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All Star Revue Season 3 Episodes

Season 3 Episode Guide

33 Episodes 1952 - 1953

Episode 1

Host: Dennis Day; Guests: Harpo Marx, George Jessel, Corrine Calvet, Paul Douglas, Irene Ryan, The Billy Daniel Dancers, The Romanos, Hal March, Jimmy Cross, Chester Clute, Harry Zimmerman and his Orc

In his first stint as a TV revue host, Dennis Day spoofs Johnnie Ray, a Nazi submarine commander, a French chef, a gigolo, a bratty kid, and a stand-up comedian. Closing the show is a Yiddish bit with Dennis and George Jessel.

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Episode 2

Host: George Jessel; Guests: Jimmy Durante, Tony Martin, Dorothy Kirsten, Carmen Cavallero, Joe DiMaggio, Peggy Ryan, Ray McDonald, The Skylarks

Sat, Sep 13, 1952

Proclaiming, "Old bits never die - they merely relive for television," Georgie Jessel, in his debut as TV host, is right at home using a toastmaster format to perform his emcee duties. His offerings include some singing, some comedy, a duet with Dorothy Kirsten, his "mama on the telephone" and "Professor Ganzermacher" routines, and impersonations of Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor. Jimmy Durante shows up to welcome Georgie to the show, and Joe DiMaggio presents him with a lifetime baseball pass.

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Episode 3

Host: Jimmy Durante; Guests: Margaret Truman, Phil Harris, Eddie Jackson, Jack Roth, Jules Buffano

Sat, Sep 20, 1952

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Episode 4

Host: Martha Raye; Guests: Risë Stevens, Cesar Romero, Rocky Graziano

Sat, Sep 27, 1952

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Episode 5

Host: Rosalind Russell; Guests: Milton Berle, Phil Harris, George Jessel, Harpo Marx, Dinah Shore, Jimmy Durante, Red Skelton, Nelle Fisher & Jerry Ross

Sat, Oct 4, 1952

An all-star cast was on hand to celebrate the opening of NBC's new Burbank studios in southern California.

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Episode 6

Host: Tallulah Bankhead; Guests: Ethel Barrymore, Groucho Marx, Ben Grauer, Meredith Willson & his Orchestra

Sat, Oct 11, 1952

Sketches include a spoof of the popular radio and TV show 'Author Meets the Critics' called 'Writer Versus Critic', with Meredith Willson as the emcee, Groucho Marx as the critic, Tallulah Bankhead as the writer (of her recently published autobiography), and Ethel Barrymore taking Tallulah's side. Another bit has Tallulah on her first New York subway ride, complaining that there's no sleeper, drawing room, or dining room. (For a particularly clever touch, she sees a picture of her nemesis Bette Davis posted there.) In what was supposedly his "live" television debut (his previous appearances had all been on film), Groucho sings "Go West," from his movie of the same name. In a tradition established on 'The Big Show', the cast sings Meredith Willson's "May the Good Lord Bless and Keep You" to close the show.

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Episode 7

Host: Jimmy Durante; Guests: Frank Sinatra, Fifi D'Orsay, Candy Candido, Eddie Jackson, Jack Roth, Jules Buffano, Roy Bargy & his Orchestra; Sheilah Graham

Sat, Oct 18, 1952

Sketches include Jimmy Durante going to Washington, Jimmy and Frank Sinatra n a barber shop, and Fifi D'Orsay trying to distract Jimmy from his music.

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Episode 8

Host: George Jessel; Guests: Phil Harris, Kay Starr, Laraine Day, Leo Durocher, Florence Chadwick

Sat, Oct 25, 1952

Georgie Jessel reprises his "Professor Ganzermacher" bit and does a drunk act. Kay Starr sings "Worry, Worry, Worry" and "Three Letters," while Leo Durocher and Laraine Day (married in real life) portray an embattled couple.

