Showing posts with label M*A*S*H. Show all posts
Showing posts with label M*A*S*H. Show all posts

Friday, May 19, 2017

TV Guided: M*A*S*H Remembered...





Redartz:  Hello everyone, and welcome to another edition of "TV Guided". For this installment, we will remember one of the most outstanding series ever to appear on broadcast television. M*A*S*H was a rare blend of comedy and drama that really worked, and worked well. The show was popular enough to run for 11 seasons, from 1972 to 1983. Yet it also raked in loads of awards and critical praise from Golden Globes to Emmys to the Peabody Award. And the final episode of the series, broadcast in 1983, remains one of the most-watched television programs of all time. 
 
Mclean Stevenson (Col. Henry Blake)

Set against the backdrop of the Korean War, the show was derived from the theatrical film of the same name, and reflected the anti-war sentiments of the Vietnam era. Yet it was far more than that; the show conveyed many messages and themes over it's lifetime. It played with the medium itself, with such experiments as a black-and-white episode, press interview episode, and many more. The show could be achingly poignant. One such episode was that in which Col. Henry Blake (Mclean Stevenson) was given a festive send off home. The absolute silence in the operating room, after it wasannounced that Blake's plane had been shot down with no survivors, spoke his loss eloquently.




Wayne Rogers (Trapper John) and Alan Alda (Hawkeye Pierce)


M*A*S*H was also, of course, a great source of humor (although I always felt the laugh track was unnecessary and somewhat intrusive). There was Corporal Max Klinger (Jamie Farr) and his eternal schemes to be sent home,  Hawkeye (Alan Alda) with his wisecracks (he seemed to channel a bit of Groucho Marx), Major "Hot Lips" Houlihan (Loretta Swit) and her shaky relationship with Major Frank Burns (Larry Linville). And that's only the tip of the iceberg; M*A*S*H found innumerable ways to find laughs amid the horrors of war. 










Harry Morgan (Col. Potter) and Gary Burghoff (Radar O'Reilly)

Yet he show's greatest strength, in my opinion, was the cast. M*A*S*H was positively blessed with an abundance of talent, from it's first season to the last. Characters came and went; Hawkeye's nemesis Burns was replaced by the patrician Charles Emerson Wincester (David Ogden Stiers). After Col. Blake's death, command went to Col. Sherman Potter (wonderfully played by Harry Morgan).
However, one thing that never changed was the sheer magnitude of talent offered by one of television's greatest ensemble casts. 









Some vintage television programs tend to suffer a bit after the years pass: some seem dated, some appear rather low budget and even cheesy. Some seem oddly naive. M*A*S*H is not one of those. The show still hits you with highs and lows, even thirty (!?!) years after going off the air. I watched a couple episodes just prior to writing this, and the show was as powerful as ever. I don't know if I'd call it the best show in television's long history, but it would surely be a candidate. I will say that M*A*S*H was a part of many 'must see' evenings of television. And that final episode: I still recall watching it among 20 or so fellow students in the lounge at our college photo lab. Now that was event tv.


Early seasons: Larry Linville, Loretta Swit, Alan Alda, Mclean Stevenson, Wayne Rogers, William Christopher, Gary Burghoff, Jamie Farr
Later seasons: Jamie Farr, Loretta Swit, David Ogden Stiers, Harry Morgan, Mike Farrell, Alan Alda, William Christopher





Thursday, February 23, 2017

Riding the Retro Metro: Destination February 23, 1974




Redartz:  All aboard; time's a wastin'! Our Retro Metro is taking us back to Saturday, February 23, 1974. Which, actually, is a fairly portentous time for your humble host: the very month that a young Redartz discovered the wonderful world of comics! Actually, this was a great time to get hooked into pop culture. Let's head back and see why...

As we step off the bus, we pass a movie theatre, showing the film with the top song in the US this week: Barbara Streisand, singing "The Way We Were"



Rounding out the top five:
2.  Terry Jacks- "Seasons in the Sun"
3.  Aretha Franklin- "Until You Come Back to Me"
4.  Jim Stafford- "Spiders and Snakes"
5.  Love Unlimited Orchestra- "Love's Theme" 

My good friend in Middle School, who was instrumental in my new comics addiction, also has got me started listening each week to Casey Kasem and "American Top 40" on the radio. I love it. I also love another song, further down the charts that we talked about in Spanish class: "Eres Tu", by Mocedades.

Tops in the UK:  Mud- "Tiger Feet"
I'm not familiar with this one, Casey hasn't played it yet...

Oh, and hey, it's Saturday again! And there's enough good viewing on the networks this morning to require a couple extra bowls of cereal. I never miss Scooby Doo and his guest stars, but also must catch Emergency Plus 4 , Star Trek and the Addams Family. A very full Saturday schedule!


US Network Television Schedule:

Saturday Morning:
ABC offered Bugs Bunny, Yogi's Gang, Super Friends, The Saturday Superstar Movie, and more
CBS had Flintstone comedy Show, New Scooby Doo Movies, Jeannie, Speed Buggy and more
NBC was showing  The Addams Family, Emergency Plus 4, Star Trek: The Animated Series and more




But wait, what's on tonight? Fear not, let's pull the TV Guide out of my backpack and see...


Prime Time: 

Carol Burnett Show Cast
ABC:  The Partridge Family, ABC Suspense Movie, Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law
CBS:   All in the Family, M*A*S*H, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Bob Newhart Show, The Carol Burnett Show
NBC:  Emergency!, NBC Saturday Night at the Movies






BBC1:  Cilla, The Saturday Thriller: Let's Kill Uncle, News, Election Broadcast
BBC2:  Falstaff, Election Broadcast, The Pallisers









Mary Tyler Moore Show Intro

Although I'm a faithful viewer of "Emergency", that CBS schedule is absolute comedy perfection! I always catch M*A*S*H when "Emergency" is a rerun. And I never fail to tune in Mary, Bob and Carol. Best night on tv all week, in my opinion.

And of course, as we still have some time to kill before turning on the console tv in the living room, let's stop in the local drugstore and check out the spinner racks:













Boy, it's no wonder I've gotten hooked on these comics. How to choose from these, and all the others? Well, that Amazing Spider-Man is already sitting on my shelf at home; it's the very comic  that has just returned me to the Marvel fold. Oh, and I had to grab that Giant Size Super-Stars with the Fantastic Four: what a cover! And they used the old logo, too!

Well, that's about all we have time for on this excursion back in the bronze age'. But don't worry, the Retro Metro will be back before we know it, ready to take us to another dynamite date...


 





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