Showing posts with label Paper Dolls (TV series). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paper Dolls (TV series). Show all posts

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Pop Quiz: Soaping Up the Celebrity Name Chain

Oh no... Another infamous Pop Quiz! This time all of the questions include at least one performer who had a featured role on a prime-time network soap opera during that genre's glorious 1980s hey-day. First, though, I must apologize for my extended absence from posting. This may be the longest I've ever gone since Poseidon's Underworld's inception! It's just been a perfect storm lately: a birthday trip out of town, a work convention out of town, a medical scenario (don't fret - I'm fine now!) and heaps of work (at the office and at home) that were waiting for for me upon each return. And I'm about to leave for Labor Day weekend again! I'm sorry if the radio silence led anyone to think I'd disappeared (perhaps like Fallon, into a spaceship on the last episode of The Colbys!) There have been treasured blogs that just up and ended without word or warning. But I'm still here. And the kicker?  I'd been preparing a gala post to commemorate this blog's "tenth" birthday, but when my blond head actually looked more closely and did the math, we ENTERED our tenth year on August 24th, 2018... we aren't yet ten years of AGE!  :::sigh:::  I'll blame the public school system. LOL Anyway, to play this game, you take the name of the person in the first photo and their last name is the first name of the person in the second photo. Hence, our cover boys today are John James (of Dynasty) and James Franciscus (in Beneath the Planet of the Apes, 1970) or John James Franciscus! Got it? Even if you hate the quiz, maybe you'll get a snicker out of some of the pics. Now on we go... and if you're good girls and boys, there may be a few bonus pics.

#1 - This one begins with a popular and omnipresent disc jockey turned television personality, whose professional moniker took its lead from one of Universal Studios' famous monsters. Next to him is the man who took over the role of Steven Carrington on Dynasty after Al Corley departed early on. 

#2 - The first gal is from the prime-time hit Falcon Crest, on which she played Melissa Agretti, locking horns with the matriarchal figure played by the show's star Jane Wyman. Next to her is an actress for whom I really should leave you "clueless."

#3 - The lady on the left is probably a toughie, even if her face may be familiar. She appeared on many, many 1970s and '80s television shows (including the prime-time soap Paper Dolls, which is why she's here) and in movies (like Slap Shot, 1978, and Ice Castles, 1978) as well.  The gent ought to be well known to most movie fans unless you've been living under a rock for quite a few decades, though he's better known to today's youth for screwing up the finale of an awards ceremony not too long ago.

#4 - The curvaceous blonde on the left was a musical comedy movie actress, notorious as being the longtime mistress of Bob Hope. Hint: Her first name is the same as another wildly famous blonde bombshell. On the right is the English hunk who slid into the role of California-bred Miles Colby on The Colbys.


#5 - The man on the left had a busy, lengthy career as a character actor in movies and on two hit TV series (Dragnet and M*A*S*H.) The gal on the left made several attempts at prime-time soaps from Flamingo Road to Paper Dolls to Falcon Crest, but never gained the long-term foothold that other stalwarts found in the genre.

#6 - The lady on the left (a cast member of our beloved The Poseidon Adventure, 1972) was an integral part of Dynasty before leaving to pursue other, mostly less successful, ventures. Her counterpart is a character performer who spent years in movies and TV (with series like Mission: Impossible and Space: 1999 on his resume) before becoming a late-in-life Oscar-winner.

#7 - The first pink pussycat played accused "Pollyanna" Karen Fairgate for all of Knots Landing's lengthy run. The second was an accomplished and versatile actress who scored a big hit as Damian's mom in The Omen (1976), but was later taken far too early by illness.

#8 - The gal on the left made a far bigger impression in the daytime soap world as part of a super (and I mean SUPER) couple than she did during her brief stab at prime-time success on Bare Essence. The gentleman next to her is a hard one, though he is known. The Czech-born actor's career stemmed from Louise Brooks' silent classic Pandora's Box (1929) to a successful stage and film career in the U.S. Much to his dismay, his 1958 turkey The Return of Dracula was one of the movie's he's most remembered for. He likely would have preferred Midnight (1939) or The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1944) as an epitaph.

#9 - I'd say this one is likely the hardest of all, but not impossible if you're an all-around movie and TV buff. The lady was a highly promising young actress in movies like Pride and Prejudice (1940), Blossoms in the Dust (1945) and The Valley of Decision (1945), all of which also starred Greer Garson. Then it all came crashing down when she was blacklisted by the House UnAmerican Activities Commission. To her right is one of Knots Landing's more deplorable bad guys. As Peter Hollister, he was bedding both a mother and her daughter and wound up with a pointy desk accessory driven through his chest!

