What's My Line? - Marge & Gower Champion; Mary Healy [panel] (May 15, 1955)

Ойын-сауық

MYSTERY GUEST: Marge & Gower Champion
PANEL: Arlene Francis, Fred Allen, Mary Healy, Bennett Cerf

Пікірлер: 128

  • @geraldkatz7986
    @geraldkatz79862 жыл бұрын

    At the time WWII ended only 10 years prior. It is nice someone from Japan is warmly welcomed.

  • @ForeverAlansGirl
    @ForeverAlansGirl5 жыл бұрын

    I think Mary Healy's beauty was so underrated. To me, she was one of the most beautiful actresses ever. ⚘⚘⚘⚘

  • @Marcel_Audubon

    @Marcel_Audubon

    Жыл бұрын

    underrated? that tired underrated comment is overrated

  • @loissimmons6558
    @loissimmons65587 жыл бұрын

    The marriage of Mary Healy and Peter Lind Hayes was the only marriage for both of them. It lasted 58 years until Peter's death parted them. On the other hand, Marge Champion was married three times and Gower was married twice. Both were married once after their marriage of 26 years ended in divorce.

  • @teriannebeauchamp254
    @teriannebeauchamp2546 жыл бұрын

    My dad was in Rotary for years. It is nice to see it mentioned so long ago. Plus the fact that it was world wide

  • @ginnylorenz5265
    @ginnylorenz52657 жыл бұрын

    I'm always reminded of Marge Champion whenever I watch 'champion' skater, Jane Torvill. Both ladies being half of a team with a strong driving man. I do think that Marge and Jane look a lot alike. Both are lady-like, modest and darling!!!

  • @Mandeley100
    @Mandeley1009 жыл бұрын

    Mary Healy was a remarkably attractive lady. Sadly she passed away just a few weeks ago at the grand age of 96. Marge Champion is still with us at age 95!!!

  • @bubblinbrownsugar616

    @bubblinbrownsugar616

    6 жыл бұрын

    I was just about to say that! 😄

  • @michaelclark6223

    @michaelclark6223

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@bubblinbrownsugar616 She will be 100 a week from the time I write this.

  • @crabbyoldman8209

    @crabbyoldman8209

    4 жыл бұрын

    As of today, 6 March 2020, Marge Champion is still with us, at 100 years young.

  • @randysills4418

    @randysills4418

    3 жыл бұрын

    Marge Champion just died yesterday or the day before at age 101. Today is October 23, 2020.

  • @user-mr6fs7et8c
    @user-mr6fs7et8c3 ай бұрын

    Great show. See all of them with the Lord!

  • @waynehowell6160
    @waynehowell61609 жыл бұрын

    John was so tickled when Bennett asked if the product was made of silk he was jumping up and down. Then Fred Allen said something about DuPont, and I was sure he had it.

  • @loissimmons6558

    @loissimmons6558

    7 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of that line from Dickens "Christmas Carol" about being "as giddy as a schoolboy."

  • @gugurupurasudaikirai7620
    @gugurupurasudaikirai76203 жыл бұрын

    Marge Champion got her break in showbusiness by getting hired to be a model for Disney out of high school. She was the live action model for Snow White, the Blue Fairy in Pinocchio, and others. She recently died at the massive age of 101.

  • @marcuslarinen684
    @marcuslarinen68410 жыл бұрын

    I love Bennett's reference to John pulling hos ear - something he did when he felt that certain double entendres were going a bit too far! :D

  • @WhatsMyLine

    @WhatsMyLine

    10 жыл бұрын

    I don't know how you caught that throwaway line (it's around 8:04). . . nice! I never knew that John used that signal, but it does make sense out of Bennett's otherwise inexplicable comment.

  • @Beson-SE

    @Beson-SE

    9 жыл бұрын

    What's My Line? In *Bennett* *Cerf* *on* *What's* *My* *Line:* *An* *Oral* *History* here on KZread, Bennett told that John often pulled his ear as a warning to Hal Block that he was going to far with the double entendres.

