Friday, November 10, 2023

Guest Who: A Hitch at "Hotel."

Quite some time ago, we did a post about the series Hotel (aka Arthur Hailey's Hotel.) It primarily centered on the pilot movie and the show's first season.  We've also done tributes to its leading man, James Brolin, its grande dame, Miss Anne Baxter, and even given its opening credits a bit of a shout out.  Given that the series ran from 1983-1988, featured a raft of guest stars each week and was an Aaron Spelling production, it's a no-brainer that we adored it. That said, we must have missed this installment, late in the game. (Perhaps I briefly "had a life" in 1988? LOL)

For those uninitiated or who may need a brush-up, Hotel was all about the goings-on in a fictional, very-plush, San Francisco, um, hotel. Each episode focused on two (generally unrelated) stories courtesy of the guests who've checked in. It was at once an ingenious idea for a TV show while simultaneously being something of a rip-off of The Love Boat and Fantasy Island! But since those were also Aaron Spelling series, that was of no concern. 

In the wake of the death of the St. Gregory's owner (played by Anne Baxter who died in real life), the place was run by James Brolin and Connie Selleca.

With the departure of previous regulars Shea Farrell, Heidi Bohay and Michael Spound, security officer Nathan Cook and promoted clerk Shari Belafonte-Harper rounded out the only remaining original cast members. This crazed wig, which is sort of perched on the usually close-cropped Harper, scared me to death at first! I had no recall of this look.

Replacement cast members meant practically nothing to me without looking into them! Valerie Landsburg was a longtime cast member of Fame prior to this, in addition to many other TV roles before and after. (I, however, never watched Fame.) Pretty Susan Walters was in the midst of graduating from daytime TV's Loving, to this prime-time gig. She proceeded to a very busy career in that vein, though in recent years has returned to daytime with The Young and the Restless. Ty Miller was just beginning his career as an actor, having made a handful of guest appearances the prior year. 

You know we're always going to zero in on anyone cute. I had no knowledge at all of Miller. Stayed tuned at the end of this post for a little bit of bonus info on him.

Now... on to the guests. It was more than startling to see Canadian singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot as one of the cast members! A virtual legend for his songs such as "Sundown," "If You Could Read My Mind" and "The Wreck of the Edmond Fitzgerald," this was one of a very select few (and the last) acting attempts he ever made.

He plays a recovering alcoholic country singer (named Joe Daniels!) who has been booked at the St. Gregory for his return to the stage after two years. As his estranged son, looking at the poster, we have...

...Matthew Laborteaux, a child actor of the mid-1970s who grew up before the public's eyes as adopted son Albert on Little House on the Prairie. He was 22 at the time of this and fivew years past Prairie.

Having written to his father that he was coming, he attempts to gain entry to the suite, but is informed that there's no record of him being listed as a guest.

As Brolin steps in to help, we are vastly relieved to see that Belafonte-Harper is sporting an all-new, much-improved look from the one she sported in the opening credits!

It's always a little jarring to spot a Prairie person in contemporary clothing, but Laborteaux looks great.

Taking a personal interest, Brolin brings the young man to his father's room, but Dad isn't even there.

Apparently, he was either looking for Loni Anderson's stunt double or has unearthed the last remaining Hee Haw Honey... HA! Lightfoot, embarrassed at having brought this toothsome tart to his room when his son is there, swiftly moves her back out the door.

While they're happy enough to see one another after a lengthy separation, things begin to unravel when Laborteaux discovers that his old man has only opened about one of the many letters he's written to him over the years!

When he discovers a bottle of Scotch in his dad's belongings when he's supposedly been dry for some time, Laborteaux has had it and flees the suite.

With things taking an unhappy turn and the stress of a looming opening night performance in front of him, Lightfoot struggles to resist the demon facing him.

"DON'T DO IT!"

Adding another layer of confusion to the mix is the sudden arrival of Laborteaux's mother, the ex-wife of Lightfoot. Anyone want to hazard a guess as to who this might be?

