I saw Gary Lewis in Modesto, California in the early 90’S. He put on a free show and everyone there really enjoyed the the fantastic music that day. He was a real nice guy and sighed autographs for a lot of people too. Thanks Gary Lewis.
Gary I love Save Your Heart for Me, it is one of my all time favorite pop songs. When I hear it , it takes me back to 1965. The words make do nostalgic I usually cry a little bit. It takes me back to a time of a 16 year old boy playing bass guitar in my own rock and roll band. Life was good. Your song made me Miss my girl friend.
WoW😁what a flashback I'm having watching this nostalgic time capsule...in '65 I was 11 years old sporting my first pair of white leather go-go boots while keeping step with the Hullabaloo dancers! Fun times! 😘
Paul Revere Dick (full name) was a clever guy, who parlayed initial Top 40 success into one of the longest running, commercially successful Vegas acts that weaved humor and live music. He understood show business and managed to sustain income for decades.
I saw them in person performing in a Cabaret. While they still had talent, I noticed that Paul Revere himself had turned over the role of lead singer to another member of the group. Maybe he fried his voice somehow. Great entertainment, still.
I love all his hit songs from the 60's. His real backing band on his records was the famous " *Wrecking Crew* " _Snuff Garrett_ produced the group.. The musicians included _Mike Deasy_ and _Tommy Allsup_ on Guitars, _Leon Russell_ on Keyboards, _Joe Osborn_ on Bass, and _Hal Blaine_ on drums. Session singer _Ron Hicklin_ did the basic vocal track. Garrett then added Lewis's voice twice, added some of the Playboys and more of Hicklin. "When I got through, he sounded like _Mario Lanza_ ", Garrett commented. Heres the original line up when they played Live: ↪ *Gary Lewis - Drums and Vocals (born July 31, 1946, New York)* *David Walker - Rhythm Guitar (b. May 12, 1943, Montgomery, Alabama)* *Allan Ramsay - Bass (July 27, 1943 - November 27, 1985; aged 42)* *David Costell - Lead Guitar (born March 15, 1944, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)* *John West - Organ and Cordovox (Electronic Accordion) (Born July 31, 1939, Uhrichsville, Ohio)*
This a great piece of history. Barry McGuire's Eve of Destruction was very controversial for that time. A lot of American boys were serving in Vietnam in 1965 and some radio stations refused to play it. They felt it was an unpatriotic song and subversive. People called it a "beatnik" song and hated it. Mc Guire was singing about the issues of the day , the Vietnam War , the March in Selma , Alabama , turmoil in the Middle East , The Gemini Astronauts spending a few days in space , hating people because of their race or religion , etc. It was very brave of NBC for letting Barry McGuire sing on Hullabaloo. I believe CBS would have banned the song from appearing on it's network. President Lyndon B. Johnson would have called CBS ' s President and accused the network of being unpatriotic. Was Barry McGuire on the Ed Sullivan show? Any way the song is a microcosm of current events in the year of 1965.
& we're all listening to the third take of the song jammed in at the end of a 4 hour session because the producer didn't like the song they were doing, "let's try something else." So Barry pulled this wrinkled up notepaper out of his backpocket, smoothie out on a music stand, ran through it twice and the third time is the charm gazillions hear forever more !
I was too busy playing outside to watch this show, but wow does it take me back! By the following year I was too busy watching Batman and The Green Hornet! Thank you so much for posting this golden treasure!!!!
This is so off the charts cornball. that I'm still watching. I was 7. yrs old back then. My parents didn't watch many shows like this, so I'm still catching up at age 63. Thanks for posting.
I actually remember watching this show. My family was a democracy when it came to choosing what was watched. I had six sisters, 5 were teenagers, needless to say, my brother and I watched a lot of songs and dance shows, this was just one of the many.
Look on the back cover of Gary Lewis and the Playboys, late 1960’s greatest hits album, was arranged by Leon Russell. And all their records were recorded by the wrecking crew, studio musicians. Gary did most of his singing. But on some recordings a studio singer helped out with voice recordings. Ron Hicklin, session singer of the wrecking crew singers sang with Gary on most of their hit songs. It’s on a TH-cam video.
