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Messages - Gothick

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4201
My dear Mrs. Peel,

May life bring you all the elegance, charm, wit and vivacity that your name enshrines for us all!

cheers and Happy Birthday!

Gothick

4202
Golly.  They really screened a Davis real estate video?  Whew.

We can get real estate commercials from Roger Davis, but no Grayson Hall Playtex commercial?  That's just wrong.

*insert Gothick frownie-face*

G.

4203
I also have to wonder what Jim Pierson was thinking when he scheduled that Sciography segment to air during that Festival banquet.

Surely an individual with even a modicum of social instinct would be able to understand just how upsetting the completed segment would be for the actors and many of the fans?

G.

4204
Can someone refresh my memory and tell me who Ice-T is again?

I *think* he's a rap artist who dabbled in acting along the way.

I have a morbid curiosity to see that Sciography segment.  I remember thinking when they were sending out press releases asking for fans to be interviewed and they were looking for a fan who slept in a coffin and thought they were Barnabas or Angelique, "HELL will feeze over before *I* ever go before a camera for that bunch!"

cheers, G.

4205
Thanks, Mysterioso darling, for letting me know!

Hope you had lots of cake for your special day!

cheers, G.

4206
So, tonight is the new episode of Moonlight?  I might try to check it out.

Best wishes,

G.

4207
Current Talk '08 I / Re: Elizabeth Collins / 18 yrs at Collinwood
« on: April 09, 2008, 03:24:03 PM »
The episode where Vicki persuades Liz to go into town to try to help Carolyn is one of the best.  Joan Bennett was incredible.  What a great actress.  Moltke and Barrett were also fabulous in that one, of course.

G.

4208
Happy Birthday!

cheers!  Gothick

4209
Calendar Events / Announcements '08 I / Re: Happy Birthday MB!!!
« on: April 09, 2008, 02:19:21 PM »
Mysterioso Darling, It's YOUR Special Day!

Here's wishing you health, happiness, and much joy!

Standing and Cheering,

Gothique

4210
Good luck and best wishes.

G.

4211
I'm not an Aries, but I *am* a huge Emma Peel/Avengers fan.  I'm also a huge fan of Honor Blackman and have been revisiting some of Linda Thorson's shows recently and finding them better than I had remembered (both in terms of Thorson's performance and as shows).  I also recently discovered Julie Stevens who appeared as Venus Smith in a few episodes during the 1962-63 season.

A friend told me that there are discussion boards where you can write reviews and share chat with fellow fans on A & E's "Original Avengers" site.  If I have the chance to check it out, I'll post the link in this thread.

I think that although the Avengers had a much more substantial budget and much glossier production facility than DS, both series share a number of attributes in common, including the ability to deploy distinguished veteran character actors in juicy guest roles and a look, sound, and style that become iconic.  Each in its own way, both also were definiing exemplars of facets of the mid to late Sixties cultural ethos.  I'm very pleased to see that both shows continue to find new fans!

G.

4212
Current Talk '08 I / Big Lou and Mighty Mitch, vintage '66
« on: April 04, 2008, 08:07:30 PM »
Fans,

Yesterday, I revisited the DVD Talk review of DS The Beginning collection III to help out a friend who's hoping to rent some Laura Collins episodes soon on his new Netflix account.  (From what I can determine, the third set ends before the introduction of Laura Collins in December of '66.)  Despite the hyperbolic language, I enjoyed the writer's description of our own beloved Big Lou, Louis Edmonds, and Mitchell Ryan in these classic shows.  A couple of corrections:  Louis WASN'T closeted (read the excellent biography of him, Big Lou, by the late, much lamented Craig Hamrick, to get more details about how blisteringly honest Mr. Edmonds was about his sexuality and every other aspect of his life), and however fey Roger's wardrobe may have occasionally seemed to the eye of a 2008 viewer, he was NEVER in drag.  (I sometimes think that Roger's PT 1970 counterpart occasionally sported invisible drag--but that's another story for another time).

The passage:

[...]episodes 71 to 105 truly belong to two people. The first is Big Lou - Louis Edmonds. A closeted homosexual in the days when being gay meant possible physical harm (not to mention industry blackballing), his Roger Collins is nothing more than a drag version of a spoiled rotten dandy. With a voice so clipped he could cut glass, and a mannerism so foppish he practically channels Oscar Wilde, Edmonds owns this storyline - and with good reason. Roger is the center of all the intrigue. He's the supposedly guilty party Burke is trying to blame. He's the source of young son David's ongoing homicidal streak. He uses Victoria as an alibi and then turns around and threatens her. And he pitches one mean hissy. Indeed, Edmonds makes many of these early installments, saving us from otherwise drab line readings and strained New York stage acting. The other creative catalyst is Mitchell Ryan. As the conniving and scheming Devlin, he does everything except chew the scenery - and that's only because Big Lou leaves very little backdrop behind when he finishes with a performance. Ryan is the manlier yin to Edmonds yang, and together they create an engaging cat and mouse.  (end)

The other thing that I would add is that as far as I'm concerned, all the members of the regular cast did stellar work in this part of the story.  I would particularly mention Joan Bennett who has some of her best scenes, and Alexandra Moltke who gets to play a much more knowing, thoughtful Vicki than we get to see later on.

Have a nice weekend, fans!

cheers, G.

4213
I really wish the episodes of Virginia Graham's Girl Talk show with Grayson Hall and Joan Bennett from 1970 would surface somehow, someday...

G.

4214
Many happy returns to Humbert Allen Astredo!  One of the true greats.

G.

4215
I saw a few minutes of a couple of episodes of Passions during the first year or so that it was on, just out of curiosity.  In one of the episodes. Timmy was naughty and the Juliet Mills character stuck him in the washing machine to "cool off."  A bubble opened up as a "Timmy doll" spun around and around in the machine advising viewers not to "try this at home."

If the show reminded me of anything from the Sixties, it was the Witchiepoo segments of H. R. Pufnstuf.  And then some vaguely pornographic hunk in a uniform would wander into camera range and read some really stilted dialogue off a cue card.  I'm really surprised it lasted as long as it did; the show did not seem to be directed at all and apart from Mills, none of the performers seemed to have had any acting experience or training of any description.  But, as I said, I'm making those observations based  on a couple of brief sequences I watched before switching off the series because the proceedings were too preposterous even for my looneytunes taste.

G.

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