  • @WhatsMyLine

    @WhatsMyLine

    9 жыл бұрын

    Johan Bengtsson Bear in mind I left that comment a year ago. :) I've been a bit more immersed in the world of WML in the past year than I expected. . .

  • @robertmelson2130

    @robertmelson2130

    9 жыл бұрын

    What's My Line?Have you, or anyone else, ever seen John pull on his ear? I'd love to see examples of where John's "line of sensibility" might lie. I've not seen it yet, and I assume it's because of my own inattentiveness or John's being off-camera when it happens, but there ought to be SOME instances the audience could see, especially during the Hal Block era. Maybe that's part of the lack, that most of the Hal Block shows are lost.

  • @chuckendweiss4849

    @chuckendweiss4849

    5 жыл бұрын

    Marcus Larinen Like Carol Bernett once did

  • @ladya1953
    @ladya19536 жыл бұрын

    Mary Healy's earrings match Arlene's heart necklace.

  • @lopa2828

    @lopa2828

    2 жыл бұрын

    May be they were twining 😀

  • @ryanschroer
    @ryanschroer10 жыл бұрын

    Arlene in seat 1 for the first time..

  • @crispincain5373
    @crispincain53738 жыл бұрын

    Arlene once again appears to be psychic! With no other clue she mentions prison!

  • @redbird28able

    @redbird28able

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Crispin Cain Gee wiz I was just thinking the same thing! Really..how could have guessed that so easily unless she somehow knew that ahead of time.

  • @loissimmons6558

    @loissimmons6558

    7 жыл бұрын

    The panel often makes intuitive leaps. Sometimes they work and many times they don't. But if the panel was being tipped off, you have to explain those challengers when no one on the panel gets anywhere near the right answer.

  • @michaeldanello3966

    @michaeldanello3966

    6 жыл бұрын

    They were already told it would NOT make anyone happy and that it was restraining. That's not a leap. Also this was not the first contestant involved with prison cells.

  • @Nicolas-zb9uw

    @Nicolas-zb9uw

    5 жыл бұрын

    This game was kind of triggered. They received questions to ask on a paper before the show for that specific evening . Some questions were relevant , others not and it was up to panelists to ask them or not making a fool of them or not . Beside that , panelists were clever and they would go over all newspapers to find out what would be celebrated during the week - secretaries week, World day od the milk , anything like that , because there was often a link between the guest and events to come . Steve Allen was one of the most to received awkward questions that would make the audience laugh and a good show .Tv lives by ratings even then . But , he said , even though he knew he was asking silly questions, he would not know the line of the guests.

  • @jenniferyorgan4215

    @jenniferyorgan4215

    5 жыл бұрын

    He was from Kentucky, Kentucky State Penitentiary had been around since 1889. Maximum security, maybe she was basing her questions on the state he's from.

  • @henjutsu1
    @henjutsu17 жыл бұрын

    Has anyone else been noticing Fred Allen joking about the possibility of himself dying in a foreboding fashion? With less than a year left, this is the third or fourth time he made such a remark.

  • @WendyDarling1974

    @WendyDarling1974

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes I noticed that.

  • @Mmdmade

    @Mmdmade

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sometimes we know……. Cause you just don’t feel good.

  • @oldmisterhoward1913

    @oldmisterhoward1913

    2 жыл бұрын

    Fred must have known that he was soon to leave the stage.

  • @joycejean-baptiste4355

    @joycejean-baptiste4355

    2 жыл бұрын

    Looking at his eyes and face the puffiness there about, conveys some kind of health issue possibly. Probably from a health care person viewing his facial profile. You would not have to be associated with the health field per say. Mr. John Daly English portrayed in this commentary.

  • @dinahbrown902

    @dinahbrown902

    Жыл бұрын

    Seems he knew like a lot of people know. In tune with himself

  • @av-bg2hr
    @av-bg2hr5 жыл бұрын

    The girdle family!!! Oh my goodness. That is hilarious!!

