speak about the dress code for women, but skinny-dipping was common in the men's pools. This was true, for instance, at Stanford University until 1974, when a large coed pool facility opened. I arrived there three years later, but often heard faculty and staff members longing for the old freedom at Encina Pool.
A great many swimming pools were single-sex rather than coed in those days. I can't speak about the dress code for women, but skinny-dipping was common in the men's pools. This was true, for instance, at Stanford University until 1974, when a large coed pool facility opened. I arrived there three years later, but often heard faculty and staff members longing for the old freedom at Encina Pool.
Fred and Red made this episode worth watching. :-)
They're all worth watching😊
These people genuinely had fun doing the show -- and live!
Makes me weepy eyed watching all these old shows with all these great actors and actresses outside of their work and see them as regular folks having fun
I'm there now.
Adored Roy and Dale! Hilarious and so much fun from wonderful and beloved stars! My hero and heroine since I was a child 60 years ago!!!
Every time I watch something like this, I realize how much I miss the days of great comedy, humor, and real entertainment. Red Skelton was always one of my favorites. He had many talents -- as a clown (see Lois Simmons' excellent comment below), a mime, and he even sang on his show. I'm glad RUclips is here to allow us to relive some of that great entertainment. Thank you for posting this!
I whole heartedley agree!! Really REALLY miss the wonderful and wonder-filled times of watching Red Skeleton with my Dad!!!!!!!
I understand he was also a fine artist as well.
You can just feel the class and quality of this show and it's participants.
JOHN Helfrick...absolutely correct...the caliber of people and show biz media not even the same. Those in the limelight for 2022 have nothing to which others can aspire.
And Respect.
And Civility
true however watch an episode or two when Fred is on the panel & the contestant is elderly, overweight &/or not the most attractive your opinion may change
Red Skelton was such a true blue and altogether lovely man.
Roy Rogers made about 200 personal appearances , with Trigger, all over America, every year.....amazing man
Roy and Dale were international stars. For 21 years I lived about 1.5 miles from them in Apple Valley Ca. Where they lived until their passing for about 50 years. Very kind and beloved by everyone who came in contact with them.
I just loved Red Skelton!!! I remember watching him on TV when I was a child, and always adored him! He was so hilarious and sweet!!!
Listen to his radio show. The jokes come fast and furious and many are cheesy but the overall effect is pretty funny. The ad libs alone make the show worthwhile.
Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were two of the very few celebrities who acknowledged the audience as they were leaving.
From some glimpses at the edge of the camera frame, I think that happens more often than is shown.
@@bryanstorm8291I agree! I hv seen a few do this! Dick Van Dyke and Sammy Davis Jr first example…
And even Arlene stood up to shake their hands! Very rarely did either of the ladies on the panel do that, it says a lot about how respected they were. Roy and Dale were legends, and made a difference in countless children's lives (including those with special needs thanks to their book Angel Unaware).
My father took my brother and me to see that rodeo in Madison Square Garden when I was in the third grade in 1954. A great memory!
I was wondering how on earth Red would come up with a voice nobody had ever heard him do before-- but he did! :-)
Absolutely LOVE Roy, Dale, AND Red. Red was such a lovely, kind man.
THE 50's & Roy and Dale.....a very special time.....
Wonderful mystery guests! Roy Rodgers was amazing. Though I am not a firearms enthusiast, I did happen to watch him on a television show where he did some skeet shooting. Until that time, I had considered him to be a TV cowboy. On this program, he was drawing his pistol from a holster and skeet shooting (obviously not an easy task). He only missed one out of about 12 shots. Roy Rogers was not just a kind man who used his position of popularity to help others, but regarding cowboys, he was the real thing!
Yes! He was also a superb bowler! 🎳
And Roy was also known as a singing cowboy. He used to be with Sons of the Pioneers. Saw Roy and Dale in person at show at Indiana State Fair in Indianapolis as a kid.
loved his roast beef sandwiches(even if he nothing to do with creating them)
@@brianoyler4777 And he could not only sing well, he was a phenomenal yodeler. Try to find his "Pecos Bill" or any of a couple dozen others.
I don't think people today are aware of how beloved both mystery guests (Roy/Dale & Red) were in their day.