Ronee Blakley had burst onto the scene in 1976 with the Robert Altman film Nashville. She was nominated for two Golden Globes, a BAFTA and an Oscar, but wasn't able to take any of the awards home. She continued a varied career of singing, songwriting, acting on screen and even on stage. This would be her final TV role. Her next project (starring Belafonte-Harper, in fact) was a straight-to-video movie called Murder By Numbers (1989.)

Blakley knew a thang or two about country sangin', having costarred as a thinly-veiled Loretta Lynn type in Nashville. (Blakley contended that the role was closer to Lynn Anderson, however.)

Ever-helpful Brolin coerces Laborteaux into joining him for a spin in his hot, red convertible and some lunch.

Perhaps on a recommendation from Pia Zadora, lunch consists of hot dogs. Brolin does his level best to help bridge the gap between this troubled father and son.

Lightfoot never acted on screen after this, but performed on stage for many years. He suffered from some significant health issues (an aortic aneurysm!) in 2002, which waylaid him for a time, but he came back strong eventually. However, in May of 2023 he passed away of natural causes at age 84.

Lightfoot in his hey-day as a recording artist.

Ms. Blakley is still alive today at 78. Having burst on the scene in such a big way, Blakley ultimately wasn't able to capitalize on her success and proceed to a significant movie career. She did work in several films and appeared as a guest on TV, but tended to stay busier with a music career (including a stint alongside Bob Dylan, who happened to be Lightfoot's idol.) She did happen to be in what would become a longtime cult film, 1984's A Nightmare on Elm Street. She is currently 78.

Laborteaux (who has since reverted to his last's name's true spelling of Labyorteaux) was and adopted child, along with his adopted brother Patrick. Both children had health and well-being concerns in their early years, but were nourished and nurtured into becoming healthy and talented youths. Patrick appeared on Prairie, too, as Jonathan Garvey and the siblings were hot topics in the teen magazines of the day.

Handsome, but only having only grown to 5'7," he seemed mired in teen roles and struggled to emerge as a leading man in projects. As the millennium approached, he segued into voice work for many animated projects and video games with only an occasional foray into on-screen acting. Long single, he startled fans by marrying for the first time at 53 and becoming a stepfather for two. Now 56, he and his brother worked together for some time towards troubled youth fundraising. 

But you really didn't think that when I called this post "A Hitch at 'Hotel'" I was merely referring to a rather broken-down country singer striving for a comeback and hitching his wagon to The St. Gregory, did you? Come on, now. You know me better than that...! The other story line offered in this ep will illuminate the title further.

Yes, children. The principal guest star for this installment was Miss Tippi Hedren, making a glamorous visit to (script-wise) San Francisco. You'll recall that The Birds (1963) was partially set in Frisco, too.

Hedren is entering her deluxe suite when she hears a woman screaming down the hall.

Catapulting down to the room and pushing the door open, she sees...

...a man strangling a gal on the bed!

The highly threatening-looking man is portrayed by...

Peter Mark Richman. Richman, a highly prolific TV actor had worked on countless episodes of various hit shows from the mid-1950s on, with a recurring part on Three's Company and a decent stint on Dynasty among them. He worked up until 2016 before retiring with his wife, to whom he'd been wed for darn close to 70 years when he passed away. He died in 2021 at age 93 from natural causes.

Hedren makes her way back to her suite and frantically calls for help.

She's just able to get her door closed before the deranged Richman can get her. But he does announce that he now knows where she is!

Security chief Cook enters the room where the strangulation was happening and finds just an unmade bed and an otherwise unremarkable vacant space.

Any birds in here?? This episode gives Hedren multiple chances to pose and emote in ways that recall her two famous movies for Alfred Hitchcock, The Birds (1963) and
(1964.)

