Okay, kittens... I'm finally back after a lengthy hiatus. Just too, too many things interrupting my usual service to the blog and nothing you'd want to be bored hearing about. After 16 long months, I am now ensconced in the office again. This means I have access to a scanner once more and can share with you some of the Fun Finds I have come across during my time away. Today's find is one of 7 vintage magazines I picked up at a huge flea market for $5.00 total. The cover story on RJ Wagner & Natalie Wood caught my attention. (Oh, and thank you to Mr. Paul Pelasky of Bellefontaine, OH for not throwing this out once he'd read it! Ha)
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We start off with a color shot of Miss Valerie Harper of Rhoda fame. If you have the opportunity, I can heartily recommend the Reelz Channel documentary on her: Valerie Harper: Behind Closed Doors.
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The story is really more about her husband at the time Richard Schaal. her spouse from 1964-1978, he was appearing on Phyllis at the time (another spin-off of The Mary Tyler Moore Show.) His daughter from a prior marriage, Wendy Schaal, later was disastrously cast on Fantasy Island as Julie, a co-host to Ricardo Montalban.
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This 1976 magazine reports friction in the Lee Majors-Farrah Fawcett house, though they remained wed until 1982. Oh Lord, I remember my mother going on and on about how Glen Campbell "stole" Mac Davis' wife! As to the photos, I had no clue that one of the Hee Haw Hager Twins was engaged to Karen Valentine. And for those curious, the man in the bottom photo is the father of one Lenny Kravitz.
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This is NOT in the magazine, but it seemed an opportune time to remind everyone that at one point during their Hee Haw hijinks, circa 1973, The Hager Twins posed semi-nude for the centerfold of Playgirl magazine! Ha ha!
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Here's a version with the creases and staples removed.
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Note that the blurb on Jimmie "J.J." Walker spells his name as "Jimmy" in the text! Lee Grant was not pleased about the cancellation of Fay and publicly referred to NBC's "mad programmer." Critics liked When Things Were Rotten (and I loved it as a 9 year-old!), but it was canned due to ratings after just 13 episodes. Dick Gautier's marriage to Barbara Stuart ended in 1979 after a dozen years. And, hey, those towheads in the bottom photo grew up to become the music act Nelson!
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Jack Albertson and Sandra Gould were both in Teacher's Pet (1958) and an episode of Ensign O'Toole, but another connection is that Jack's older sister Mabel played Darren's delightfully cranky mother on Bewitched, Gould's popular show! All photos of Robert Conrad should be shirtless (and many were!) Janet Lennon and her husband did divorce in 1976. She remarried later in the year.
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Lloyd Bridges died of natural causes in 1998 at the age of 85. About a decade after this, when she'd remarried another man, Valerie Harper did adopt a daughter. George Peppard, while always maintaining a career, managed to piss off scads of people along the way with his attitude, demeanor and demands.
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Some folks ask themselves, "What Would Jesus Do?" I suspect that some of you might be more inclined to ask, "What Would Adrienne Barbeau Do?" and now you know...! LOL
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David Janssen's marriage to Dani was a happy one, though the workaholic actor and very heavy smoker dropped dead of a heart attack in 1980 at only age 48.
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"Who loves ya, baby?" Yep, this is Telly Savalas, enjoying some fan interaction while on location in New York to film parts of his hit series Kojak.
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It never dawned on me that Kojak was principally filmed in L.A. with only some exteriors done in NYC. It seemed very gritty for the time.
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I noticed when reading this mag that the profiled celebrities seemed to skew older than we may be used to these days (and for quite some time!) I mean, '40s actor Glenn Ford?! It's a testament to his enduring popularity with readers as he was 60 at this time. And, as you may guess, I prefer to read slightly (?) geezer-ish magazines myself these days like Closer and Remind because at least the subjects of the articles are ones I give a hoot about usually.
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Ford, who was married four times in all and banged most every gal of note in Hollywood, did marry Cynthia, his third wife, but it only lasted until 1984. A fourth union barely made it from 1993-1994.
