I don’t care what people tend to say: Ed Sullivan was cool!
@@Dexiray Ed Sullivan was quite dour on his show and hardly ever cracked a smile. but - he was a superb showman. :)
@@feralblueeI loved that he loved The Beatles when they came on his show for the first time. He really complimented them. Yes I think he was cool.
It's 2023 and I am laughing hysterically at this show. I love it so much.
We all do, which proves that GOOD programs don't need vulgarity to flourish! ♥
Ed Sullivan had a HUGE sense of humor, often using his humor backstage to help guests with jitters and nervousness. He was a very warm and kind man- almost the opposite of his "stiff" image on his show.
Thanks for posting these wonderful shows!
Hey it's Ed Sullivan's episode. That's when you gotta thank the channel operator for posting theeeeeese wonderful shoooooos. Rilly big shoooo.
I'd never seen Ed Sullivan like this. Admittedly I was just shy of 2 years old when this was televised, but obviously grew up with Ed Sullivan on CBS every Sunday; and I always saw what most of us remember -- a stiff and somewhat stodgy fellow utterly lacking in a sense of humor. This is a catharsis for me and so very grateful to have seen this. I have a new appreciation for the character and humor of this man.
Recalling his low-key persona as host and contrasting it with his playfulness here, I'm wondering if he dialed back his humor deliberately when introducing the guests on his show in order to focus the audience's attention on their talents rather than his. If so, that reveals an innate modesty that is unusual in the television world.
So glad things such a UA-cam exist so we can still watch these gems!
Ed Sullivan killed it! What a riot. One of the best mystery guest segments in WML.
@@esmeephillips5888 - they always say that, but apparently he only wore a size 9 1/2.
i was laughing my head off. didn’t know he had such a sense of humor!😹. Are you in the entertainment business. ‘No! ‘ Daly’s reactions were wonderful.
With all the honors heaped on Ed Sullivan, with the huge show CBS was creating for him, with all the name recognition and international fame, Cerf's compliment about how nice his wife was clearly touched him more than anything else. Sullivan looked genuinely happy about the remark.
Poor john daly, he looked like he was gonna bust his gut trying not to lose it. great episode.
I’ve seen many of them, and I’ve never seen a bad or poor episode. This was definitely one of the best.
This was probably the Best game show on Television for 17 years . I have enjoyed watching this show with the usual regulars on the Panel .
This is one of the most hilarious episodes, mostly because of the way John Payne phrased his questions & how Mr Daly responded. Also, Ed Sullivan added to hilarity.
So grateful to have these great quality episodes uploaded by Mr What's My Line. :-)
That mask really scares the hell out of me, whenever I bump into the thumbnail of that video, I have a jump scare.
Until I read the description of this video I thought the still was of John Mirick AKA the elephant man
@@donaldleroy6502 it looks more like the 1960s movie of Joseph Merrick than the actual man. The real elephant man had a kind gentle face considering his disfigurement. But yeah that mask is grotesque and horrific
There is no one on TV today of the importance and cultural stature of Ed Sullivan. Name the biggest personalities today, and they are dwarfed by the giant that was Ed Sullivan.
True. He was to the nation what Flo Ziegfeld was to Broadway: the great launcher of talent and mediator of performance, from ballet to animals doing tricks. He normalized the unfamiliar in times when dozens of millions of Americans watched the same thing at the same time- the king of watercooler TV.
I have fond memories sitting as a young boy with my grandmother watching "What's My line" and "Queen for a Day." Her two favorite TV shows.
I used to get all emotional and cry while watching "Queen for a Day" episodes. What a tear-jerker of a show!
These people were on regular TV before I was born, but I now watch them as if they are still on today. None of them are alive now, but I want to thank them for the laughs.
It's a shame that John Payne did not appear in many WML episodes. He was the most outstanding guest panelist ever.
It way really nice to see Mr. Payne. I really liked him in _Miracle on 34th Street_ and was always disappointed not to have seen him in more.