  • @lopa2828

    @lopa2828

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's a quite large family 😂- miss Arlene Francis

  • @morussell4033
    @morussell40332 жыл бұрын

    Fred Allen is so funny 😅😂🤣

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick597 жыл бұрын

    Gower seemed like a really cool gent.

  • @galileocan
    @galileocan10 жыл бұрын

    It's hard to believe but I just looked it up, and as of November 22, 2013 both Mary Healy and Marge Champion are both still living (in their 90s)!!!

  • @markru2

    @markru2

    4 жыл бұрын

    As of 2020 Marge Champion is now 100 but Mary Healy passed in 2015

  • @accomplice55

    @accomplice55

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@markru2 She died in October at 101. :(

  • @leannsherman6723
    @leannsherman6723 Жыл бұрын

    That first segment was hilarious 😂

  • @telephotousa
    @telephotousa6 жыл бұрын

    Marge Champion is still alive and spry at age 98!

  • @juanettebutts9782
    @juanettebutts97825 жыл бұрын

    Last and this show: Bennett has "touched up" his hair dye. Mary Healy was lovely! Vacation obviously agreed with Arlene: she was beautiful -- and her hair was lighter again (perhaps from the sun? 😉).

  • @ToddSF
    @ToddSF8 жыл бұрын

    I note that silk stockings, after the advent of nylon, virtually disappeared. They were too expensive in comparison, and sheer hosiery was too easily damaged for most people to want silk stockings any longer given what they cost. Women were annoyed when they got a "run" in their nylons, but, at least, they could be replaced fairly inexpensively when that happened. As to the very funny "connection with the girdle family", most women in 1955 wore a girdle with garter clips on the bottom hem to clip onto the tops of their nylons to hold them up. I mention this in case certain viewers might be too young to realize that women's nylon hosiery in 1955 came in pairs -- pantyhose showed up on the market in the latter 1960's and quickly became the hosiery of choice because they didn't require wearing a girdle to hold them up and girdles were uncomfortable and restrictive. I was in high school when panty hose came out and I remember many female schoolmates who expressed their delight in not having to wear girdles anymore thanks to pantyhose.

  • @billbryant7194

    @billbryant7194

    7 жыл бұрын

    ToddSF 94109

  • @billbryant7194

    @billbryant7194

    7 жыл бұрын

    ToddSF 94109

  • @ToddSF

    @ToddSF

    7 жыл бұрын

    perpieta -- Yes, I remember girls who wore tights under their skirts when I was in elementary school. It is strange that it took so long for someone to think of making something exactly like tights where the legs and feet were made like nylon stockings, out of sheer material. As to garter belts, when I was discussing this subject with one of my high school classmates a couple of years ago and she said she couldn't believe she wore a girdle for as long as she did just to hold her nylon hose up with its garter clips, I asked about garter belts (called suspender belts in the U.K.). She'd never heard of them and didn't know anyone who wore them in the latter 1960's. Indeed, my mother had girdles with those garter clips on them which I used to see in the laundry all the time -- and never a garter belt. I'm thinking garter belts had gone out of fashion by then. What I know is, once panty hose came out, all my female high school classmates started wearing them, and so did my sister and my mother. I remember my mother as having said, "Pantyhose beat the daylights out of individual hose with garters." And, suddenly, various brands of panty hose were featured in TV commercials. By the way, I think they call pantyhose "tights" in the U.K. An American woman might say, "I got a run in my pantyhose," but a British woman would say, "I got a ladder in my tights."

  • @loissimmons6558

    @loissimmons6558

    7 жыл бұрын

    +ToddSF 94109 In our day nylon is commonplace. And it became commonplace very quickly in 1940 when the first nylon stockings were sold. 64 million stockings were sold that first year. But suddenly it became rare again as the fabric was diverted for wartime use to make items such as tents and parachutes. My mom, who is very handy with fine work, made pin money repairing the runs in stockings for other women (somewhere in the neighborhood of 5-10¢ per run - you could get a lot for a nickel in those days: the Sunday newspaper or a ride on the NYC subway, for example). Alas, I don't have my mother's small motor skill dexterity.

