Saturday, May 14, 2011

Ain’t that a hole in the boat

Hey pallies, likes gotta 'fess up that I am likes psyched, perplexed, and pained by today's Dino-postin.

Psyched pallies, 'cause likes this is the first "review" that I have found of the new Time-Life Dino-discs of our beloved Dino's awesome TV Show.

Perplexed pallies, 'cause the dude who scribed this, Mr. James Lileks, has certainly failed to put the accent on our Dino...likes how strange to begin the post with a pix of Joel Gray?

Pained pallies, 'cause Lileks failed to do proper Dino-study....such as not knowin' that our great man made Kents his brand of smokes...and that our Dino indeed did stop smokin' a few months before his passin'. Indeed pallies, this dude spent more time trackin' down which mags were used in that classic Dino-skit featurin' our Dino, Jimmy Stewart, and Orson Welles in the beauty parlor. Gotta admit, it's very very cool to learn these Dino-details, but certainly not at the expense of bein' so errant on important Dino-facts.

Today's Dino-gram comes from the extemely popular blog " The Bleat" where Mr. James Lileks, columnist for the Minneapolis Star-Tribune holds forth. Lileks reports that he got a review copy of the new Time-Like Dino-discs from a pallie at work and proceeds to show how truly little he truly knows 'bout our beloved Dino and our Dino's amazin' style as entertainer extraoridnare.

It's so so cool pallies to be able to share this first, of what I woulda expect to be many, reviews of the Dino-show discs. It's so so sad that this first report is by someone who definitely doesn't "get Martin."

Woulda likes loves to hear your thoughts on Mr. James Lileks' thoughts o'pallies of mine. To read this in it's original format, as usual, please clicks on the tag of this Dino-message. Dino-only, DMP


Ain’t that a hole in the boat

Hi there!



That’s Joel Grey. I watch a lot of stuff I don’t particularly enjoy – not to punish myself, but to learn. Everyone has their ideas about how things were, how they were better back then. Well. Time-Life has a new set of disks on this show:



You all remember De-Anne Martin. This ran for many years, and I have a dim collection of the later ones with the Golddiggers, Dean sitting on a stool with a drink and a smoke in Full Swank. Classy stuff. Carson you didn’t have to stay up late to see! It was the death-throes of the Greatest Generation culture, one of the last levees built to contain the rising water of the youth culture. When it was all over I think Dean just went home and played golf and drank and had lunch until one day he checked his watch, said “well, closing time,” and checked out. There’s a book I’ve been meaning to read for years, Nick Tosches’ bio – the description seems to confirm the sense that I get from watching him perform, that the surface was all there was. There was no Deep Dean. People expected to find there was another guy down there somewhere, but never found it. We expect artists to be Complicated; if not, they’re shallow. But maybe he was just a one-story house without a basement. Nothing a guy can do about that.

I got a review copy from a co-worker. Everything I’d read about the show seems right: Martin never rehearsed, treated it all as a lark, smoked constantly; everyone ambled and stumbled through the bits with cavalier nonchalance. To read some reviews of people who recall the show fondly, it was a Golden Age, real entertainment, “classic,” the sort of thing they just don’t make anymore.

That’s true. The variety format is dead. On the other hand, the stuff is terrible. The singing is fine, in that old belt-it-out style, but the humor is not . . . what’s the word, funny? That’ll do. The disk opens with a ’65 or ’66 monologue by ol’ Ski Nose:



He runs through his jokes without enthusiasm, playing to a tape-recorded crowd – the laugh track is tinny and obviously fake – and the jokes are an interminable parade of witless cliches in the old style, meaning, things that should be funny because they follow the commonly-accepted parameters of a joke. They’re mostly two-liners, constructed along lines from 20 years before, beaten to death in the afternoon shows of second-billing Vegas acts. Did you hear about the Person with a Particular Attribute? He suffered a rather expected, and apt, fate. Hahahahahha!

Watching TV of this era brings back early childhood, as you might imagine, but not because of the content. Over my head that went. No, it’s the look – the bright saturated look of the shows. Living color. I thought there’s be little to enjoy until I came across . . . Him.