Wow! I was 13 then. No wonder my friend and I took the bus to Cleveland to see Paul Revere and the raiders!!! Her dad had bailed on us firvthe Beatles:( But we took the bus. We were early and saw the Raiders feet practicing behind the curtain!!!! This show was great! Glad you reminded us of it. Thank you!!!
Much of the music from my time was under appreciated by those older or younger. Now here on TH-cam the generations below they’re finding our music and loving it.
These were the times when everything was just about to burst wide open. First the Summer of Love 67, then the tragic events of 68, Woodstock in 69, and Kent State in 70. The calm before the storm.
That was the great Carl Radle on Bass for Gary Lewis, in the early days, before he teamed up with Eric Clapton and was immortalized from the album Derek and the Dominos onward.
What great memories...I was 11 yrs old when this show aired....watched Hullabaloo every week....Jerry Lewis was so handsome and I adored him as a child....Love the opening Beatles song with him and Gary, and when Gary sings "Everybody Loves A Clown" with the little girls, very cute...lol....Thanks so much for posting the whole show !! 👍 💜 💜 💜 : )))))
It's a shame there's not many copies of this show, Shin Dig, an American Bandstand, this was a time of great songs an bands, you could understand the words, an the bands were great, unlike today with the stuff they have now, you can't understand them, they got cuss words, violence . Miss those days.
I was really young but I had a teenage sister. My dad did let me stay up to watch the Beatles on Sullivan. I remember it well because of the screaming girls and me not understanding what was wrong with them lol. Never saw this show that I can recall.
"Eve of Destruction" had just hit Number One that week. Excellent timing. Gary and his group had hit #1 earlier in the year with "This Diamond Ring" while "Everybody Loves a Clown" peaked at #4. Only the Playboys and the Lovin' Spoonful had their first seven Hot 100 releases reach the top 10 during the 1960's. Meanwhile, Paul Revere and the Raiders had hit #11 in '65 with "Just Like Me." So this show was pretty loaded. Even with Goldie Hawn pre-Laugh-In. As for me, I was barely nine months old.
I was just a little teeny bopper when Hullabaloo aired. I used to look forward to it every week. I loved the music of Gary Lewis. I used to dance to it in my bedroom. I also loved seeing Paul Revere and the Raiders. Paul was a local boy who made good from Idaho. I didn't live out here back then but some of my cousins claimed they knew him. Thanks for the memories!
Barry Maguire said everyone was trying to say he was singing a protest song. He said it wasn't sung as a protest, but as a news bulletin. At the time I was16 years-old, and 4 years away from serving in Vietnam with the U.S. Army. Funny thing watching this now at age 74. I remember thinking how old Barry Maguire looked to me when I was 16.
@@sw2442 Yeah, there was no way they would have flown these two across the country to host. Plus, Goldie Hawn would have been a local at the time. So Burbank makes more sense, and may account for this rare color episode surviving.
Just think of this amazing aspect of the power of The Beatles. "Help" came out in 1965, the same year of this broadcast. They are singing the song like it's been out for decades and is a standard. It was likely a current hit.
Great time capsule of the 60's, but when I was a teen a lot of kids actually hated this show. It was equivalent to having your parents show up uninvited to your party and watch them trying to be hip...
You watched "SHINDIG!", I know. Producer Jack Good, unlike Gary Smith, didn't have to depend on "adult" guest hosts and "older singers" to entertain the parents in the living room. He just presented the REAL stars- the people who made the hits- and just let them sing (with Jimmy O'Neill in the background as a nominal host).
Barry I. Grauman shindig has aged better too. You can tell this show is trying to appeal to the parents. I can’t imagine them having James Brown or the Rolling Stones on this show.....way too safe.
Agree, Mitch. You can tell that Jerry was coming up with comedy schticks - like substituting child models instead of same-age models on Gary/Playboys song. That brass "Brat Pack" treatment of "Help!" was cringeworthy today, but was considered "show business-y in 1965.
@@tdoggo7614 Actually the Rolling Stones appeared on the show a few times. There's TH-cam videos of their performance of "Get Off Of My Cloud" on the show
I didn't realize how handsome Jerry lewis was until I met him in person in Cleveland at the keg& quarters after he did his gig he was staying there he was appearing at some place in cle I was so excited to see him I always loved him since I was a little girl I was a teen when I met him .beautiful memories 🥰💋❣💖💞
"Eve of Destruction " was written by P.F. Sloan & Steve Barri. They also wrote Johnny Rivers hit "Secret Agent Man" They also wrote The Grass Roots first hit "Where Were You When I Needed You " among others.