  • @barrykendrick3146

    @barrykendrick3146

    6 жыл бұрын

    +ToddSF 94109 Silk stockings were history for a somewhat different reason: their construction required a seam which ran up the back of the leg. After nylons became available silk stockings were over!

  • @joshuahall6983
    @joshuahall69833 жыл бұрын

    Margaret Champion pass’s recently she lived to be 101 years old.

  • @AllenMQuinn
    @AllenMQuinn8 жыл бұрын

    SO weird to see Arlene in Dorothy's spot. I like Mary Healy. Much more likeable than the last guest panelist (Ms. Day)

  • @Nicolas-zb9uw

    @Nicolas-zb9uw

    5 жыл бұрын

    Always tells us every one you can snif, please !

  • @lopa2828

    @lopa2828

    2 жыл бұрын

    True but miss Laraine Day was a smart lady and a good panelist, not great, but pretty good than Wally Cox (sorry if I misspell the name of the young man who couldn't even form a question at all).

  • @MrWindermere123
    @MrWindermere1235 жыл бұрын

    There's a grim connection between John Daly and the Japanese challenger Mr Kobayashi; Mr Daly was the first journalist to report the attack on Pearl Harbour in 1941. He did so on radio news. Fourteen years later in 1955, they are all smiles and good humour - how life moves on!

  • @robmastro8620

    @robmastro8620

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think JCD also may have been the announcer of FDR's passing

  • @jackkomisar458

    @jackkomisar458

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@robmastro8620 That's true.

  • @loissimmons6558
    @loissimmons65587 жыл бұрын

    Gary mentioned on an earlier episode that one of Fred Allen's popular bits was to spoof husband and wife radio shows. In the 60's, Mary Healy and Peter Lind Hayes had a show like that on WOR-AM in NYC. They set up a studio in their home in New Rochelle to do the show there rather than schlep into the city.

  • @BenDover-cl6gx
    @BenDover-cl6gx4 жыл бұрын

    That last contestant looks like a Hollywood star herself.

  • @robertfiller8634

    @robertfiller8634

    3 жыл бұрын

    She was stunningly attractive!

  • @Gwaithmir
    @Gwaithmir Жыл бұрын

    Marge Champion died in 2020. She was 101.

  • @Wizardofgosz
    @Wizardofgosz6 жыл бұрын

    Where the hell did Arlene come up with the prison guess out of thin air? I'm going to have to play this game without seeing the jobs, because I have no idea how she came up with that, and wonder if I would come up with anything similar.

  • @kristabrewer9363

    @kristabrewer9363

    4 жыл бұрын

    Dorothy did that once too. I commented, How in the WORLD did she get that lol

  • @lopa2828

    @lopa2828

    2 жыл бұрын

    Arlene was very smart lady. But I think Bennett's question helped her to guess correctly. They were saying about making portable cell so I don't see that her comment came out of blue.

  • @VickyRBenson

    @VickyRBenson

    2 жыл бұрын

    Arlene was quick to pick up on clues. Early on they found out that the product wouldn’t make the person any happier.

  • @robertjean5782

    @robertjean5782

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@kristabrewer9363Dorothy was a investigative reporter for years 😊

  • @Mmdmade
    @Mmdmade3 жыл бұрын

    Well they got it! “Portable jail cells “…….. audience should have clapped

  • @diamondstud322
    @diamondstud3223 жыл бұрын

    Well, dang. I really thought Mr. Schwin would be a candy store owner, and all the neighborhood kids called him “Pop”. Prison cells....sheesh!

