Harvey Korman John Astin I'm Dickens He's Fenster 1962 ABC TV Episode BEST Quality!

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Harvey Korman (Blazing Saddles) appears in The Acting Game episode of the 1962 ABC TV sitcom I'm Dickens He's Fenster, starring John Astin and Marty Ingels.
Aired on November 2, 1962, this episode marks one of the first TV roles for Harvey Korman before his breakout roles in the TV series The Carol Burnett Show and the feature films Blazing Saddles, High Anxiety, and providing the voice of The Great Gazoo in the classic 1960s ABC TV animated series, The Flintstones.
In 1961, TV producer Leonard Stern (Get Smart) was having his house remodeled. As he observed the construction workers building a hood over his fireplace, he noticed they had sealed their steel ladder inside. It took hours for the workers to deconstruct the fireplace to retrieve the ladder. While watching otherwise intelligent and talented men endeavor to hastily rectify their incompetence, a light bulb lit up inside Stern's head.
With this incident in mind, Leonard Stern approached the ABC television network. With classic TV credits such as Sgt. Bilko, The Honeymooners, and The Steve Allen Show under his belt, Stern's new show was not a hard sell. I'm Dickens He's Fenster, starring John Astin (The Addams Family) and Marty Ingels (The Dick Van Dyke Show) was ultimately given the green light for the 1962-63 TV season.
Initially, the show was not a ratings bonanza. Playing opposite stiff competition -- Route 66 on CBS and Sing Along with Mitch on NBC -- and airing on a struggling network, D&F had difficulty finding its audience. However, one audience was finding the show and loving it-the television critics. Instead of Singing Along with Mitch, newspaper and magazine scribes from coast to coast were singing the praises of this hilarious little show about two skillfully etched, hilariously delineated construction workers named Dickens and Fenster.
One reason for their enthusiasm, and that of the show's relatively small but loyal audience, was that the show wasn't simply a series of slapsticky skits. While the emphasis was always on comedy, almost every episode commented on issues such as greed, mob mentality, conformity, and social inequality. But unlike the title characters, the audience wasn't hit over the head with the hammer of a preachy polemic every week.
Ironically, just as D&F was gaining popularity and winning its time slot, ABC canceled the series after only one season of 32 episodes. Without enough episodes for syndication, unfortunately, this little gem of a TV comedy show quickly faded from the public's memory--until now!

Пікірлер: 6

  • @richardranke3158
    @richardranke315812 күн бұрын

    Harvey Korman was also a regular on the Danny Kaye Show in the mid-sixties.

  • @jeraldbaxter3532
    @jeraldbaxter35325 ай бұрын

    And just a very few years later, John Astin played Gomez Addams.

  • @arydant

    @arydant

    5 ай бұрын

    DUHH!

  • @kt9166
    @kt91665 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for posting this show! We loved it in our family, and it's so hard to find these days. Keep going, please! The whole first and only season?

  • @JJJBRICE
    @JJJBRICE5 ай бұрын

    There is a faint element of Gleason's The Honeymooners here .

  • @JJJBRICE
    @JJJBRICE5 ай бұрын

    The vlogger mentioned the stiff competition of Route 66 and the Mitch Miller songfest on the other networks but the proceeding ABC show was at that time a top 30 show . Too much audience was lost when D/F appeared .

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