I was thinking the same thing. I wonder what Jerry's relationship with his father Danny was. It could be that Jerry treated his kids like his dad treated him?
@@philiphoward1731 Sadly, audio and video tape sticks to itself over time. There is a work-around that involves baking in an over, but, there are no guarantees.
I met Barry McGuire in person at the Calvary Chapel here in Hamilton, MT just before he did his performance on one of his Christian tours back in 2004. I remember back when Barry was the front-man for The New Christie Minstrels with their top folk-pop hit, "Green Green" in 1963 before he pursued his solo career, topping the charts with his signature 1965 folk-rock standard, "Eve Of Destruction" (written by the late P.F. Sloan), and shortly thereafter, covered by The Turtles. Gary Lewis & The Playboys did a nice job covering "It Ain't Me Babe", a folk-pop standard first recorded by Bob Dylan and covered by The Turtles (which became their first hit single in 1965).
Great show. Chad and Jeremy did a lovely, haunting version of "Before and After," written and arranged by Van McCoy (of "Do the Hustle" fame), who was at that time a Columbia staff writer.
Timing is everything! WB probably released her records the same time that other labels released their established big sellers, like Capitol with the Beatles. So her records just couldn’t compete.
Joanie was a great jazz/standards/Latin singer who was (wrongly) marketed as a teen queen by Warners. Her only real hit, "Johnny Get Angry" ('62), was a teen throwaway. She later made a great album of bossa nova standards (I love Jobim!), At the time of her hit, Warners made most of its record dough on comedy albums: Newhart, later on Cosby (when he was young and clean), and my all-time favorite, Allan Sherman. Except for the Everlys, they weren't Top 40-oriented yet. Peter, Paul and Mary (my folkie favorites) were on it as well.
I remember Joanie Sommers from numerous appearances on the game show Name That Tune. She is the ONLY performer I remember from that show, so she must have made a big impression on me. Yes, it seems like Sommers should have had a bigger career. Her most noteworthy moment was probably singing the jingle in a Pepsi commercial. As her pop music career went, she had only one Top 40 hit (although the song got to #7) with "Johnny Get Angry." Now there's a tune that wouldn't fly today. The Me Too Movement would be all over those lyrics, where she is pushing her boyfriend to verbally abuse her - be more of a man, she says!
Gracias por subirlo.! Video de calidad y de gran valor. Me encanta lo bello de esa época, y la musica de Gary muy alegre y bonita. Jerry cantando junto a su hijo, por tv, muy emocionante!
This episode of the year, 1965 shows comedian, Jerry Lewis at his height during the 1960's. Several funny movies he made during that time. One his his best was during that year of '65: "The Family Jewels". He also, I think, started his famous annual MS ( Muscular Dystrophy) Labor Day weekend telethon. As to his talented musical son, Gary...I loved the group's tunes. One of my favorites: "She's Just My Style" still sets my mind to thinking of my 1966 big-time crush, Loretta. Joannie Sommers...what a voice and good looking gal back then. The " Johnny Gets Angry" lady, I think, has passed on sometime ago. So is Barry McQuire...gone. Such a powerful big hit he did for the world back then: "Eve of Destruction". "This whole big world is just too frustratin' " Yep! The stars of that time doing some of the big hits of up to that time...kinda fun (?). If it wasn't for the stars popularly known back then to the "young at heart"...it would make me cringe with: "Please! Stop!" What's that tune Jerry sang about 75% of the way through this show? I like it!
1st time I ever heard your music was in 1966 at the teen center in Rockland, Michigan. Gary Lewis and the Playboys... Thought for sure my dad would never let me go back if I told him the name of your group haha. The olden days. I am blessed to say that I'm a cousin of yours through the Brodskys.
Gary looked like his mother Patti. He took the height and the gawkiness from Jerry. They butchered “Help” but it was nice seeing them sing that together!
Go-Go boots were present, but no miniskirts yet. They had been introduced to America only a few weeks earlier, on September 1, 1965, at Mary Quant's Youthquake fashion show in New York.
I saw Gary Lewis in Modesto, California in the early 90’S. He put on a free show and everyone there really enjoyed the the fantastic music that day. He was a real nice guy and sighed autographs for a lot of people too. Thanks Gary Lewis.