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Over the last year, I had the chance to (for the first time ever) check out some episodes of The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour. He was so amiable and talented and fun. But as the '70s dawned, he began to fall increasingly under the spell of alcohol and drugs and eventually became quite a mess. This wife was his second. He married Mac Davis' ex and that only lasted until 1980. Then came the Tanya Tucker phase, followed by a fourth marriage which he credited with helping to get him turned around again. He died of Alzheimer's disease in 2017 at age 81.
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I don't guess "Hollywood" wrecked Robert and Natalie's second marriage, but it was still wrecked when she died tragically at sea in 1981. At this time, Wagner was taking an occasional supporting role in the movies while starring on Switch. Wood had deliberately slowed her career to focus on motherhood, but still enjoyed the occasional TV or movie role.
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Wood's mother was a dominant force in her childhood and attempted to be the same in her adult life. She was a fascinating creature; very dramatic and driven. For once, I went ahead and scanned the whole story because it seemed rare to me that TVRM landed an interview with her and offered up her alleged opinions about her daughter and son-in-law.
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Bursting onto the scene in the mid-1950s, Franciosa enjoyed a string of successes (and an Oscar nomination for the film version of his Broadway hit, A Hatful of Rain, 1957, though the award went to Alec Guinness for The Bridge on the River Kwai.) By this time, he'd mostly segued into TV on shows like The Name of the Game (from which he was fired due to his temper) and Search, which floundered.) Matt Helm was likewise washed up after 14 episodes.
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Rita was his fourth wife (his second had been one Shelley Winters!), but it lasted until his death in 2006 of a massive stroke. He was 77 at that time. I don't know if he was TV's Sexiest Man, but I like that he could frolic around in an abbreviated swimsuit so comfortably!
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This magazine devoted quite a bit of space to daytime TV. Some of the stars mentioned here have been touched on here in Poseidon's Underworld before for one reason or another. In another, prior, Fun Find, there were stories and pics on Kathryn Hays, Susan Flannery and George Reinholt that I went into some more detail about.
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Longstanding All My Children viewers will recognize the lady shown here, Mary Fickett, who played Ruth Martin for many years. Fickett held the very unusual distinction of having been granted an Emmy Award for her work on the soap before there was such a thing as the Daytime Emmys! She was tossed into competition with MacDonald Carey, a scenic designer and several directors for a single daytime drama category.
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Despite all the demonstrative lovey-dovey, she and this second husband divorced later that year. She wed for a third and final time in 1979.
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Fickett passed away in 2011 at age 83 of Alzheimer's complications.
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Here's a little manspread on another All My Children star who was once hot in the press, Nick Benedict, who played Phil Brent.
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He was the son of busy Italian-born supporting actor Richard Benedict. Phil did marry Michelle, but it was all over and done with during 1976... He proceeded to a long career in various other soaps.
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I have never seen an episode of Love of Life, which was really popular in its day. Nevertheless, I always disliked seeing these old warhorses get canceled and this one bit the dust in 1980.
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You'll surely recognize young Christopher Reeve, who was soon to take the world by storm as Superman (1978) or perhaps Ray Wise, who made a splash on Twin Peaks. Then in the bottom-middle photo is John Aniston, who went on to a big success with Days of Our Lives (and sired a daughter named Jennifer, who carved out quite a career for herself.)
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The successful, but short-lived, star of Chico and the Man, Freddie Prinze.
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Prinze had parlayed a stand-up comedy career (and a significant appearance on The Tonight Show) into a starring role on the sitcom. But personal demons such as depression and the overuse of tranquilizers loomed. His wife looks happy enough here, but she was a few months pregnant during the nuptials, which helps explain the rather sudden union. By January of 1977, Prinze had committed suicide by revolver, leaving behind an already estranged spouse and a baby boy named Freddie Prinze Jr. He was only 22 when he died.
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Beacon Hill is another show I never saw. An Americanized rendition of the highly-successful British series Upstairs Downstairs, its pilot cost nearly $1 million; a fortune for 1970s TV. And while it had a lot of viewers that first night, it fell off soon and the show was canceled after only a dozen installments. McGuire soon headed back to daytime on a variety of soaps.