I had the pleasure of seeing Roy, now years ago, in Victorville. Trigger was there, in his own showcase. Nellybelle was there. Many other things from his show l had seen and loved were there. It was wonderful. Thanks Roy, Mr. Slye, for being there for us. You gave us many beautiful, memorable moments.
May he Rest In Peace! He absolutely was one of the funniest (& such a natural) comedians that ever lived! A amazing man too! May his memory live forever! Amen!♥️
What a great line when Fred Allen said "I know this isn't Trigger (Roy Roger's horse) I would have gotten wind of it." 18:26
Fred Allen was terrific with Red Skelton ... I laughed out loud watching it ...
Fred Allen was incredibly annoying, as usual.
@@brunoantony3218 Fred Allen had a unique style of humor that was widely admired. But not universally -- some people found it irritating, and you represent them. I think most humorists have to deal with that -- some people just won't see them as funny. Lots of people admire Jimmy Durante, for example, but he leaves me cold. But I do find Fred Allen hilarious. If we all liked the same things, it would be a dull world.
That was absolutely classic!! I don't think I've seen a funnier guest/questioning.
@@brunoantony3218 I thought he was delightful. That's what makes horse racing
..
I loved their interaction.
Roy, Dale, Red! Awesome talents, beautiful hearts.
Dorothy is a very good player... easy to see why she was a top reporter of the day. She always has a purpose to her questioning... Very penetrating and deliberate. Easily the best player this game ever featured.
Sadly she passed away, shortly after this episode..... barbiturates / alcohol OD........ (** some believe conspiracy theory abt JFK death) she was a good reporter....)
@@rhondapelletier2141 This episode was from 1954. She passed away in 1965.
@@rhondapelletier2141 Dorothy passed away many years after this episode.
true she was 90% brains, 10% personality but many times her co-panelists set her up & when everyone knew what the line/who the mystery guest was she would pad her time but continuing to ask questions maybe ego trip?
Dorothy was a investigative reporter for years 😊
Love Roy Rogers and Dale Evans And Trigger...Icons indeed, well loved.
Red Skelton was one of a kind he lived to make people happy Love red Skelton he was the greatest.comic loved his show he was gone to soon good night and may god bless rip
My favorite also Lori. Lots of laughs without the F- - - bombs the comedians of today seem to need. Probably just showing my age LOL
I would just die to see this episode clear and in color... to see the color and decoration of Roy and Dale’s outfits!
The previous week’s episode was in color, although it was not preserved
Roy Rogers would lead Trigger up 4 flights of stairs to visit the kids wards in hospitals. Really a generous, compassionate man.
And a pretty good horse that would climb four flights of stairs for any reason other than some outstanding horse training, probably done by someone other than Roy Rogers himself. There were several 'Triggers,' all palominos, each with a specialty--like run fast, do tricks, etc. There was a little bit of phony there, but I still believe that Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were sincerely sweet people. They never stepped out of character.
slaytonp Never anything phony about Roy & Dale. There was only one Trigger who played in the movies. Roy helped a lot with the training. There was Trigger Jr and Little Trigger that travelled with Roy. Didn’t want to risk hurtingTrigger
Zzz
@@mssuzieq312 That showed Roy and Dale's genuine love for Trigger. I would have loved to have met Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, and Trigger while they were still alive. I know that the original Trigger died in 1965. I think that he was in his 30s. Maybe 35.
I've actually heard that Trigger was so well trained that he could actually "sign" autographs for people (really a rough x-mark, but still). An insanely smart horse, Roy and Dale were lucky to have him.
I love watching these shows, takes me back to my happy childhood.
Isn’t Roy Rogers just a gentleman? I like how he lifts his hat in respect.
Yes! I noticed that too.
This show is so awesome. Thank You For Uploading these shows.
I adored each of them... A time that time forgot.
What a wonderful and funny episode! Like many others I'm truly dismayed that we never got to see Steve Allen's final jaunt with the WML gang, but this great episode nearly makes up for it. Thanks very much for all you do, curating and maintaining this important, intriguing, and entertaining slice of history.
Wonderful to see Roy, Dale & Red. Love to see John Daly's reaction. He truly is having lots of fun.
