The Mike Douglas Show
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mike Douglas Show was an American daytime television talk show hosted by Mike Douglas that ran from 1961 to 1982.
Contents |
[edit] Format and production
A former big band singer, Douglas moved to television in the 1950s. The Mike Douglas Show started in 1961 in Cleveland as a local show on Westinghouse's KYW-TV (now WKYC-TV), it proved popular and, in August 1963, was syndicated by Westinghouse to all five of its owned-and-operated stations. By 1967 the show was available in 171 markets and seen by an audience of six million viewers a day.
The program featured light banter with guests and musical performances. Each week would have a different co-host who would appear every day with Douglas. The program was initially aired "live" on KYW-TV in its city of origination, but after off-color on-air remarks by Zsa Zsa Gabor in 1965 (she called Morey Amsterdam a "son of a bitch"), the producers taped all shows in advance of broadcast. This allowed for the editing-out of any objectionable material. The program then aired in Philadelphia on a one-day tape-delay basis. Live broadcasts (with a seven-second delay) were attempted in Philadelphia only on a few special occasions thereafter, such as when the Philadelphia Flyers won the Stanley Cup.
In August 1965, the show moved from Cleveland to Philadelphia to a small basement studio located in the KYW-TV building at 1619 Walnut Street (see photos on right). This studio held 140 seats. In July 1972, the show moved to a new studio in the newly constructed KYW-TV studios at 5th and Market Streets in Philadelphia. That studio ("Studio A") was the first and only studio especially constructed for the program. While the overall new studio was larger, it accommodated only 120 seats. The original musical director in Philadelphia was Ellie Frankel. In 1967, Joe Harnell, an accomplished musician, composer, and band leader took the position of musical director. Harnell continued as musical director through 1973. Joe Harnell was followed by musical director Joe Massimino and the show ended with musical director Frank Hunter. During much of its time on the air, it remained strong in ratings, consistently finishing among the most popular daytime television shows nearly every season. Douglas took the success lightly. He made a surprise visit to the set of Match Game in 1976, a competing show which managed to score higher ratings than Douglas' program during the mid-1970s, in order to congratulate host Gene Rayburn on making the game show the #1 daytime TV show.
The show's run spanned 21 years and more than 6,000 episodes.[1] In 1978, production of the show moved to Los Angeles, where it remained until the end of the show's run in 1980.
[edit] Guests
Among the musical performers featured on the show were Chuck Berry, Every Mother's Son, Gary Lewis and the Playboys, The Turtles, Frank Zappa, Donna Summer, KISS, Jefferson Airplane, Cher, Ray Charles, Bo Diddley, Barbra Streisand, Aretha Franklin, Genesis, The Supremes, Linda Ronstadt, The Rolling Stones, The Bee Gees, Herman's Hermits, Sly & the Family Stone, Little Anthony & the Imperials, The Electric Prunes, and The Beach Boys. Notable among guest co-hosts were Bobby Darin, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Anne Baxter, and Billy Crystal. Many people have tried to take credit for producing the episodes with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, but the real producer at the time of the episodes was Michael A. Krauss, who also came up with the idea to book John and Yoko.
The show also featured the first television appearance of Tiger Woods who showed off his swing for Bob Hope and Jimmy Stewart at the age of 2. Others who appeared on the show include Malcolm X, Jerry Rubin, Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, Bette Davis, Gene Kelly, Lucille Ball, The Three Stooges, Ted Knight, Totie Fields, John Travolta, Louis Armstrong, Gloria Parker with her Musical Glasses, Jay Leno, Joan Crawford, Angela Davis, Mason Reese, Muhammad Ali and many others.
[edit] Awards and other achievements
Douglas earned five Emmys[citation needed] for the show. His book, I'll be Right Back; Memories of TV's Greatest Talk Show was published in 1999.
Many subsequent talk hosts – in particular Jay Leno, David Letterman and Rosie O'Donnell – have acknowledged their personal debt to Douglas and his work.
[edit] References
- ^ Mike Douglas, Former TV Show Host, Dies, AP via ABC News.
[edit] External links
- Official website
- The Mike Douglas Show at the Internet Movie Database
- The Mike Douglas Show TV Tome entry (Author: Gil Cosnett)

