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RIP DEAN STOCKWELL
1936-2021

Robert Dean Stockwell was a film and television actor with a career spanning over 70 years. As a child actor under contract to MGM, he first came to the public’s attention in films such as Anchors Aweigh (1945), The Green Years (1946), Gentleman’s Agreement (1947), and Kim (1950).

He was an uncredited extra in Abbott and Costello in Hollywood (1945), in which Lucille Ball had a cameo role as herself. Stockwell was ten years old.
“I started at a very early age in this business and I’m sure most of you have read stories about people who have started as children and ended up in very difficult lives and bad consequences. It’s not the easiest life in the world, but then no life is easy.“

In 1963, he appeared in an episode of Desilu’s “The Greatest Show on Earth”. The following week, Lucille Ball herself did a guest appearance on the show.

In late 1967, Stockwell was back at Desilu Studios to film an episode of “The Danny Thomas Hour.”

In 1989 his career had a resurgence on television in “Quantum Leap”, for which he was nominated for four Emmy Awards.

That same year, he was nominated for an Oscar for his work in the film Married to the Mob. As a nominee, he attended the 1989 Oscar Ceremony, Lucille Ball’s last public appearance before her death.

Stockwell died of natural causes on November 7, 2021, at age of 85.
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“Miss Ball is issuing no treats this year!” ~ SLUMS OF BEVERLY HILLS (1998)
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RIP MORT SAHL
1927-2021

Mort Sahl was a Canadian-born comedian, actor, and social satirist who poked fun at political and current event topics using improvised monologues and only a newspaper as a prop.

He spent his early years in Los Angeles and moved to the San Francisco Bay Area where he made his professional stage debut in 1953. In 1960 he became the first comedian to have a cover story written about him by Time magazine. He appeared on various television shows, played a number of film roles, and performed a one-man show on Broadway.
Television host Steve Allen said that Sahl was “the only real political philosopher we have in modern comedy”. Woody Allen. Allen credits Sahl’s new style of humor with “opening up vistas for people like me”.
“Television is never more false than when it’s openly sincere.” ~ Mort Sahl

Sahl’s only acting gig with Lucille Ball was in the 1962 CBS special “The Good Years” co-starring Henry Fonda. The narrator was Margaret Hamilton.

Ball and Sahl (a good name for a comedy team) were together on the dais in 1986 for “An All-Star Party for Clint Eastwood”. As a former honoree herself, Lucy had done similar honors for Carol Burnett.
He was married three times, and had one son, who pre-deceased him. Sahl died at his home in Mill Valley on October 26, 2021, at age 94.
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RIP RALPH CARMICHAEL
1927-2021

Ralph Carmichael was an composer and arranger of both secular pop and contemporary Christian music, regarded as The father of Contemporary Christian music.

In the mid-1950s he joined Desilu as an assistant musical director, composing and arranging background and incidental music for “I Love Lucy”.
On television, however, his most famous contribution was the theme song to “My Mother The Car” starring Jerry Van Dyke and Ann Sothern (as the voice of the title character).

Throughout the 1960s, Carmichael also worked with one of the decade’s most successful space age pop performers, pianist Roger Williams. He arranged over 20 albums for Williams and earned a gold record credit for “Born Free."
He died on October 18, 2021, at the age of 94.
Coincidentally, his last name was the same one Lucille Ball chose as her character name on “The Lucy Show.” Even more coincidentally, her roommate Vivian Bagley’s ex-husband was named Ralph – but then, so was the actor that played Viv’s son, Ralph Hart.
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IMPEACHMENT: “Not To Be Believed” (S3;E3)
Before founding “The Drudge Report” Matt Drudge (Billy Eichner) is manager of the CBS Store, where he dispenses his pop culture knowledge about Lucy and Desi.






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RIP LESLIE BRICUSSE
1931-2021

Leslie Bricusse was a British composer, lyricist, and playwright, most prominently working in musicals and movie music. He was best known for writing the music and lyrics for the films Doctor Dolittle, Goodbye, Mr. Chips, Scrooge, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, and the songs “Goldfinger”, “You Only Live Twice”, “Can You Read My Mind” (with John Williams) from Superman and “Le Jazz Hot!” (with Henry Mancini) from Victor/Victoria.