Gary I love Save Your Heart for Me, it is one of my all time favorite pop songs. When I hear it , it takes me back to 1965. The words make do nostalgic I usually cry a little bit. It takes me back to a time of a 16 year old boy playing bass guitar in my own rock and roll band. Life was good. Your song made me
Miss my girl friend.
WoW😁what a flashback I'm having watching this nostalgic time capsule...in '65 I was 11 years old sporting my first pair of white leather go-go boots while keeping step with the Hullabaloo dancers! Fun times! 😘
Paul Revere and the Raiders were very underrated. It was a great band.
100% agreed. I liked all of their songs as well as Mark Lindsay’s solo material.
Yeah, but that was not one of their better songs.
Paul Revere Dick (full name) was a clever guy, who parlayed initial Top 40 success into one of the longest running, commercially successful Vegas acts that weaved humor and live music. He understood show business and managed to sustain income for decades.
But, this was earlier in their career. And they did a great performance. They really have the crowd going.
I saw them in person performing in a Cabaret. While they still had talent, I noticed that Paul Revere himself had turned over the role of lead singer to another member of the group. Maybe he fried his voice somehow.
Great entertainment, still.
I love Gary Lewis and the Playboy's they are my favorite performer God bless you all Gary Lewis
Let us all thank Garry Lewis for serving our country!
I know he was in Vietnam !
US Army 🇺🇸
This is the first time I have ever seen this. Oh what a discovery!!! My birth year. 1965. Oh innocent times were! I wish I had a time machine.......
Gary Lewis, one of the most underrated singers from the sixties
Great Talent!
I love all his hit songs from the 60's. His real backing band on his records was the famous " *Wrecking Crew* " _Snuff Garrett_ produced the group.. The musicians included _Mike Deasy_ and _Tommy Allsup_ on Guitars, _Leon Russell_ on Keyboards, _Joe Osborn_ on Bass, and _Hal Blaine_ on drums. Session singer _Ron Hicklin_ did the basic vocal track. Garrett then added Lewis's voice twice, added some of the Playboys and more of Hicklin. "When I got through, he sounded like _Mario Lanza_ ", Garrett commented. Heres the original line up when they played Live: ↪
*Gary Lewis - Drums and Vocals (born July 31, 1946, New York)*
*David Walker - Rhythm Guitar (b. May 12, 1943, Montgomery, Alabama)*
*Allan Ramsay - Bass (July 27, 1943 - November 27, 1985; aged 42)*
*David Costell - Lead Guitar (born March 15, 1944, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)*
*John West - Organ and Cordovox (Electronic Accordion) (Born July 31, 1939, Uhrichsville, Ohio)*
and he should be. Can't sing
He got overshadowed by The Beach Boys and The Beatles.
Some good songs, but was never a good singer. All studio effects.
This a great piece of history. Barry McGuire's Eve of Destruction was very controversial for that time. A lot of American boys were serving in Vietnam in 1965 and some radio stations refused to play it. They felt it was an unpatriotic song and subversive. People called it a "beatnik" song and hated it. Mc Guire was singing about the issues of the day , the Vietnam War , the March in Selma , Alabama , turmoil in the Middle East , The Gemini Astronauts spending a few days in space , hating people because of their race or religion , etc. It was very brave of NBC for letting Barry McGuire sing on Hullabaloo. I believe CBS would have banned the song from appearing on it's network. President Lyndon B. Johnson would have called CBS ' s President and accused the network of being unpatriotic. Was Barry McGuire on the Ed Sullivan show? Any way the song is a microcosm of current events in the year of 1965.
Yep and if the future generations want to know what the 1960s were really like, this song pretty much sums it all up
@@joejones5653 👍
He was definitely a brave soul and far ahead of his time.
& we're all listening to the third take of the song jammed in at the end of a 4 hour session because the producer didn't like the song they were doing, "let's try something else."
So Barry pulled this wrinkled up notepaper out of his backpocket, smoothie out on a music stand, ran through it twice and the third time is the charm gazillions hear forever more !
It was the 60s
I forgot what a good singer and dancerJerry Lewis was as well as a comedian, but Gary Lewis was really very talented as a singer
I agree with you, and also a fine drummer.
OMG this show was as white as Lawrence Welk!!