This episode had me laughing right out loud. Ed Sullivan was hilarious with that mask, but the treat was watching John Daly trying to do his job and keep a straight face. I think John Payne was one of the best guest panelists; too bad he wasn't on more often. Thanks for sharing this gem.
Seeing Ed Sullivan, I miss his show. I grew up watching it, and always enjoyed the show and the acts that he brought to us.
You Tube is a treasure, an online living museum of our culture, our entertainment. Yes, there are also some sketchy, speculative, conspiracy content but at its best so much wonderful cultural material from the last 100 plus years.
I haven't laughed this hard in a year since before the pandemic began. Thank you so much for posting this. I am watching this at 11:30 at night and I am sure my neighbors can hear me laughing my butt off over here. Thank you again.
If you want another big laugh, run a search for The Best Contestant Ever on What's My Line.
It's a hoot!
You should have heard me last night when I came across the dentist episode of carol Burnett show
@@auggie803 I wouldn't dare. There's not enough joy or love so NO ONE WILL STIFLE MY LAUGHTER AND JOY. THOUGH I MUST ADMIT TO SNORTING LIKE A RHINO WHEN I LAUGH.
OMGosh!! Laughed so hard at Ed Sullivan. And I watched Arlene Francis takeoff her mask and crack up laughing about 20 times. I couldn’t stop watching. Such a good clean fun.
It’s fascinating to realize that Sullivan was known for the talent he showcased but here for a switch - he shows he has his own strong sense of humor. Good for him.
Ed Sullivan a true legendary variety show, who gave many rock stars exposure, and got the critics off their back…like Elvis
John should have asked the panelists to remove their blindfolds after Ed had put his mask on.
What was that mask? I’ve seen it worn on The Andy Griffith Show and other media from this time period.
@@brendalovesmariah Although he could have signed in with an "X" while wearing that mask - just a thought 😊
AF's reaction on seeing Ed Sullivan. Priceless.
This was my favorite mystery guest segment , ever . I must watch it , every week , and still can not stop laughing .
The show is based on 20 questions, which we used to play all the time. You can see John Payne has played a lot of 20 questions because he knows how to frame a question to get a yes, so he can keep asking.
Will Rothfuss I noticed how the panelists were able to frame questions, but you are right, John Payne was an exceptional player!
Ed Sullivan's reaction at 21:03 to John's remark - priceless!
And then Arlene's reaction at 22:21 - even MORE priceless! (You'd have to hand it to the director for calling the shot at exactly the right moment.)
Dorothy's reaction was more subdued. I wonder if Ed had already taken his mask off by the time she took hers off.
Brendan Richards you are remarkably perceptive! I wondered why Dorothy did not react. I think you provided the answer!
This is probably the funniest and most unexpected show I have ever seen. Never would have ever thought Ed would do this. HAHAHAHA
John Payne was in Miracle on 33th Street with Maureen O'Hara, Edmund Gwynn, and Natalie Wood. One of my favorite films.
@e M It is not necessary to insult people on here. Commenters are generally polite here. Errors can be corrected without being nasty.
That wonderful laugh when Arlene saw what Ed was wearing. John couldn't even look at Ed with that thing on. One of the funniest Mystery Guest segments on What's My Line!
I love the sophisticated responses from Mr. Daly.
a whole new side of Ed Sullivan
I did not know that Ed Sullivan had such a sense of humor! Delicious :)
He was so funny! Quite the opposite of how I remember him on his variety show (or is that shew?)
Ed could be a real cut- up when he wanted. I vaguely remember a show where he gave a tour of his home and he was a total comedy act. I think there was one of his shows where John Byner or someone like his was imitating him and they got into competition who could do better Ed Sullivan
@@michaelszczys8316 I remember once he had a guest who imitated him. When the act was over, Ed said, "And now...I DO sound like that!"
@@jackkomisar458 Yes, I think I have seen that one. After the impersonator he went into bringing the next act, " And now..." stopped and said " I do sound like that"
Spud Melin's company did invent and/or successfully market the hula hoop, frisbee, silly string, hacky sack and boogie board. The company he created WHAM-O sold nearly $350million worth of hula hoops in one year 1958-1959.