  • @joiefulton4015
    @joiefulton40158 жыл бұрын

    You woulda thought the girdle had a family of apparel

  • @juliansinger
    @juliansinger3 жыл бұрын

    Miss Gornall was not the motivating force behind the reducing show; that was Margaret Firth. But Gornall was a good collaborator. This was for KDKA in Pittsburgh. Article & picture: www.newspapers.com/clip/13003793/margaret-some-history-of-its-fun-to/ www.newspapers.com/clip/13003734/margaret-with-her-crew-1955/ Miss Gornall went on to marry someone named Whited, divorced him, and married a gent named Feigenbaum in 1977 in Virginia. I'm pretty sure she died in England, but I'm not sure when or why. (Also, I like Mary Healy, here. She's not obtrusive, but she helps the program (and the investigations) along.)

  • @esmeephillips5888

    @esmeephillips5888

    2 жыл бұрын

    The dimension of social history, captured through changing occupations and attitudes to them, is one reason why WML remains engrossing. (The etiquette and fashions is another). Your truffling for background- what Paul Harvey called 'the rest of the story'- enhances the show's interest. Many thanks.

  • @44032
    @440327 жыл бұрын

    They should have said that the hoiesry might sometimes be bigger than bread box.

  • @loissimmons6558

    @loissimmons6558

    7 жыл бұрын

    When it's stretched out on the body it gives that impression, but if you go to a store and see how it is sold in either a plastic egg or flattened around cardboard, you can see that even the largest sizes take up very little room. It's the person inside that's bigger, not the hosiery itself.

  • @44032

    @44032

    7 жыл бұрын

    No kidding!

  • @jadeblues357
    @jadeblues3573 жыл бұрын

    Did anybody else notice that the guy the builds prison cells when he was on Arlene and Fred answered it but John missed it or ignored it? Just wondering.

  • @mdesapio
    @mdesapio10 жыл бұрын

    I wonder why John never took Bennett aside and explain to him that his third name was Patrick, not Francis.

  • @belindaalbright8798

    @belindaalbright8798

    2 жыл бұрын

    John corrected Bennett on one of the shows. I remember seeing it but don't remember the specific show.

  • @BleedBNG
    @BleedBNG3 жыл бұрын

    RIP Marge

  • @poolside123canadian7
    @poolside123canadian73 жыл бұрын

    I’m surprised they didn’t they ask if the 2nd contestant had something to do with Schwinn bikes🤣

  • @mjanavel
    @mjanavel2 жыл бұрын

    Kobayashi Maru

  • @charliec2627
    @charliec26273 жыл бұрын

    Sometimes you wonder from time to time the panels are given clues or answers. I mean how did Arlene out of nowhere talk about prisons...

  • @enriquesanchez2001

    @enriquesanchez2001

    Жыл бұрын

    ABSOLUTELY... I've watched so many of these that I now ALSO WONDER about Arlene's SUDDEN SWITCH to prisons - OUT OF NOWHERE!, look at Daly's face as she is asking her questions. It is rather strange if you ask me.

  • @robertjean5782

    @robertjean5782

    2 ай бұрын

    Arlene is very intelligent and very much listens to the audience and they're vocal sounds, comments.😊

  • @leannsherman6723
    @leannsherman6723 Жыл бұрын

    That Japanese gentleman was so sweet.

  • @drumbum3.142
    @drumbum3.1422 жыл бұрын

    Marge and Mary kinda Lo.ok Alike ! 😍😊☺️😊☺️☺️🧸🧸

  • @SnowWalker1
    @SnowWalker16 жыл бұрын

    I think I understand now why Daly seems a little off sometimes. I'll have to reserve my thinking though for how he seems after 1960.

  • @robertjean5782

    @robertjean5782

    2 ай бұрын

    John divorced his wife, 1960 married a much younger woman 😊

  • @juliansinger
    @juliansinger8 жыл бұрын

    Marge Champion is still with us, but Mary Healy died in 2015. www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-mary-healy-20150206-story.html ETA: Oh, and everyone but Arlene stood up for the Champions. (But really, I think Miss Healy just wanted to talk to Marge.)