I. A'm Sooooooooo. Old....... 😅
I was too busy playing outside to watch this show, but wow does it take me back! By the following year I was too busy watching Batman and The Green Hornet! Thank you so much for posting this golden treasure!!!!
Gary is 74 now. 75 on July 31. So he was 19 when he appeared on this show with his dad.
This is so off the charts cornball. that I'm still watching. I was 7. yrs old back then. My parents didn't watch many shows like this, so I'm still catching up at age 63. Thanks for posting.
I'm grateful to have experienced these times first hand growing up
in the sixties. May you live in interesting times!
I actually remember watching this show. My family was a democracy when it came to choosing what was watched. I had six sisters, 5 were teenagers, needless to say, my brother and I watched a lot of songs and dance shows, this was just one of the many.
I've been an oldies fan for decades, but before this, I never knew that Gary Lewis was Jerry Lewis' son.
Look on the back cover of Gary Lewis and the Playboys, late 1960’s greatest hits album, was arranged by Leon Russell. And all their records were recorded by the wrecking crew, studio musicians. Gary did most of his singing. But on some recordings a studio singer helped out with voice recordings. Ron Hicklin, session singer of the wrecking crew singers sang with Gary on most of their hit songs. It’s on a TH-cam video.
The first concert I ever went to was Gary Lewis and The Playboys and Buffalo Springfield.
What year was that?
That's a very strange pairing ... but I wish I had been there for it!
Wow! I was 13 then. No wonder my friend and I took the bus to Cleveland to see Paul Revere and the raiders!!!
Her dad had bailed on us firvthe Beatles:(
But we took the bus. We were early and saw the Raiders feet practicing behind the curtain!!!!
This show was great! Glad you reminded us of it. Thank you!!!
Much of the music from my time was under appreciated by those older or younger. Now here on TH-cam the generations below they’re finding our music and loving it.
Ah, the music I grew up on. Being able to think for yourself helped put things in perspective.
These were the times when everything was just about to
burst wide open. First the Summer of Love 67, then the
tragic events of 68, Woodstock in
69, and Kent State in 70. The calm
before the storm.
That was the great Carl Radle on Bass for Gary Lewis, in the early days, before he teamed up with Eric Clapton and was immortalized from the album Derek and the Dominos onward.
What great memories...I was 11 yrs old when this show aired....watched Hullabaloo every week....Jerry Lewis was so handsome and I adored him as a child....Love the opening Beatles song with him and Gary, and when Gary sings "Everybody Loves A Clown" with the little girls, very cute...lol....Thanks so much for posting the whole show !! 👍 💜 💜 💜 : )))))
It's a shame there's not many copies of this show, Shin Dig, an American Bandstand, this was a time of great songs an bands, you could understand the words, an the bands were great, unlike today with the stuff they have now, you can't understand them, they got cuss words, violence . Miss those days.
This is 60's great. Guess my parents made me go to bed early when this was on 54 years ago!
Wow I was 11 and never missed this
It was on Mondays at 7:30pm(et).
I was really young but I had a teenage sister. My dad did let me stay up to watch the Beatles on Sullivan. I remember it well because of the screaming girls and me not understanding what was wrong with them lol. Never saw this show that I can recall.
I’d say August or September 1965 as “Eve of Destruction” was number one in September 1965. Thanks so much for sharing this with us in “living color” 👍
"Eve of Destruction" had just hit Number One that week. Excellent timing. Gary and his group had hit #1 earlier in the year with "This Diamond Ring" while "Everybody Loves a Clown" peaked at #4. Only the Playboys and the Lovin' Spoonful had their first seven Hot 100 releases reach the top 10 during the 1960's. Meanwhile, Paul Revere and the Raiders had hit #11 in '65 with "Just Like Me."
So this show was pretty loaded. Even with Goldie Hawn pre-Laugh-In. As for me, I was barely nine months old.
Eve of Destruction threw a wet towel on the show. Would've been more appropriate on the Smother's Brothers.
Good info! I had just turned 2. Sad I never saw this show in reruns all these years. Thank God for TH-cam!!
Awww those little girls were so cute especially the little one on the swings that was singing along
Still love Jerry and Gary in 2018, and Barry McGuire too. Wow!...Barry McGuire and his "Cosmic Cowboy" song. Just wonderful!