Yes, it’s Orson. After some gruesome strained routines they cut to Orson on a dark stage:



He does a passage from “The Merchant of Venice,” straight, from memory. I’ll give the advocates of the good-old-days this much: the form of the variety show was so loose and capacious that they could take time out for a man delivering Shakespeare straight up, no chaser. He’s in a tux the whole show. Everyone’s in a tux. Everyone is dressed up, because this is how men of the world dress, right? It’s all a cocktail party, a piping stew of celebrity and wit and glamour.

I call your attention to this bit, with Dean, Jimmy Stewart, and Orson, getting their hair done in a beauty parlor. (You may have to hit reload to see the video; I don’t know why, but that’s what I have to do. Mysteries abound.)



They just outed Rock Hudson and Tab Hunter. Wow.

Earlier in the sketch, they’re talking about their magazines, and if you know the styles of the mags of the era, this one’s easy:



Look had that style, and the internet helped me pin it down to August, 1967.



Of course, they had to take the name off, lest it be seen as a commercial endorsement. Likewise the magazine Dean’s reading, although at one point he turns it sideways to show it has a centerfold. Well, now that we know the approximate date, perhaps we could zoom in on the picture . . .



See that stripe? Okay. Cross-reference with the wikipedia list of centerfolds for 1967, do an image search – oh, the things I do for history – and voila:



It’s Anne Randall, whose “data sheet” (sfw) listed the people she admired: “Ronald Reagan. He’s honest and the kind of man America needs in politics.”
Now she’s a community activist at a retirement resort in Arizona, where she seems to have her hands full. Her website could stand an upgrade, but she seems to be doing good work

As for Martin after the show ended, wikipedia says:

A much-touted tour with Davis and Sinatra in 1988 sputtered. On one occasion, he infuriated Sinatra when he turned to him and muttered “Frank, what the hell are we doing up here?” Martin, who always responded best to a club audience, felt lost in the huge stadiums they were performing in (at Sinatra’s insistence), and he was not the least bit interested in drinking until dawn after their performances.

Don’t think he ever quit smoking, which makes his end a one-two punch: got lung cancer and died of emphysema. But he was 78, and from what I’ve read he was hit hard by his son’s death. You wonder if you’d told him when he was 77 he could have lived three more years if he’d never smoked; he might have looked down at the Pall Mall red, considered it, and said: “Sure. And for what?”

One of the gags in the show: the door. Dean would open the door, and there’d be a surprise guest. Supposedly they never told him who it was, so his reaction would be genuine. Can’t vouch for that – he seems surprised, but it seems to me that he was so good at faking it he didn’t know when he was faking it, and if he didn’t know, then maybe he wasn’t? It was all an act, every bit of it, but it was him.

Then there’s this.



I don’t have any particular love for the Rat Pack; they seemed like comic-book superheroes for men who’d been living square-john lives since they were 18, but the imagery of the era is something else, and you can’t dismiss their role in the playboy-cool male archetype of the time. Or our time: people talk cool, they don’t talk Kurt Cobain or the guy from Weezer or some other post-90s emo-wiener. It’s the guys with the easy grins and the hats and the cigarette and the drink and Angie Dickinson waiting in a room in the Sands. It’s the posture of disengagement, the casual entitlement to the good things and the appreciation of the same, the remnant sense of old-line manliness – which they watched evaporate with no regrets, because hell, they were still doing fine. Dean was fine. Looking good. And hammered.



A good day, with caveats. Worked at home, since Natalie had no school. Put up a lot on the blog – oh, criminey, forget to fix the link to PopCrush. Well. Add that to the list of things. After writing all day, a thick soupy nap, a workout while watching “The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes” – love the show, but the theme has a trumpet that feels like a dentist’s drill on a filling – then wrote the National Review column. Then this. Hope you enjoyed; I got a letter today telling me how pretty much everything I do sucks now, because I’m overextended and just going through the motions here on the site. I’d hate to think that’s true, because I’m not going through the motions, which means giving things my full attention means the result sucks, which is really depressing. I love this site; it’s my life’s work. There will be weak Bleats, but on balance week to week, I think the overall contribution to the amount of Stuff on the internet is worth it. But in case you feel the same, I thank you for sticking with it! See you around.

