They knew, at least Francis knew. If you really look at her face after the first answer, you can see it in her expression. I think most knew, maybe not Hackett, but you don't want to guess too quickly, or it just seems futile.
+James Vaughan She was well produced this time. Even though the dress and the gloves might seem a bit too much for today standards for Lucille Ball that's nothing. She was usually not so sober when it comes to fashion, she often wore a considerable amount of jewelry and was more daring than most women but in here she was very sober and traditional even the haircut was more simplistic than her 1950's usual self. I'm not an expert but I think her fashion choice enhanced her natural features and she's always been naturally beautiful.
Wow...she was gorgeous. First woman to ever run a TV studio...she was the executive who gave both Mission Impossible and Star Trek their starts! Comedian, actor, dancer, model, business woman...she could do it all.
She did everything and was wonderful. These young people of today are just horrible and don't care about her or what she stood for or how great television was either!!!!!
Ron nelson....young people today do not like to watch shows that are in black and white , they are to busy with their phones , video games , taking drugs , ect. , . We do not have very many movie stars, or celebrities that are like the ones that we had back in the 4os , 50s , and 60s . Back in the good old days , we could identify our favorite stars just by their voices. They gave us many hours of clean entertainment , and enjoyment . Now days , there are not to many that we know just by their voices . Our heros , and stars that we loved had private lives that we knew nothing of , and we didn't care , because we loved to watch them .we all have our faults and hidden sins and wrongdoings , so we should not judge them nor hate them for what they did in their private lives.we should just enjoy and cherish the joy and happiness that they gave us. We too have made a lot of mistakes , in our lives have we not..
She also helped rod Stewart and gave the twilight zone a backdoor pilot. She was a huge influence on television hard to overestimate her importance in comedy and television production.
+Vahan Nisanian Yeap, she was a marvelous persona. By the way, Lucy set the record of appearances, I guess. Even Jayne Mansfield couldn't match her popularity among the members of the show establishment. Anyway, she well deserved the attention. Cheers !
For me Lucille Ball was definitely in the top 10 of the most beautiful women ever in Hollywood and Desi and Gary were two of the luckiest guys on the planet for being married to this goddess.
Lucy was about 54 here and stunning. I saw pictures of her when she younger, perhaps in her 20s and a model. She was very beautiful. I don't think a lot of people realize just how pretty she was because they only ever hone in on her comedic abilities. Her outfit here was also gorgeous.
Lucy was about 54 years old when this aired. I am the same age today. I am madly in love with Lucy. She was an absolute knockout! She was not just good-looking, but smart, talented and funny.
I love Lucy's hair styled like that it's more sleek and modern than those poodle looking curls they always seemed to keep her in. She should've worn her hair like that more often.
I love how Buddy Hackett really thinks about the questions he asks and pays attention to the others answers where some guests don't seem to follow along too well
@@johnnytd1128 Its almost a cringy as when the creep Hal Block tried desperately to kill Bette Davis after her appearance. There was a visible struggle...
The second contestant made artificial snow for skiing. Buddy asked if the product was manufactured and got a "sometimes". He replied "Sometimes it's manufactured and sometimes it's natural. Could be rain!" He didn't know how close he was with that answer and the audience went wild! Then Martin Gabel got on the right track with some help from Dorothy. Good teamwork.
I grew up watching reruns of I Love Lucy bund never thought of her as beautiful. Probably because of the role she played. Seeing her now I agree she was very beautiful.
I simply adore all the sparkling and glittering that comes from things like Arlene's necklace, the crystals on the women's dresses, how it's almost blinding to the camera. I'm a woman, and we tend to like sparkling things anyway! But it's so beautiful!
She wasn't really considered a full-time comedienne until her TV series started in the early 1950s. Until then, she was a hard-working actress who played all kinds of roles in the movies. She wasn't thought of as a "sex symbol" kind of beauty, but she was obviously attractive, and the roles she played were of very attractive young women. Her skin tone in the 1940s was so perfect that she was dubbed "Technicolor Tessie". It was said that she could have been used for technicolor lighting tests.