I was just a little teeny bopper when Hullabaloo aired. I used to look forward to it every week. I loved the music of Gary Lewis. I used to dance to it in my bedroom. I also loved seeing Paul Revere and the Raiders. Paul was a local boy who made good from Idaho. I didn't live out here back then but some of my cousins claimed they knew him. Thanks for the memories!
Mark was from Idaho too! Wasn't he a dreamboat?
I saw Gary Lewis in 1988 for a free concert in Utica, NY great performer he is
Barry Maguire said everyone was trying to say he was singing a protest song. He said it wasn't sung as a protest, but as a news bulletin. At the time I was16 years-old, and 4 years away from serving in Vietnam with the U.S. Army. Funny thing watching this now at age 74. I remember thinking how old Barry Maguire looked to me when I was 16.
This gets me pumped for "Once upon a time in Hollywood" !!
Hullabaloo was broadcast from NYC!
@@jimm6095 Partly...they also taped some episodes in Burbank too...
@@sw2442 Yeah, there was no way they would have flown these two across the country to host. Plus, Goldie Hawn would have been a local at the time. So Burbank makes more sense, and may account for this rare color episode surviving.
Barry was so right on and on and on right up to today.
I grew up watching Hullabaloo and it takes me back to my adolescence. So happy to have TH-cam so that I can enjoy watching the old episodes.
Jerry was 39 and Gary was 20 here. I was 15.... I always enjoyed them both.
Me too.
I DID NOT KNOW HE WAS JERRY LEWIS SON!!! I HAVE LOVED THIS SONG FOR YEARS!!!!
I didn't either.......after all these years !
@Lisa Guy fun fact in the movie “Rockabye my baby.” (1958) Jerry’s son played as a younger version of Jerry Lewis’ character.
Barry shows the anguish as he sings this incredible but possible prophetic song
I always loved Jerry Lewis. I guess I always will.
Paul Revere and the Raiders soo groovy cool boss 😍
Just think of this amazing aspect of the power of The Beatles. "Help" came out in 1965, the same year of this broadcast. They are singing the song like it's been out for decades and is a standard. It was likely a current hit.
"Help" was already the #1 song in the U.S. at the time this was taped {"Billboard Top 100" Chart, September 18, 1965}.
You can see Jerry checking the lyrics on the cue cards too
The world jumps on the hit of the time pretty quickly...unless that was rare in the 60s.
I think they'd usually perform the newest hits on the show
The little girls are probably collecting social security right now.
I love you KRLA - The Heart & Soul of Rock & Roll. You introduced me to oldies when I was a kid and I've loved it ever since!
Hearing Barry McGuire live is great.
I remember this show. Brings back memories.
Barry McGuire was amazing here. He sang " Eve " live over a backing track. Powerful song for sure.
+wayofthinkin Agree, no limp syncing.
Eve of Destruction was written with so much passion and truth. Barry McGuire is songwriter extraordinary talent.
Agree great job by him singing it live.
His additional words proves it’s live.
And the words of the song still apply today.
This was too awesome 😎. Just, too awesome.
I met Gary lewis in Dallas in 1969. Nice guys.
Barry did it right. No lip synching. Still powerful.
This show and episode takes on a whole different perspective; 58 years later....
I love the Gary and Jerry’s dance routine at the beginning of the show.
Love music of the 60S🎸🎵
Great time capsule of the 60's, but when I was a teen a lot of kids actually hated this show. It was equivalent to having your parents show up uninvited to your party and watch them trying to be hip...
You watched "SHINDIG!", I know. Producer Jack Good, unlike Gary Smith, didn't have to depend on "adult" guest hosts and "older singers" to entertain the parents in the living room. He just presented the REAL stars- the people who made the hits- and just let them sing (with Jimmy O'Neill in the background as a nominal host).
Barry I. Grauman shindig has aged better too. You can tell this show is trying to appeal to the parents. I can’t imagine them having James Brown or the Rolling Stones on this show.....way too safe.
Agree, Mitch. You can tell that Jerry was coming up with comedy schticks - like substituting child models instead of same-age models on Gary/Playboys song. That brass "Brat Pack" treatment of "Help!" was cringeworthy today, but was considered "show business-y in 1965.
