Who doesn't just adore Roy Bolger? I loved his dance moves, and he was fantastic in the Wizard of Oz. Thank you for airing this, and I thoroughly enjoyed him dancing his way off the program!
It is so restful and peaceful to watch these programs. No cursing no vulgarity. Ladies and gentleman. Class and manners. It seems like I am watching them in real time, and not from 60 years ago. Like Arlene and Dorothy are still with us. Or so I wish.
I truly agree with you. I love the way they bow to each other when they are introduced and calling each other when it is appropriate Miss or Mr. I love the formal clothes for men and women. I wish I had a job in which I could wear evening clothes every time I worked. And it is peaceful.
I saw Ray Bolger perform onstage at the Sands Hotel when I was about nine-years old! I so remember the audience clapping and appreciating his moves from 'The Wizard of Oz'. Very well-loved star.
Gerard Marenghi (January 24, 1920 - May 24, 2018), known as Jerry Maren, was an American actor who played a Munchkin member of the Lollipop Guild in the 1939 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film, The Wizard of Oz.
@@Camop-iz9kt He Also made a memorable appearance on Little House on the Prairie with Eileen Heckart. Michael was always able to sign on the best talents in the Biz.
There are videos and photos of Johnny Carson playing the drum set. Both my siblings were drummers and it was second nature to drum on and or with anything. Johnny and his pencil are classic drummer moves.
What a time capsule. We are so lucky to have so many of these wonderful shows preserved. Just as a historical note, "The Wedding" that was referred to several times was the Wedding of Rainier III, Prince of Monaco, and Grace Kelly, in April, 1956.
Amen to that ! I love these bodacious "blasts from the past" ! Good clean fun ! A nice change from the large amount of vulgarity we see in so many of today's programs.
@@jubalcalif9100 I agree. There's nothing like the great stuff many of us grew up watching. Shows often had good morals like decency, love, and neighborly kindness. No longer the case.
I am only 58 years old but it seems I must have traveled through a time machine in that I have once had the great pleasure of meeting Ray bolger. He was the Grand Marshal at, of all things, the Temple City Camellia parade Festival in the late 70s in Los angeles. We chatted for a bit and I shook hands with him. What a pleasure that was to meet him. He was such a friendly man.
She was an old school newspaper reporter with Broadway as her beat. It was when she stepped out of that box, that her life changed, and not for the better.
Another fun episode ! What a treat especially to see the late great Mr Bolger dance at the end ! How ridiculous that back then they weren't allowed to even mention the name of other television networks ! Were they THAT afraid of the competition ! Silly rule ! But THANKS for sharing these wonderful "blasts from the past" with us ! CHEERS !! :-)
They technically weren't allowed but John often broke that rule - he'd say something like the mystery guest "has a new program on another network whose name we can't mention because it's NBC".
Nothing silly about it at all.. If a viewer had just cut the TV on and it was already on the local CBS affiliate's channel and an NBC guy came on WML and DALY said that the guest had a show with NBC, and the viewer suddenly remembered that they were going to watch something on NBC, the odds increase that the channel will get changed to NBC, than it would have been kept on CBS if only "another network" was used in the guest's description. That is absolutely indisputable. There were only three or four major broadcast nets then- NBC, CBS, ABC AND DUMONT(PBS came on in 1959 and only to limited regions of the country, ABC had only popped up in 1953) with DUMONT folding in 1957.. People did not have 500 choices back then, precious few had TV remotes. It was serious business then to ensure viewers were not going to "TOUCH THAT DIAL." Ad revenue dollars being sought then were part of a pitched battle. Its why with few exceptions, shows were not given a long time to develop audiences. Secondly, ad-revs were compared to the inflationary cost of living then, much higher in 1956.. There were, compared to the general population then and the amount of TV sets' owners(most folks who owned them had only one) back then, huge audiences with BIG DOLLARS fought for between the 3 big networks.. Audiences tallied up to 60 million viewers possibly... NO, they did not want anything making you "TOUCH THAT DIAL." It was a different world back then. A celeb in 1956 was not going to be able to plug a movie on a TV talk show like TONITE with STEVE ALLEN. TV AND MOVIES were competing for eyes and ears and for word of mouth. Twas very different then.. Twas totally different.
He sure was. I haven't heard/seen much of him outside of Wizard of Oz (of course), but I do have one episode of the radio series "The Big Show" that guested on, and he was delightful. He sang a sort of audience-participation number version of "Once in Love with Amy", which I take it was something of a signature tune for him? That's the sense I got from the audience response when he started singing it.
Rick, I'm beginning to think youtube hates you for some some reason. This must be the 5th time one of your perfectly welcome comments got flagged as spam, and I've told you that I added you to the list of pre-approved users, which is supposed to prevent this from ever happening again. Clearly it doesn't work at all! And your comment got flagged after I already replied to it, no less!