I had to stay with Roy Rodgers when he headlined the last Hero Scholarship Thrill Show before The?JFK Stadium in Philadelphia closed and was demolished and what a nice man he was. The next day he was opening the Roy Rogers restaurant in Deptford N.J. and he invited me their when he found out i lived in the next town over. And we got alot of pictures together and they are one if my great pleasures in photos I have. Roy and Dale were such class acts you never heard any bad stuff about them like you hear from so many other celebrities.
The first challenger, Mrs. Lillian Rowen, was quite lovely with a gorgeous gown.
I also loved her smile !
This was FUN -- one of the best ones
I enjoyed
Thank you so much!🌷
Red Skelton: one of the funniest comedians ever (whatever he called himself)!
I heard him read the Telephone Book once, and damned near split a gut laughing.
@@slaytonp Thanks for sharing!!!!♥️
@@karenstrycharz1499 I still can't explain why when he simply read off names and phone numbers, it just got funnier and funnier. There have been many comedians I've heard over the years that I like a lot better, but I doubt that one of them could have made a telephone book side-splitting funny.
He was my father's and my favorite comedian and when people ask how to spell my name, if they are old enough I say just like Red's LOL
@@bskelton8712 There are so few left who are old enough to know what you're saying anymore, you're chances for using that repost must be getting distressingly rare. 😢
I love the way the said good night to each other at the end of the show. Those days are sadly gone. No one does that hardly anymore. If they do, it is very rare. My opinion only.
I remember watching Roy Rogers every Saturday on TV when I was a kid. He and Dale would always sing "Happy Trails to You" during the show's closing credits.
TY for this old show featuring my childhood hero, Roy Rogers❤Watched him & Dale during my young years...wanted a horse like Trigger for my own or a dog like Bullet...sigh😊
Even in the UK the name Roy Rogers was as revered as The Lone Ranger in the 50s/early 60s Instant identification with good Cowboy heroes! We had the annuals and the toy gun outfits and we could go riding off into the sunset in our dreams! Wonderful days!
How wonderful, so much class elegance and talent from a bygone era. Mores the pity.
Great Show. Miiss Red
One can plainly see that looks were not necessarily the main focus like it had become in the 1990s and early 2000s. One can see that presentation and style were very much in vogue. Many of the people in the limelight for 2022 do not even have the look or the style. They have nothing to which youngsters can aspire. Kudos to those in this program who knew how to conduct themselves on national television.
I love these wonderful shows. I was 6 years old when this was broadcast... probably didn't even see it at the time because we didn't have a tv, I don't think. Thank you so much for the uploads. In these troubled times, they are a blessing, and we can remember the times of fun, sophistication, and class. Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were beautiful souls, and so was Red Skelton.
DITTO!! SO TRUE!!!🤔👍
I met Mr Skelton several years ago when he was displaying one of his art shows on Cape Cod. He was lovely in person.
I loved Red Skelton and Roy and Dale!
Since Trigger got a mention from the brilliant, beloved Fred Allen, I must do a call out to Buttermilk, Dale's faithful horse. Dale, of course, was the lyricist/composer of "Happy Trails to You," often referred to as the happiest cowboy song ever written. LOL.
Fred Allen was sooo unbelievable funny. I fear he's underappreciated.
Can't stand him. I'm on my 2nd watch from the beginning and I'm already fast forwarding through him. I have to do this until March 1956.
I really enjoyed watching Roy Rogers and Dale Evans perform. I also watched Roy Rogers bowl on Celebrity Bowling with Jed Allen as the moderator. Roy Rogers was a superb bowler!! 🎳. He could easily bowl a 200 game if he bowled 🎳 by himself! After the bowling game was over Jed Allen asked Roy if it was true that Trigger was stuffed after he died. Roy said "Yes, and I told Dale after I die, you can stuff me and put me on Trigger." Roy's sense of humor was overlooked and underappreciated.
While Red Skelton's "no" answer to the question "Are you a comedian?" was primarily for comic effect, it was not a totally false answer by him. He preferred to be known as a clown rather than as a comedian, because he felt a clown employed a broader range of talents to touch the audience, using pathos as well as comedy. Clowns were the subject matter of his paintings. When he introduced his character "Freddy the Freeloader" wearing clown makeup, the makeup was inspired by the clown makeup his father had used, helped by his mother's recollections as to how he had done it.
