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SKELTON, RED
RED
SKELTON. Born Richard Skelton in Vincennes, Indiana, U.S.A.,
18 July 1913. Married: Lothian Toland (third wife). Joined medicine
show at age 10; later appeared in show boat stock, minstrel shows,
vaudeville, burlesque, and circuses; began appearing on radio in
1936; starred in long-running The Red Skelton Show on television.
Recipient: Emmy Awards, 1951, 1956, 1960/61; ATAS Hall of Fame;
ATAS Governor's Award, 1986.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1951-53;
1953-70; 1970-71 The Red Skelton Show
MADE-FOR-TELEVISION
MOVIE
1956
The Big Slide
TELEVISION
SPECIALS (selection)
1954
The Red Skelton Revue
1959 The Red Skelton Chevy Special
1960 The Red Skelton Timex Special
1966 Clown Alley (host, producer)
1982 Red Skelton's Christmas Dinner
1983 Red Skelton's Funny Faces
1984 Red Skelton: A Royal Performance
FILMS
Having Wonderful Time, 1938; Seein' Red, 1939; Broadway
Buckaroo, 1939; Flight Command, 1940; Lady Be Good,
1941; The People vs. Dr. Kildare, 1941; Dr. Kildare's
Wedding Day, 1941; Whistling in the Dark, 1941; Whistling
in Dixie, 1942; Ship Ahoy, 1942; Maisie Gets Her Man,
1942; Panama Hattie, 1942; DuBarry Was a Lady, 1943;
Thousands Cheer, 1943; I Dood It, 1943; Whistling
in Brooklyn, 1943; Bathing Beauty, 1944; Ziegfeld
Follies, 1944; Radio Bugs (voice only), 1944; The
Show-Off, 1946; Merton of the Movies, 1947; The Fuller
Brush Man, 1948; Southern Yankee, 1948; Neptune's
Daughter, 1949; Yellow Cab Man, 1950; Three Little
Words, 1950; The Fuller Brush Girl, 1950; Watch the
Birdie, 1951; Duchess of Idaho, 1950; Excuse My Dust,
1951; Texas Carnival, 1951; Lovely to Look At,
1952; The Clown, 1952; Half a Hero, 1953; The Great
Diamond Robbery, 1953; Susan Slept Here, 1954; Around
the World in 80 Days, 1956; Public Pigeon No. 1, 1957;
Ocean's Eleven, 1960; Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying
Machines, 1965.
RADIO
The
Red Skelton Show, 1941-53
PUBLICATION
I
Dood It. n.p. (1943)
U.S. Comedian
It
was not until 1986, a full fifteen years after his weekly television
show had ended, that "one of America's clowns" received his overdue
critical praise. Only then did the critics realize what the public
had long known. Regardless of his passion for corny gags and slapstick
comedy, Red Skelton was a gifted comedian. He is one of the few
performers to succeed in four entertainment genres--vaudeville,
radio, film, and television. To honor his lifetime achievements,
Red received the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Governor's
Emmy Award in 1986 and, with it, the critical praise he deserved.
Born 18 July 1913 as Richard Red Skelton, his youth was characterized
by poverty and a fascination for vaudeville. It was the influence
of vaudeville great Ed Wynn that led Skelton to perfect his own
comedy routines. The basics of Red's vaudeville act consisted of
pantomimes, pratfalls, funny voices, crossed eyes, and numerous
sight gags that would serve to identify Skelton throughout his entertainment
career. It was also during this period that Red began developing
various comedy characters.
His
radio show, which ran from 1941 to 1953, provided the opportunity
to present his comedy to a mass audience. The limitations of the
sound medium also made it necessary for him to further develop the
characters he would later bring to television--Freddie the Freeloader;
Clem Kadiddlehopper, the country bumpkin; Willy Lump Lump, the drunk;
Cauliflower McPugg, the boxer; The Mean Widdle Kid; San Fernando
Red, the con man.
In conjunction with his radio show, Skelton also enjoyed film success,
most notably in Whistling in the Dark (1941), The Fuller
Brush Man (1948), A Southern Yankee (1948), and The
Yellow Cab Man (1950). Regardless of his vaudeville, radio,
and film success, it would be television that would bring him his
greatest fame and endear him to his largest audience.
The
Red Skelton Show began in 1951 on NBC as a comedy-variety show.
Red co-produced this initial show, which was a half-hour program
on Sunday evenings. In its first year, the show finished fourth
in the ratings and received the Emmy Award for Best Comedy Show.
Unlike other radio comedians Skelton's comedy act entailed more
than his voice, and television provided the opportunity to fully
display the showmanship talents he had begun in vaudeville.
In 1953, the show moved to CBS on Tuesday nights and received a
second Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing Achievement in Comedy
in 1961, and expanded to an hour long the following year. In 1964,
the show made the Nielsen Top Twenty, where it stayed until its
end in 1970.
The
show consisted of Red's opening monologue, performances by guest
stars, and comedy sketches which included his various characters.
Perhaps the most unique part of the show (and for all of television)
was "The Silent Spot," a mime sketch that often featured his character
Freddie the Freeloader. The only regulars on the show were Skelton
and the David Rose Orchestra. The Red Skelton Show set the
precedent for future comedy-variety shows, such as The Carol
Burnett Show.
According
to CBS, the show's 1970 cancellation was due to rising production
costs and the network's desire to appeal to more upscale advertisers
(the show finished seventh in its final season). The following year,
Red returned to NBC with a half-hour comedy variety show which included
a cast of regulars. The show's premiere featured then Vice-President
Spiro Agnew. This time, unfortunately, the uneven comedy failed
to match Red's previous success. Its cancellation marked the end
of Red Skelton's television career, a run of 21 straight years which
also included guest appearances on other television series and involvement
with thirteen television specials. The only television performer
with a longer stay was Ed Sullivan (24 years as host of The Ed
Sullivan Show).
Following
his departure from television, Skelton maintained a low profile
and performed at resorts, clubs, and casinos. In the early 1980s
a series of superb performances at Carnegie Hall received critical
praise and briefly thrust him back into the public spotlight. The
new found interest resulted in three comedy specials for Home Box
Office (HBO).
Since his TV show was seldom rerun and is not syndicated, it is
easy to forget his popularity. Based on longevity and audience size,
The Red Skelton Show was the second most popular show in TV
history (Gunsmoke is first). As Groucho Marx once said, Red
Skelton is "the most unacclaimed clown in show business." Marx noted
that by using only a soft, battered hat as a prop, Red could entertain
with a dozen characters.
-Robert
Lemieux
FURTHER
READING
Adir,
Karen. The Great Clowns of American Television. Jefferson,
North Carolina: McFarland, 1988.
Davidson,
Bill. "I'm Nuts and I Know It." Saturday Evening Post (Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania), 17 June 1967.
Jennings,
Dean. "Sad and Lonely Clown." Saturday Evening Post (Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania), 2 June 1962.
Marx, Arthur. Red Skelton. New York: Dutton, 1979.
Rosten,
Leo. "How to See RED--SKELTON--That Is." Look (New York),
23 October 1951 and 6 November 1951.
Shearer,
Lloyd. "Is He a Big Laugh!" Collier's (New York), 15 April
1950.
See
also Red Skelton
Show; Variety
Programs
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