I'm not surprised you're not getting any indication on your own that this has been happening. . . Given how poorly this works, you probably see your falsely-flagged comments sitting there plain as day for the world to see when you're logged in! And it's still only occasional. No idea what to suggest. But I am pretty diligent about checking the comments. The main problem will be on any episode where the ONLY comment posted is considered spam by TH-cam, because I won't even get notified that there's anything there in the first place. I already did the only thing I know to do on my end to correct this, and you see how well that worked. ;)
The only other thing I can think of is that a human user flagged the post, but I can't imagine that happening except as an accident, and it's happened to your comments more frequently than anyone else's. Not trying to make you feel paranoid. . . ;)
Ray Bolger, the scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz! I just loved him, Glinda, Dorothy, & everyone in it except the Wicked Witch. I grew up watching it every yr, since I was like 7. I think my parents might've seen it in the theater sometime after it came out. 🤩
Enjoyed watching this and reading many of the comments below. While spending a week in NYC during the 1950s would be wonderful, I'd go further and ask to spend 1956 there. Would get to see Ray Bolger perform, "My Fair Lady," and Judy Garland at the Palace, with the "Wizard of Oz" tv premiere thrown in for good measure. :)
Nineteen years later (in 1975), Rsy Bolger would present a Tony to Geoffrey Holder as Best Musical Choreographer for THE WIZ - which also won for Best Musical. Full circle...and quite meaningful when Bolger and Holder hugged each other...
Bolgernow I made reference down below to an episode of an old radio show I love that he was a guest star on, The Big Show, 1/28/51. Have you heard that yet? It's wonderful. Almost definitely a part of this set on archive.org: archive.org/details/OTRR_Certified_Big_Show I'm pretty sure these are the mp3s that I encoded myself a long time ago, though they could be someone else's versions of the same shows, (fairly unlikely). I mention this only because If they're my files, the show with your great great uncle is in there. Unfortunately you can only download the entire collection as a giant 500MB zip file. If any of this interests you and you have trouble with the technical part, let me know. I'm sure I can get a copy of the show to you, it'd be a pleasure.
My parents got married in the same year as this famous wedding and my father passed away on the same day as Prince Rainier. I just figured out about the wedding by watching this show.
She was a top notch investigative reporter, and astutely used logic, reason and the process of elimination to narrow down the possibilities and arrive at a conclusion. To watch her is to truly watch a genius at work.
I love Ray Bolger ....he was born in the same town I was born in ....Dorchester Massachusetts...that he was loved by everybody is so true ....God Bless him and his craft which will live forever .....
@Tony Davis @Tony Davis Yes, in a eight word sentence. It's just frustrating. Never saw these BASIC typos even 10 years ago. And we wonder why you know who became president...
Your the Cousin of Ray Bolger Nice to Meet You I enjoy His Performance If He was Alive He would Play His Character again in LEGO Dimensions for Playstation 3 and Xbox 360
+Johan Bengtsson He was certainly extremely limber. It almost seems that he is double-jointed but I find no reference to that in the brief biography I read on him. One thing I would have done differently in my life is take up dancing on a regular basis. Professional dancers seem to remarkably retain their health, youthfulness, trim figure and athleticism long after most other performers. Ray Bolger starred in a movie called "That's Dancing" with Liza Minnelli in 1985. He was about 81 at the time. He was also married to the same woman (his only marriage) from 1929 until his death in 1987, That impresses me even more.
Thank you so much for uploading these episodes! I love 1950s game shows, and "What's My Line" is one of the best, IMHO. Little bit of trivia -- in the 1970s, I went to see the Ringling Brothers circus, and saw Edwin Bale's son, Elvin, perform one of his daredevil acts. Apparently, Elvin represented the fourth generation of Bales in the circus.
Glad you're enjoying the videos! Just in case you're not aware, I also have channels for "To Tell the Truth" and "You Bet Your Life". TTTT: th-cam.com/channels/ZkBUfTQ_tmKAlUV_sQqrTQ.htmlfeatured YBYL: th-cam.com/channels/UIbTdEI7D1AMyLATIdKq5w.html
The panel speaking about the “wedding” must have been speaking of Grace Kelly’s upcoming wedding. I can imagine how exciting and extraordinary that wedding would have been to the entertainment community.
Johnny Carson was so handsome when he was young and his appreciation of Ray Bolger's dancing showed a glimpse of his appreciation of talent on The Tonight Show. "The Wedding" must have been that of Grace Kelly!
This is a special posting to this “channel”. Old films and early television must be saved and rebroadcasted to newer generations.’ As always, thanks’ for taking the time to support these films! And I support this site. ~M~
Carson looks so young! No one then except Marty McFly knew that some day he'd be the man who kept millions of us up past midnight or at least until after The Monlogue and do it for decades.