@@eyextacy8412 Yes, she started as a Conover model, which back then was the Rolls Royce of modelling agencies in NY. She was that gorgeous and then went into movies from along that route.
How hard she tried to please her audience ,beautiful speaker graceful ,poised ,dignified ,and she remained so right down to her last appearance on the Oscar show
In the John Daly ten best mystery guest post game interview list, two of his interviews with Lucy should turn up. They would be -- hands down -- 1 January 1961 and 7 March 1965. Lucy is very charming tonight and quite amusing with her stories from meeting Presidents Eisenhower and Johnson.
“Who has never abused the freedom of the press” and that’s why her death seems so interesting. She was an amazing journalist and never let her emotions get in the way. She told it like it is and she was incredibly intelligent, which is why she was so great on this show.
Lucy not only LOOKED great here, but came off very well indeed, with self-effacing humor plus her involvement with, and advocacy for Easter Seals! Classy lady!
Buddy Hackett was a guest panelist on WML for two of Lucille Ball's six WML appearances. He was panelist (in beard) when "Bob Ball and Lucy Hope" appeared in 1963. Tonight, talk about coincidence, Hackett in his only question asked Lucy the same question Steve Allen asked Lucy in his only question the night Lucy showed up in Martian vocal disguise in 1954. Both their questions got roughly the same sort of comic response. I think both were going for laughs.
As soulierinvestments pointed out on more than one occasion, there was a policy regarding Mystery Guest appearances. He or she could not appear on "What's My Line?" as a Mystery Guest more than one time in a calendar year. However, there were four exceptions (perhaps as a last-minute replacement): 1) 1959: Paul Newman was MG on January 25 and November 8. 2) 1961: Carol Burnett was MG May 7 and December 17. 3) 1964: Steve Allen was MG on March 8 and October 4. 4) 1965: Lucille Ball was MG on March 7 and July 25.
Carol Burnett in a 365 day period in 1961-1962 appeared a record three times. The weather on 17 December 1961 was hideous, and I bet your are right that she was a last minute replacement for someone who got stuck somewhere.
This is the main reason why I wish CBS and WML had gone color earlier than they did. I am glad we have at least this kinescope of Lucille Ball's March appearance, but this is Lucy's most stunningly beautiful WML appearance, and she should have been recorded in color. WML kept mystery guests to one appearance per year, but it was not hard and fast as a rule. Lucy appeared twice on WML in 1965. Stay tuned.
Of course, Lucille is correct - she is not a natural redhead. During the heat of the McCarthy era, Desi Arnaz told an audience, "The only thing red about Lucy is her hair -- and even THAT'S not real!!" Lucy herself teased that her hair color WAS real and came from a REAL bottle of Clairol!
There are some viewers who found Hackett annoying, and not a suitable panelist. But I disagree. I actually like Hackett more so now then when I was younger. Here he proves a contrast to the more refined and intellectual persons on the panel. Like a palette cleanser. The duality works because Hackett also plays the game comparatively well.
@@luissantiago8446 some of the people on the panel looked at him as crude and not part of " High society". Cerf was one of those snobs. Buddy was cool in my book. He didn't need their approval and didn't care what people like Cerf thought.
I've always thought that of all the Mystery Guests, Lucy either on purpose or by accident, does the worst at disguising her voice. With someone with that distinctive of a voice, she should have never said one word!
That voice Lucy was doing was exactly the same voice she did on the outro to her radio show "My Favorite Husband," complete with the Woody Woodpecker laugh.
Was that a fake name? Pete Sa.. When Gabel asks him about his name he says its Portuguese origin but it felt like he was making it up, the way he said it. And John was looking at him amused while he was saying that.
Me too. What a splendid woman: a naughty but not vulgar sense of humor, warmth and support to the mystery guests; a smashing beauty. One can half pretend that these wonderful people are still alive.
Near the end, John said, "Office" and realized he had said too much. Sometimes, it would be best if he didn't respond. In this case, the guest's line seemed to have been guessed prematurely as a result of him revealing a significant clue.☹️
It’s great to see Lucille Ball again on this show. She appeared with Desi Arnaz back in the 1950s, but then divorced him in 1960, for cheating on her so much. That said, her career continued to flourish, as we can see here.