#10 - The hirsute hunk on the left was Mark Jennings of Dynasty, a tennis pro who also bedded a mother and daughter (Alexis and Fallon) and was also murdered, but not for that transgression. The equally hairy - at least on top!) guy on the right was a flavor of the month (perhaps February?) who eked out a fairly lengthy career, but is still most likely known for playing Justine Bateman's boyfriend for several seasons of Family Ties.

#11 - We all should know the pretty blonde songbird on the left, who occasionally made a movie or worked on television. Her counterpart was the leading man of Dynasty, taking over at the eleventh hour for a fired George Peppard.

#12 - How much more of a clue can I give you about the man on the left other than that he was self-proclaimed "The Greatest?" And, though the pronunciation may be ever so slightly different, the spelling is the same for the first name of his ladyfriend next door. She too took a bit of a pummeling from fans, critics and the producers of Dynasty during her stay there, culminating in a christening of fake blood all over her as a means of telling her she was fired...

And now, on to the answers!

|


|


|


|


|

#1 - "Wolfman Jack Coleman" - The raspy-voiced DJ Wolfman Jack died of a heart attack at fifty-seven. Jack Coleman went on to success with the TV series Heroes, looking quite a bit different than he did as Steven.
Here is Coleman about to shuck his track pants at a Battle of the Network Stars installment and also as his character on Heroes. At the bottom are two of Steven Carrington's key love interests (which, on the 1980s show, were limited to an occasional embrace.) William Campbell played the ill-fated Luke Fuller while Kevin Conroy portrayed Bart Fallmont who, by the time of the 1991 reunion movie, was Steven's life partner (sadly played by someone else...)

#2 - "Ana Alicia Silverstone" - Ana Alicia left acting in the mid-1990s to raise her family. Alicia Silverstone - of Clueless (1995) fame - is now starring on American Woman, the series devised by Kyle Richards, loosely based on her upbringing.

#3 - "Jennifer Warren Beatty" - Jennifer Warren exited the realm of acting for the most part in the 1990s and turned to the field of directing. Warren Beatty, the star of many, many films from Bonnie and Clyde (1967) to Shampoo (1975) was part of Oscar-gate a while back when he helped to announce the wrong Best Picture winner.
Mr. Beatty in pajamas for a costume test during Splendor in the Grass (1961) and in Italian makeup for The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone that same year. The bathing suit shot is from an early TV appearance of his.

#4 - "Marilyn Maxwell Caulfield" - Marilyn Maxwell also had a lengthy affair with Frank Sinatra and was a close pal of Rock Hudson's. She died of a heart attack at only age fifty, but seemed to have had quite a time. Maxwell Caulfield "slid" - get it?! - from Grease 2 (1982) into his TV role. He still works at age fifty-eight and has been wed since 1980 to Juliet Mills.
In 1985, between Grease 2 and The Colbys, Caulifield appeared nude on stage opposite Elizabeth Wilson and Jessica Tandy in the play Salonika. You can read more about that here.
In 2012, in his early-fifties, he was still delivering the goods in the stage play Euripedes as Menelaos the King of Sparta, wearing only some torn fabric.

#5 - "Harry Morgan Fairchild" - Harry Morgan was in over 100 movies and did scads of TV. He died in his sleep at age ninety-six and was still working even then. Morgan Fairchild was seemingly everywhere in the 1980s. In recent years she has focused on work for AIDS research and on Screen Actors Guild business, as she is a board member currently.

#6 - "Pamela Sue Martin Landau" - Pamela Sue Martin went from nice girl roles in The Poseidon Adventure and The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries before turning 180 degrees to play Fallon Carrington. (She's now sixty-five!) Landau took home an Oscar f0r Ed Wood (1994) and kept working to acclaim (after a dismal period in the 1980s) up to his death at eighty-nine.

#7 - "Michele Lee Remick" - Broadway musical performer Michele Lee made the non-singing role of Karen a role model for many female fans. After the series' demise, she returned to the Broadway stage, among other things. Lee Remick was a busy, sought-after actress in many 1960s and '70s films and TV projects until kidney cancer took her life when she was only fifty-five.

#8 - "Genie Francis Lederer" - As one half of General Hospital's legendary couple Luke & Laura, Genie Francis became a national sensation. Despite attempting other roles, she is best known as Laura and is back doing it again even now. Francis Lederer was a proud stage actor who turned his film earnings into a real estate bonanza. His later years were spent in many civic and charitable tasks and when he passed away (at age one-hundred!) he was one of the last Austro-Hungarian veterans of World War I left.