In “Lucy in London” (October 24, 1966), Lucy’s escort through London is Leslie Bricusse’s writing partner, performer Anthony Newley, who sings a myriad of Bricusse-Newley songs throughout the special.

Newley sings “On a Wonderful Day Like Today” as he zooms off on his motorcycle with Lucy in his sidecar. A chorus of schoolgirls on bicycles join in singing “The Beautiful Land.” Newley then sings a bit of “Sweet Beginning” as they drive through Piccadilly Circus. These songs are all from their musical The Roar of the Greasepaint – The Smell of the Crowd, which Newley co-wrote with Leslie Bricusse and starred in on Broadway in 1965. This is the show that gave Lucy’s cousin (and producer) Cleo Smith the idea to cast Newley, who only had a two week opening in his Doctor Dolittle shooting schedule (a musical movie that also had songs by Briccusse and Newley) to film the special with Lucy. Bricusse and Newley won a 1968 Oscar for the song “Talk To The Animals” from that film.

On the banks of the Thames, Newley quickly sings a bar of “What Kind of Fool Am I?” a song he wrote and performed in Stop the World – I Want To Get Off. The song won a 1963 Grammy Award for Best Song.

In a theatre setting, he first sings “Fine Day in London” then “I’m Gonna Build a Mountain” (from their musical Roar of the Greasepaint). He follows with “Once in a Lifetime” (from their musical Stop the World) and “Nothing Can Stop Me Now,” also from Greasepaint.

When Lucille Ball guest starred on the very first episode of the short-lived “The Steve Lawrence Show” (September 13, 1965) Lawrence also sang “Once in a Lifetime”.

Not coincidentally, when Ball and Lawrence made their grand entrance down 44th Street in New York City on the back of an elephant, they arrived at the Shubert Theatre, where Bricusse’s musical The Roar of the Greasepaint, The Smell of the Crowd was playing. You can see the title on the marquee in the upper left corner of the photo, and behind the elephant’s head.

When Tennessee Ernie Ford guest-starred on “Here’s Lucy” in 1969, his back-up singers, The Back Porch Majority, sang “On a Wonderful Day Like Today” from The Roar of the Greasepaint.

When Sammy Davis Jr. guest starred on “Here’s Lucy” in 1970, Lucy Carter offers Sammy the use of the office telephone as repayment for “What Kind of Fool Am I?” The song was written by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley and published in 1962. It was introduced by Anthony Newley in the musical Stop The World – I Want To Get Off. In 1978 Davis starred in a Broadway revival of the musical and also did a television special called “Sammy Stops the World.” In 1971 Davis recorded another Bricusse / Newley tune, “The Candy Man” from the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. It was a number one hit for the singer and is still associated with him today, although it was not one of his favorites.

“CBS Salutes Lucy: The First 25 Years” (November 28, 1976) kicks things off with a montage of memorable moments of Lucy on TV is underscored by Frank Sinatra singing Bricusse’s 1961 song “My Kind of Girl”. Later in the program, Steve Lawrence sings Bricusse and Newley’s “Look at that Face” in celebration of Ball’s famous physiognomy.

In “Happy Birthday, Bob” a 1978 TV special celebrating Bob Hope’s 75th birthday and guest starring Lucille Ball, Sammy Davis Jr. sings a medley of “Gonna Build a Mountain” / “What Kind of Fool Am I?” / “Once in a Lifetime” by Bricusse and Newley.
Bricusse resided in California and was married to actress Yvonne Romain and had a son, Adam. He died on 19 October 2021, at the age of 90.
Anthony Newley, Bob Hope, Broadway, Dr. Dolittle, Goodbye Mr. Chips, Here’s Lucy, Leslie Bricusse, Lucille Ball, Lucy in London, Sammy Davis Jr., Scrooge, Steve Lawrence, Stop The World I Want To Get Off, The Back Porch Majority, The Roar of the Greasepaint, tv, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory -
RIP BETTY LYNN
1926-2021

Betty Lynn was born as Elizabeth Ann Theresa Lynn in Kansas City, MO. She was best known for her role as Thelma Lou, Deputy Barney Fife’s girlfriend, on “The Andy Griffith Show”. Although the series was filmed at Desilu Studios, she never appeared on screen with Lucille Ball. However, her co-stars (Andy Griffith, Fred MacMurray, and Don Knotts) often did.
She came to Hollywood in 1948 after appearing on Broadway and did several films, including June Bride with Bette Davis.