For many, calling someone a clown is meant to be derogatory. To Red, it was a compliment.
Excellent point.
Lois Simmons ~ I love your comment! Very interesting, informative and well written. ❤️
Excellent observation! He could be a clown, he had his own style of mime, he sometimes even sang on his show. When his son was dying from cancer, he sang a very touching song in his inimitable style (I'm certain it brought tears to the viewers who were familiar with some of his personal challenges). He was one of a kind, and did it all.
Lois Simmons - You are so right. For those of us in the performing arts, a clown carries layers of talent and meaning in all that s/he does. Skelton was superior. What the general public means by the term diva or the term clown is not what a performing artist would quite recognize. Both huge carry depths and breadths.
So, Red never knew his father?
Is there anyone today who is beloved and revered from "Coast-to-Coast"? Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were role models for my generation. What has happened to us?
So much fun watching them again
Red Skelton had such a hard life, worked so hard....raised enough money to buy a fighter plane for our allies, The Soviet Union in 1943...his biography goes on and on
Red Skelton is hilarious act.
I got the opportunity to meet Roy Rogers and shake his hand in the early 90s at his museum in Victorville. He remember he was very gracious!
It is an amazing show.I love the cultivated way of conversation in it.It's a shame,that the society today had not that fine respect that those people had back in those days.It is so warm and kindly.But it's nice to see that it is possible to live.May be it becomes a time that the people realise how good it feels and come back to this kind of respect.It may help to have a better feeling in live.💋😎
Red had one of THE greatest smiles
Roy Rogers & Dale Evans ~ 'loved from one end of our "Countries" 🇨🇦 to the other' & Red Skelton, the beloved comic entertainer & very talented artist of clowns. Our family loved them all! ❤
I met one of his distant relatives and he sort of resembles him and also has a sense of humor. He said that Red was a distant relative through his mothers side of the family. Loved them both.
Arlene is so good at the game!
the interaction between fred and red is great
Red was the best. His show was treasured by most and certainly missed. As we say,,the good old days.
Great line by Skelton. "With a voice like this, I don't think I've just returned from Copenhagen" 19:00
Three of the most important people in my childhood.
When Mr. Allen said “Is Fred Allen the father of Steve Allen from Whats My Line?” that had me laughing for some time.
It actually made me emotional since Steve talked about it on the first show after Fred's death.
Although there were a handful that were even bigger stars (Bob Hope) I personally thought Red Skelton was THE funniest comedic actor that was in films in the 40s. ( Danny Kaye may have had a wider range of skills ...comedy,singing ,dancing, )but for the sheer skill of making people laugh ,I thought Red was the best of the 40s movie stars.
Damn would have loved to see the previous week's episode....
Roy and Dale were so cute as contestants. 😆🥰 They were such lovely people. Red was such a sweet man, too.
Indeed Roy and Dale were fine folk. In 1948 or 1949 Roy Rogers stopped for gas at a station in our very small rural California town. I was a child in a wheel chair with my parents also getting gas. Mr Rogers spontaneously gave me a large photo of him and personally autographed it on the spot, while chatting with me briefly. He was my idol then so I was one thrilled child. Unfortunately that photo has disappeared amid many many moves.
I always wanted to dress like Roy and Dale. Lovely people. ❤
All hail the King of the Cowboys!!! Also I want Roy's hat.
I love the word gymnastics they have to do to answer questions. 😆
just loooooove the classiness, the demureness, the beautiful appreciation of life - perfect....
4 days before I was born, can picture my parents and grandparents watching in Dallas
Wouldn’t it have been amazing if the following week they had on Clayton Moore and Jay Silverheels!
"When country music performers from Nashville's Grand Ole Opry appeared in concert at Carnegie Hall to benefit New York's Musicians Aid Society in 1961, Kilgallen dismissed them as "hicks from the sticks". In her column she advised that "everyone should leave town. The hillbillies are coming". Patsy Cline, one of the headliners, responded that "Miss Dorothy called us Nashville performers 'the gang from Grand Ole Opry - hicks from the sticks.' And if I have the pleasure of seeing that wicked witch, I'll let her know how proud I am to be a hick from the sticks.""