Once, while watching a TH-cam video featuring old clips of Johnny Carson during various years from the The Tonight Show, it was obvious that one of the commenters was very young, because he or she had no idea who Johnny was or how well-known he was when this commenter asked about Johnny, "Who is this dweeb?" I thought, ' If this person only knew who he/she was speaking of!' On another note, "Heeeere's Johnny!" has significance for me because one of the most special times of my life happened on the same day as the very last time his show was on TV, which was on Friday evening of Memorial Day, 1992: 7 hours earlier I had become a mother for the first time!!! I was recuperating in my hospital bed that eve, when, suddenly, it was announced that it was the very last show ever with Johnny Carson! It made me a little sad, but I was so elated with my new little son, that the sad feeling quickly subsided! :)
@@kristabrewer9363 ...back then they called it "poking fun", still rude by his reaction. Though it is difficult to judge yesteryear's social norms by our present social norms.
@@deerejohn7209 Yes you're correct poking fun. It wasn't mean spirited. Now everyone is so sensitive about all things and everything is considered disrespectful. I wish there was a happy medium.
Maybe I'm a stickler for the rules of the game, but Bennett should not have "helped out" Arlene on the Ray Bolger segment. There was no conference called.
@@m.a.6136 What is your source for that? In the Bennett Cerf interview that I've heard he says quite the opposite, pointing out that the panelists were not good enough actors to pretend that they didn't know the MG. And on several occasions panelists, including Bennett, disqualified themselves when they had inadvertently learned before the show who the MG would be.
@@mikejschin I listened to an interview recorded in Cerf`s later years. I don't think he would lie and they made sure they knew who was doing what, where, and when. That is my source. From the Cerf's mouth.
@@m.a.6136 Thank you for your reply, Michele. We seem to have different recollections of what Bennett said. Either way, the show is highly enjoyable and I'll continue watching all of the episodes for the second time.
I love watching these shows! The panel and contestants are all so well groomed, well spoken and well behaved. They're classy; unlike the folks on TV today.
I never knew Ray Bolger also did accents on top of all his other talents. Somwhere on TH-cam is a clip of his complete version of "If I Only Had a Brain," with all the verses that were cut from the final edit of the movie. It's fun to watch the original scene in its entirety.
Steve Burrus Apropos of that, did anyone else notice Johnny say @16.33 "I don't know what I have this pencil for!" It was obviously a prop long before he took over The Tonight Show!
Johnny's pencil addiction started early in his career. Also, I liked how Ray equated a free display of his dancing capabilities on-show (he charges for that, don't forget) for a "free ticket to one of your lectures." God knows how much Cerf charged for that ticket :-)
Weren't we FORMAL back then! In the way we spoke, the way we dressed...Dad even told me to put on a clean shirt, good slacks, and combed hair...to go to the movies and sit in a dark theater! And how nicely we dressed when flying TWA or PanAm!
Forget "politically incorrect". Making personal remarks about someone's weight is just plain discourteous, no matter what time you live in. My mother lived during this time and would never have dreamed of being so rude.
+Joyce Alice I'm only a few minutes in, so I'm not sure exactly who you are referencing as rude. But, the host as already told Karl to "take a small hike" down to the panel and to tell the panel "a big fat no" if they're wrong. It's uncomfortable.
+Daleylife I did Honer Ray Bolger by Playing Scarecrow in The Wizard Of Oz School Play He would have been very Proud of Me and He did While He Was in Heaven and I Sing and Danced and other staff He done.
Yeah, there's absolutely nothing whatsoever offensive in the phrases cited above, "a big fat no" and "take a small hike down the panel". I don't really understand on any level what would make anyone even a bit uncomfortable about this-- they're just colloquial expressions. Weight jokes, of course, are another story. But while I totally understand why people note their surprise nowadays at this sort of thing, right or wrong, weight jokes were considered perfectly acceptable back then, in the sense of social standards. Even Arlene Francis, the epitome of elegance and grace, made a weight joke every now and then about a contestant. It's jarring today, to say the least, and certainly I'm not doubting that there were plenty of people even back then who would never think of making such a joke (as with Joyce Alice's reference to her mother in the original comment here), but if Arlene Francis of all people was doing it, you can be pretty well assured that it was generally considered acceptable back then. I'm not justifying it, I'm just putting it in historical context.
as much as I think it's awesome Johnny was there, it makes me sad knowing that Fred Allen who manned that second spot and was supposed to be there had died a few weeks beforehand. RIP to all the panelists who have all since passed and Fred Allen.
Who doesn't just adore Roy Bolger? I loved his dance moves, and he was fantastic in the Wizard of Oz. Thank you for airing this, and I thoroughly enjoyed him dancing his way off the program!