Dorothy got a little fresh when she asked Buddy if he knew Joe Bananas. Buddy was no dope and he knew that was the nickname for the Mafia boss Joe Bonanno
Lucy looked really good here. She was using (What was known as) a 'flying-lift', to keep her youthful appearance, w/out surgery. For whatever reason, Lucy wouldn't go 'under the knife', and by this point, she was ...'mature' - she started her career at the end of silents, beginning of sound-era, and that was 30-ish years, prior to this). When she did I Love Lucy, she was very smart; hired the best lighting, and cameramen - who'd previously done studio work, so they KNEW how to light, and film her. But, if you ever see pictures - esp. By the time they did the 1hr-long Lucy-Desi show, her face was showing it. I forgot the specifics (the names of who taught her this), but, what the 'flying-lift' was, they - the makeup artist would attach tiny little eyelets at her hairline, with invisible stage tape, and then would take heavy-duty (i.e., strong) thread, and run it through the eyelets, and pull it all BACK, and tie it up. Then, they'd slap a wig on her - covering the threads, and eyelets, and voilá; a 'flying-lift'. It looked terrific, as the resolution of TV's wasn't anywhere close to today (but, since I Love Lucy was filmed, it can be 'up-converted', and her lines become more visible) but, as time wore on - one thing about skin on the face, is, it looses its elasticity - so, when it's pulled one way, then, it slowly moves back, and in certain shots/lighting (I didn't look here), Ms Balls skin has that slow, 'melting' back into it's normal position appearance.
If you notice throughout Lucille Ball's various TV series from 1951 to 1974, only the very earliest episodes did you ever have tight close ups of Lucy's face. Especially on The Lucy Show (1962-68) and Here's Lucy (1968-74) all you get are medium shots (like from the waist up) and long shots (like head to toe).
Hmm. I wonder if they still do that today. ( Shut up Shirley. You don't want this). When you stretch this already vulnerable facial skin either with face lifts or this flying lift you are worsening the problem. Whatever foundation or structure your skin had, the stretching out of the skin with these lifts keeps loosening the skin so that you have to keep getting more and more of these lifts. Better not to start, seems to me.
I haven't seen John flip those cards over for no reason whatsoever for a long time; I thought he was DONE with that :( and also Lucille Ball can disguise her voice any way she wants to; there's no WAY she can disguise that voice lol (should should have just said, "hmm hmm" or uh uh")
Orla Ok I'll look out for that. Have to say I've seen no evidence of decline so far and in fact a while ago I watched the episode she appeared in hours before she died and she is as sharp, together and happy as ever on it. She certainly wasn't in decline with her investigations and professional motivations with her other more important work at this point. If anything she was 'on fire' with that. As you might have gathered I personally think Dorothy was doing very well indeed right up until the alcohol and barbiturates entered her body on the night she died.
Joe Ambrose I don't think it's uncommon, amongst those watching these programmes, to be aware of her time running out....especially when she is doing important work during these latter months and appears to be enjoying herself right here. Surely in the case of anyone dies tragically while looking so young, vibrant and producing the goods in their field, it's natural to consider what few months or weeks they had to go at the time.
Bless sweet Lucy...her work from promoting Easter Seals benefits my friends and family as those with special needs go to a very joyous Easter Seals summer camp!
Lucille Ball, what a stunningly beautiful, classy, elegant woman.
Signature just "Lucy"...
She must have had long legs to make love with.
not really. Only for show on camera. In real life she was a horrible person. But at least she had the fame.
Surprised they didn't get Lucy right away. You can't mistake that voice.
Marla Singer
I agree. The second she gave her first answer, I thought it was a dead give-away!
They knew, at least Francis knew. If you really look at her face after the first answer, you can see it in her expression. I think most knew, maybe not Hackett, but you don't want to guess too quickly, or it just seems futile.
They were all elegant people.