Lawrence Welk is better , imo
@@tdoggo7614 Actually the Rolling Stones appeared on the show a few times. There's TH-cam videos of their performance of "Get Off Of My Cloud" on the show
I used to watch Paul Revere and the Raiders 1964 where the action is
This is brilliant
i always heard the song ( everybody loves a clown) but i never knew who did it. now i do...thanks.
And it sounded better than I'd ever listened, perhaps seeing this live, capsule
Great show ! I had a crush on Joanie Summers. Always loved Hullabaloo.
I didn't realize how handsome Jerry lewis was until I met him in person in Cleveland at the keg& quarters after he did his gig he was staying there he was appearing at some place in cle I was so excited to see him I always loved him since I was a little girl I was a teen when I met him .beautiful memories 🥰💋❣💖💞
Another classic video from the fabulous sixties! Jerry's singing was surprisingly effective here.
"Eve of Destruction " was written by P.F. Sloan & Steve Barri. They also wrote Johnny Rivers hit "Secret Agent Man" They also wrote The Grass Roots first hit "Where Were You When I Needed You " among others.
I don't get a warm fuzzy feeling with Jerry Lewis and his son, Gary. Never cared for Jerry Lewis. But I love Gary Lewis and the Playboys!
they look so great together; it is so sad they were so unhappy with each other
I was thinking the same thing. I wonder what Jerry's relationship with his father Danny was. It could be that Jerry treated his kids like his dad treated him?
Unless you know them personally how would you know that Because the tabloid says so?
I wanted white GO-GO boots I was in fourth grade and got them for my birthday. It was one of those things you had to have when your a young girl.
Everybody was younger then. ( Brilliant comment of the day).
Just love Joannie Sommers...so beautiful.
People loved each other back then.
Barry Maguire's hair style was 10-15 years ahead of its time. Looking like he could have been in a Chips episode.
He definitely has a roddy piper look about him.
One of the few surviving color videotapes of the show.
Yes. What a sin as all we have now are horrendous black and white kinascopes. The original 2 inch videos were beautiful!
It’s too bad nobody took better care of these videos it’s really a tragedy
@@philiphoward1731 Sadly, audio and video tape sticks to itself over time. There is a work-around that involves baking in an over, but, there are no guarantees.
I met Barry McGuire in person at the Calvary Chapel
here in Hamilton, MT just before he did his performance
on one of his Christian tours back in 2004.
I remember back when Barry was the front-man
for The New Christie Minstrels with their top folk-pop hit,
"Green Green" in 1963 before he pursued his solo career,
topping the charts with his signature 1965 folk-rock standard,
"Eve Of Destruction" (written by the late P.F. Sloan), and shortly
thereafter, covered by The Turtles.
Gary Lewis & The Playboys did a nice job covering
"It Ain't Me Babe", a folk-pop standard first recorded by Bob Dylan
and covered by The Turtles (which became their first hit single in 1965).
Great show. Chad and Jeremy did a lovely, haunting version of "Before and After," written and arranged by Van McCoy (of "Do the Hustle" fame), who was at that time a Columbia staff writer.
Joannie Sommers: such a class act...I wonder why Warner Brothers could never provide hits for her...Beautiful voice....Beautiful lady.
Timing is everything! WB probably released her records the same time that other labels released their established big sellers, like Capitol with the Beatles. So her records just couldn’t compete.
Joanie was a great jazz/standards/Latin singer who was (wrongly) marketed as a teen queen by Warners. Her only real hit, "Johnny Get Angry" ('62), was a teen throwaway. She later made a great album of bossa nova standards (I love Jobim!), At the time of her hit, Warners made most of its record dough on comedy albums: Newhart, later on Cosby (when he was young and clean), and my all-time favorite, Allan Sherman. Except for the Everlys, they weren't Top 40-oriented yet. Peter, Paul and Mary (my folkie favorites) were on it as well.
Johnny Get Angry-Joannie Sommers 1962 Position #7 Was on Billboard for 11 weeks!!!
I remember Joanie Sommers from numerous appearances on the game show Name That Tune. She is the ONLY performer I remember from that show, so she must have made a big impression on me.
Yes, it seems like Sommers should have had a bigger career. Her most noteworthy moment was probably singing the jingle in a Pepsi commercial. As her pop music career went, she had only one Top 40 hit (although the song got to #7) with "Johnny Get Angry." Now there's a tune that wouldn't fly today. The Me Too Movement would be all over those lyrics, where she is pushing her boyfriend to verbally abuse her - be more of a man, she says!
