Rose Marie and Red Skelton, what a pair! She's been singing since she was 3. There was even a radio spot called "baby rose Marie" She sang a lot other Dick Van Dyke Show. She smoked quite a but which gave her that "friggy" voice yet she waa great. She used her hands a lot while singing, evrn as a kid. Itcwaa her iwn style. There are very few film clips of her singing as a child but they are hard to find
THAT was wonderful!!! The whole show, and especially Rose's singing! Thanks for posting!!! But yes, ahhh....the fifties...the commercials and the showgirl opening...alrightee-then.
I was 6 years old in 1955 and my family moved to Salt Lake City in 1954, about 8 miles from where I live now. For a portion of that time we didn't have a TV so I'm not sure I was aware of Red Skelton. At least until the 60's when he was on Tuesday nights. IIRC. Most cities had 3 channels and 1 TV at home so we had to watch usually what dad wanted, but he liked Ed Sullivan and Red Skelton and Gary Moore, so that's where I got my love. He also loved Bonanza which I hated, but it was on Sunday nights so I just went to my room I think. I remember Rose Marie first from the DVD show but this video just shows how great she was.
Rose Marie was a singing radio and recording star when she was only 4 years old. When she died, she held the record for the longest entertainment career. They made a documentary about her, which she appeared in, that was great. She died shortly thereafter.
She had such a grown up voice that few people believed it was a little girl singing with such a style and perfect pitch. UA-cam has a FILM clip of her singing at age five. Even with the low fidelity recordings of the time, she sounded great! Listen and be amazed!
Pretty fun. Nelson Case was the announcer and he had a ton of credits in radio and tv. Enough to buy a ranch and raise cattle up in Pennsylvania. Anyway, his conversational and personable style in doing the ads doesn’t seem unusual - but it was very new at the time. I read he had a giant jazz record collection. Cheers
Rose Marie and Red Skelton, what a pair! She's been singing since she was 3. There was even a radio spot called "baby rose Marie"
She sang a lot other Dick Van Dyke Show. She smoked quite a but which gave her that "friggy" voice yet she waa great. She used her hands a lot while singing, evrn as a kid. Itcwaa her iwn style.
There are very few film clips of her singing as a child but they are hard to find
The other day I heard my 10 year old daughter singing a Rose Marie song :) It makes my heart so happy that she is into this older music :)
Thank you for the shows. My Nana used to watch them. I was too young to understand them in the 60s. I watch them now. He was a genius 👍🏼
Rose Marie was such a delight!
THAT was wonderful!!! The whole show, and especially Rose's singing! Thanks for posting!!!
But yes, ahhh....the fifties...the commercials and the showgirl opening...alrightee-then.
I was 6 years old in 1955 and my family moved to Salt Lake City in 1954, about 8 miles from where I live now. For a portion of that time we didn't have a TV so I'm not sure I was aware of Red Skelton. At least until the 60's when he was on Tuesday nights. IIRC. Most cities had 3 channels and 1 TV at home so we had to watch usually what dad wanted, but he liked Ed Sullivan and Red Skelton and Gary Moore, so that's where I got my love. He also loved Bonanza which I hated, but it was on Sunday nights so I just went to my room I think. I remember Rose Marie first from the DVD show but this video just shows how great she was.
Love it!
Rose Marie was a singing radio and recording star when she was only 4 years old. When she died, she held the record for the longest entertainment career. They made a documentary about her, which she appeared in, that was great. She died shortly thereafter.
She had such a grown up voice that few people believed it was a little girl singing with such a style and perfect pitch. UA-cam has a FILM clip of her singing at age five. Even with the low fidelity recordings of the time, she sounded great! Listen and be amazed!
I suspect that's why her adult voice was a bit hoarse. @@jackkircher1755
Love love Red ❤❤❤❤🤣🤣🤣❤❤❤❤❤
That was cute. Thanks for the video.
I enjoyed this so much.. Thank you Noopy.
She just always seemed like she's been around more than anyone else.
Wow! With all the original ads! Those are usually edited out. Like stepping back in time to see Red again.
Ahhh the 50's
Pretty fun. Nelson Case was the announcer and he had a ton of credits in radio and tv. Enough to buy a ranch and raise cattle up in Pennsylvania.
Anyway, his conversational and personable style in doing the ads doesn’t seem unusual - but it was very new at the time.
I read he had a giant jazz record collection.
Cheers
Hold The Roses So That I Can Take A Bow , as the phrase goes
This is the only instance I know of when Rose Marie does not wear a bow in her hair. It was her trademark.
She wore it after her husband died to remember him by. He died in 1964.
David Rose and his orchestra- Judy Garland first husband. Martha Ray was married to him too.
Only Red could ha:e pulled this iff and be hilarious doing it!
Reminds me of “The Brave and the Backache”. Lol
I think the dark haired girl is Angela Cartwright!
Cute.
Listen to Red Skelton plea to the pledge of the United States flag
I wouldn’t buy any food product called Pet!
PET milk ? wtf kind of branding idea was this
Well, it was the "Helvetia Milk Company", so which would you go with? PS it was "Our Pet" in the beginning...
Sewer mouth, FYI, the brand still exists, particularly in the south. Look it up.