Dorothy knew too.
Such a wonderful show. Lucille Ball looked stunning. Wow!
Lucy looked really beautiful here.
Very much so.
+James Vaughan
She was well produced this time. Even though the dress and the gloves might seem a bit too much for today standards for Lucille Ball that's nothing. She was usually not so sober when it comes to fashion, she often wore a considerable amount of jewelry and was more daring than most women but in here she was very sober and traditional even the haircut was more simplistic than her 1950's usual self. I'm not an expert but I think her fashion choice enhanced her natural features and she's always been naturally beautiful.
The most beautiful woman of the 1960s!!!!!
Wow...she was gorgeous. First woman to ever run a TV studio...she was the executive who gave both Mission Impossible and Star Trek their starts! Comedian, actor, dancer, model, business woman...she could do it all.
She did everything and was wonderful. These young people of today are just horrible and don't care about her or what she stood for or how great television was either!!!!!
Ron nelson....young people today do not like to watch shows that are in black and white , they are to busy with their phones , video games , taking drugs , ect. , . We do not have very many movie stars, or celebrities that are like the ones that we had back in the 4os , 50s , and 60s . Back in the good old days , we could identify our favorite stars just by their voices. They gave us many hours of clean entertainment , and enjoyment . Now days , there are not to many that we know just by their voices . Our heros , and stars that we loved had private lives that we knew nothing of , and we didn't care , because we loved to watch them .we all have our faults and hidden sins and wrongdoings , so we should not judge them nor hate them for what they did in their private lives.we should just enjoy and cherish the joy and happiness that they gave us. We too have made a lot of mistakes , in our lives have we not..
She also helped rod Stewart and gave the twilight zone a backdoor pilot. She was a huge influence on television hard to overestimate her importance in comedy and television production.
What did she help Rod Stewart with😅
That's Rod SERLING.
Of Lucille Ball's six appearances on this show as a Mystery Guest, she looked her most beautiful here.
And yet she was about four years younger than the ever youthful and lovely Arlene.
*****
I'm not sure whether or not I've seen all five of her other appearances, but she certainly looked both elegant and stunning in this one!
+Vahan Nisanian Yeap, she was a marvelous persona. By the way, Lucy set the record of appearances, I guess. Even Jayne Mansfield couldn't match her popularity among the members of the show establishment. Anyway, she well deserved the attention. Cheers !
Witold Banasik I think that Jayne Mansfield was on twice.
Joe Postove
Well, I'm sure she was a mystery celebrity four times, actually; in 1956, 1957, 1964, and 1966. Smashing shows, I must tell you !
I wish this was in colour so I could see Lucy's dress...
Lucille Ball and the entire panel guests were marvelous !!!!!
I STILL love Lucy......you got some splainin to do.
For me Lucille Ball was definitely in the top 10 of the most beautiful women ever in Hollywood and Desi and Gary were two of the luckiest guys on the planet for being married to this goddess.
Buddy Hackett asks great questions and make insightful connections quickly. Bravo!
But he's creepy as hell. Thank God that last lady didn't fall for his creepy embrace 😂😂
He's joking. Chillout@@edmundpower1250
Absolute Queen of comedy for all time.
Repeating "mostly no" to answer "are you male?" was genius
Whoda thought in 2024, this isn't even an absurd answer anymore!
It's hysterical watching John Daly crack up with each of Miss Ball's responses.
I'm crying at Pete Sa making pizza 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Howbout Buddy caressing miss Caress with his arms to try to get a hug but got a handshake instead
I think both Arlene and Dorothy are stunning.
And Stunned at the end as well.
Dorothy, unfortunately, had 8 months to live ... before the JFK "silencers" went into action (!!)
Buddy Hackett (born Leonard Hacker) sounded goofy because of his childhood Bell’s palsy, but he was actually quite smart.
I love Lucy's facial expression at 17:25 after being asked if she was a "male." That was just so funny. Hahahaha!!!!!!!😆🤣😂
Her comic timing was impeccable.
