Showing posts with label Janet Waldo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Janet Waldo. Show all posts

Saturday, August 27, 2011

More Janet Waldo stuff

Here's a recent Janet Waldo interview.

©Jimbo 2010/2011

Meet Corliss Archer - a review

Sam Edwards and Janet Waldo
Meet Corliss Archer was one of those shows I had tried listening to in the past and didn't like. With my recent hiatus, I had the opportunity to actually take a good listen to the show and what I heard this time seemed completely different.

Meet Corliss Archer was a show mostly centered around 15 or 16 year old Corliss, who was "engaged to be engaged" to her boyfriend Dexter.

Corliss was played by Janet Waldo, the same gal who played the bobbysoxer on the Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet who was always so infatuated with Ozzie Nelson. She does a fine job of being a teen and is very believable, although she tones it down a bit from the Nelson show.

Sam Edwards as Dexter is just as good if not better than Waldo. He played Dexter for more than 10 years (the show ran for 13 years!) and was made for the part. He was prone to say, "Holy cow!" and seems to do it more than Phil Rizzuto ever did. He was also prone to calling his girl in a similar way that Henry's mother called him on the Aldrich Family. Dexter is definitely part of the show's overall fun.

While this show has many similarities with the other teen comedies that were out in the same era of the Golden Age of Radio (for instance, A Date With Judy) this show has far more charm. Corliss is the central character but Edwards (who would go on to play many other parts in radio and television) is the deciding factor.  He's goofy but not ridiculously so.

Mr. Archer was played by Bill Christy. He was a level-headed dad and he has a laugh similar to Harold Peary's trademark giggle.

The sound quality of the 10 or so surviving episodes ranges from passable to fine. I'm going to give the show 3 stars.

©Jimbo 2010/2011

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Ten supporting characters who were superb

10. Emmy Lou - The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet
Emmy Lou was played by Janet Waldo (who was also the star of Corliss Archer.)  She did such an excellent job of playing a tiny part - that I simply had to mention her.

She played a bobby-soxer teen who seemed to have a crush on Ozzie and would often wail, "Ewwwwwwwwwwww!" - but in a nice, giddy way, not the "bad sour cream" way.

9. Raymond Johnson - Inner Sanctum
Raymond was the host of Inner Sanctum but was just as much a part of the show as the actors himself.

His humor was pure corn but it was delivered in such a way that remains memorable even if you have listened to the show just once.

8. Old Timer - Fibber McGee and Molly
Bill Thompson (who played several parts on Fibber McGee and Molly) made the Old Timer such a phenomenal character that his expression, "But that ain't the way I heerd it." became a national catch phrase during the second World War.

A near-deaf fellow with a propensity for telling jokes and ribbing Fibber week after week, put him on this list.

7.  Chester Proudfoot - Gunsmoke
Chester (Parley Baer) seemed to fit in so seemlessly into Gunsmoke that he hardly seems to be there at all sometimes.  But he was there - and this why he's on the list.

6.  Miss Duffy - Duffy's Tavern
There were lots of Miss Duffys... but only one really stands out to me.  As I wrote the other day:  I really like the acting of Sandra Gould. Who's she, you ask? She played Miss Duffy on Duffy's Tavern from 1944-48; you may know her better as "the 2nd Gladys Kravitz" on the TV show, Bewitched. To me, she is perfect for the part of Miss Duffy.

Her accent seemed perfect and she delivered her lines flawlessly week after week.

If not for some stiff competition, she would rank even higher on this list.

5. Rush - Vic and Sade
Bill Idelson (who later became a writer for television) wasn't the star but by George, his performances easily stand out over the length and breadth of the entire series.

4. Perry White - The Adventures of Superman
Julian Noa created the character of Perry White and made him real.  The character he created was later added into the comics and the various motion pictures and television for the Superman franchise.

While White wasn't on but perhaps a fifth or less of the radio shows, the character was done with such uniqueness that he remains the stereotypical newspaper editor.

3, Dr. Watson - The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
The episodes that Nigel Bruce took on the role of Watson were so good that when Basil Rathbone (the "preferred" Holmes) left and John Conway took over that role, the show really never seems to skip a beat because Bruce was the anchor in which the show remained steady.

2. Gillis/Digby O'Dell - The Life of Riley
John Brown played both characters and played them so well and so differently that the uninformed would never know they were the same person.

Each character was so completely different and played such a vital part in the show that Brown probably deserves special recognition.

1. Leroy - Great Gildersleeve
Walter Tetley's role of Leroy is superior to all other supporting character roles on radio to me.  Not only was he a very good actor - he was very funny.  His delivery was second-to-none (aside from the likes of Orson Welles and Helen Hayes.)

©Jimbo 2010/2011
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