It is so restful and peaceful to watch these programs. No cursing no vulgarity. Ladies and gentleman. Class and manners. It seems like I am watching them in real time, and not from 60 years ago. Like Arlene and Dorothy are still with us. Or so I wish.
Agree. I've been watching them in order since the first show, and I have almost forgotten that I am stepping into a time machine when I watch it.
I truly agree with you. I love the way they bow to each other when they are introduced and calling each other when it is appropriate Miss or Mr. I love the formal clothes for men and women. I wish I had a job in which I could wear evening clothes every time I worked. And it is peaceful.
The classy qualities you list are not a part of our culture today , sadly. I almost didn’t know what you were referring to.
Indeed.
So much class
I saw Ray Bolger perform onstage at the Sands Hotel when I was about nine-years old! I so remember the audience clapping and appreciating his moves from 'The Wizard of Oz'. Very well-loved star.
How heartwarming ! THANKS for sharing your memories with us !!
Gerard Marenghi (January 24, 1920 - May 24, 2018), known as Jerry Maren, was an American actor who played a Munchkin member of the Lollipop Guild in the 1939 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film, The Wizard of Oz.
@@ladyyuna2000 Did Gerald Marenghi live at Penny Farms in NE Florida? I heard that little community was mostly built for the Munchkin's to retire too.
Stunning
@@ladyyuna2000 He sat next to Nikki Glaser on a flight once and they chatted. She said he and his wife were lovely.
How wonderful to see Ray Bolger dance off the stage, and also acknowledge the audience which so few celebrities ever did.
Ray Bolger : What a charmer ! It's grand to realize how appreciated he was - the ovation was fantastic.
Almost exactly 20 years after this show, Ray was a guest on "The Tonight Show" in March of 1976.
@@Camop-iz9kt Very cool, thanks!
@@Camop-iz9kt He Also made a memorable appearance on Little House on the Prairie with Eileen Heckart. Michael was always able to sign on the best talents in the Biz.
Yes, I noticed that, too. What a guy!!!
Johnny Carson was so young, but he still sounded exactly the same. And even then, he couldn't put down that pencil! lol
It must have been a security thing.
To me he sounds very different-not nearly so many years' smoking under his belt yet.
There are videos and photos of Johnny Carson playing the drum set. Both my siblings were drummers and it was second nature to drum on and or with anything. Johnny and his pencil are classic drummer moves.
He was already 30, not so young as he looked.
What a time capsule. We are so lucky to have so many of these wonderful shows preserved. Just as a historical note, "The Wedding" that was referred to several times was the Wedding of Rainier III, Prince of Monaco, and Grace Kelly, in April, 1956.
I love Bolger's facial expressions. He "speaks" with his eyes and facial expressions.
That's probably why he managed to be as successful on film as he was on the stage. :-)
Oh that wedding!
Ray Bolger was such a talented man.
Yes!
Always great to see how much fun John Daly is having.
He is such a nice host, so polite and kind!!
Wow, this episode had a Dorothy, a Scarecrow, and a man thought to be a lion tamer but was a tiger tamer-Oh my!
John Andersen - Clever.
Shirley Rombough Thanks!
Outstanding observation!
Heh -- Well played!
We couldn’t “bear” much more!
Thank you so much for uploading these. I can't tell you how much fun I've had watching them.
Amen to that ! I love these bodacious "blasts from the past" ! Good clean fun ! A nice change from the large amount of vulgarity we see in so many of today's programs.
@@jubalcalif9100 I agree. There's nothing like the great stuff many of us grew up watching. Shows often had good morals like decency, love, and neighborly kindness. No longer the case.
Me too!
Wizard of Oz one of the best movies ever made with Ray Bolger & others 😚
Thank you for the time and effort you put in, to bring these videos to us.
These are wonderful vignettes into a bygone era.
Their not all dead yet.
That little dance by Ray Bolger was just great!
I am only 58 years old but it seems I must have traveled through a time machine in that I have once had the great pleasure of meeting Ray bolger. He was the Grand Marshal at, of all things, the Temple City Camellia parade Festival in the late 70s in Los angeles. We chatted for a bit and I shook hands with him. What a pleasure that was to meet him. He was such a friendly man.
JJ-un2mt.........."of all things, the Temple City Camellia parade Festival" .....lol. I'm in So. Calif and a bit familiar with the area🤷😵💫🤔
Wow! With that second contestant Dorothy really showed just how good she is at the game!
She was an old school newspaper reporter with Broadway as her beat.
It was when she stepped out of that box, that her life changed, and not for the better.
For all that complaining, I am still grateful to you WML@ YT for uploading all of these shows! I know it is a LOT of work.
I'm hooked on WML. What a great spokesway of earlier more pleasant times.
