Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Week of 4/30: YesterTube's Best TV Theme Songs (Lyric, Instrumental and More)

By Sylvia Gurinsky

In a similar fashion to the NCAA basketball championships, Yahoo! had a selection bracket for top television theme songs. The winner in their poll was "The Ballad of Gilligan's Isle."

TV Themes

Incidentally, theme songs (with lyrics) were taken together with instrumentals. Frankly, some of the choices have to be questioned. ("Saved By the Bell" is there and "Hawaii Five-O" and "Mission: Impossible" aren't?)

Here are the YesterTube selections for top songs with lyrics, top instrumentals and top miscellaneous themes (memorable introductions to shows that don't quite fit the other two categories for apparent reasons). All have to be original. Shows with pre-existing themes ("Thank You For Being a Friend" for "The Golden Girls," for instance) wouldn't qualify since the song existed independent of the show.

In some cases, shows have been bundled under the heading of a single producer.

Theme Songs With Lyrics

1. The Norman Lear Collection (All In the Family/Maude/The Jeffersons/Good Times/One Day at a Time): It really wouldn't be a fair fight, because so many of the theme songs are so good - Archie and Edith Bunker singing "Those Were the Days" at the piano as the introduction for "All In the Family" and their Queens neighbors George and Louise Jefferson "Movin' On Up" to Ja'net Dubois' theme song in "The Jeffersons," for starters. Lear took as much care with the theme songs as he did with what came after:

Archie & Edith

2. "Love Is All Around" from "The Mary Tyler Moore Show": Sonny Curtis wrote and performed this theme song, which actually got better after Season 1. Perfect for describing the experiences of a single woman in a new place.

3. "Where Everybody Knows Your Name" from "Cheers": Gary Portnoy performed the song he co-wrote with Judy Hart Angelo. It mixed in perfectly with the old-time titles to take you right into the bar:

Cheers

4. "The Ballad of Jed Clampett" from "The Beverly Hillbillies" by Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs: "Come and listen to my story about a man named Jed....." and you'll be heading to Beverly Hills for the benefits of that "Texas Tea" he discovered.

5. The Sherwood Schwartz Collection (Gilligan's Island/The Brady Bunch): While the comedies aren't my favorites, the theme songs certainly knew how to tell the stories involved:

The Ballad of Gilligan's Isle





Instrumentals

1. "Mission: Impossible": Lalo Schifrin wrote what I consider the best television theme song, period, of all time. Wonderfully mixed with snippets from that week's episode to get the heart racing:

Mission: Impossible (Season 1)

2. "Hawaii Five-O": Series creator Leonard Freeman wanted a Hawaii that was more than ukelele players. Boy, did composer Morton Stevens ever provide it in the fast-paced theme song.

Hawaii Five-O

3. "The Mod Squad": Undoubtedly the coolest theme ever written by television theme show king Earle Hagen. I just want to know what those kids were running from.

Mod Squad

4. "Peter Gunn": Henry Mancini's television success; the recording session also included a pianist named John Williams, who later went on to his own great success with movie scores and the Boston Pops.

5. "The West Wing": W.G. Snuffy Walden came up with an absolutely majestic theme, perfect for a show about the White House:

The West Wing

Miscellaneous

-60 Minutes: Tick, tick, tick, tick, tick........... That stopwatch has marked America's changes - and "60 Minutes" constancy for journalism and ratings excellence:

1997 episode intro

-"The Andy Griffith Show": Another Earle Hagen work (with Herbert W. Spencer) is "The Fishin' Hole," which mixes music with Hagen's whistling. Come on out and join Andy and Opie:

The Andy Griffith Show

-"The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson": Paul Anka, at the height of his teeny-bopper success as a singer, wrote "Johnny's Theme," which continued through Carson's 30 years of hosting the show:

Johnny's Theme

See you next week. Until then, Happy Humming - and Viewing!

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Week of 4/23: TV's Best First Responders: "Emergency!"

By Sylvia Gurinsky

First responders, including firefighters and paramedics, were crucial in the lives that were saved last week in the terror attack in Boston and the explosion and fire in Texas.
New attention is being paid to their work.

That has also generated focus on the television shows that have highlighted first responders. Because of the cost of creating fire and disaster scenes, there have been relatively few such programs in TV history. Today, NBC features "Chicago Fire," created by Dick Wolf, who also created the successful "Law & Order" franchise. "Chicago Fire" is typical of many of today's drama series - soap opera elements mixed with action. But it's one of the few current successes on the network.

One of the fire trucks is Engine 51. No doubt that is a tribute to what is still the greatest first responders show ever - "Emergency!" which also ran on NBC from 1972-79.

"Emergency!" (created by Robert Cinader) is the third show in the Jack Webb trilogy that also includes police shows "Dragnet" and "Adam-12." It's considered a semi-spinoff of "Adam-12," but actually owes its creation more to the real-life struggle that was going on in California during the late 1960s over the creation of a paramedic program to assist hospital emergency rooms.