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Episode 9

Host: Martha Raye; Guest: Milton Berle, Ezio Pinza, Sara Seegar, The Kirby Stone Quartet, The Herb Ross Dancers, George Bassman & his Orchestra

Sat, Nov 1, 1952

In a skit, Ezio Pinza has amnesia and Martha Raye tries to help him regain his memory

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Episode 10

Host: Tallulah Bankhead; Guest: David Niven, George Jessel, Vaughn Monroe, Paul Hartman, Patsy Kelly, Phil Foster, Ron Fletcher, Meredith Willson & his Orchestra

Sat, Nov 8, 1952

A satire of 'Gone with the Wind' called 'Real Gone avec le Breeze'. Patsy Kelly and Phil Foster play a bickering couple, and Vaughn Monroe sings "Yours."

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Episode 11

Host: Jimmy Durante; Guests: Lily Pons, Candy Candido, Eddie Jackson, Jack Roth, Jules Buffano, Roy Bargy & his Orchestra

Sat, Nov 15, 1952

At the Club Durant Opera Company, Jimmy Durante plays a fawn, while Lily Pons is a wood nymph. They team up for "Obbligato Song", "Jenny," and "You and Your Beautiful Eyes." On her own, Lily sings "Caro Nome" from Verdi's 'Rigoletto'.

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Episode 12

Hosts: The Ritz Brothers; Guests: Mimi Benzell, John Ireland, Bill Skipper, Lou Bring & his Orchestra

Sat, Nov 22, 1952

The three Ritz Brothers offer up bedtime story spoofs of the Mayflower (for Thanksgiving), Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and Ivanhoe.

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Episode 13

Host: George Jessel; Guests: Denise Darcel, Ben Blue, Rocky Marciano, Nelle Fisher & Jerry Ross, Esther Klegerman, Jack Norworth, Barry O'Hara

Sat, Nov 29, 1952

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Episode 14

Host: Martha Raye; Guests: Dorothy Lamour, Sara Seegar, George Bassman & his Orchestra

Sat, Dec 6, 1952

Martha Raye finds it difficult to compete with beautiful Dorothy Lamour for the men aboard a Caribbean cruise ship.

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Episode 15

Host: Jimmy Durante; Guests: Sophie Tucker, Korla Pandit, Danny Thomas

Sat, Dec 13, 1952

Jimmy Durante and Sophie Tucker, in the Club Durant sequence, pull out all the stops, proving that in the right hands, vaudeville never goes out of style. Danny Thomas congratulates Jimmy on winning the B'nai B'rith's Humanitarian Award.

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Episode 16

Host: Tallulah Bankhead; Guests: Jack Carson, Louis Armstrong, Patsy Kelly, Phil Foster, Bil and Cora Baird's Marionettes, The Ron Fletcher Dancers, Meredith Willson & his Orchestra

Sat, Dec 20, 1952

For this Christmas show, Tallulah Bankhead recites "Touch Hands," a poem about brotherly love by William Harrison Murray. Sketches include a spoof of Antony and Cleopatra, Tallulah making a visit to Macy's Department Store, a discussion of gossip columns, and Patsy Kelly and Phil Foster's bickering couple (reprised from a previous show). Louis Armstrong sings and plays his trumpet to a new song by Meredith Willson called "Who Needs What Moonlight?"

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Episode 17

Host: Walter O'Keefe; Guests: Frankie Laine, Buster Keaton, Eleanor Keaton, The Three Stooges, Margaret Whiting, Dorothy Shay, Johnny Carson

Sat, Dec 27, 1952

Walter O'Keefe substitutes for an ailing George Jessel. Using the usual toastmaster format, sketches involve football spies, insurance policies, and Buster Keaton and his wife Eleanor demonstrate how to put an inebriated spouse to bed.

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Episode 18

Host: Jimmy Durante; Guests: Linda Darnell, Vic Damone, Eddie Jackson and Candy Candido.

Sat, Jan 3, 1953

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Episode 19

Host: Tallulah Bankhead Guests: Milton Berle, Dennis King, Billy Daniels, Benny Payne, Patsy Kelly, Phil Foster, The Ron Fletcher Dancers, Meredith Willson and his Orchestra

Sat, Jan 10, 1953

Tallulah Bankhead in a dramatic scene as World War I nurse Edith Cavell; a British sketch with Tallulah, Milton Berle, and Dennis King; a Broadway automat skit; Billy Daniels sings "Yiddishe Momma". Patsy and Phil as the bickering couple.