Another fun episode ! What a treat especially to see the late great Mr Bolger dance at the end ! How ridiculous that back then they weren't allowed to even mention the name of other television networks ! Were they THAT afraid of the competition ! Silly rule ! But THANKS for sharing these wonderful "blasts from the past" with us ! CHEERS !! :-)
They technically weren't allowed but John often broke that rule - he'd say something like the mystery guest "has a new program on another network whose name we can't mention because it's NBC".
Nothing silly about it at all..
If a viewer had just cut the TV on and it was already on the local CBS affiliate's channel and an NBC guy came on WML and DALY said that the guest had a show with NBC, and the viewer suddenly remembered that they were going to watch something on NBC, the odds increase that the channel will get changed to NBC, than it would have been kept on CBS if only "another network" was used in the guest's description.
That is absolutely indisputable.
There were only three or four major broadcast nets then- NBC, CBS, ABC AND DUMONT(PBS came on in 1959 and only to limited regions of the country, ABC had only popped up in 1953) with DUMONT folding in 1957.. People did not have 500 choices back then, precious few had TV remotes. It was serious business then to ensure viewers were not going to "TOUCH THAT DIAL."
Ad revenue dollars being sought then were part of a pitched battle. Its why with few exceptions, shows were not given a long time to develop audiences. Secondly, ad-revs were compared to the inflationary cost of living then, much higher in 1956..
There were, compared to the general population then and the amount of TV sets' owners(most folks who owned them had only one) back then, huge audiences with BIG DOLLARS fought for between the 3 big networks..
Audiences tallied up to 60 million viewers possibly...
NO, they did not want anything making you "TOUCH THAT DIAL."
It was a different world back then.
A celeb in 1956 was not going to be able to plug a movie on a TV talk show like TONITE with STEVE ALLEN. TV AND MOVIES were competing for eyes and ears and for word of mouth.
Twas very different then..
Twas totally different.
@@robertsprouse9282Exactly, well stated😊
@@robertjean5782 , thank you..
I'm so happy to see all the old show. Thank you for posting them.
You're very welcome. Glad you're enjoying the series. It's a true classic!
I agree totally 😊
Ray Bolger was a wonderful entertainer!
He sure was. I haven't heard/seen much of him outside of Wizard of Oz (of course), but I do have one episode of the radio series "The Big Show" that guested on, and he was delightful. He sang a sort of audience-participation number version of "Once in Love with Amy", which I take it was something of a signature tune for him? That's the sense I got from the audience response when he started singing it.
Rick, I'm beginning to think youtube hates you for some some reason. This must be the 5th time one of your perfectly welcome comments got flagged as spam, and I've told you that I added you to the list of pre-approved users, which is supposed to prevent this from ever happening again. Clearly it doesn't work at all!
And your comment got flagged after I already replied to it, no less!
What's My Line? Hmmm... wonder why? Never got anything saying I was flagged in any way. Any idea how I might fix this? Thanks for the pre-approvals!
I'm not surprised you're not getting any indication on your own that this has been happening. . . Given how poorly this works, you probably see your falsely-flagged comments sitting there plain as day for the world to see when you're logged in! And it's still only occasional. No idea what to suggest. But I am pretty diligent about checking the comments. The main problem will be on any episode where the ONLY comment posted is considered spam by TH-cam, because I won't even get notified that there's anything there in the first place.
I already did the only thing I know to do on my end to correct this, and you see how well that worked. ;)
The only other thing I can think of is that a human user flagged the post, but I can't imagine that happening except as an accident, and it's happened to your comments more frequently than anyone else's. Not trying to make you feel paranoid. . . ;)
Ray Bolger, the scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz! I just loved him, Glinda, Dorothy, & everyone in it except the Wicked Witch. I grew up watching it every yr, since I was like 7. I think my parents might've seen it in the theater sometime after it came out. 🤩
Impressive dance moves by Ray Bolger as he exits!
Impressive? How about incredible?
Ray Bolber what a charming man. They don't make em like him anymore.
Have we run out of straw?
Enjoyed watching this and reading many of the comments below. While spending a week in NYC during the 1950s would be wonderful, I'd go further and ask to spend 1956 there. Would get to see Ray Bolger perform, "My Fair Lady," and Judy Garland at the Palace, with the "Wizard of Oz" tv premiere thrown in for good measure. :)
Nineteen years later (in 1975), Rsy Bolger would present a Tony to Geoffrey Holder as Best Musical Choreographer for THE WIZ - which also won for Best Musical. Full circle...and quite meaningful when Bolger and Holder hugged each other...
Thank you so very much! My great great uncle would be so proud...