Gracias por subirlo.!
Video de calidad y de gran valor.
Me encanta lo bello de esa época, y la musica de Gary muy alegre y bonita.
Jerry cantando junto a su hijo, por tv, muy emocionante!
Jerry and son are great here. Got to see Gary and Lou Christie in LA at the Shrine .
What a cute show thanks for posting
My favorite show when I was a teenager.
Eve of Destruction, greatest protest song ever written, still relevant.
Thomas Timlin protesters are all bitching and no solutions.
Sad he LIPPED it.
We should be singing it now.
@@larryhinze8482
Singing the song live over a backing track
This episode of the year, 1965 shows comedian, Jerry Lewis at his height during the 1960's. Several funny movies he made during that time. One his his best was during that year of '65: "The Family Jewels". He also, I think, started his famous annual MS ( Muscular Dystrophy) Labor Day weekend telethon.
As to his talented musical son, Gary...I loved the group's tunes. One of my favorites: "She's Just My Style" still sets my mind to thinking of my 1966 big-time crush, Loretta.
Joannie Sommers...what a voice and good looking gal back then. The " Johnny Gets Angry" lady, I think, has passed on sometime ago. So is Barry McQuire...gone. Such a powerful big hit he did for the world back then: "Eve of Destruction". "This whole big world is just too frustratin' " Yep!
The stars of that time doing some of the big hits of up to that time...kinda fun (?). If it wasn't for the stars popularly known back then to the "young at heart"...it would make me cringe with: "Please! Stop!"
What's that tune Jerry sang about 75% of the way through this show? I like it!
Hullabaloo was a distant second to Shindig, as I remember. But this is still very cool to see.
Saw Gary Lewis and the playboys at Atlantic city steel pier summer 1965 a month or two before I watched this
That Barry Maguire song is just as timely today as it was then. Someone should do a modern version of Eve of Destruction.
I enjoyed every minute. ❤
Great video! I haven’t seen this one before! Thank you for sharing!😊
He should’ve partnered with his son. Gary understood his father’s humor, he sang, and he had that Dean assuredness.
You can see the family resemblance between Jerry and Gray. In every way. Loved seeing father and son singing a classic together..
They have similar speaking voice but Jerry is much more handsome than Gary.
Look at how Jerry is sneering and making fun of the song.
Las bailarinas y bailarines eran extraordinarios bailando, me encantaban y me siguen encantando. puro a GO GO.
How can you not like Jerry Lewis. Seems like such a warm wonderful fun person.
How can you not LOVE Jerry Lewis?!? I've adored him for 60 years! 🥰
great camera work, you never see performers like this any more.
Summer time in Fayetteville NC! 65 to 74.
So were they related
Loved watching anything that had Jerry Lewis ❤❤
They do NOT have music like this anymore!!
Times have changed and people taste have changed.
OMG, I was 13 when this aired!!
Damn you're OLD... I was 12 lol :o)
Lovely rare souvenir of history!!!!
1st time I ever heard your music was in 1966 at the teen center in Rockland, Michigan. Gary Lewis and the Playboys... Thought for sure my dad would never let me go back if I told him the name of your group haha. The olden days. I am blessed to say that I'm a cousin of yours through the Brodskys.
I was a Hullabaloo girl in 1967. Our skirts were much shorter.
Eve of destruction, sadly is timeless and as relevant today as it was then!
I was 9 when this one came out, wow long time ago!
Gary and Jerry were too cute !!! 😃❤️
Gary looked like his mother Patti. He took the height and the gawkiness from Jerry. They butchered “Help” but it was nice seeing them sing that together!
I don't think "Help" sounds that bad
@@elliestar88 It's bad :-D
Yeah; they needed 'help', singing that song....
Garry is so cute, and a great voice.
He was always overdubbed by Ron Hicklin...
This vid is fantastic ! Jerry Lewis is great and so is his young son also a real talent.... Jerry is very good looking ..
Go-Go boots were present, but no miniskirts yet. They had been introduced to America only a few weeks earlier, on September 1, 1965, at Mary Quant's Youthquake fashion show in New York.
I did not know Jerry Lewis had a son who was also a signer and on TV and I grew up watching Dean and Martin Movies ..Wow..Xoxo