J G - Ouch. As much as we love our own Dorothy, she sure could be a snob.
@@lauracollins4195 Now I know why Roy lifted hat for Arlene but not for Dorothy!
God help her if she'd tried that on on Dolly Parton.
Dale Evans was almost crying as John Daily was expressing the love international fans have for her and her husband.
Roy and Dale were the perfect couple.
The announcer blooper at the beginning was funny, saying the panel "was broadcasting to you...." It's obviously something he said all the time for another show. It's easy to press the wrong button in your mind sometimes.
Steven Chappell It was probably because of the color episode the week before. Old script.
I like the new closing credits with the credits having drawn characters in them.
Skelton's response to question "Are you a man" was "I don't think I just returned from Copenhagen" referred to the then current story of Christine Jorgensen, the first sex change operation.
Michael Danello Thanks! I didn't understand the "Copenhagen" remark, but I DO now. :)
Ah, okay -- I was wondering about that.
That was a very risqué answer for that time in television. I’m even surprised it wasn’t bleeped out!
This show aired the day I was born
incredible!! this is amazing.
Nice of them to do it for the occasion!
How do you know, you were only one day old ?
Glenn...you'll always be way older than I am. I was born November 16, 1954
Glenn Bussell Dang you have an excellent memory! From one day old you remember that.
Red Skelton died on September 17, 1997, at the Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, California, at the age of 84, from pneumonia.
Red Skelton was an American comedy entertainer who had a net worth of $30 million. Red Skelton was born in Vincennes, Indiana in July 1913.
Steve Allen mentioned the man who asked if he was Fred Allen's son in the tribute episode to Fred after he passed away.
Roy Rogers was a terrific bowler! He is on a few episodes of Celebrity Bowling, which are available on RUclips.
We went to Victorville to their museum when it was there , we had a nice time
At the beginning of the show, Fred Allen notes the same thing I mentioned when he had been part of the panel a few weeks earlier: that WML could use the same sign as they did for Steve Allen.
When celebrities were dignified - and talented.
it didnt hurt that social media didnt exist & that reporters wouldn't withhold published certain stories
MANAGES TURKISH BATH FOR WOMEN
This was most likely the only episode featuring just ONE non-celebrity guest.
In November, Skelton fell down stairs and injured an ankle, and he nearly died after a "cardiac-asthma" attack on December 30, 1957. He was taken to St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, where, his doctors said, "if there were ten steps to death, Red Skelton had taken nine of them by the time he had arrived". Skelton later said he was working on some notes for television and the next thing he remembered, he was in a hospital bed; he did not know how serious his illness was until he read about it himself in the newspapers. His illness and recovery kept him off the air for a full month; Skelton returned to his television show on January 28, 1958.
His young son Richard & Red’s 2nd wife info is below
As kids,we called him Red Skeleton....:>)
Fred Allen is hilarious.
1:23: "Would you please state in your column if Fred Allen is the father of Steve Allen of What's My Line?"
Cut To:
Steve Allen: (after Fred's death) "The answer was obviously no, but last night when I heard the sad news, I couldn't have been more depressed if the answer had been yes."
12:51 Dorothy by far the best at playing the game(due to her line of work) but one of many examples where she took the game too seriously with a crass reply
If I'm not mistaken, correctly guessing Red Skelton marks the first and I believe the only time that Fred Allen "ran the table" with a mystery guest, i.e., having the questions begin with him and never passing to another panelist before correctly guessing the MG.
Comments left on prior version of this video:
Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago
The show before this (sep 19, 1954) was broadcast in color but doesn't exist any more. A color photo of the panel was taken and used on a LP. It was also Steve Allen's last program as a regular panelist.
home.comcast.net/~s.astorino/WML.LP.1958.Dot.jpg
What's My Line? 10 months ago
A pretty terrible loss that this particular show isn't available. I would have liked to have been able to see Steve's send off. Why couldn't it have been the show the week before with Robert Q. sitting in that got lost? ;)
Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago
+What's My Line? I have understood that you are not a fan of Robert Q. :) I Think he is all right. But as you say, it's a terrible lost that the show is lost.