Is Ray Bolger your great great uncle? If so, it's great to hear from you. :)
What's My Line? he was, & thanks again. He would be humbled ;)
Bolgernow I made reference down below to an episode of an old radio show I love that he was a guest star on, The Big Show, 1/28/51. Have you heard that yet? It's wonderful. Almost definitely a part of this set on archive.org: archive.org/details/OTRR_Certified_Big_Show
I'm pretty sure these are the mp3s that I encoded myself a long time ago, though they could be someone else's versions of the same shows, (fairly unlikely). I mention this only because If they're my files, the show with your great great uncle is in there. Unfortunately you can only download the entire collection as a giant 500MB zip file. If any of this interests you and you have trouble with the technical part, let me know. I'm sure I can get a copy of the show to you, it'd be a pleasure.
+Bolgernow you're like the third person who has commented this somewhere...
@@sammiwhite9575 noticed that as well.
,,, I just wanted to take the time to thank you for posting this video ,,, I luv these old shows like this :) ,,,
How handsome Johnny Carson looks here.
goldenthroat86
I think he was considering a moustache.
Too bad his manners are so ugly.
He does appear to have been trying a mustache. So glad he reconsidered. Even the hint of it makes him look quite unsavory.
golden86 - He really was, was't he
Handsome, I mean.
My parents got married in the same year as this famous wedding and my father passed away on the same day as Prince Rainier. I just figured out about the wedding by watching this show.
Sorry about your dad.
@@donaldmanthei1224 Thank you.
I love this show. And I really like the comments. I learn so many interesting facts. Keep them coming!
Dorothy was like a hound, once she picked up the scent she would take it all the way. Seen that in many episodes.
I wouldn't call her a hound. She was very astute, and she paid attention.
She was a top notch investigative reporter, and astutely used logic, reason and the process of elimination to narrow down the possibilities and arrive at a conclusion. To watch her is to truly watch a genius at work.
She was a great journalist and that doggedness would very unfortunately cost her her life. 💕🐝
@@amazinggrace5692 i am so glad to have found WML on youtube. watched every episode during this pandemic lockdown
@@PP-McFly Me too!
I love Ray Bolger ....he was born in the same town I was born in ....Dorchester Massachusetts...that he was loved by everybody is so true ....God Bless him and his craft which will live forever .....
Fields Corner boy😁
"Scarecrow, I think I'll miss most of all." Wizard of Oz
The least you could do is get the quote right.
Some of those fine lines around Ray's mouth are leftover from his months of wearing the Scarecrow makeup in Oz.
@Tony Davis @Tony Davis Yes, in a eight word sentence. It's just frustrating. Never saw these BASIC typos even 10 years ago. And we wonder why you know who became president...
@@DDumbrille I have to manfully restrain myself because I think Gary does not like politics in the replies.
@@DDumbrille, would that be JOKE BABBLIN?
This would be the beginning Johnny's pencil habit that he had throughout his years on "The Tonight Show."
I'm guessing he'd been doing it for years.
Watching these clips all night, I remember the 70's version but this stuff is classic. Thanks!
Ray Bolger was a beloved guy
I have a notion to second that emotion ! One of American's most popular entertainers !
@e M I'll say what I please when I please. If you don't like it, don't read my comments....
Dorothy at the top of her game. Watch her with the tiger trainer. She could be outstanding at the game.
Dorothy was so intelligent, and didn't hide it- a treat to watch her circling in with her questions. A true journalist.
During the goodbyes to the panel Ray Bolger does some wonderful dance steps and kicks his legs high up in the sky. 20:30
my 3rd cousin once removed
Your the Cousin of Ray Bolger Nice to Meet You I enjoy His Performance If He was Alive He would Play His Character again in LEGO Dimensions for Playstation 3 and Xbox 360
+Johan Bengtsson
He was certainly extremely limber. It almost seems that he is double-jointed but I find no reference to that in the brief biography I read on him.
One thing I would have done differently in my life is take up dancing on a regular basis. Professional dancers seem to remarkably retain their health, youthfulness, trim figure and athleticism long after most other performers. Ray Bolger starred in a movie called "That's Dancing" with Liza Minnelli in 1985. He was about 81 at the time.
He was also married to the same woman (his only marriage) from 1929 until his death in 1987, That impresses me even more.
Johan Bengtsson Just like he did in the Wizard of Oz.
@@josephbailey3968 That's what I thought.
Thank you so much for uploading these episodes! I love 1950s game shows, and "What's My Line" is one of the best, IMHO.
Little bit of trivia -- in the 1970s, I went to see the Ringling Brothers circus, and saw Edwin Bale's son, Elvin, perform one of his daredevil acts. Apparently, Elvin represented the fourth generation of Bales in the circus.
Glad you're enjoying the videos! Just in case you're not aware, I also have channels for "To Tell the Truth" and "You Bet Your Life".
TTTT: th-cam.com/channels/ZkBUfTQ_tmKAlUV_sQqrTQ.htmlfeatured
YBYL: th-cam.com/channels/UIbTdEI7D1AMyLATIdKq5w.html
+What's My Line? I'll definitely be checking those out!
@@WhatsMyLine Didn't like Groucho when he appeared on WML but did like him on YBYL.