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Alongside this continuation of the Maeve McGuire piece is a trio of movie reviews. I LOVE Three Days of the Condor (1975) and can never understand how I have resisted profiling it over the last dozen years...!
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Finally, we have a story on Alex Rocco, then 40 and playing in what would be yet another failed series that happened to be mentioned in this issue. Three for the Road had him as the father of two young boys (one played by Leif Garrett) who travel all over the U.S. in an RV. You might recall Rocco as one of Bea Arthur's lovers on The Golden Girls. Mr. Rocco passed away in 2015 from pancreatic cancer at the age of 79.
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This is a little bit light for a Fun Find, so I'm going to end with a few photos of RJ & Natalie during their relationships, early and later, in which they seem happy.
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Showing off the pearl engagement ring she received way back when. Note her slightly deformed wrist, which she always obscured with a thick bracelet of some sort.
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The ring (and her freckles) are seen in color here. I love his brush-cut hair at this time (for a movie role.)
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The then-stringbean is positively swimming in his tuxedo jacket!
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Wood made a brief appearance on Switch in 1975 and again, as seen here in a publicity shot, in 1978. She later popped up for a cameo in the Hart to Hart pilot as well.
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I doubt we'll ever know the full extent of what exactly happened on the night of her death. What's certain is that she had many more performances in her that we never got to see (and left behind the daughters she adored so much.)
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Seeing the Hager twins nude is like seeing Macaulay Culkin in a mirror but without his studliness and musculature. I remember that they posed in Playgirl in February 1973 for Valentine's Day immediately prior to the magazine showing full frontal nudity. They wouldn't have eager to pose for $4000 if they had to show their genitalia. Playgirl would have faced a huge issue recall had they actually shown the twin's dicklets. Now, had they shown Buck and Roy's or Grandpa Jones and George "Goober" Lindsay's genitalia as the "Hee Haw - The Cocks 'n Balls" issue, well sir, now you've piqued interest.
ReplyDeleteA short time after the death of Natalie Wood, a friend and I went to the cemetery where she was interred (she and a lot of other luminaries). There was a lot of flowers on her grave and a handwritten note that said, "Natalie -don't worry, we won't forgive and we won't forget."
ReplyDeleteGreat to see you're back in gear, Poseidon! Hopefully, there isn't too much stress or backlog of work associated with a return to the office!
ReplyDeleteI've missed these "flea market finds" magazine shares-- they're always so much nostalgic fun, even the cheesy little ads in the back next to part of the article.
(There's one for "towels" at a surprisingly low price-- but notice that they're "unwoven" towels-- i.e., a disposable pressed-fiber product not much different from paper towels.)
The PLAYGIRL ceneterfold with the Hager twins was from one of two limited-circulation "test" issues the magazine did before launching the first "real" issue in June 1973 with Lyle Waggoner.
I had seen a small repro of the photo before, but never that good. And the version with the creases and marks in place shows that the centerfold format at that point was going to be the standard "gatefold" that PLAYBOY and other skin magazines were using.
When PLAYGIRL did finally launch, they notably revamped the centerfold into a pull-out poster slightly less than four times the page size, with the centerfold image "hidden" until you pulled it free of the staples.
Eventually, after the magazine changed hands, they dropped the pull-out poster and went with a simple two-page centerfold spread.
I had never seen that thing with Natalie Wood's wrist before, nor had I ever heard anyone mention it. Now I'm going to *always* be looking for it in photos!
(I guess now I have to put Natalie in the same "irregular beauties" markdown bin with Rufus "wonky eye" Sewell and Darryl "nine fingertips" Hannah!)
Poseidon,
ReplyDeleteIt's so nice to get another great post from you!
Loved this one.
A.
Hey Poseidon! Great to see this post - perfect for reading on a hot summer afternoon...I hope that the transition back into the workplace has been an easy one for you.