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Episode 20

Host: Martha Raye; Guests: Peter Lorre, Boris Karloff, Charyl Sue Fong

Sat, Jan 17, 1953

In a change of pace, the show does a story about Martha Raye's adoption of a little Chinese girl. To provide a better environment for the youngster, she takes a job in a tearoom run by two of cinema's greatest villains, the sardonic Peter Lorre and Boris Karloff. At one point, when the girl's relatives come to take her back, Martha gets so emotional she has to leave the stage.

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Episode 21

Host: George Jessel Guests: Sophie Tucker, Dorothy Kirsten, Nat King Cole, Shelton Brooks, Ben Wrigley, H. V. Kaltenborn.

Sat, Jan 24, 1953

Filmed introduction by H. V. Kaltenborn. Georgie Jessel returns, following surgery, and resumes his place as toastmaster in the banquet setting. He does a "Professor Ganzermacher" bit, as well as impressions of Eddie Foy, Raymond Hitchcock, Sam Bernard, and George M. Cohan. Sophie Tucker belts out "Nobody Loves a Fat Girl" and a medley of her oldies. Dorothy Kirsten does "Un bel dì vedremo" from 'Madame Butterfly' and "Libiamo ne' lieti calici" (The Drinking Song) from 'La Traviata'. Nat King Cole sings "Mona Lisa," "That's My Girl," and "Pretend," while Shelton Brooks plays his "At the Darktown Strutter's Ball" on the piano.

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Episode 22

Host: Jimmy Durante Guests: Ezio Pinza, Fifi D'Orsay, Ben Wrigley, Candy Candido, Eddie Jackson, Jules Buffano, Jack Roth

Sat, Jan 31, 1953

Jimmy jokes that he discovered Ezio Pinza - when his name was "Lauritz Melchior." At the Club Durant, Ezio sings "I Want to Be Eddie Jackson" and does a bit of cakewalking.

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Episode 23

Host: Tallulah Bankhead; Guests: Bert Lahr, Renzo Cesana, Patsy Kelly, Phil Foster, Bob Carroll, Dolores Martin, Ron Fletcher

Sat, Feb 7, 1953

Tallulah Bankhead reads O. O. McIntyre's column of the death of his dog. Bert Lahr does a satire on artists, Renzo Cesana appears as a traffic cop, Dolores Martin sings "I'm Through with Love" and "Necessity," Bob Carroll sings "Rachel."

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Episode 24

Host: Perry Como Guests: Ben Blue, Joan Blondell, Patti Page, Hoctor and Byrd, Stanley Prager, Siri, Snag Werris, Fred Irving Lewis, Joey Walsh, Anita West, Belle Flower, The Ray Charles Choir, Mitche

Sat, Feb 14, 195360 mins

Perry Como hosts with guests Ben Blue, Joan Blondell, dance team (Danny) Hoctor and (Betty) Byrd, Snag Werris, Siri, Anita West, actor Stanley Prager, and singer Patti Page. Perry sings "Don't Let the Stars Get In Your Eyes" and "You'll Never Walk Alone." Perry woos Joan to be on the show, but she falls asleep thanks to some sleeping pills from her doctor. Page sings "How Much Is That Doggie in the Window." Ben Blue plays in "Montmartre," a silent sketch where he gets the best of snobs in a French bar. Perry takes his kids to a museum where the paintings talk back. Blondell, Blue and Como do a comedy dance as hobos.

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Episode 25

Host: Martha Raye Guests: Ezio Pinza, Rocky Graziano, Emery Deutsch, The Herb Ross Dancers

Sat, Feb 21, 1953

The hour's entertainment is centered around a simple premise: Rocky Graziano, as Martha Raye's boyfriend, isn't happy when Ezio Pinza shows up claiming to have married Martha when the two knew each other years ago in Vienna. In a cute bit, Martha and Rocky watch a film on TV of real-life Rocky's 1948 middleweight title bout with Tony Zale. (Rocky lost.) Martha sings "Blues in the Night."