I wanted to see Ed Sullivan's appearance. But when when they showed us who Spud was it blew my mind !!! WHAMO WAS THE BEST !!! BUT I MUST SAY ED DID TOO !!!
You're right about that. Plastic manufacturing should have been discontinued 100 years ago. It ramped up in the 1950's and has only gotten worse with people ordering everything online instead of shopping in person.
I love when something happens to cause Mr Daly to respond facially. His responses to Ed Sullivan’s masks and all the painters arms were hilarious!
Greetings from the UK.We had our own version of 'What's my Line'.These episodes are priceless.They are showing the best of the best American talent of the time.Brilliant.Cheers Jim
Arlene's laugh, which I adore, was out of control when she saw the mask !
I wish I could go back in time and have the chance to meet her.
John Payne was a fine actor. Catch him in the noir thriller, "Kansas City Confidential."
Holy Underwear, Batman ! Ed Sullivan's silliness in this episode gave me more laughs than any other ! THANKS for sharing with us ! :-)
Arlene Francis was a living doll
John Miller
yes, the way she looked back then, and not look like Ed Sullivan with that mask
CRAVEN MOREHEAD That's what I mean. I wouldn't want her in her 80s. Especially considering she had Alzheimer's. But she was very pretty bad then.
John Miller
yes, she was a classy woman with charm, smart, and quite attractive, a trifecta
these shows were the best!!! There's nothing like it today.
Just enjoyed seeing Mr Sullivan on this particular show!😊😊He was wonderful!
Arlene is the smartest one by far. She always gets it so fast, off of barely anything!
Yes, I think Arlene was the sharpest, most well-informed of the panelists. It is so very sad to know that she contracted Alzheimer's near the end of her life and passed away in 2002. :(
Don't think so. Dorothy Kilgallen was nothing short of brilliant. Arlene and Bennett were also very, very sharp, but Kilgallen's journalism background makes her edge out the other two. She had the depth and range of knowledge the other two didn't have, which is saying a lot. They don't make panelists like this anymore.
Dorothy was a snob. Cerf wrote that Dorothy had run-ins with all of them because she took the game seriously. She played to win. You can see that Arlene and Bennett like to win, but they know the winning the game was second to the banter. Dorothy played to win and you can see how she hates it when she misses easy guesses or screws up.
Never knew Ed had such a great sense if humor! Lovedthis
I'm 69, and oh how I love this show. Mr. Daly does SUCH a great job of helping to define the questions and answers.
Hey, I'm 66, and we used to watch Ed Sullivan every week at home when I was a kid. I was told on more than one occasion that, on my dad's side, we are 3rd cousins to Ed. Never met the man, but that was kind of cool.
So Spud Melin & Richard Knerr basically invented our childhoods? Things I never knew, part 3,754. I love the little hula hoop drawing on the ID screen at 3:34.
I have a lot of admiration for Ed Sullivan because he had so many guests that I am fans of.I can see now he is also very funny.
Under all that television lighting, it must have been hot as hell for Ed Sullivan in his mask!
Really good show; And I say that sincerely. John is BRILLIANT!
I like John Payne on the panel. I don't know who he is, but I like him on the show.
Purple Capricorn he was an actor. I remember him as santa's lawyer in the movie " miracle on 34th street"
@@dodge96neon He also did a movie with Betty Grable "Springtime In The Rockies", he did another movie with Maureen O'HARA "Tripoli"
He was also a star in "Sun Valley Serenade" with Glenn Miller, Sonja Henning, and Milton Berle.
A great T.V. series! Much appreciated and respect!
I really enjoyed this show and the Ed Sullivan Show. I was 14 when the Beatles were on his show! Great memories!
Really brilliant and hilarious. I was unaware of Ed Sullivan’s sense of humor.
This is a really entertaining show. Greats panel, host and guests.
Can’t believe I’m enjoying it in 2021, while this show was aired way before I was even born.
John Payne was a fine figure of a man. Sounds a nice guy too!
Check out GOVERNMENT training films from WWII on UA-cam which are quite excellent, with John Payne featured.
stwads
Check him out in the wonderful family film “miracle on 34th St.“. It shows all of his best characteristics : Humor, compassion, intelligence.