Robert Melson 4 months ago
+What's My Line? Hear! Hear! While I came to your channel to watch Fred Allen, I've developed an even greater appreciation for Steve Allen. I really, Really, REALLY appreciate the time and effort you've put into creating and developing this channel. Thank you very much!
What's My Line? 4 months ago
+Robert Melson My pleasure, Robert-- thanks for the kind comment, and I'm glad you enjoy the videos!
David Von Pein 1 year ago (edited)
This episode is an absolute treasure. Great fun all around. I love it!
4.bp.blogspot.com/-twmvOdL1AN0/U57FuI1WwVI/AAAAAAAA0_Y/9_GgRbAYkts/s1600/WML-9-26-54.png
DVP-Potpourri.blogspot.com/2014/05/whats-my-line-september-26-1954.html
TehJew22 5 months ago
Thank you for your Price is Right videos of the 1950's and 1960's. :)
Joe Postove 1 year ago
Hmmmm. Even Fred Allen calls it "Daylight Savings Time" when we all know it is "Daylight Saving Time". No "s" at the end of "Saving".
corner moose 3 months ago
Concerning Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, I love to see the MG turn and acknowledge the audience as they leave the stage.
I think Red Skelton was one of the funniest people in show business. A great ad libber, and when he got to laughing at his own jokes it was very contagious. ("Don't get me laughing, we'll never get out of here!")
Denny Law 1 month ago
Simply legends in their time as they brought so much happiness for so many yeas and STILL doing that here in 2015 in re-runs..... They don't make them like this anymore. Beautiful!!
MattTheSaiyan 4 months ago
It has been raining where I live. I like it when it rains, particularly when I'm watching this show. The mix of rain while watching black-and-white images is very atmospheric.
Bigstooler0 7 months ago
I believe Roy Rogers was one of the nicest human beings ever to grace the planet Earth
Donald Kershayn 6 months ago
And I believe that you are correct. A nice person and a shrewd businessman.
Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago
Roy Rogers had a horse named Trigger and a dog named Bullet.
BOB ROCK 4 months ago
+Johan Bengtsson and you left out a side kick named Pat & a jeep named Nellie Bell for what reason ?
balconi71 5 months ago
The back and forth between Skelton and Allen was great.
Jill Gordon 5 months ago
9:14
"There are swimming pools, John" ;)
Can you imagine a person running a pool that's strictly for skinny dipping? Actually...is that a thing nowadays?
robert cornish 5 months ago
Mrs Rowen was fun..
GodsFavoriteBassPlyr 6 months ago
"How's Mr. Rowen?" LOL
Johan Bengtsson 10 months ago
When Red Skelton says: "- With a voice like this I don't think I've just returned from Copenhagen no." he must have been thinking of Christine Jorgensen who in the early 50's became famous for her sex reassignment surgery.
PepsiMama2 11 months ago
LOVE Fred Allen...
mrpuniverse2 1 year ago
Wonder if the panel were aware of the meaning and origin of the term sticky wicket as it is generally related to the sport of cricket that is not generally well known to Americans
joed596 9 months ago
thanks very much
croozer11 10 months ago
Loved everything Red Skelton did. A marvelous comedian who always used clean humor to make people laugh. His kind is sorely missed today.
A great many swimming pools were single-sex rather than coed in those days. I can't speak about the dress code for women, but skinny-dipping was common in the men's pools. This was true, for instance, at Stanford University until 1974, when a large coed pool facility opened. I arrived there three years later, but often heard faculty and staff members longing for the old freedom at Encina Pool.
A great many swimming pools were single-sex rather than coed in those days. I can't speak about the dress code for women, but skinny-dipping was common in the men's pools. This was true, for instance, at Stanford University until 1974, when a large coed pool facility opened. I arrived there three years later, but often heard faculty and staff members longing for the old freedom at Encina Pool.
What's My Line
wow, most amazing in all ways
Roy and Dale did good British accents.
Madam/Lady Turkish Bath Manager resembles Kay Ballard (a bit)..
😊🎨😊😊😊🧸
This is when it was fun to be an American...
@Just a Girl HOOAH!
21:18 I am fairly good with voices, and the word "stolen" gave it to Fred Allen.