#9 - "Marsha Hunt Block" - Marsha Hunt was one of the more notable victims of the Hollywood Blacklist, at least as far as actors go. She did make a tenuous return after the dust had settled and proved to be quite a survivor. Miss Hunt is still alive today at age one-hundred! Stage-trained Hunt Block had a promising start with a featured role in the miniseries The First Olympics: Athens 1896 (1984), but floundered a bit after his turn on Knots Landing. In 2000, he successfully reinterpreted the role of Craig Montgomery on As the World Turns, but was unceremoniously let go as part of a budget cut after five years.
This is the way Block looked when he assayed the role of Craig on ATWT. His dynamic, creative acting led me to return to the show after having abandoned it for a while.
During this period, the aforementioned John James turned up on the show as well, this time playing a doctor with a murderous side.

#10 - "Geoffrey Scott Valentine" - Geoffrey Scott (who'd previously worked for a bit on Dark Shadows and the short-lived Concrete Cowboys - in for Tom Selleck who'd done the pilot movie) worked up until the mid-1990s before moving to Colorado. Scott Valentine had an on-screen career spanning three decades, but few projects lent him the sort of public fame that his role on Family Ties offered. (Three attempts at getting him a spin-off were developed, but none succeeded in the end.)
Mr. Scott's towel scenes during his stint on Dynasty are legend. Unfortunately, his character was systematically destroyed by the writers until he was no longer useful to the show. And with Tom Selleck and Lee Horsley around, he had trouble establishing a notable TV identity. Also shown is a pic of him during his time on Dark Shadows.

#11 - "Olivia Newton-John Forsythe" - Ms. Newton-John, one of our favorite vocalists, has had us worried of late with the recurrence of her cancer which had been in remission since 1992. John Forsythe passed away at ninety-two. Recently, I've been re-watching a fair amount of Charlie's Angels and appreciating the vocal skills he brought to the unseen role of Charles Townsend. It's not as easy as it looks, kids.

#12 - "Muhammad Ali MacGraw" - Muhammad Ali wrote a book called, "The Greatest: My Own Story" in 1975 and starred in his own story in 1977's The Greatest. (Trivia: This is the project that gave the world the song "The Greatest Love of All," later covered to a fare thee well by Whitney Houston.) Ali MacGraw's career took a serious downward turn when she was lambasted for her performance in The Winds of War and then followed that up with the role of a predatory photographer on Dynasty which left the show's fans cold. In her defense, she was supposed to win Blake Carrington for a bit, but John Forsythe put a stop to that, leaving her role irrelevant and more bothersome than anything. She found out she wouldn't be back for the following year when a crew member liberally sprinkled her with stage blood during the notorious Moldavian massacre that ended the 1984-85 season.
Ali passed away at age seventy-four after a bout with Parkinson's disease. (By the way, I didn't blur the above-left shot of him back when he was known as Cassius Clay and I couldn't find another version of it, though I tried.) 
Till next time, friends!

Friday, April 2, 2010

Help! I'm Having a Dack Attack!

I profile a good many hunks at this site and if I didn’t have some sort of affection for them or attraction to them I wouldn’t bother. Today’s guy, Dack Rambo, is one whose looks and manner thoroughly blew my pre-teen and teenage mind and who remains one of the men I always love to watch in whatever project of his happens to be on or available. Though it all ended badly, in more ways than one, he was, for a time, the go-to guest star for 70s TV.

Born Norman Rambo to a California farm family in 1941, he was a twin. Brother Orman (Jesus… Orman and Norman? Really?) and he were handsome, hard-working young men of incredible closeness. Though they had certain aspirations for escaping their lives and making a success in show business, they were 21 before anything came to fruition.

Loretta Young, once a tremendously successful movie star, but by the late 50s a significant TV personality, had ended her highly popular anthology series The Loretta Young Show (the most prominent feature of which was her darting into a room at the start and swirling her latest clothing confection as she introduced that night's story) and was now preparing The New Loretta Young Show. (Where do they get these astonishingly creative titles?) She picked Orman and Norman (newly christened Dirk and Dack, and they were called that on the program as well) Rambo to play her twin sons. Their primary distinction was a prominent mole on Dack’s lower left cheek.
The twins were briefly represented by notorious agent Henry Willson who chose their new names as part of a plan to make them the next singing sensation (a la Jan and Dean), but the relationship quickly soured and they turned to acting strictly rather than singing at all. Do we think this issue of Screen Life magazine is up my alley or what?! Dack, Stella Stevens and Faye Dunaway all on the cover! I was born too late.
The New Loretta Young Show only ran one season, but it was a big step for the young men, Dirk was quoted as saying that he came off the cotton fields right into a Hollywood acting career. Following the cancellation, it took a little while longer for the guys to land more work, but eventually Dirk won parts on The Virginian and Dragnet while Dack was placed with multi-Oscar-winning actor Walter Brennan in the series The Guns of Will Sonnett.