He was a matinee idol of the 40’s turned TV Star of the 50’s and 60’s he starred in his own Western ...........🦘🐎
@@bravehome4276 That is a wonderful movie. But although he was good on WML, I found him to be the weakest player in that whole film. So many other actors could have played that role better, IMHO, and I never cared for him when he played boxers and such in other films. I found him to be stiff, dull, and not very emotionally expressive. Can't argue with taste.
@stwads - He and Anne Shirley were married in the early 40's but later divorced after having a boy and a girl. She stated that there was some mental abuse on his part. So sad. I did like him in Sun Valley Serenade with Sonja Henne.
I love that you put these videos up, a great teaching of the celebrities of the past.
I was born September 3, 1958
But I have been in love with Arlene Francis since that day.
Little did Ed know how much things would change in six years when The Beatles hit his stage.
This was fantastic. I never knew this side of Ed Sullivan. And Arlene has such a joy of everything!
We could not stop laughing omg Sullivan was hysterical! 🤣🤣🤣
Ed Sullivan was not by trade an entertainer but was a journalist like Dorothy Killgallon or John Daly. That is why he answered the question that way.
I've never seen Sullivan outside of his variety show. He was excellent!
I saw Mr. Sullivan once in New York, near the end of his life. He was sitting alone on a park bench in front of the General Motors building on Fifth Avenue. I looked at him and waved. He looked at me and waved back with a big smile on his face. I like to think that I as a pretty young woman brought a moment of joy when he was still alive but not far away from death. He seemed to be grateful to be alive I soon realized not that long afterward.
Had no idea just how much of a sense of humor Ed had. The mask was just perfectly hilarious!
“So he has a regular show but he’s not an entertainer.”
“I bet it’s Ed Sullivan.” Lol
Payne to Mr. Spud: "Do you have anything to do with the Hula Hoop?" I was like 'WHAAAAAAAAAT?"
It's impossible for anyone who wasn't around in 1958 to imagine the intensity of the hula hoop fad that year; over a hundred million were sold in 1958-59. Considering that the prior questioning had established that it could be thought of as, but was not really a sport, the hula hoop was by far the most topical recreational item on the market at the time. If this had been 1962, the same line of questioning might have led to guessing yo-yos.
@@zorroonmilkavitch1840 Wikipedia says that 100 million were sold in the first two years; it's not clear whether it was 1945-46 or 1946-47. Before my time. There was a marketing peak in 1962 when a television ad campaign introduced a musical jingle about it. I remember being given one about that time, but I had thought it was something new then.
@@neilmidkiff sounds like you've got your hand on the pulse of all these good thing sounds like you were either a collector or what?
@@zorroonmilkavitch1840 Mostly just someone who does a bit of online research. I do have pretty good memories of being a kid in the late 50s and into the 60s, too.
What happened to good American game shows like this that the family could watch together? I know we have game shows that could be that way today but it seems that this was a feature instead of a side bar consideration. Love the eloquence of the contestants and panel speech as well as how they present themselves. Thank you for this. I am officially hooked.
The thumbnail for this video looked terrifying, thought the guy's face was melting. 😁
Who would of thought Ed Sullivan had such a sense of humor!
This episode aired the month before I was born. Nice to see an entertaining and funny snippet of the world I was about to enter.
I think all the shows were very humorous and enjoyable. I was born in 1946 and remembered seeing the show originally from mid fifties on. Dorothy Kilgallens Collums we’re in our newspaper when I grew up. Having read 3 books about her I watch to see her on the show.
i don’t know anyone who didn’t like Ed Sullivan. watched every week and i was really fond of him. BUT - who knew he could be so funny, even without the mask. there was only one “sing it, boys!” Ed Sullivan
(“Bye Bye, Birdy :).
‘ts alright? ‘ts alright! Señor Wencis :) 🌷🌼
This was the funniest episode ever. I really love this show!
One of my favorite segments. The mask was hilarious!
