ARTHUR
GODFREY AND HIS FRIENDS
HOST
Arthur Godfrey
REGUALR
GUESTS
Tony Marvin
The Chordettes, (1949-1953) (Virginia Osborn, Dorothy Schwartz,
Carol Hagedorn, Janet Ertel)
Janette Davis (1949-1957)
Bill Lawrence (1949-1950)
The Mariners (1949-1955) (Jim Lewis, Tom Lockard, Nat Dickerson,
Martin Karl)
Haleloke (1950-1955)
Frank Parker (1950-195B)
Marion Marlowe (1950-1955)
Julius LaRosa (1952-1953)
Lu Ann Simms (1952-1955)
The McGuire Sisters (1952-1957) (Christine, Dorothy, Phyl-lis)
Carmel Quinn (1954-1957)
Pat Boone (1955-1957)
The Toppers (1955-1957)
Miyoshi Umeki (1955)
Frank Westbrook Dancers (1959-1959)
ORCHESTRA
Archie Bleyer (1949-54)
Jerry Blesler (1954-55)
Will Roland and Bert Farber (1955-57)
Bernie Green (1958-59)
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
CBS
January 1949-June 1957 Wednesday 8:00-9:00 September 1958-April
1959 Tuesday 9:00-9:30
ARTHUR GODFREY'S TALENT SCOUTS
HOST
Arthur Godfrey
ANNOUNCER
Tony Marvin
ORCHESTRA
Archie Bleyer (1948-1954)
Jerry Bresler (1954-1955)
Will Roland and Bert Farber (1955-1958)
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
CBS
December 1948-July 1958 Monday 8:30-9:00
FURTHER
READING
Castleman, Harry and Walter Podrazik. Watching TV: Four Decades
of American Television. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1982.
See
also Godfrey,
Arthur
Arthur Godfrey's
shows helped define the first decade and half of TV history in the
United States. While there were a number of television shows on
which Godfrey appeared, his fame, fortune, and pioneering activities
centered on two variety shows presented on the CBS-TV network: Arthur
Godfrey's Talent Scouts and Arthur Godfrey and His Friends. These
two proved so popular that during the 1950s that they served as
a cornerstone of the CBS-TV network's programming strategies.
In December
1948, after more than a decade on radio, principally for CBS, Arthur
Godfrey ventured onto primetime TV by simply permitting the televising
of his radio hit Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts. On TV Arthur Godfrey's
Talent Scouts ran until July 1958 on Monday nights at 8:30 P.M.
for a half hour and proved Godfrey's best venue on television. Fans
embraced this amateur showcase, and during the 1951-52 TV season
it reached number one in the ratings. Next season I Love Lucy vaulted
into first place, but thereafter through most of the 1950s Arthur
Godfrey's Talent Scouts regularly finished in TV's primetime top
ten.
The formula
for Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts was simple enough. "Scouts" brought
on their discoveries to a converted New York theater to perform
before a live studio audience. Most of these "discoveries" were
in fact struggling professionals looking for a break, and so the
quality of the talent was quite high. At the program's conclusion,
the studio audience selected the winner by way of an applause meter.
In his day Godfrey
significantly assisted the careers of Pat Boone, Tony Bennett, Eddie
Fisher, Connie Francis, Leslie Uggams, Lenny Bruce, Steve Lawrence,
Connie Francis, Roy Clark, and Patsy Cline. His "discovery" of Patsy
Cline on 21 January 1957 was typical. Her scout, actually her mother
Hilda Hensley, presented Patsy who sang her recent recording Walkin'
After Midnight. Though this was heralded as a country song, and
recorded in Nashville, Godfrey's staff insisted Cline not wear one
of her mother's hand crafted cowgirl outfits but appear in a cocktail
dress. The audience's ovations stopped the meter at its apex, and
for a couple of months thereafter Cline appeared regularly on Godfrey's
radio program. In short although Cline had been performing for nearly
a decade, and had been recording and appearing on local Washington,
D.C. TV for more than two years, it is Godfrey, because of the great
ratings and fame Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts, who is heralded
as making Patsy Cline a star. Yet Godfrey proved fallible. He turned
down both Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly!
His other top
ten TV hit was Arthur Godfrey and His Friends, which premiered in
January 1949. On Wednesday nights Godfrey hosted this traditional
variety show, employing a resident cast of singers which over the
years included Julius La Rosa, Frank Parker, Lu Ann Simms, Pat Boone,
and the Cordettes. Tony Marvin, as he was on Arthur Godfrey's Talent
Scouts, served as both announcer and Godfrey's "second banana."
The appeal of the hour long Arthur Godfrey and His Friends rested
on the popularity of the assembled company of singers, all clean
cut young people, and guest stars. Godfrey played host and pitchman.
Indeed to industry
insiders, Godfrey ranked as television's first great salesman. He
blended a Southern folksiness with enough sophistication to sell
almost anything. As he had long done on radio, Godfrey frequently
kidded his sponsors, but always "sold from the heart," only hawking
products he had actually tried and/or regularly used. Godfrey made
it sound like he was confiding to you and to you alone, and early
television viewers listened to Godfrey's rich, warm, resonant descriptions
and went out and purchased what he endorsed.
During the early
1950s Godfrey seemed unable to do anything wrong, despite a press
that could find little reason for his vast popularity. He began
a fall from grace began in October 1953 when he fired the then popular
La Rosa--on the air. Because of the negative fallout, Godfrey thereafter
regularly feuded with a host of powerful newspaper columnists including
Dorothy Kilgallen and John Crosby.
By
the end of the 1950s Godfrey's ratings were falling and his brand
of variety show was giving way to action and comedy series made
in Hollywood. Still, through the 1960s CBS unsuccessfully sought
new ways to showcase Godfrey. He flopped on Candid Camera, but out
came regular specials: Arthur Godfrey in Hollywood which aired on
11 October 1963, Arthur Godfrey Loves Animals on 18 March 1963,
and so on once or twice a season. His final television special came
on 28 March 1973.
Television
in the United States is most dependent on the star system, and Arthur
Godfrey, despite common sense declarations that he had "no talent,"
must be counted as one of television's greatest stars. Prior to
1959 there was no bigger TV draw than this freckled face, ukulele
playing, host. There was something about Godfrey's wide grin, his
infectious chuckle, his unruly shock of red hair that made millions
tune in not just once, but again and again.
-Douglas
Gomery