  • @ToddSF

    @ToddSF

    8 жыл бұрын

    I note that Marge Champion is now 96 years of age and will be 97 in September 2016. I note that the women on the panel almost always observed the convention of remaining seated while shaking hands, which conformed to the rules of etiquette. Arlene only stood of the contestant was an ordained member of the clergy, and Dorothy Kilgallen only stood if an ordained member of the clergy was Roman Catholic.

  • @jvcomedy

    @jvcomedy

    7 жыл бұрын

    I've also seen both ladies stand when a contestant was older.........I'm sure as a sign of respect.

  • @enriquesanchez2001
    @enriquesanchez2001 Жыл бұрын

    I've watched so many hundreds of these and I feel that Bennett Cerf's complaints regarding the TRICKERY of John Daly's responses is either part of the confrontational banter which they developed or that Mr. Cerf is an idiot. 🤣

  • @joncheskin
    @joncheskin6 жыл бұрын

    Mary Healy is a good player and very beautiful, but seems a little introverted for the panel. Maybe she was nervous?

  • @lopa2828

    @lopa2828

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who knows may be but she was smart lady to be panelist

  • @jmccracken1963
    @jmccracken196310 жыл бұрын

    One might suspect that the producers gave Arlene Francis a gambit for the second contestant, because her questioning certainly came "out of nowhere," so to speak. But, in fairness, there had also been a man who built jail cells as a contestant on WHAT'S MY LINE? a couple of years before (in 1953) - so maybe Arlene remembered something from that episode.....

  • @WhatsMyLine

    @WhatsMyLine

    10 жыл бұрын

    I don't think so-- Arlene's questioning didn't feel out of nowhere to me because it had already been asked if the product would make someone happy and the answer was no, which, if you think about it, *really* limits things (basically, something having to do with law enforcement or garbage!) According to the producer, the gambits were only used with whoever was the comic member of the panel at the time, which in this case would have meant Fred Allen. The intent behind gambits was to create a *funny* line of garden path questioning, never, ever, ever to give real clues to the contestants' line. It would have ruined the segments if the panelists had any real inside information, which is why they always voluntarily disqualified themselves in those rare instances.

  • @twinsonic
    @twinsonic4 жыл бұрын

    Marlene was hot!!