She started playing Thelma Lu in March 1961. Despite playing the role for five years, she appeared in only 26 episodes.
“I didn’t want to leave Thelma Lou. I really loved her. I enjoyed her. She was sweet and kind, she was so fun to play, and I loved working with Don Knotts – he was so wonderful."

In 1986, she reprised the role of Thelma Lou in the reunion television movie Return to Mayberry, in which Thelma Lou and Barney Fife are finally married.

From 1967 to 1971, she was back at Desilu Studios to film seven episodes of “My Three Sons,” in which she played Janet (or Janice) Dawson for six episodes, and Lois Bradley for one episode. Lynn had appeared with star Fred MacMurray in the 1949 film Father Was a Fullback.

In 2006, Lynn retired from acting and relocated to Mount Airy, North Carolina, the home town of Andy Griffith and the town on which Mayberry is believed to have been based, despite Griffith’s claims to the contrary.
Lynn died on October 16, 2021, after a brief illness, at the age of 95.
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DESIFLIX / NETILU
If Desilu Ran Netflix ~ A Program Guide















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RIP JAY SANDRICH
1932-2021

Jay Sandrich was born in Los Angeles, California. Sandrich was a television director who won two Emmy Awards for Directing of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and “The Cosby Show”.

He started his career as Assistant Director of season six of “I Love Lucy”.

After “I Love Lucy” ended, he moved with the cast and crew to become AD on 11 of 13 of the “Lucy-Desi Comedy Hours”. He also was AD on “The Desilu Revue” and the Lucille Ball film The Facts of Life (1960). In addition, he worked on Desilu’s “The Ann Sothern Show” “The Untouchables” and “Angel”.
His first solo directing credit was on “The Danny Thomas Show” shot at Desilu. He had been AD on the show since 1957.

He directed three episodes of “Here’s Lucy” in 1970:
“I was so young and caught in the middle of America’s favorite couple breaking up. Psychologically, I didn’t know how to handle it because I was in the middle. They all were wonderful people but naturally there was tension.” ~ Jay Sandrich about working on "The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” in 1957
Jay Sandrich was married twice and had three children. He was 89 years old.
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RIP PETER PALMER
1931-2021

Peter Palmer was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He is best remembered for his role as Abner Yokum in the 1956 Broadway production and 1959 film adaptation of the musical comedy LI’L ABNER. He won a 1956 Theatre World Award for the role. On stage, he starred opposite Edie Adams (later Mrs. Ernie Kovacs) as Daisy Mae. The stage musical was also the debut of Valerie Harper, who later appeared on Broadway with Lucille Ball in WILDCAT. Throughout the 1950′s, the comic strip Li’l Abner by Al Capp was one of the most-read strips in history, and references became a part of pop-culture, mentioned on several episodes of “My Favorite Husband” even on “I Love Lucy.”

In 1981, Lucille Ball cast Palmer (above right) in her one and only (official) directing credit – a pilot for NBC titled “Bungle Abbey” starring Gale Gordon. This failed sitcom about a group of monks, was one of Lucille Ball’s few projects for the Peacock network, who had wooed Lucy away from CBS with much fanfare in 1980. For the pilot, he was re-united with his LI’L ABNER film co-star William Lanteau. Lanteau first appeared with Lucille Ball in The Facts of Life (1960). In addition to an episode of “The Lucy Show,” Lanteau did four episodes of “Here’s Lucy,” and the 1964 special “Mr. and Mrs.”

Palmer died in Florida at the age of 90. He was married twice and had six children.