One more thing about the Dean Martin show, something that says so much about the era:

Marionettes. They had to have marionettes.

11 comments:

  1. Well pallie, what can I say about this fella...definately NOT in the know about Dean. Hey, I guess you'll find a guy like this every now and then. I feel bad for him, no, I mean it. Cause when he wakes up with no Dino to look forward to, then that's as good as he's gonna feel ALL day! Ha ha!!!
    Danny G.

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  2. There was no Deep Dean. People expected to find there was another guy down there somewhere, but never found it. We expect artists to be Complicated; if not, they’re shallow. But maybe he was just a one-story house without a basement. Nothing a guy can do about that.

    Pardon me, but...What a load!

    Would Orson Welles have associated with our Dino is our Dino had had depth?

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  3. One more thing....

    I find the following DISGUSTING:

    It was the death-throes of the Greatest Generation culture, one of the last levees built to contain the rising water of the youth culture.

    Two of my cousins (brothers) served on D-Day and were forever emotionally scarred. Neither ever slept through a night as long as they lived!

    As a result of what happened to them at Normandy (What they saw, what they endured), one died of a heart attack at age 39 and the other at age 44. Both left young children behind.

    Whoever wrote this review has no depth of character or depth of understanding -- not only of our Dino but also of our American history.

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  4. This is a terrible review.
    This guy seems to have a very limited amount of knowledge about Dean and the show.
    This is it !
    The greatest variety show and the greatest entertainer in the world are finally making it to dvd.
    Like many fans I`ve only seen poor copies of these Dean Martin shows but they have given me so much pleasure over and over again.
    I might agree about The Marionettes, things improved when they were replaced with real girls.
    The shows just got better and better.
    Dean had so much fun doing the shows and that`s what made the shows so great.
    Every show was funny, Dean never rehearsed and that was a good thing because the mistakes he made were some of the funniest moments from the shows.
    I am sure Dean never knew who was behind the closet door.
    Dean never knew what to expect.
    I hope we get better reviews than this in future from someone who really apreciates how great this show was.

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  5. Hey pallie, thanks Danny G. for puttin' such a cool Dino-spin on this dude's last of Dino-appreciato...loves it...and likes keeps lovin' our Dino!

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  6. Hey pallie, Miss AOW gotta sez that likes I agrees with all your thoughts on this review...Dino and otherwise....thanks for boldly sayin' the truth...and likes, of course, keeps lovin' our Dino...

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  7. Hey pallie, Miss Ky, likes thanks for steppin' to defend our Dino...your Dino-thoughts ring with deep, pure, and true Dino-reality....keeps lovin' our Dino!

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  8. I would also note that Dean Martin's hometown of Steubenville is very much pro the Greatest Generation. Steubenville had so many volunteers in WW2.

    Methinks that this reviewer has been reading Nick Tosches "biography" of Dean Martin. I've read that book and, indeed, own it. Quite a bit of creative writing (stream of consciousness, which is fiction in that Tosches never interviewed out Dino) mixed in with biographical facts.

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  9. Hey pallie, thanks for more Dino-thoughts Miss AOW. Actually ma'am this reviewer has never read Tosches' tome 'cause he sez, "There’s a book I’ve been meaning to read for years, Nick Tosches’ bio – the description seems to confirm the sense that I get from watching him perform, that the surface was all there was."

    So it woulda appear to be hearsay of Tosches' thoughts that he is basin' his Dino-understandin' on.

    Keeps lovin' our Dino!

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  10. Looking back over the archives I came across this one. I know this is a Dino Blog but the only way I can describe this dude is from the lyrics of a Sinatra song.
    "Some people get their kicks stompin' on a dream"....from "That's Life".

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  11. Hey pallie, likes I hear you Matty...likes some pallies just can't appreciate the greatest of our great man....keeps lovin' our Dino!

    ReplyDelete