In fact, the pilot movie, "The Wedsworth-Townsend Act," deals with that struggle; the episode is named for the bill that California Gov. Ronald Reagan signed into law creating the paramedic program. The pilot is terrific, a great way to introduce viewers to the core characters: Fireman/paramedics John Gage (Randolph Mantooth) and Roy DeSoto (Kevin Tighe) and staff members at fictional Rampart Hospital: Nurse Dixie McCall (singer-actress Julie London, once married to Jack Webb); Dr. Kelly Brackett (Robert Fuller) and Dr. Joe Early (composer-musician-actor Bobby Troup, who was married to London in real life). Here's the scene in which Gage and DeSoto meet:

Emergency! The Wedsworth-Townsend Act

The series would add the supporting staff of Gage and DeSoto's Station 51 - including real-life firefighters Dick Hammer (in Season 1) and Mike Stoker - and Rampart's Dr. Mike Morton, played by Ron Pinkard.

"Emergency!" continued in the tradition of other Webb shows of taking rescue situations from real life. It also played a role in the evolution of television into the ensemble cast (10 in all, including the Station 51 and Rampart supporting characters) and featured increased diversity (Mantooth is Native American, Pinkard is African-American, and Marco Lopez, who played a firefighter with the same name, is Hispanic.).

One of the appealing characteristics of "Emergency!" is how it mixed serious rescue situations with humor - often at Gage's expense. The show's core audiences were usually younger than 21, and Mantooth became a frequent presence on the cover of teen magazines. The show generated collectibles such as lunch boxes, comic books and action figures. Mantooth and Tighe also appeared as animated versions of Gage and DeSoto in "Emergency +4," a Saturday-morning action series featuring four rescuers who were children, from 1973-76:

Emergency + 4: S.O.S. Help Us!


Here are two clips from one of the best rescue scenes, from the Season 3 episode "Snakebite." Among other things, Gage is rescuing himself, with the help of the Station 51 crew (minus an anxious DeSoto, who is at Rampart after rescuing teens from a car crash):

Snakebite 1

Snakebite 2

There are numerous rescue workers across the United States who are in their profession because of this show. It is seen daily on ME-TV at 5 p.m. Eastern time, and the entire series is available on DVD.

See you next week. Until then, Happy Viewing!

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Week of April 17: General Hospital: The Golden Music

By Sylvia Gurinsky

ABC's "General Hospital" is celebrating its 50th anniversary. The show has been featuring its greatest hits, remembering pioneers and bringing back supercouples.

The recent Nurses Ball scenes have included some of the show's greatest musical hits.

The peak of "General Hospital's" popularity - the early 1980s - coincided with a rise in the popularity of visual music on resources such as MTV. During that decade and somewhat during the 1990s, the cast list included actor-singers who did both on the show.

Among those who sang on "GH" were John Stamos, who played Blackie, and Wallace Kurth, who played Ned (Ashton) Quartermaine. There were two others who were hitmakers, however.

The first was Rick Springfield, an Australian-born actor-singer who played the handsome Dr. Noah Webber. At the same time Springfield increased heart rates on the show, he was moving up the charts with "Jessie's Girl."

Sorry to say, Springfield's original 1980s "GH" version of the song cannot be found (yet), but here's a recent version he did for the golden anniversary - as himself, not Noah:

Jessie's Girl

Another "GH" heartthrob who was versatile was Jack Wagner, who has played Frisco Jones. While Frisco and Felicia (Kristina Wagner, once married to Jack Wagner offscreen as well as on) were one of "GH's" supercouples, it was Tania (Hilary Edson), not Felicia, to whom Frisco sang "All I Need" in 1984:

All I Need

The biggest "GH" supercouple of them all, Luke and Laura (Anthony Geary and Genie Francis), don't sing. But as they tracked down the Ice Princess and escaped the Cassadines during the early 1980s, the Patti Austin-James Ingram song "Baby Come To Me" was used for their treks. Another Austin-Ingram duet, "How Do You Keep the Music Playing," was used as the love song for Robert and Holly Scorpio ( Tristan Rogers and Emma Samms). Again, alas, no "GH" clips that feature those songs.

In 1998, a CD of music from the show was released - but not those songs, given music rights laws.

But take your Jack Wagner, Rick Springfield and Austin-Ingram CDs and say a Happy Musical 50th to General Hospital!

See you next week. Until then, Happy Viewing!




Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Week of April 9: In Memory of Annette: Who's the Leader of the Club......

By Sylvia Gurinsky

Annette Funicello, who died yesterday after an almost three-decade battle with multiple sclerosis, was a pioneer in her communications about her MS battle. Her lasting legacy will be scientific efforts in her name to find effective treatments and cures for the illness.

But she was a television pioneer, too, of course - as one of the original members of television's "The Mickey Mouse Club."

The website originalmmc.com has an excellent history about how "The Mickey Mouse Club" came together to become an ABC late-afternoon - and children's television - staple during the mid-1950s.

The original Mouseketeers, including Funicello, made their television debut on ABC during the July 17, 1955 opening of Disneyland in California. But "The Mickey Mouse Club" kicked off October 3, 1955 to very high ratings. Funicello quickly became the most popular of the Mousketeers for her quiet charm.

The show mixed Disney cartoons and live-action serials, such as "Spin and Marty," with Mousketeer song and dance numbers relating to daily themes. The format would be used and somewhat modified in a variety of later children's television shows.

Here's a great number with the cast, including Funicello:

Mouseketeer Matinee

The show would be syndicated from 1975-77, and later shown on the Disney Channel. It remains fondly remembered by Baby Boomers, and Disney programs with the original Mouseketeers have remained popular.

For DVD collectors, Disney has released selected shows. Check on Amazon.

See you next week. Until then, Happy Viewing!