Lucy was about 54 here and stunning. I saw pictures of her when she younger, perhaps in her 20s and a model. She was very beautiful. I don't think a lot of people realize just how pretty she was because they only ever hone in on her comedic abilities. Her outfit here was also gorgeous.
Those who haven't should check out some of the old noir movies she was in, like one called Lured. She's very good and yes, very beautiful.
Lucy was about 54 years old when this aired. I am the same age today. I am madly in love with Lucy. She was an absolute knockout! She was not just good-looking, but smart, talented and funny.
Nice score for guessing the Pizza guy, Buddy Hackett!
No big deal. His name gave it away.
I love Lucy's hair styled like that it's more sleek and modern than those poodle looking curls they always seemed to keep her in. She should've worn her hair like that more often.
I love how Buddy Hackett really thinks about the questions he asks and pays attention to the others answers where some guests don't seem to follow along too well
I love how he open his arms, and she game him a handshake.
@@johnnytd1128 Its almost a cringy as when the creep Hal Block tried desperately to kill Bette Davis after her appearance. There was a visible struggle...
Yeah, he thinks fast too.
@@billiebuffalo I assume you meant "kiss". 😂
@@johnnytd1128 That was super awkward!
I like how Lucille Ball bowed to the audience. Not many of the celebrities did that.
The second contestant made artificial snow for skiing. Buddy asked if the product was manufactured and got a "sometimes". He replied "Sometimes it's manufactured and sometimes it's natural. Could be rain!" He didn't know how close he was with that answer and the audience went wild! Then Martin Gabel got on the right track with some help from Dorothy. Good teamwork.
I grew up watching reruns of I Love Lucy bund never thought of her as beautiful. Probably because of the role she played. Seeing her now I agree she was very beautiful.
Buddy’s character didn’t seem very smart, but he was smart as a whip.
I simply adore all the sparkling and glittering that comes from things like Arlene's necklace, the crystals on the women's dresses, how it's almost blinding to the camera. I'm a woman, and we tend to like sparkling things anyway! But it's so beautiful!
Thank you Lucy for all that you did! Easter Seals! I still get them every year!
Lucy looks gorgeous as always, tall and stunning
I love that buddy hackett always played the dumb guy but he was closest every time. Great actor.
Lucille Ball was never considered one of Hollywoods great beauties - I guess they couldn’t see past the comedy.
SHE IS VERY EXOTIC..
She wasn't really considered a full-time comedienne until her TV series started in the early 1950s. Until then, she was a hard-working actress who played all kinds of roles in the movies. She wasn't thought of as a "sex symbol" kind of beauty, but she was obviously attractive, and the roles she played were of very attractive young women. Her skin tone in the 1940s was so perfect that she was dubbed "Technicolor Tessie". It was said that she could have been used for technicolor lighting tests.
She WAS considered a great beauty during her pin-up girl years. She even posed for Alberto Vargas and George Petty.
@@dave00004483 she started in modeling...
@@eyextacy8412 Yes, she started as a Conover model, which back then was the Rolls Royce of modelling agencies in NY. She was that gorgeous and then went into movies from along that route.
Lucy was gracious and bowed to the audience.
How hard she tried to please her audience ,beautiful speaker graceful ,poised ,dignified ,and she remained so right down to her last appearance on the Oscar show
In the John Daly ten best mystery guest post game interview list, two of his interviews with Lucy should turn up. They would be -- hands down -- 1 January 1961 and 7 March 1965. Lucy is very charming tonight and quite amusing with her stories from meeting Presidents Eisenhower and Johnson.
“Who has never abused the freedom of the press” and that’s why her death seems so interesting. She was an amazing journalist and never let her emotions get in the way. She told it like it is and she was incredibly intelligent, which is why she was so great on this show.
I love Buddy for saying this!!
All contestants have funny or unusual names: Pete Sa, Scott Tutt and Benita Caress.
Johan Bengtsson yeah they seem to have had themes for most shows. Twins, wrestlers, people doing something strange for their gender.
I am Portuguese and it is a Portuguese surname, the correct way to write it is Sá.
Lucy!!!! She looks gorgeous in here. I would've known that it was her since she answered the first question.
