Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Hollywood Lights, Nashville Nights and William Conrad


One of the biggest prime time TV series to premiere in the late 1960s was Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In.  Consisting of short comedy skits and irreverent and sometimes politically spiced jabs the series was a huge hit.
 
Someone got the brilliant idea to emulate Laugh-Ins format but to tone down the innuendos and throw in a little (or a lot) of hometown and country humor.

The results was the show Hee Haw which became an instant hit and between prime time and syndication it lasted almost 25 years.

The show featured Buck Owens and Roy Clark hosting the show accompanied by a zany troupe of country comedians and a bevy of hillbilly beauties known as the Hee Haw Honeys.

Two of the  former Honeys: Victoria Hallman and Diana Goodman, have collaborated on a fascinating new book called: Hollywood Lights, Nashville Nights: Two Hee Haw Honeys Dish Life, Love, Elvis, Buck & Good Times In The Kornfield, published by BearManor Media.

Both authors had successful careers in show business before joining Hee Haw.  

From rubbing elbows with some of the biggest names in show business, including Elvis, to frequenting Hollywood and Vine to the Kornfields of Tennessee the book covers the all.

This book was a real eye-opener to me.  I never know about the shenanigans, deals and activities that occurred outside the Kornfield.

From Tinsel Town to married bliss to individual careers the book covers them in a reader friendly and page turner style that makes reading the book a real pleasure.

Did you know that actor James Arness was the not the first actor to star as Marshall Matt Dillon in Gunsmoke?  He was the first to portray him physically, but as to his first adventures actor William Conrad voiced Matt Dillon’s lines on radio long before the TV series premiered.

Conrad lost the job as the show’s TV star mainly due to his physical appearance: short, balding and fat.

Years later Conrad got his own TV series: Cannon, and carved out a very successful life for himself.

Long before the success of Cannon Conrad was one of the most prolific voice actors on radio.  It should come as no surprise that his career then shifted to TV where he voiced hundreds of commercials and guest-starred on numerous TV series.

Known for his professionalism and voracious appetite for food, wine and women, he was a complicated man.
He not only as actor but also a director, producer and movie character actor.

After Cannon’s impressive TV run, Conrad would go on to star in another TV hit: Jake And The Fatman.

In William Conrad A Life & Career author Charles Tranberg delves into the personal life of the portly actor, his long and illustrious career and provides a few tantalizing glimpses of his humor, temperament and passions.

Also included are complete episode descriptions of his Cannon and Jake And The Fatman series as well as his credits on radio, in the movies and as a guest star on various TV shows.

William Conrad is one of my favorite TV actors.  I am a big fan of his Cannon series and it is a sheer delight to learn all about this fascinating man