Brennan was one of the all-time scene-stealing character actors, but rather than run roughshod over young Dirk, he taught the young actor a lot, especially regarding camera angles and the use of eyes. Rambo’s newfound success on the series was tempered by news so tragic that Dack never really got over it. His brother Dirk, his self-confessed other half, was killed by a drunk driver at the age of 25.

Rambo discussed his brother and himself as being so close that there was hardly the need to speak to each other apart from only the most superficial of topics. They were that commensurate with each other.
In the wake of Will Sonnett, Rambo was selected to work in Jerry Lewis’s latest comedic film, a goof on WWII called Which Way to the Front?, that featured Lewis as a would-be Hitler assassin. Panned by critics and mostly ignored by audiences, the movie died a quick death and marked the end of Lewis in the cinema for a time. That’s Dack in the middle with an uncharacteristically goateed Lewis on the right.

Soon after, Dack guest-starred on the highly popular western series Gunsmoke. His appearance was well thought of enough to warrant him being brought back as a different character for a two-part episode that would serve as the pilot for another series. He played a delinquent, but good-hearted, punk who is tamed by an irascible, scraggly old woman played by Jeanette Nolan (who looks in this shot as if she took her teeth out!) The very brief series that followed was named for her character Dirty Sally.
In Rambo’s career, he starred in a large number of pilots, very few of which were picked up as series. In 1971, he did River of Gold with Roger Davis which concerned treasure seeking divers. Davis, for those who don’t know, was married to Jaclyn Smith before her Charlie’s Angels days. The pilot movie also featured Suzanne Pleshette and Oscar-winner Ray Milland, though Milland thought little of the male leads and said so! To be fair, Rambo said of himself that at the start of his career he was driven and arrogant, so perhaps Milland had grounds to be disgruntled.

Other TV followed until Dack was cast in a moody revenge flick called Nightmare Honeymoon to be directed by Nicholas Roeg. This was a step up for him in terms of the caliber of people he was working for, but, sadly, Roeg departed the film after only five days of shooting. The result was therefore far less creatively satisfying than he had anticipated it would be.

All about a newly married couple who witness a mafia crime and then are subjected to violence upon themselves, he got the chance to play the lead in a feature film at least, though there would be very few of those in his future. TV would continue to be his bread and butter.
Popular shows such as Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law, Marcus Welby, M.D. and The Rookies made use of his looks and talent. Also, Yvette Mimieux utilized him in a TV movie she had written for herself. Hit Lady gave her a meaty role, but put the hunky Rambo in a sort of “girlfriend’ role. At least there was a scene in which she snuggled up to him from behind and his (ungodly tight) jeans were open, showing off his cute, white underwear!

Another of his failed pilots was Good Against Evil, which would have had him and his sidekick fighting off the Devil every week. In 1977, he played the part of Andros on The New Adventures of Wonder Woman with Lynda Carter. His beauteous eyes and wavy hair made him the sort of alien that anyone would gladly be probed by, though his uniform stressed body coverage more than sexiness. Incidentally, this same character had been portrayed the season before by the far older, white-haired actor Tim O’Connor!

One of Dack’s pilots A Double Life was finally picked up as a series. The series went by the name Sword of Justice and concerned a millionaire who is wrongly convicted of extortion and imprisoned. While there, he develops all sorts of skills that help him later when he’s released and goes about righting various wrongs, always leaving a signature playing card at the scene.

While he had all the makings of an appealing series lead including looks, agility and some seriously sensual lips, the show only limped along for ten episodes before it was canned. While I am always happy to watch Dack do just about anything, it would take just about anything I ever desired to get me to tolerate the two freakish looking actors he was paired with for this unfortunate show! When just the publicity stills are annoying, you know you’re in trouble.
He continued to work on other series (notably a half dozen eps of Fantasy Island) and TV movies and pilots (with a teensy, uncredited part in George Cukor’s last feature film, Rich and Famous) until taking a role on the daytime serial All My Children. That stint came to an end when he was put to use in another TV show, the glossy nighttime soap Paper Dolls.