Lucy not only LOOKED great here, but came off very well indeed, with self-effacing humor plus her involvement with, and advocacy for Easter Seals! Classy lady!
Lucy is so beautiful and elegant. She's gone through a lot of familiar changes, physically, throughout the years but she's still Lucy.
Paul V. Gentile She's too "mumsy" for me.
Buddy Hackett was a guest panelist on WML for two of Lucille Ball's six WML appearances. He was panelist (in beard) when "Bob Ball and Lucy Hope" appeared in 1963. Tonight, talk about coincidence, Hackett in his only question asked Lucy the same question Steve Allen asked Lucy in his only question the night Lucy showed up in Martian vocal disguise in 1954. Both their questions got roughly the same sort of comic response. I think both were going for laughs.
As soulierinvestments pointed out on more than one occasion, there was a policy regarding Mystery Guest appearances. He or she could not appear on "What's My Line?" as a Mystery Guest more than one time in a calendar year. However, there were four exceptions (perhaps as a last-minute replacement):
1) 1959: Paul Newman was MG on January 25 and November 8.
2) 1961: Carol Burnett was MG May 7 and December 17.
3) 1964: Steve Allen was MG on March 8 and October 4.
4) 1965: Lucille Ball was MG on March 7 and July 25.
Carol Burnett in a 365 day period in 1961-1962 appeared a record three times. The weather on 17 December 1961 was hideous, and I bet your are right that she was a last minute replacement for someone who got stuck somewhere.
It took me until Buddy said it to get “Pete Sa.” I wonder whatever happened to him.
Peetsa ... pizza
This is the main reason why I wish CBS and WML had gone color earlier than they did. I am glad we have at least this kinescope of Lucille Ball's March appearance, but this is Lucy's most stunningly beautiful WML appearance, and she should have been recorded in color. WML kept mystery guests to one appearance per year, but it was not hard and fast as a rule. Lucy appeared twice on WML in 1965. Stay tuned.
Of course, Lucille is correct - she is not a natural redhead. During the heat of the McCarthy era, Desi Arnaz told an audience, "The only thing red about Lucy is her hair -- and even THAT'S not real!!"
Lucy herself teased that her hair color WAS real and came from a REAL bottle of Clairol!
American Comedy Royalty. Not pitching a show (unthinkable for her then) but chairman of the Easter Seal campaign.and at the height of her style.
Buddy cracks me up trying (and failing) to get a hug from the passport agent.
Creepingly trying to steal a close body embrace you mean. She knew how to deal with guys like that 😂
Buddy Hackett has more smarts than the supposed "intellectuals."
There are some viewers who found Hackett annoying, and not a suitable panelist. But I disagree. I actually like Hackett more so now then when I was younger. Here he proves a contrast to the more refined and intellectual persons on the panel. Like a palette cleanser. The duality works because Hackett also plays the game comparatively well.
@@luissantiago8446 some of the people on the panel looked at him as crude and not part of " High society". Cerf was one of those snobs. Buddy was cool in my book. He didn't need their approval and didn't care what people like Cerf thought.
I've always thought that of all the Mystery Guests, Lucy either on purpose or by accident, does the worst at disguising her voice. With someone with that distinctive of a voice, she should have never said one word!
Martin looked somewhat gaunt/unwell in this episode. Maybe he’d taken a diet a bit too far?
Martin reportedly lost weight for his role as Professor Moriarty in the play "Baker Street".
mikejschin ~ Ohhhh okay...that makes sense. Thanks for the info my friend.
I first notice he looked very thin in the face like he'd lost weight. But then for the part of Moriarty hrd need to be thinnish.
I think he looks great, thinner.
And on ABC "Judgment at Nuremburg, " interrupted by special bulletins from Selma, Alabama
His name is Pete Sa , guess what he makes for a living, lol
For Pete’s sake 😂
"its not supposed to!" As a longtime skier - thats one of the funniest answers (by a non-MG) that I've ever heard on this show.
They all have such nice handwriting.