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Episode 26

Host: George Jessel; Guests: Bob Hope, Fred Allen, Toots Shor, Sara Berner, Hilda Gueden, Al Goodman & his Orchestra

Sat, Feb 28, 1953

Broadcast from NYC in a simulated Toots Shor's Restaurant. George Jessel, Bob Hope, and Fred Allen participated in a Friar's Club banquet the night before. The next night Bob hosted 'The Colgate Comedy Hour' with Jessel as his guest.

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Episode 27

Host: Jimmy Durante Guests: Carmen Miranda, Cesar Romero, Eddie Jackson

Sat, Mar 7, 1953

The cast does a spoof of cowboy movies, as presented on South American television.

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Episode 28

Host: Tallulah Bankhead Guests: Fred MacMurray, Wally Cox, Cab Calloway, Patsy Kelly, Phil Foster, The Ron Fletcher Dancers, Meredith Willson and his Orchestra

Sat, Mar 14, 1953

Tallulah Bankhead, Fred MacMurray, and Wally Cox do a sketch about daredevil bicycle test pilots. Cab Calloway was appearing on Broadway in 'Porgy and Bess' and sings "There's a Boat That's Leaving Soon For New York" from that show.

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Episode 29

All Star Ice Revue

Sat, Mar 21, 1953

Sonja Henie does a hula-hula to "Song of the Islands." The show originated from the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

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Episode 30

Host: Ben Blue Guests: Mickey Rooney, Dorothy Lamour, Connie Haines

Sat, Mar 28, 1953

Ben Blue and Dorothy Lamour do a sketch in which she complains about his behavior at a party, and Ben gets a chance to do some pantomime. Mickey Rooney offers impressions of various film stars.

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Episode 31

George Jessel, Eddie Cantor, Fred Allen, Gloria DeHaven, Portland Hoffa, Senator Claghorn

Sat, Apr 4, 1953

During the banquet portion of the show, in honor of Georgie Jessel's 55th birthday on April 3rd, Eddie Cantor reviews the highlights of the host's career but manages to turn the focus around to his own accomplishments. Fred Allen brings along a couple of regulars from his old radio show, wife Portland Hoffa and Kenny Delmar (in character as Senator Claghorn). Gloria DeHaven sings "The Old Soft Shoe" and "Ain't Got No Man." By this time, Jessel had already signed to do a show for ABC starting in the fall, but he graciously thanked NBC for "having put me closer in one season with the American audience than in all my 40 years in show business."

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Episode 32

Host: Jimmy Durante Guests: Helen Traubel, Rose Marie, Gene Fowler, Ben Wrigley, Eddie Jackson, Jules Buffano, Jack Roth, Jackie Barnett, Alan Henderson, Marilyn Borden, Rosalyn Borden, Wanda Smith's

Sat, Apr 11, 1953

The cast pays tribute to Jimmy Durante's illustrious career, with both Helen Traubel and Rose Marie doing their best Durante impressions. For her part, Helen, the dignified opera star, "heaved parts of the piano, scattered the music and strutted in a manner that would have done credit to Eddie Jackson." Author Gene Fowler was on hand to plug his biography of "The Schnoz."

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Episode 33

Host: George Jessel Guest: Tallulah Bankhead, Jimmy Durante, Ben Blue, Connie Russell, dancer Betty Bruce, Eddie Jackson, Wanda Smith's Cover Girls

Sat, Apr 18, 1953

This, the final episode of 'All Star Revue' as a weekly series, features a parade of old favorites: Georgie Jessel as Professor Ganzermacher, Ben Blue in a Chaplinesque pantomime, Tallulah Bankhead doing her New York subway sketch, and Jimmy Durante and Eddie Jackson providing their usual vaudeville hijinks. Also included is Connie Russell singing "I'm Gonna Live Till I Die." This show originated from the Center Theatre in New York (demolished in 1954 and replaced by a skyscraper) and scored a 21.8 Trendex rating against its competitor 'The Jackie Gleason Show's 25.1.

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