Selleca (and her earrings) lend a caring, concerned ear to the distraught Hedren. She also manages to get her into a different room, though the hotel is booked solid. Seemingly free from danger, Hedren goes to her new room to prepare for a downstairs meeting.

The glass elevator begins to have a mind of its own! This sequence recalls Hedren's famed entrapment in a phone booth during The Birds.

When the door finally opens, she's met by the menacing Richman! But she manages to escape his clutches.

Down in the lobby is a cousin of hers, who she's arranged to meet with for dinner. Do you recognize her?

Comer was a Texas-born actress who began working on television sitcoms and westerns in the early-1960s before scoring an Emmy nomination for Arrest & Trial (a precursor to Law Order.) She lost to the formidable Ruth White in Little Moon of Alban. She soon graduated to movies such as Quick, Before It Melts (1964), The Loved One (1965), The Appaloosa (1966) and Banning (1967), though was found more often on TV in the 1970s. She continued to act on screen into the millennium, but apart from an appearance in 2011 has been retired. She is currently 84.

In her late-50s at the time of this episode, the Tipster next gives us a bathing scene. She still looked terrific (and, truth be told as far as I'm concerned, always had far better looks and figure than her frequently-undraped daughter Melanie Griffith!)

Unfortunately, something is amiss again!

Whoever it is on the other side of this door has some crazy-big hands! 

Somehow, she keeps staying at the hotel even though someone keeps attacking her (and a dead body was even found in a parking lot across the street!)

Hedren has been so busy with attempted murders that she forgets to let her concerned cousin Comer know that she made it through the previous night basically unscathed!

Fans of Hedren and/or Hitchcock can't afford to miss this installment, in which Hedren looks great and keeps giving us memories of her earlier work, such as Marnie, seen here.

All during her ordeal, Selleca is on hand to see that she's heard and cared for (to whatever extent the hotel can protect her!)

Selleca is not exactly one of "my people," but she had a certain soothing serenity mixed with a modicum of authority when called for. And she could really rock those '80s earrings and other fashions. And you have to love those eyes, coated down with so much smoky liner and mascara.

Anyway, even here, there are echoes of Marnie. The full episode without commercials may be seen on YT here

Those startled expressions and wide-eyed reactions were part of her considerable training for that long-ago debut film. Though she hasn't been seen acting on-screen since 2017, Hedren is still with us today at 93 and continues to maintain a collection of lions and tigers at her nature preserve Shambala. You may have wondered to yourself... WHO directed this episode of Hotel, which seemed so bent on creating a dark, suspenseful atmosphere with a nod to Hitchcock?

!!!

Who'd have thought it?!

If you're still lingering... Ha ha! I told you I was going to return to Ty Miller at the end of the post. The headline of this clipping made me chuckle. Turns out that he wasn't talking to any "guys," that was just the title of a teen rag. After Hotel checked out, he was hand-picked by Aaron Spelling to appear in the cast of The Young Riders, a new sort of western based on The Pony Express. I loved the fact that Miller made mention of having liked The Big Valley, a Top-5 favorite show of mine.

The Young Riders put Miller in the mix of all those teen rags of the day.

Although it ran for three seasons, I must confess that I have never seen a single moment of the show!

Apart from Anthony Zerbe, who often mentored younger performers, the series boasted a few guys who would later spring to greater fame, including Stephen Baldwin and Josh Brolin. Yes, Miller's next series after appearing with James Brolin was one in which he costarred with James' son! 

Miller didn't stay in the limelight much after Riders was over, though he kept working. He was Tim Thomerson's costar in Trancers 4 (1994), which recently got a mention here, as well as Trancers 5 (1995.) He worked on screen until just before the pandemic, but hasn't been seen - as of this writing - since. He is currently 59.

Sometimes I think that Hollywood truly is a very small town.

9 comments:

http://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/ said...