ReplyDeleteA lot of fun reading, as always! I do remember the Hagar Twins and I can't recall seeing that Playgirl spread; I would have been about 15 when that issue came out, so I wouldn't have been in a position to buy it from the local drug store magazine rack...lol. Give them a different haircut and, yabba-dabba-do-me!
Interesting tidbit on Mabel and Jack Albertson - I had no idea!
Thanks and take care!
Jeff
Wow so much interesting stuff here. Glad to see you back.
ReplyDeleteYour point about the age of stars is interesting - I wonder whether the obsession with youth started in the eighties?
You can get magazine templates and put yourself on the cover. I myself am on a Playboy cover!
So nice to have you back where you belong, this is looking swell Poseidon. In the age of HD tv and better photography across the board I was struck by how normal and accessible most of these stars look. I would completely agree on the sexiest man on tv title. Smoking hot there.
ReplyDeleteAn Adrienne Barbeau advice column never entered my mind as a possibility, it's hilarious.
The Nelsen twins kept that haircolor for a long time but only under suspicious circumstances. One thing I love Natalie and Robert for was their kindness to the playwright Mart Crowley. I was watching a doc on "Boys In The Band" and he had some tough times but she made sure he got hired for "Hart To Hart" and he lived very comfortably. Very endearing. This was a fun post
I loved reading Adrienne Barbeau's Speakeasy. Only, the writing style from one fan to the next doesn't change if you notice. A letter from an 11year old complaining about privacy? Hilarious.
ReplyDeleteDJWildBill, The Hagers were over 30 at the time! LOL Baby faces... As a kid, I always wondered why they didn't have ears. I vote for the title "Hee Haw's Hangers" for your special country-fried issue. ;-)
ReplyDeleterigs-in-gear, wow! That's fascinating. So much drama in Hollywood, on and off screen. I think the types of personalities that gravitate there help feed that sort of larger than life level of passion about things. (Not that someone wanted to bring Nat's case to light, but I mean just the whole place being constantly riddled with suicides, murders, overdoses and all that through the years.)
hsc, thanks! I had three decent days at work last week, then the wheels came off. Hoping for a smoother ride this week. Thank you for clearing up what "unwoven" towels are...! How crazy. Natalie's wrist was injured early on in her career as a child star and she was so obsessed with obscuring it any time she was in public or in a project on screen. I always like seeing whatever bangle she chose to use for a given occasion.
A, thanks!! I'm glad you enjoyed this. I appreciate it.
jobj69, I was also startled when I first found out about Jack and Mabel Albertson. I love, love, love her nasal, disapproving voice as Darrin's mother!! LOL She was a hoot with her "sick headaches."
John, you should have made that Playgirl cover your profile pic! Ha! How fun. And while young stars can be fun to look at, the more interesting performances tend to come from more seasoned actors and actresses... So many times the formula of a hot young face paired with an older, established person worked to great advantage. The worst is when an older actor or actress ruins their looks trying to freeze themselves at 30... I wish we could pendulum away from that.
Gingerguy! LOL about the Dolly Levi phrasing. I think that most people who knew Natalie well found her to be a very loyal friend. If done wrong, that Russian blood came out and she was done with you, but more often it seemed like she had great friendships with a variety of people, Mart being a key one.
Shawny, lord only knows who really penned those "letters." Hilarious. If you actually watch "Maude," especially season one, Adrienne did anything but speak "easy." She screamed every line even louder than Bea Arthur and that's sayin' something! LOL
ReplyDeleteBracken's World Trivia/Intertwine:
Steven Oliver as "Tom Hudson" did a screen test. He said that his real name, Barbario, was thought to be too ethnic. "Who ever heard of Sinatra, Franciosa, Gazarra, right?"
Franciosa starred in Matt Helm. Also in Matt Helm was Laraine Stephens, "Diane Waring" on BW.
Further intertwine: Shelley Fabares appeared as Hilary Saxon in BW S1.E10 "Package Deal" and in Matt Helm S1.E2 "Now I Lay Me Down to Die" as "Chris * Tina".