Dorothy, Bennett and Arlene were extremely astute players.
@dancoll i agree
And actually so was Buddy Hackett.
Bennett wasn't ON this episode
@@gailsirois7175 I, and the other people who replied, we’re speaking in general terms.
But Buddy got the 1st, and came so close on #2, "rain"
Lucy - as smart, funny and beautiful as ever!
*_MAKES PIZZA_*
*_MAKES ARTIFICIAL SNOW FOR SKIING_*
*_ISSUES PASSPORTS_*
Lol. I knew the first guest's line as soon as he signed in. 🤣
Lucy’s from my hometown. Love her 👏🏻🌟🥰‼️
They just don’t make stunning beauty like this anymore
I can't believe i'm just realizing what 101 Dalmations was parodying with What's my Crime!
How could John Daly say that artificial snow is edible? He wasn’t working on all cylinders there.
That voice Lucy was doing was exactly the same voice she did on the outro to her radio show "My Favorite Husband," complete with the Woody Woodpecker laugh.
I wasn’t aware, thanks for sharing.
Do we think that sometimes John played the game too much and too often FOR the contestant, going so far as to contradict him or her unnecessarily?
Joe Postove Probably.
Yes, far too intrusive. He was supposed to be a ‘moderator’.
Was that a fake name? Pete Sa.. When Gabel asks him about his name he says its Portuguese origin but it felt like he was making it up, the way he said it. And John was looking at him amused while he was saying that.
Lucy looked so beautiful
The day this episode aired, it was 'Bloody Sunday' in Selma, AL.
Thanks for making us aware of this historic period in time.
David Pinegar, then each time you tell a positive story about yourself, contextualize it with a little talk about that water on your backside.
@@cjb8010 Je ne comprends pas.
@@shirleyrombough8173 Il messaggio a cui stavo rispondendo è stato rimosso, quindi forse ora nessuno lo capisce.
Oh my god this mans name was Pete Sa. Can’t believe it took them more than a minute to work it out.
Lucy was so beautiful.
The most beautiful female television actress and movie star of all time Period!!!!!
Wish I had been able to have known Arlene Frances
Me too. What a splendid woman: a naughty but not vulgar sense of humor, warmth and support to the mystery guests; a smashing beauty. One can half pretend that these wonderful people are still alive.
The last contestant's name was caress. And she can come to Israel (50 years ago) anytime WITHOUT a passport!
I love Lucy!
This is from March 1965. Sad to think that Dorothy Kilgallen would pass in November of 1965.
Lucille Ball was extremely talented. A legend. She was also a beautiful woman. Thanks for the video.
How very, very beautiful Lucy looked here.
Oh I wish i could see Lucy’s dress in color!
Lucy was SO gorgeous here. That dress!
yes, she was so pretty and throughout her entire life. such presence!
Notice how when Dottie receives a ‘no’ and the audience chortles, that her saccharine smile changes to a sour, snotty grimace.
An excellent episode due to the absence of boring, stuffy Bennett Cerf.
I'm surprised that Buddy didn't ask the snow guy if he had anything to do with King Tut
Near the end, John said, "Office" and realized he had said too much. Sometimes, it would be best if he didn't respond. In this case, the guest's line seemed to have been guessed prematurely as a result of him revealing a significant clue.☹️
Actually, her line wasn't guessed. As a result of the accidental hint, John decided to flip all the cards and give her all of the money.
It’s great to see Lucille Ball again on this show. She appeared with Desi Arnaz back in the 1950s, but then divorced him in 1960, for cheating on her so much. That said, her career continued to flourish, as we can see here.
Thank you so much for posting these.
Olivia de Havilland + Bette Davis= Truely wonderful Film Stars 🌟🌟No one else agree,three years on!? 😮
Dorothy got a little fresh when she asked Buddy if he knew Joe Bananas. Buddy was no dope and he knew that was the nickname for the Mafia boss Joe Bonanno
Ricky was fool. I agree with Vahan Nisanian. There was something about Lucy, and there still is.
Lucy looked really good here. She was using (What was known as) a 'flying-lift', to keep her youthful appearance, w/out surgery.