Hi Poseidon, Aaron Spelling's shows always had that Hollywood Squares-style of star casting, but had no idea that Gordon Lightfoot ever acted... Have a soft spot for Lightfoot as his "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" occurred during my teen years here in Upper Michigan's Lake Superior. Also, "If You Could Read My Mind" is one of my favorite '70s tunes. Got to see Gordon Lightfoot toward the end of his career in concert, at Interlochen Center for the Arts. While he was pretty weathered, Lightfoot was in good voice and very engaging!
Cheers, Rick

hsc said...

Not only is "Hollywood a very small town"-- the Internet is a very small place.

Believe it or not, I had *just* posted a comment about MARNIE over on a "classic horror films" discussion board I frequent before checking in here to find a new post with-- *Tippi Hedren in MARNIE* being referenced! (Weird, huh?)

Thanks for another fun look at a TV episode (loved the "Neely O'Hara" reference!) and its cast, including the young, almost-name performers! Keep up the great work, Poseidon, and thanks for all you do!

Love to all, and be safe and well, everyone!

joel65913 said...

Hi Poseidon!

Can't say I am certain that I saw this particular episode but I was a pretty faithful "Hotel" watcher. I did fall off somewhat after the passing of Miss Anne Baxter and her ability to bring the star power, which none of the other attractive but ordinary players possessed. I did like Nathan Cook though for whatever reason he was far more magnetic on the myriad game shows, he was sharp as a tack and an expert player, he appeared on before his shockingly early death.
But even with Tippi this sounds like a standard episode, not necessarily a bad thing.

To be honest I wasn't watching for the complex storylines and expert thesping. I do remember however a segment-a version of Rita Hayworth's sad story-with an exemplary Jean Simmons as a once great star who's memory was slipping away from undiagnosed Alzheimer's, but I think that was early in the series and as it went on challenging storylines went out the window in favor of glamour and melodrama. Again that's what the audience was looking for so no harm, no foul.

I agree that Tippi has always looked far better and certainly more pulled together than daughter Melanie (in her youth a pretty girl, if a bit common, now a testament to far too much cosmetic surgery).

I always confuse Anjanette Comer and Antoinette Bower. Their major acting activity was about the same period, their names are similar as are there looks. I believe Bower is English though her accent was more Mid-Atlantic so not as noticeably so. I recognize each lady when I see her in something but if I read their name in the cast list I'm never sure which one is which until she appears on screen.

I can't recall ever seeing Gordon Lightfoot in any acting role. A very fine insightful singer, though as has been proven time and again that doesn't guarantee acting ability.

I had wondered what happened to the Laborteaux boys. They seemed to be everywhere for a while and then poof. Good to hear it's not some train wreck story.

I saw an episode or two of The Young Riders but have no memory of it really. Perhaps it's just the picture of the older Ty but I never would have recognized him now.

Another fun entry Poseidon! Thanks!!

Gingerguy said...

Deliciousness. My roommates and I watched "Hotel"and hooted at the sexy faces Connie Sellecca made, especially when she was romanced by Mr Streisand ( he's been all over the news lately due to Barbra's book and is a gorgeous old man). I remember thinking Mathew was a cute kid on "Prairie". I live for Ronee Bakley and saw "A Nightmare On Elm Street" only this year on a plane. She's fabulously off in it. A little like Shelley Duvall in that way. I remember clearly Tracy Scoggins on an episode of this but not Tippi, worth looking at again. Fun stuff

Poseidon3 said...

Rick, Lightfoot was clearly a talented songwriter and vocalist, but was likely one of the casualties of MTV/VH1 when it became almost essential to be conventionally handsome, glitzy, stylish, trendy, etc... Many people with strong voices found themselves waylaid in the video era if they didn't play along. But it was good to see that he continued to perform for decades after that. Thanks!

