Monday, December 08, 2025

Pulling Pin Off a Seventies Nostalgia Grenade

 

Never Mind Turning Water to Wine ... CBS Running This in 1979 Primetime. Now That Was a Miracle

When Carol Burnett (and Others) Helped Make Old Movies Mainstream Again

Carol Burnett on her 70’s comedy-variety show did affectionate parodies of “old” movies thirty or so years passed. She’d open with a card reading “Late, Late Movie” or Lyle Waggoner in black tie as mock host for a local station’s “Nostalgia Theatre.” Plenty of such programming went on then. Channel 8 in High Point had a weatherman that doubled as presenter of pre-49 Warner titles in mid-seventies primetime, something few expected what with VHF stations abandoning older syndicated packages in favor of all-color content. What Carol Burnett celebrated, maybe without knowing, was large-scale revival of B/W now that UHF stations were on the rise and reacquainting viewers with “Movies When They Were Movies.” Advantage of deep libraries was getting them cheap. A program manager from Memphis told me how they licensed Warner oldies for seven runs on each title, $25 per play. How could then-present owner United Artists command more, competition from recent movies fierce as it was? UHF channels bought heavily from vintage preserves and unspooled them at all times of the day and night, Charlotte with two such outlets, Channels 18 and 36, both top heavy with pre-49. Classics ignored during latter half of the sixties came roaring back in the seventies to tap memory wells. Renewed popularity if not a surprise at least led to mainstream VHF use, such as with latterly mentioned Channel 8 or Winston-Salem’s Channel 12 where It Happened One Night occupied prime viewing hours in 1976, Channel 8 doing the same with Ceiling Zero, Now Voyager, you name them. What startled me was these affiliates skipping their network feed for movies they but recently would have said were played out. To theatres in a meantime came Summer of ’42, The Sting, American Graffiti, more. PBS affiliates got rarities like Once in a Lifetime and Counselor at Law, even silents in a pinch. Classics got a yearly boost from American Film Institute “Life Achievement” Awards which recognized likes of John Ford, Cagney, Bette Davis, each with a backlog finding fresh viewership on local stations suddenly awake to the appeal of old and older favorites.

Amidst this was Carol Burnett and her spoofs. She had been a fan since growing up one block up from Hollywood Boulevard, witness to red carpet premieres (she remembers seeing Linda Darnell), dramatizing films with her friends after seeing them. Burnett would be variety TV’s ideal spokesperson for the glories of Classic Era filmgoing. Being mainstream and maybe the most popular comedian on television at the time, Burnett would peak at 22.1 percent of U.S. TV-equipped households watching, which according to estimates, translated to over twenty-five million residences tuning in, and considering most homes had multiple occupants … well, those numbers are staggering beside what passes for a “hit” today. Carol Burnett made movies memorable by ribbing them: Mildred Pierce, A Stolen Life, various 30-40’s musicals familiar perhaps to an older generation, but objects of discovery and appreciation by younger watchers. “Gentle parody” might better describe Burnett’s approach, always affectionate where mimicking the old stars. Some called in to express appreciation, Joan Crawford after “Mildred Fierce,” James Stewart for enjoying a skit not even taking off on one of his, but pleasing to him still. Burnett gathered veterans to her show's guest list, Rita Hayworth, Betty Grable, Martha Raye, Dinah Shore, others who would assert existence outside late show schedules. Again point out: the seventies thanks largely to UHF stations put pre-49 back on prime, at least more accessible, hours (all hours of the day and night, in fact). Not for years had vaulties known such relevance. It helped that artists who made them were alive and eager to commemorate their revival. Major current names stood up to cheer for veterans. Burt Reynolds did two CBS specials where he interviewed panels of Classic Era luminaries, these accessible at You Tube though I can’t vouch for quality, level of that evident in captures below. Still it was nice to see Reynolds hosting Esther Williams, Van Johnson, James Stewart, June Allyson, others, such appearances to let fans know they were alive and ready to take fresh bows for work playing heavily on local channels.