Added both an as icon on my comp.
Perfectly put and I couldn't have said it any better :-)
Our reality was appreciating the best of the Stars and Ray Bolger showed it as the Scarecrow in The Wizard Of Oz!!!
Nice of Bennett to give the credit to Dorothy for almost guessing the Tiger Trainer all by herself. 14:02
Bennett equals nice
Paul Edelstein and Jonah Bengtsson So Happy He did it for Her
Terrific questioning from Dorothy.
The panel speaking about the “wedding” must have been speaking of Grace Kelly’s upcoming wedding. I can imagine how exciting and extraordinary that wedding would have been to the entertainment community.
Dorothy Kilgallen was so adorable. Love her little giggle at 16:34.
Ray Bolger was enchanting!
Arlene was always so gracious with the challengers.
Looking at a 30 year old Johnny and the legend Ray Bolger with wonderment!
Wonderful Ray.
Johnny Carson was so handsome when he was young and his appreciation of Ray Bolger's dancing showed a glimpse of his appreciation of talent on The Tonight Show. "The Wedding" must have been that of Grace Kelly!
The only thing i hate about watching these old shows is that almost 100 percent of the people on the shows are dead
Depressing.
I’d hope so
We all die
I was watching a movie from the 1980s the other day and realized most of the cast was deceased.
I attended the show often. I'm 87 still here😊
"Once in love with Amy Always in love with Amy - with the dancing - sigh. . .
I ❤️Ray Bolger! He was so fun to watch!
Dorothy’s deductive reasoning is extremely impressive! Smart lady!
Dorothy was a investigative reporter for years 😊
Ray was as cute as he could be.
This show is just lovely
Johnny Carson is the cutest boy I ever did see. I still miss him. I was named for that song "Once in Love with Amy", and just love this episode.
This is a special posting to this “channel”. Old films and early television must be saved and rebroadcasted to newer generations.’ As always, thanks’ for taking the time to support these films! And I support this site. ~M~
The generation that now exists wouldn't want to watch any of these shows. 😢
Carson looks so young! No one then except Marty McFly knew that some day he'd be the man who kept millions of us up past midnight or at least until after The Monlogue and do it for decades.
That is a very young Johnny Carson . . . Legend.
Once, while watching a TH-cam video featuring old clips of Johnny Carson during various years from the The Tonight Show, it was obvious that one of the commenters was very young, because he or she had no idea who Johnny was or how well-known he was when this commenter asked about Johnny, "Who is this dweeb?" I thought, ' If this person only knew who he/she was speaking of!'
On another note, "Heeeere's Johnny!" has significance for me because one of the most special times of my life happened on the same day as the very last time his show was on TV, which was on Friday evening of Memorial Day, 1992: 7 hours earlier I had become a mother for the first time!!! I was recuperating in my hospital bed that eve, when, suddenly, it was announced that it was the very last show ever with Johnny Carson! It made me a little sad, but I was so elated with my new little son, that the sad feeling quickly subsided! :)
He was VERY rude to that first guy. If he had've called ME fat, I would've been on the verge of tears :(
@@kristabrewer9363 ...back then they called it "poking fun", still rude by his reaction. Though it is difficult to judge yesteryear's social norms by our present social norms.
@@deerejohn7209 Yes you're correct poking fun. It wasn't mean spirited. Now everyone is so sensitive about all things and everything is considered disrespectful. I wish there was a happy medium.
@@nysavvy9241 ... so do i
I like the formata Ray put under his name.
Fermata
*Kelly
Maybe I'm a stickler for the rules of the game, but Bennett should not have "helped out" Arlene on the Ray Bolger segment. There was no conference called.
Years later Cerf said they always knew who the mystery guest was but played along.
As I do when I take off my hat, you make a good point !!
@@m.a.6136 What is your source for that? In the Bennett Cerf interview that I've heard he says quite the opposite, pointing out that the panelists were not good enough actors to pretend that they didn't know the MG. And on several occasions panelists, including Bennett, disqualified themselves when they had inadvertently learned before the show who the MG would be.
@@mikejschin I listened to an interview recorded in Cerf`s later years. I don't think he would lie and they made sure they knew who was doing what, where, and when. That is my source. From the Cerf's mouth.
@@m.a.6136 Thank you for your reply, Michele. We seem to have different recollections of what Bennett said. Either way, the show is highly enjoyable and I'll continue watching all of the episodes for the second time.
I bet Ray Bolger was a great guy to know! 😎
I love watching these shows! The panel and contestants are all so well groomed, well spoken and well behaved. They're classy; unlike the folks on TV today.
This episode replete with fat insults was not at all classy. It was less classy than meaningless curses
Mr Ray Bolger also played on Little House on the prairie. Funny man!
Dorothy Kilgallen, RIP - rare human indeed
Ray is so cute. My little scarecrow.