For whatever reason, Lucy wouldn't go 'under the knife', and by this point, she was ...'mature' - she started her career at the end of silents, beginning of sound-era, and that was 30-ish years, prior to this).
When she did I Love Lucy, she was very smart; hired the best lighting, and cameramen - who'd previously done studio work, so they KNEW how to light, and film her. But, if you ever see pictures - esp. By the time they did the 1hr-long Lucy-Desi show, her face was showing it.
I forgot the specifics (the names of who taught her this), but, what the 'flying-lift' was, they - the makeup artist would attach tiny little eyelets at her hairline, with invisible stage tape, and then would take heavy-duty (i.e., strong) thread, and run it through the eyelets, and pull it all BACK, and tie it up.
Then, they'd slap a wig on her - covering the threads, and eyelets, and voilá; a 'flying-lift'.
It looked terrific, as the resolution of TV's wasn't anywhere close to today (but, since I Love Lucy was filmed, it can be 'up-converted', and her lines become more visible) but, as time wore on - one thing about skin on the face, is, it looses its elasticity - so, when it's pulled one way, then, it slowly moves back, and in certain shots/lighting (I didn't look here), Ms Balls skin has that slow, 'melting' back into it's normal position appearance.
Legend has it that Marlene Dietrich used to wear this "flying lift", too.
If you notice throughout Lucille Ball's various TV series from 1951 to 1974, only the very earliest episodes did you ever have tight close ups of Lucy's face. Especially on The Lucy Show (1962-68) and Here's Lucy (1968-74) all you get are medium shots (like from the waist up) and long shots (like head to toe).
Hmm. I wonder if they still do that today. ( Shut up Shirley. You don't want this). When you stretch this already vulnerable facial skin either with face lifts or this flying lift you are worsening the problem. Whatever foundation or structure your skin had, the stretching out of the skin with these lifts keeps loosening the skin so that you have to keep getting more and more of these lifts. Better not to start, seems to me.
I haven't seen John flip those cards over for no reason whatsoever for a long time; I thought he was DONE with that :(
and also Lucille Ball can disguise her voice any way she wants to; there's no WAY she can disguise that voice lol (should should have just said, "hmm hmm" or uh uh")
Sounds & acts just like Lucy! I think the panelists are being kind. They always get her!
Dorothy Kilgallen had 7 months and 1 day of life left.
So sad...
Strange how different she behaved leading up to her death compared to the first few years of the show when she was so composed and intelligent.
U need help
Orla Ok I'll look out for that. Have to say I've seen no evidence of decline so far and in fact a while ago I watched the episode she appeared in hours before she died and she is as sharp, together and happy as ever on it. She certainly wasn't in decline with her investigations and professional motivations with her other more important work at this point. If anything she was 'on fire' with that.
As you might have gathered I personally think Dorothy was doing very well indeed right up until the alcohol and barbiturates entered her body on the night she died.
Joe Ambrose I don't think it's uncommon, amongst those watching these programmes, to be aware of her time running out....especially when she is doing important work during these latter months and appears to be enjoying herself right here. Surely in the case of anyone dies tragically while looking so young, vibrant and producing the goods in their field, it's natural to consider what few months or weeks they had to go at the time.
Bless sweet Lucy...her work from promoting Easter Seals benefits my friends and family as those with special needs go to a very joyous Easter Seals summer camp!
id love me some petesa right now
Sad to think...it should have been President Kennedy she was goofing with....
I WAS VERY HAPPILY SURPRISED BY THIS FIRST CHALLENGER WITH THE MENTION OF MY HOME TOWN FROM NJ( METUCHEN) THANK YOU FOR THIS EPISODE.
Desi screwed up. 5 years after the divorce and Lucy is stunning!!❤👍🥰
He KNEW he screwed up
Pizza Pizza? Hey! He did it first!!
The artifician snow in my opinion is a service not a product. I think its misleadin to cal it a product
The young lady who came on after Lucy wore a typical 1960s "beehive" hairdo.
Much like one of my mistresses.