No coincidence was That’s Entertainment landing in theatres to such fanfare and modern crowd embrace, its premiere stage crowded with faces that once populated the old musicals, would spokes-speak for them again as That’s Entertainment and sequels fanned out to audiences nationwide. Vibrant vet Ann Miller took the field as MGM’s Good Will Ambassador and spent a year spreading happy news that old musicals were new again, not unlike similar arrangement Gloria Swanson had with Paramount during 1949-50, her traveling on behalf not just of Sunset Boulevard but other Para product, Swanson ideal to trumpet past-set if not nostalgic The Heiress. Swanson selling Sunset was less simple a commission than Ann Miller’s for That’s Entertainment, Boulevard having struck more a sour note amidst cheerful look back at Hollywood the stuff of Betty Hutton as Pearl White or much-proposed screen bios of Mack Sennett, those so close, yet so far, from actual production. The seventies had Day of the Locust to muddy ponds, less noticed by a public preferring rose colored looks-back. It’s interesting that plainer-speaking Sunset Boulevard would, from late-forties, early-fifties explore of all things old, take posterity’s ribbon. Embracing a Classic Era in the seventies would not isolate enthusiasts, not with oldies drawing crowds well beyond those who'd recall the films from distant past. It was plenty OK during this epoch to be an old movie geek, be you young or past that.

Ann Would Again Do Her Dance for Leo Long After MGM Orchestras Had Left the Stage

Campus shows often were cult-driven, idols to include Humphrey Bogart, the Marx Brothers, W.C. Fields, us to assume students would gravitate always to these and other past personalities, but no, we'd since see it for pop-cultural gust of short-lived smoke it was. Gift we have in age 92 Carol Burnett is one of the last eyewitnesses to the best of a Classic Era. Artists who made all that entertainment are gone. No more Ann Miller or Jane Powell. What remains are fewer-every-day first-run fans of Miller and Powell, others of us not yet born when they thrived. Burnett, the pioneer fan, tells Dave Karger on TCM how she was taken to see Gone with the Wind when it was new, her barely past toddling. That’s like me at The Shaggy Dog, but what does The Shaggy Dog amount to beside Gone with the Wind? One day I’ll be among last who recalls Gone with the Wind when it still played theatres, notwithstanding Fathom Events. Carol Burnett speaks for those from best years of filmgoing largely gone, like veterans of World War Two. Original fans, fans that understood best, like Ray Harryhausen who saw King Kong when a boy and had his life changed by it, or my collector friend Bill Wootten in Statesville (him 1948 writer of the first monograph and index on John Ford’s films). Bill was fortunate enough to develop “pink eye” (is that a thing anymore?) which enabled him to skip school and enjoy Kong with the other eye. Greenbriar had joy and privilege that was access to Conrad Lane, born in 1930 and seeing everything worth seeing from three-years-old on (starting with Footlight Parade!). Conrad offered eyeball account of King’s Row, Desperate Journey, To Each His Own when they were new in theaters, his perspective not to be approached by latter-day “historians,” including myself. But then we can’t blame those who study Caesar or Copernicus just because they never conferred with either chap.

A lot from Bette Davis-Joan Crawford had been lumped into “weeper” category, obvious exception their late-career horrors, but Carol Burnett alerted viewers to values of 40’s melodrama. They may not register as modern, nor “camp,” but still could be enjoyable if not baroque by comparison with less energetic successors. Not a coincidence was music from older films being re-recorded, re-packaged, re-discovered, by those thinking “classical” might have a broader definition. The RCA Charles Gerhardt album series was successful enough to continue past initial Steiner and Korngold, and I’d ask how many campuses booked Now Voyager beside their Marx and Bogie weeks? A good reception for one aspect of oldies might suggest other ways for a deep library to prosper again, such inventory not nearly so deep fifty years ago as now. Refreshing aspect of then-youth embrace for vintage films was their not being driven by “nostalgia,” few or none having been around when the features were new. I’d like to understand mindset that took hold of that seventies generation --- actually it had begun in the sixties, lasted well into the eighties. For that matter, I was still running by then ancients to early twenty-first-century collegiate crowds, surely a last stand for campus shows based on earlier models. But wait … maybe there is college programming yet, and well attended, though insistent voice tells me, probably not.

13 comments:

  1. Back in the early 70s a local UHF station ran prewar Paramount comedies under the banner "W.C. Fields and Friends" on weekends. Friends included the Marx Brothers, early Hope and/or Crosby, Burns and Allen, and Mae West. It was a little like the Universal monsters, characters occupying the same world in the same approximate role in each film. "International House" and "Big Broadcast" were the equivalents of "House of Frankenstein". Even "Alice in Wonderland" felt like it belonged in this group. Aside from regular spots for series like Shirley Temple or the Bowery Boys, don't remember any other efforts to highlight classic or vintage movies.

    My classical cinema education really began at UC Santa Cruz. Screenings for specific classes were held in the huge Classroom One, open to all students for an admission fee. They tended to be double features, and over the course of a quarter you'd have effective film festivals of Keaton, fantasy films, animation, etc. In town there was the Sash Mill, a revival house I associate mainly with old Warner Brothers features. In those years I finally saw vintage movies with big, appreciative audiences. Did my heart good to hear collegiate peers roar at "March of the Wooden Soldiers".