  • @loissimmons6558
    @loissimmons65587 жыл бұрын

    On this date, the Dodgers split a doubleheader in Cincinnati. In the opener, the Dodgers broke open a tight game with 5 runs in the eighth on a bases-loaded double by Sandy Amoros that cleared the sacks and a home run by Gil Hodges. Don Newcombe retired the last six batters he faced after the outburst for a complete game 7-1 that raised his record to 5-0. In the nightcap, the Redlegs (as they were known at this time, surmised but never officially announced that it had to do with the strong anti-communist sentiment in the U.S.) pounded the Dodgers, 11-4. It was the season debut for Karl Spooner who had broken in spectacularly in September 1954 with shutouts in both games he pitched and 27 strikeouts. Shoulder miseries delayed his appearance on the mound in 1955, but Dodger fans believed that once he was healthy, he would pick up where he left off. While he had his bright spots in 1955, this wasn't one of them and his shoulder continued to get worse and worse each year. He gave up a run in the first and was knocked out of the box when Cincy added three more runs in the third. During the week of May 9, after their torrid start, the Dodgers posted a respectable but more pedestrian 4-3 record. After their sweep of the Phillies on Mother's Day, they headed to the friendly confines of Wrigley Field. After a travel day, the Dodgers extended their latest winning streak to 11 games and a record of 22-2. The Dodgers won 3-0 as Don Newcombe pitched a brilliant one-hit shutout and faced the minimum 27 batters in the process. Gene Baker's single in the 4th inning was the only blemish on Newk's record. Baker was erased trying to steal second. All streaks must end and the Dodgers streak ended the next day, Wednesday, May 11. The Cubs outslugged the Dodgers 10-8 as Russ Meyer surrendered five runs in the first inning to erase a 2-0 Dodger lead and he was removed for a pinch hitter in the second inning. Four of those first inning runs came on an Ernie Banks grand slam home run. After the day game (no lights at Wrigley Field in 1955) the Dodgers rolled up U.S. Highway 41 (thinking of the late Gregg Allman) to Milwaukee County Stadium. And on Thursday, the Dodgers had a losing streak for the first time in 1955, albeit a two game streak. Gene Conley and Carl Erskine reprised the pitching duel they staged the previous week in Brooklyn. This time each team managed one run through 11 innings. Hank Aaron led off the second inning with a home run, his 7th of the year and 19th of his career. Many more would follow. Amoros returned the favor in the fourth. But then Walter Alston flipped the script. He batted for Erskine in the top of the 12th. Rube Walker struck out as the Dodgers went down in order. Ed Roebuck is waved into the ballgame and he faced only one batter. Del Crandall sent everyone home with 4-bagger. On Friday, the Dodgers righted the ship as Billy Loes went the distance for a 6-2 win and series split with the Braves. Then it was on to Cincinnati for a Saturday afternoon game and a Sunday doubleheader. The Dodgers took the series with an easy win before splitting the doubleheader as described above. Saturday's game was scoreless for the first three innings. Then the Dodgers offense started rolling. They were leading 5-0 when they broke it open in the 7th. The Reds brought Bob Hooper into pitch, the same guy that Don Mueller of the Giants victimized on an intentional walk on May 1. Hooper walked the leadoff batter, Roy Campanella. Then Amoros and Hodges bunted for base hits. The Dodgers dropped down three bunts for base hits in front of Redlegs third baseman Chuck Harmon that day. Carl Furillo sent one over the fence at Crosley Field for a grand slam home run. Eventually seven runs crossed the plate in the seventh, two more on Duke Snider's home run. All seven runs were charged to Hooper. It was his major league farewell performance. The following day, the same as the day this episode aired, another player played his last major league game. His major league career was nondescript but he eventually became the answer to a trivia question. That day in Washington's Griffith Stadium, 28 year old Jesse Levan pinch hit with a runner on first and no one out. He grounded out to the right side of the infield, moving the runner to second base. He spent the next four years in the minor leagues where he was a star power hitter and his defensive shortcomings weren't so noticeable. Then in July 1959, a meeting was called in Nashville where Levan's team was scheduled to play a road game. Based on the testimony given by Levan and other players at that meeting, Levan became the last baseball player to be banned for life for trying to fix games. (Pete Rose was banned for betting on them, but he was not accused of trying to fix them.)

  • @cjb8010

    @cjb8010

    4 жыл бұрын

    Lois Simmons, Go Giants!

  • @robertfiller8634

    @robertfiller8634

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@cjb8010 Lois Simmons and her breathtaking encyclopedic knowledge! (I was a precocious 6 year-old in 1955 and already following the box scores in the sports section of the morning newspaper, the Montreal Gazette. Her detailed summaries bring back wonderful memories of players, both stars and those ordinary ones who are mostly forgotten in the mists of time.)

  • @keymaninmusic

    @keymaninmusic

    3 жыл бұрын

    Again with the boring baseball?

  • @waynegarrison2481
    @waynegarrison2481 Жыл бұрын

    Don't see it. Fred Allan is not that funny,

  • @peternagy-im4be

    @peternagy-im4be

    9 ай бұрын

    He's a hoot. A riot.

  • @robertjean5782

    @robertjean5782

    2 ай бұрын

    Dry humor was popular 80 years ago considered top notch😊

  • @rogerpropes7129
    @rogerpropes71295 жыл бұрын

    "Mr. Kobayashi, how many American G.I.s did you kill?"

  • @dinahbrown902

    @dinahbrown902

    Жыл бұрын

    Cold

  • @rogerpropes7129

    @rogerpropes7129

    Жыл бұрын

    And Gower Champion once had an affair with young Shirley Temple, and Marge Champion lived on another 45 years, dying in 2020 at 101.

  • @adriennegormley9358
    @adriennegormley93588 ай бұрын

    Kobayashi-san was a very pleasant gentleman here.

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