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Memories of Lawrence Welk

Last post 03-18-2006, 11:21 PM by LostDog-Reward!. 3 replies.
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  •  03-11-2006, 7:19 PM 1567

    Memories of Lawrence Welk

    My favorite Lawrence Welk Show was Sights & Sounds of Los Angeles aired in 1979 because I was there for the taping. The show was taped at CBS Television City that year and I enjoyed the music and show in its entirety. I am so glad I had the opportunity to go in person to see this wonderful man and his organization. They played the Waltz of the Flowers and it was a great arrangement.

    --Ibubby


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  •  03-11-2006, 7:19 PM 1568 in reply to 1567

    Re: Memories of Lawrence Welk

    The continued success of this cultural abortion, which was broadcast in syndication for over a decade after ABC finally gave it the heave-ho after more than 15 seasons, was a testimony to the low-brow, tepid, pedestrian corndog tastes of the rubes, squares and geriatrics who would dutifully and faithfully tune in this dreck week after week. The fact that this tripe is still broadcast on PBS outlets across the country and stage reviews at Branson by surviving members of Welk's "Musical Family" still pack 'em in indicates that there's still plenty of those culturally-backward WWII generation fossils slobbering out there in the Heartland.

    Back in the early Super70s, when I was a longhaired rock and roller, I would invite my stoner buddies over to my place for Lawrence Welk parties: we'd chug ice cold Budweisers, smoke bongs and laugh hysterically at the cavalcade of no-talents ol' Larry would foist upon those misfortunate enough to be tuning in at the time: The Champagne Lady, Norma Zimmer, who was so old and wrinkly that they filmed her through six sheets of greased burlap; singing married couple Ralna English and Guy Hovis, who, by the way, divorced, I understand, when Guy came out; insipid dancers Bobby and Sissy, another example of a closeted, but so obvious pansy going through the motions with a cheezy hetero chick; the three refugees from AA, Larry Hooper, Jimmie Rodgers and Joe Feeney; totally bland Dick Dale, who also always appeared to be in his cups during taping; token tap dancer "He's So Smooth" Arthur Duncan (who Larry referred to in one episode as, "A credit to his-a race and-a the tap-a-dancing profession") perpetuating stereotypes week after week: his angry Afro sons probably hated his guts for the Uncle Tom antics he degraded himself with for the sake of his paycheck and spurious exposure to the Public Eye; audience pleaser (especially to the 95-year-old great great grandmothers with purple hair who were in attendance).

    Ken Dealo, who either had the worst toupee or most dramatic comb-over in American history; benign Country and Western singer Clay Hart, who was about as Country as Coney Island; accordianist Myron Floren, complete with his garish pinky rings and gaping grin; clarinetist Henry Cuesta, whose tone approximated that of noted 19th century Parisian music hall icon Le Petomane; and who can forget "our a-little a-Peruvian girl, " Aniconni, a cheese enchilada who looked like an outcast from South American stroke films. Yeah this show was quite memorable, but for the wrong reasons. 

    --moosekarloff


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  •  03-11-2006, 7:20 PM 1569 in reply to 1568

    Re: Memories of Lawrence Welk

    From this and other message you've left elsewhere on this site, you sound pretty bitter, moosekarloff. I'm sorry you've lived such a terrible life.
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  •  03-18-2006, 11:21 PM 1998 in reply to 1567

    Re: Memories of Lawrence Welk

    The only show I remember was when Welk had this Afro-American tap dancer , I think it was during the 1975 season on channel 13 in baltmore when it was on the local station then.  Till this day the show still airs on pbs and on sunday afternoon I still just as I did back then when I was 7 or 8 years old during wack out Super70s still in elementry school,  I enjoy watching them now.
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