In 1984, I was a naïve (yes!) 17 year-old and, to me, Dack Rambo epitomized the all the seductive, carnal charms that a man could offer. I recall watching agape as Rambo would canoodle in the hot tub that was situated in the OFFICE of Morgan Fairchild’s character, a modeling agent hilariously named Racine. The pair would frequently discuss plans and machinations as they bubbled and bobbed around in there.

Rambo maintained that, as a former farm boy, he never felt comfortable in a suit, but he nonetheless wore expensive clothes beautifully and seemed to exude an inherent sense of up to the second style. Now, of course, I would likely look back at his and Morgan’s hot tub exploits and scream with laughter, but at the time, he was beyond hot.

Paper Dolls was not meant to be and folded up after thirteen episodes. Its demise happened to coincide somewhat closely with that of one of primetime soaps’ most beloved characters, Bobby Ewing of Dallas. Star Patrick Duffy decided to leave the still popular show and was killed in a bloody murder by car.

To fill the void he was leaving, the producers of Dallas brought in Dack to play long-lost cousin Jack Ewing (in an almost science-fiction level piece of casting, they also hired big-mouthed Jennilee Harrison as Rambo’s sister! Right…) Things went swimmingly at first and Rambo gave J.R. Ewing (Larry Hagman) some cause for concern. He also had a tendency to lounge about poolside wearing a Speedo. Dack’s tightly packed Speedos always seemed as if they had to have been made out of some special substance, lest they burst apart at the first twitch.

Unfortunately, after one season, Duffy decided he wasn’t going to get the big movie career he’d hoped for and came back, rendering the entire season Rambo was on into nothing but an extended dream!! Still under contract, Rambo’s character had to be written in AGAIN, as if he had never been there and since Duffy was back, there was precious little for him to even do. He sported blonde highlights for his second season there in order to emphasize a rebirth on the show, but instead he was underused and, according to him, discriminated against because of his sexual lifestyle. The good ol’ boys behind the scenes of the show (and some in front of the camera) allegedly made him the brunt of various derogatory remarks and actions. When they wrote him out, he was glad to go, but sad at how it had ended.

Rambo later identified himself as a (tres chic?) bisexual, though he unquestionably was associating more with men than women when it came to sex and he lived a wild, indulgent life. To me (and, one assumes, to the countless viewers who watched him on TV for so many, many hours), he never came off as particularly effeminate or readily, identifiably gay, but there’s no denying that in this shot of him at an airport in the 80s, he could make JM J Bullock seem like Paul Bunyan! I include it, though, because it is one of the rare pictures that demonstrate the otherworldly bulge that he carried in his jeans. As usual, you can click on it to, er, make it bigger. Surprisingly, in the bulk of his acting projects, this was not typically exploited very much, though perhaps the on-set censors made it clear that Dack Jr. was not gonna see any airtime!
Aaron Spelling shows, such as The Love Boat (that's Barbi Benton with him above) and Hotel, along with Murder, She Wrote, gave Dack enough work to keep his face out there, but in time he was back on daytime TV, this time on Another World. And he was quite successful there, for a while. In 1991, he was diagnosed with AIDS and willingly retired from the program. By now, his wavy hair snow white, he did a complete 180 and never acted again. Instead, he spoke candidly all over the nation, trying to spread information about the disease and sharing some of his own story. Less positive, at least from my point of view, was his association with televangelists, with whom he proclaimed a love of God and a dedication to the work of TV preachers. He did not, however, apologize for the approach he had taken to life.

It was all pretty short-lived, though. Dack died from complications of the disease in March of 1994. He was 52. In those days, especially in the prior decade, AIDS was a near-certain death sentence and people fled from it in fear. He is to be admired, at least, for trying to spend his last days educating anyone he could about it.

More than one friend of his has suggested that the sudden, numbing death of his beloved twin set Dack on a course of hedonism and lack of personal accountability that was going to lead to a downfall of some sort eventually no matter what. However, there was no way that Dack could know that his sexual activity was going to lead to his death. I tend to think that while, yes, he was wounded to the core by Dirk’s passing, he was also a very desirable man who had the benefit of fame to draw practically anyone he wanted to him. God knows had he looked at me with those eyes I’d have shoved my grandmother down a San Francisco street in a wheelchair just to hold his hand!

Dack Rambo leaves behind precious little cinematic legacy, but for those who like to watch classic TV shows and TV movies, his prolific contributions there live on. As far as I’m concerned, no still photo does him justice. He has to be watched in action and listened to (his warm voice had just a hint of twang to it) in order for his charm to be fully appreciated.