SHOWS that entertainment CAN BE
funny A.N.D. wholesome; it does not have to below brow
love the gracious and polite candor
This is one of the funniest WMLs thanks to Ed Sulliavan!!!
One of the funniest shows EVER. It had me in stitches.
The man was very funny; who would've ever known? Outstanding to see this side of the great Ed Sullivan!!
Arlene Francis was 51 here, the age I am now. She possessed an easy glamour.
Wow this is the first episode I've clicked on and what a doozie, also it's the first time I learned the name of Mr Payne. What a great actor I've seen him in many different westerns wonderful
Its crazy that I can see this young man here for the first time ever and just google and see every phase of his life until his death
I didn't know Ed Sullivan was so funny and nice looking too.. I love back when people were nice..
Who knew Ed Sullivan had that kind of sense of humor?
The Ed Sullivan bit was one of the first WML segments I ever saw, and it was pretty funny at that point, since I had some Ed Sullivan context. Now that I've seen more of the panel & Daly, this is even better. (Also, I know Payne mostly from film noir, so he's a bit disconcerting here, but very good. he said at one point he'd watched the show a lot, and I can believe it.)
I never realized Ed Sullivan had such a sense of humor. I miss his show!
Hysterical! Arlene is adorable!
And who says that the cerebral approach can't be a hoot? Pure, over the top genius.
good 'ol days !....
Lars Rye Jeppesen , always one somewhere. You know. Some of them may have enjoyed the times thinking how much progress had been made since their grandparents. sigh. When people bring up "the good ole days", 99% of the time they are referring to the best of the times, not the worst of the times.
@@LarsRyeJeppesen only in the deep south you wouldn't enjoy it If you were black and sexism was never as bad as people make it
Great show!
My fraternal grandmother once commented, don't be like those Beatles, in reference to growing long hair. I only thought about it many years later and figured out that she must have seen the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show.
This is such a wonderful show.
Oh my god, my cheeks hurt from laughing so much during the Ed Sullivan part. I never knew he was so funny! HILARIOUS!
Even Ed called Raymond Burr, Perry Mason, and James Arness. Marshall Dillion. Just shows how these two great actors completely owned their on-screen personas.
11/19/17 HAPPY THANKSGIVING- right around the corner. Just found this...but remember as a kid. Super entertainment!
I will always associate Ed Sullivan with The Beatles!!
@@davidwesley2525 Elvis broke the ceiling, he was on the show first as a rock n' roller.
John Payne was no dummy, managed his career brilliantly and became wealthy thereby and in canny investments in real estate.
Nobody else could moderate this program as well as the intellectual super John Charles Daly
John Payne was an excellent guest panelist. It's a shame he didn't appear again (to my knowledge...?).
from Wiki:
In March 1961, Payne suffered extensive, life-threatening injuries when struck by a car in New York City.[8] His recovery took two years. In his later roles, facial scars from the accident can be detected in close-ups; he chose not to have them removed. One of Payne's first public appearances during this period was as a guest panelist on the popular CBS Sunday night game show What's My Line?. In the December 3, 1961 episode, regular panelist Dorothy Kilgallen introduced Payne by saying "He's been in the hospital after a very bad accident. So it's good to see him fit as a fiddle and all in one piece." And regular panelist Bennett Cerf remarked "Good to see you here John. Glad to see you beat that car on Madison Avenue that bumped into you.
I think he had played a lot of 20 questions, or as we used to call it: animal, mineral or vegetable, where you have to guess something by asking yes or no questions, and keep asking as long as you get a yes.
that first guest was a toy genius. the owner/ inventor Whamo Toys Co. made all the toys I grew up with. the Slip'n'Slide, the super ball, the hula hoop, silly string, Frisbee, ....what a great movie that would make.
Around our house we called it a ‘ Slip and Die ‘
Seriously! They SHOULD make a movie about him!
Michael Szczys - no basic coordination skills at your house? 😂 JK.
@@mena94x3 that made me 😁😳😛
My Mother was always ahead of the game, I remember slip n slide, SuperBall, and Frisbee to name a few, hours of fun with fam and friends.