TV History
December 1, 1940
Richard Pryor is born in Peoria, Illinois. According to the Museum of Broadcast Communications, Pryor was “the first African-American stand-up comedian to speak candidly and successfully to integrated audiences using the language and jokes blacks previously only shared among themselves when they were most critical of America. His comic style emancipated African-American humor.”
December 1, 1945
Bette Midler is born in Honolulu, Hawaii.
By
the time she appeared as the final guest of Johnny Carson's 30-year career on The
Tonight Show and brought tears to the unflappable host's eyes with an
emotional performance of "One For My Baby (And One More For The
Road)," she was an established star of stage and screen—a Tony winner, an
Oscar nominee, a Grammy winner and a multimillion-selling recording artist. It
would be difficult, however, to imagine a more unorthodox path to mainstream
stardom than the one followed by Bette Midler—"The Divine Miss M"—who
was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, on this day in 1945.
Equal parts Judy Garland and Ethel Merman, Bette
Midler early on set her sights on making it in New York City. Arriving
in New York in 1965, Midler soon tried out for the national touring company of Fiddler
On The Roof only to land the role of Tzeitel (and the job of singing
"Matchmaker" eight times a week) in the Broadway production instead.
After several years of singing in various Manhattan nightclubs on the side, she
got what would prove to be the most important gig of her career, singing
poolside nightly at the fabled Continental Baths, a gay bathhouse/cabaret in
the basement of the Ansonia building on West 72nd Street in Manhattan. It was
there, in collaboration with a young pianist named Barry Manilow, that she
fully developed her "Divine Miss M" stage persona—a brash, campy
interpreter of numbers ranging from "Chattanooga Choo Choo" and
"Leader Of The Pack" to "Superstar" and "Delta
Dawn." It was at the Continental Baths that Atlantic Records chief Ahmet
Ertegun discovered Midler and signed her to record the album that made her a
star: The Divine Miss M (1972). That album, which made an unlikely pop
hit out of "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" (Billboard #8, June
1973), earned Midler the Best New Artist award at the 1973 Grammy Awards.
Though she would remain a beloved favorite of a
significant fan base over the next decade or so, her only pop hit during that
period was the theme song from the 1979 movie The Rose. In 1986,
however, her flagging Hollywood career was revived by a comic turn in Paul
Mazursky's Down And Out In Beverly Hills. Two years later, she would
earn a Record of the Year Grammy and her first and only #1 pop hit with
"Wing Beneath My Wings," from the 1988 movie Beaches, in which
Midler co-starred alongside Barbara Hershey.
December 1, 1950
Keith Thibodeaux is
born. The former child actor and musician is best known for playing “Little
Ricky” in the I Love Lucy and The
Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour television
shows.
Here is a "HOLIDAY SOR-BAY"
a little spark of madness
that we could use to artificially maintain our Christmas spirit.
Tony Figueroa
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