A Panel From The Last Mr. Magoo Comic Ever Published
Labels: Comic Book Nudity, Mr. Magoo
Labels: Comic Book Nudity, Mr. Magoo
I find it impossible to believe that I've had this blog for a few months now and didn't think to post a rather incredible piece of cassette tape.
I had a friend named Richard. Richard had a grandfather that occasionally came through town. Richard's grandfather enjoyed the company of younger people, which was basically everybody. He also enjoyed gin. He also enjoyed talking. He was also quite hard of hearing. One night, I suddenly realized that I should be capturing the unique confluence of these four things. Only one problem: I didn't have a recorder.
And so I issued strict orders for everybody to stop talking until I returned. I ran to my car, sped home, and gathered up my Norelco cassette recorder, which was, at that time, the only brand of cassette recorder... the only model of cassette recorder there was in the world. (According to an expert, that dates this recording as 1965 or '66).
I put the microphone on the TV table where the now-considerably-emptier bottle of gin resided. I pushed the record interlock button and moved the all-in-one play/record/fast forward/rewind lever up, toward the speaker. (Since I could drive a stick shift, I quickly mastered the Norelco Carry-Corder 150).
What I got, for my trouble, was... well... a rather intriguing, somewhat melancholy monologue about mankind's relationship to the sea.
First, Richard tries to get a question through to his grandfather.
Then, a message passed from generation to generation, with somewhat salty language, as is only appropriate.
The next time you're at an animation festival watching one of those vintage UPA Mr. Magoo shorts, casually turn to the person sitting next to you and say, "You know, they based that character on a real guy."
Link (4m)
Labels: Mr. Magoo, Norelco Carry-Corder, Richard, Richard's grandfather
People? Please stay together, and when we stop, circle around me. This is about as loudly as I can speak, so if you're having any difficulty hearing me, move in closer. Please follow me into the first gallery, where we'll have a look at the opening frame.
Why is this 15-year-old miserable during a high-spirited celebration of her athletic achievement? Is it because her dad is Mr. Magoo? Is it because her 'high school boyfriend' is a 24-year-old? Or is it because she's a "lonely little in-between?"
You're looking at a still frame taken directly from the major motion picture Billie. This is our first look at Patty Duke as the distressed, confused tomboy "with the beat," Billie.
Who is Billie?
The lyrics of the title song offer no help whatever:
Show (itself an exploration of duality), the MPAA code forbade movies on the subject. However, the filmmakers behind Billie employed a clever and unusual technique to get their messages across.
When Billie sniffs her track shoes, they are more than track shoes. When Billie pours out her anguish to a stuffed wolf, the audience becomes restless... due not only to Patty Duke's performance, but also to the large photograph of her father, Tyler Fitzgerald, next to her bed. At the end of her song, Billie is left with a stark choice... the smell of the track shoe in her left hand - or - the bottle of perfume in her right? Symbolically, Billie must choose: male, or female? The character literally "weighs her options." Indeed, it is from the end of this scene that our modern phrase "heavy-handed symbolism" is derived.
Patty Duke saw Billie as her first 'real' film role. When Ms. Duke blindly accepted a minor role in a forgotten picture called The Miracle Worker, she found to her horror that she had had no lines, and worse, the movie was in black and white. Duke's television program proved popular, but it, too, was in black and white. Duke saw Billie as her chance to prove, once and for all, that she could act in color. Eventually, she would move to Idaho.


And the gruff-but-lovable Coach Jones, who appeared on The Real McCoys, The Thin Man, Perry Mason, The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour, Richard Diamond Private Detective, The Millionaire, The Ann Sothern Show, The Gale Storm Show, Bachelor Father, The Twilight Zone, The Bob Cummings Show, The Tab Hunter Show, Pete and Gladys, Surfside Six, Maverick, Mr. Ed, Dennis The Menace, McKeever and The Colonel, 77 Sunset Strip, Burke’s Law, Make Room for Daddy, The Andy Griffith Show, The Bill Dana Show, The Bing Crosby Show, The Smothers Brothers Show, Get Smart, Honey West, The Munsters, The Pruitts of Southampton, F Troop, The Man From Uncle, He and She, The Wild Wild West, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., Judd for the Defense, Green Acres, Petticoat Junction, The Flying Nun, The Debbie Reynolds Show, The Beverly Hillbillies, Nanny and the Professor, Bewitched, The Odd Couple, The Rookies, Rhoda, Karen, Family, Maude, Soap, Mork and Mindy, Little House on the Prairie, St. Elsewhere, L.A. Law, I Love Lucy... and the film Mother Is A Freshman.
Let's move on to the third gallery, "Billie's Problem."
In the released version, Billie quits the track team because she "likes being a girl" and flees the city with Deckard, whom she suspects is a replicant.Labels: Florence Griffith Joyner, Mr. Magoo, Orson Welles, Patty Duke, Pomona, The Twonky