hsc, I know it's reputation is questionable, but is "Marnie" a horror film?! LOL j/k "Marnie" features a rather rare bitchy turn by Diane Baker, who was more often a heroine/ingenue. Glad you liked the shot of Neely and her bottle. It was hard to come by! Most of the pics from that shoot had a big pill bottle. ;-)

joel, I have to confess I didn't really like the way this ep ended. But... It continued to play into the Hitchcock universe and references, so I guess there's that. Like many shows with a level of sexual tension in them, once the leading male and female began shacking up, some of the chemistry was lost. "Hotel" was hovering on its last legs about this time. I have many performers who I get confused such as yours with Anjanette and Antoinette. Antoinette had pretty pronounced, well, for lack of a better word, bags under her eyes - a genetic trait in her case, I think. As she was memorable on an ep of "Star Trek," I had her memorized early on. But it took me ages to get Rosemary Murphy, Rosemary Harris and Rosemary Forsyth figured out! LOL Thanks!

Gingerguy, I agree about Brolin and I am SO damned jealous of his still-thick mane of (now white) hair! It blows me away that those two met up and created a lasting partnership the way they did. Incredible. They seem from two different planets. But hooray for them! Take care.

hsc said...

"I know it's reputation is questionable, but is "Marnie" a horror film?! LOL j/k"

Actually, the topic was "Controversial '70s Films," and the discussion of MARNIE was obviously major thread drift (not started by *ME*-- I swear! LOL!) spawned by noting a '70s film in which the main character raped a woman and the audience is basically expected to "get over it." Connery's spousal rape of Hedren in MARNIE was cited and discussed at length (along with some of the Bonds).

The Classic Horror Film Board (CHFB) forum actually has a section for psychological thrillers that includes Hitch's MARNIE, as well as the more obvious THE LODGER, PSYCHO, and FRENZY. (WEHT BABY JANE and all the "Horror Hag/ Psycho-Biddy/Grand Dame Guignol" films get heavily discussed here, and we've even had some bitchy Crawford/Davis-fan verbal slapfights.)

Because of the inexplicable bird attack element, THE BIRDS is considered actual "horror" and goes under "60s Horror." It's kind of a bridge between the "giant bugs" films of the '50s (like THEM! and TARANTULA!) and the "critters go crazy" films of the early '70s (like WILLARD and FROGS). JAWS started a second wave of "killer animal" films in the late '70s (ORCA, GRIZZLY) with a *single* top predator killing off people.

There's also a section for "marginally horror" films and sections devoted to peplum films, spy films and other "genre films" as well as a catchall "stuff that doesn't fit anything" section.



And I'm relieved to hear I'm not the *only* person who confuses Anjanette Comer and Antoinette Bower-- as well as Rosemary Harris, Rosemary Murphy, and Rosemary Forsyth! (At least there's no mistaking Rosemary Clooney!)


Thanks again for all you do, Poseidon! Love to all and be safe and well, everyone!

harlow said...

This is a show that I barely have any memory of! Though I seem to remember Bette Davis and not Anne Baxter as the star of it. Did I imagine that? It seems she only did the pilot before ill health forced her to exit so they brought in Ann. I can't remember seeing any episode with her in it. Anyway you can see the full film on YouTube with Bette as Laura Trent the owner. Thank you for bringing this show back into limelight, I am curious to see more!

David Kenilworth said...

Bracken's World: Intertwine:

Bette Davis ("Margo Channing") starred in the Hotel pilot. Anne Baxter took over the role.

Anne Baxter and Eleanor Parker co-starred in Hotel S1.E10 "The Offer".

Anne Baxter was on Bracken's World in the late (S1.E24) "Diffusion" first season after Eleanor Parker left.

Eleanor Parker starred onstage in the Margo Channing role of Applause (https://historicimages.com/products/rsk13819).

Perfect 3-Way!

Unknown said...

There's also an earlier feature film under the same title, adaptation of Arthur Hailey novel pre-Airport, NOT a great movie but great cast, incl. Poseidon regulars McCarthy, Oberon & Oscar winner Melvyn Douglas, prior to Being There. Can never forgive model Hedren for keeping Marnie from Eva Marie Saint, Oscar winning actress who wanted to play the role.