_🐰💖_
Johnny Carson is so young and handsome...oh my! ❤️
🤢🤢🤮
I never knew Ray Bolger also did accents on top of all his other talents. Somwhere on TH-cam is a clip of his complete version of "If I Only Had a Brain," with all the verses that were cut from the final edit of the movie. It's fun to watch the original scene in its entirety.
Ohh..i love Ray ,, wish i could've met him
The first contestant was from Greenfield Center, a small community roughly 3 miles from Saratoga Springs and Saratoga Race track.
Such lovely signatures
Cursive was required in the schools 😊
Ray Bolger was the consummate entertainer and he seems like a real sweet guy.
So great
Boiy no one knew as of this wml show that Johnny Carson would become a huge show bizness legend what with his 30+ years of doing the "Tonight Show "!
Steve Burrus Apropos of that, did anyone else notice Johnny say @16.33 "I don't know what I have this pencil for!" It was obviously a prop long before he took over The Tonight Show!
And let us not forget that the original host of "The Tonight Show" was former regular WML panelist, Steve Allen.
Excellent!
I loved him in the wizard of oz.
Yes Sara ur right its a calm that comes with watching this show
Johnny's pencil addiction started early in his career. Also, I liked how Ray equated a free display of his dancing capabilities on-show (he charges for that, don't forget) for a "free ticket to one of your lectures." God knows how much Cerf charged for that ticket :-)
Weren't we FORMAL back then! In the way we spoke, the way we dressed...Dad even told me to put on a clean shirt, good slacks, and combed hair...to go to the movies and sit in a dark theater! And how nicely we dressed when
flying TWA or PanAm!
Bugler playing the post parade at the racetracks! Now that's way out there!
Johnny was very funny. especially enjoyed the race track bugular
Forget "politically incorrect". Making personal remarks about someone's weight is just plain discourteous, no matter what time you live in. My mother lived during this time and would never have dreamed of being so rude.
+Joyce Alice I'm only a few minutes in, so I'm not sure exactly who you are referencing as rude. But, the host as already told Karl to "take a small hike" down to the panel and to tell the panel "a big fat no" if they're wrong. It's uncomfortable.
+Daleylife I did Honer Ray Bolger by Playing Scarecrow in The Wizard Of Oz School Play He would have been very Proud of Me and He did While He Was in Heaven and I Sing and Danced and other staff He done.
Braddock E. Hutton Rest In Peace Ray
These two phrases are quite standard for Mr. Daly's opening remarks, whatever the contestant's size or appearance.
Yeah, there's absolutely nothing whatsoever offensive in the phrases cited above, "a big fat no" and "take a small hike down the panel". I don't really understand on any level what would make anyone even a bit uncomfortable about this-- they're just colloquial expressions.
Weight jokes, of course, are another story. But while I totally understand why people note their surprise nowadays at this sort of thing, right or wrong, weight jokes were considered perfectly acceptable back then, in the sense of social standards. Even Arlene Francis, the epitome of elegance and grace, made a weight joke every now and then about a contestant. It's jarring today, to say the least, and certainly I'm not doubting that there were plenty of people even back then who would never think of making such a joke (as with Joyce Alice's reference to her mother in the original comment here), but if Arlene Francis of all people was doing it, you can be pretty well assured that it was generally considered acceptable back then.
I'm not justifying it, I'm just putting it in historical context.
Awww dear Mr. Ray Bolger... :)
Quite the signature Ray Bolger had!
a nice shout out for upstate NY and the Saratoga Racetrack!!
as much as I think it's awesome Johnny was there, it makes me sad knowing that Fred Allen who manned that second spot and was supposed to be there had died a few weeks beforehand. RIP to all the panelists who have all since passed and Fred Allen.
Wish Johnny could have been a permanent panelist.
I have a Ray Bolger autographed menu from the WALDORF from this appearance
That's super..
I was about ten years old when this first aired❗WHAT A TOTALLY DIFFERENT WONDERFULL WORLD THEN❗
WML was such a classy, delightful game show.
I've never seen earrings like those worn by Arlene, covering the entire opening of her ears.
Obsessed with Ray saying "comedehh"
I was surprised to find that the big guy (Karl Rissland) made it to 76 years old. The tiger trainer made it to 81.
Oh good! Thanks! When I like the guest, and i liked both, I hope they have long happy lives.
Love Ray Bolger!!!
I just love Johnny Carson
Ray Bolger was seriously great
Ray Bolger was a great entertainer.
People on TV had talent in the 50s
Lmaoo. The next panel will have the Kardashians.
_🤭_
“sure and how” John Daly replied, after Ray whispered if Bennett surf was tipped off. You can’t pull one off on a Bolger.
R.I.P Both of Them
Bolger was wonderful!
Young Johnny Carson was so cute.