    My own first-run experiences, dating back to early 60s, are largely extinct. The one-screen neighborhood houses with two- or three-day runs; the widescreen domes with cafeteria-style snack bars, souvenir programs and monthlong engagements; the drive-ins long since paved over -- repaved over -- for suburbs; the art house that showed those animation festival compilations. A modern multiplex can offer a nice experience with recliners and all, but maybe it's too comfortable.

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  2. The actual nostalgia for old things started in the late 50s, from a perspective from Argentina the big time was 1955 after Perón was ousted from power. What happened at the time is that due to inflation, the cabarets began to close their doors forever, the cost of having live big orchestras became prohibitive, and they were replaced with minor ensembles of no more than six musicians. Despite the emergence of rock and roll, stereophonic and high definition recordings, a big number of people still prepare the noisy recordings coming from 78 rpm discs, I still do. With the arrival of television in the 60, old movies began to be shown at different time slots at the only 5 channels available from the next 30 years. Many of the young stars of the old movies began to constantly appear as older people in the contemporary soap operas of the day, and their presence reinforced interests in the old movies featuring them. The old Hollywood movies were always present, and the TV stations were always a constant cinematheque where you could find the very best produced by Hollywood or access movie marathons during the weekends. This began ending from the end of the eighties through the mid 90s when TV stations replaced movies and shows with boring live panel shows that are cheaper to produce. By now, I have been seen many classic films to the point that it gets hard to go watch titles that I haven't seen before: the environment does not make these films too accessible and a shared experience anymore.

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  3. One of my fond growing up memories was a Carol Burnett sketch set on an ocean liner, but at 15 or whatever I had no idea what movie they were spoofing. Years later I saw One Way Passage and it suddenly dawned on me that I had already seen it-- with Carol Burnett and Harvey Korman.

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  4. Footnote: In 1964 Carol Burnett starred in a Broadway musical, "Fade Out - Fade In", set in 1930s Hollywood. While not specifically a movie parody, it was set in an MGM-like studio where an unknown (Burnett) is mistakenly cast as the star of a musical, allowing for mock production numbers.

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  5. When I used to cart around my projector and Laurel and Hardy films to show to people, the most heard comment I recieved was "Laurel and Hardy? They're dead." A lot of people I encountered believed once you were dead, you shouldn't be watched anymore. The plethora of 40 plus year old comedies that inhabited the airwaves in the late 1960s and early 1970s I believe was caused by the fact that film comedies produced after the 1930s never got better, the material was already produced and ready to broadcast, and you don't have to pay a dead comedian. I do wonder if Groucho recieved any money from Paramount, or whovever owned ANIMAL CRACKERS when re-released in 1974.

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  6. I had only the vaguest familiarity of most of the movies parodied by Carol Burnett, but my mother who saw them all in their original releases laughed mightily. And as for Groucho getting any money from the Animal Crackers re-release -- probably as much as Zeppo received, meaning nothing.

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    1. Seems I read somewhere that the Marxes had a percentage deal with Paramount. Yes or no?

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    2. For some the real money was never the actual movies. Singing cowboys toured constantly and had record deals. A talk show host pressed "Little Mermaid's" voice actors how much Disney paid them. They demurred, but one admitted they got a bigger payday from sales of the soundtrack. Max Baer Jr. recalled complaining about low wages on the hit "Beverly Hillbillies"; an executive told him his fame from the show meant big personal appearance fees at state fairs. And there were various side hustles. Endorsements, corporate gigs, and such merchandising as the studios didn't claim.

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  7. If they had a deal lasting that long, that's pretty impressive. I'd like to know how they were the only actors of their time (that I know of) who made only one movie per year when they were at Paramount and MGM.

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    1. Steve Stoliar in his book about Groucho talked about how he made personal apps supporting Universal's reissue of ANIMAL CRACKERS, so I'd guess there was some sort of compensation involved.

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    2. I imagine it took a while to conjure up MARX BROTHERS scripts. Paramount surpassed each previous picture while at MGM the slope was in the other direction in my view.

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  8. I found classic movies in high school (1974) out of complete boredom. UHF, as you mentioned was awash in those films, then only 20-30 years old. I was lucky enough to catch Bogart Month on a local UHF station and discovered well over two dozen Bogart films as I consumed a film nearly every evening. 50 years later classic films are still my favorite hobby.

    Burnett was so great at those spoofs as she loved those films so much and the films were still new enough for all to know the film being lovingly spoofed. And fresher still for me as I just learning about them.

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    1. Our Channel 36 from Charlotte had a weekly primetime Bogart feature. Virtually all his pre-49 features ran, even the earlier B's.

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