• HATS, WRAPS, STAGE & SCREEN

    January 27, 1937

    On January 27, 1937, Lucille Ball was one of three Hollywood starlets modeling the newest trend in fashion – ‘12 in 1 hats’ in the Des Moines (IA) Tribune.  

    Also on January 27, 1937, Lucille Ball was seen in the Oshkosh Northwestern (WI) modeling a ‘Coronation’ Hat.  The coronation of King George VI would take  place at Westminster Abbey, London, on May 12, 1937.  Lucy did not attend, but as a young model, was widely seen in this Associated Press photo. 

    On the same date, The Detroit Free Press mentioned Lucy’s evening wrap. 

    While reporters were complimenting Lucy’s fashion sense, she was on stage in the Broadway-bound play Hey Diddle Diddle in Baltimore. Little did she know that this would be her last engagement of the play. Star Conway Tearle got seriously ill and had to withdraw, canceling the Broadway run and delaying her dream of acting on the Broadway stage – at least until 1960. 

    Despite that, Ball was also on movie screens. Her film That Girl From Paris had opened wide on New Year’s Day and was just wrapping up its initial engagement in many theatres on January 27, 1937. 

    About the film, Edgar Hay’s ‘Show Folks’ column said of Lucille Ball: 

  • HOLLYWOOD TODAY

    January 26, 1938

    A strange assortment of night attire is assembled on the “Joy of Loving” [SP] set. Lucille Ball, with inch-long lashes glamorizing her eyes, is clad in a blue, fluffy negligee. Irene Dunne whose blonde hair reveals some darkness at the parting, wears a mannish-looking dressing gown. Alice Brady’s locks are enveloped in a hair-net, her body in a voluminous wrap. Guy Kibbee rates a sartorial prize of some sort in massive, candy-striped pajamas. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., adds a finishing touch to the fashion parade in blue slacks and an open shirt 

    “Why do you always smile when I talk to you?” Miss Ball queries Doug between takes. "Because I’m a polite little boy,“ he replies. "You Rat” says Lucille coldly. 

    “Talking of colds,“ says director Tay Garnett to your correspondent. "Put in a word of praise for Alice Brady – the doctor thought she was in for pneumonia, but she reported for work – not wanting to hold up shooting.” …. Fairbanks tells me he would like to be in New York. “But I always want to be where I’m not”…. “All right – camera – lights – action!”, commands Garnett ….“D’ye expect me to work with this ‘round my neck?” complains Kibbee, indicating the soft arms of Lucille Ball.

    Same column, different headline and photo in a different newspaper. In all newspapers where the item was printed, the column consistently mis-spells the film title as “Joy of Loving” instead of “Joy of Living”. The film would be released on May 8, 1938. RKO recorded a loss of $314,000 on the film. 

    In a different newspaper, a different headline (same mis-spelling), with no photo. 

    Lucille Ball, posing for a publicity photo for “Joy of Living.”  

    On the same date, in a different newspaper, this random fashion note! 

  • WHY I LOVE LUCY

    January 25, 1952

    Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz appeared on the cover of TV Guide (pre-National edition, volume V, #4) on January 25, 1952.  The inside article “Why I Love Lucy” was written by Desi Arnaz.  This was Lucille’s second of five covers of the pre-national edition before she graced the cover of the very first national edition on April 3, 1953. 

    In the New York region (above) the black and white photograph was colorized against a white background. 

    In other regions, a different color background was used. In New England (above) it was yellow. 

    Not all regions used the same images or published material at the same time. The Washington-Baltimore region didn’t use the story “Why I Love Lucy” by Desi Arnaz until February 7, 1952, two weeks after most other regions. They also used a different image, this one a press photo from “Lucy Thinks Ricky is Trying To Murder Her” (ILL S1;E4) first aired on November 5, 1951. 

    The December 8, 1951 issue of “TV Forecast” used the same photograph but here Desi is cropped out and the image is reversed. Lucy’s teardrop earring also failed to make the cut! 

    The uncropped black and white photograph.

    The photograph also appeared on the cover of Ric Wyman’s book For The Love of Lucy.

    Desi was cropped out of the photo when it was used on a special edition of Newsweek in 2017. 

    Among the letters to the editor, a viewer of “I Love Lucy” points out that an on-screen photographer didn’t follow the usual procedures for the press camera used in the episode!  

    The shutterbug viewer is probably referring to the photographer played by Harry Shannon in “Men Are Messy” (ILL S1;E8), first aired on December 3, 1951. 

    The episode listed in this issue of TV Guide was “Lucy Fakes Illness” (ILL S1;E16) aired on Monday, January 28th. The episode earned a rating share of  57.4/77.

    “I Love Lucy: You Would Too, If You Were I” by Desi Aranz. [Sadly, no legible scans of the text were available for perusal.]

    This issue was casually left on the coffee table while Lucy was packing during “Breaking the Lease” (ILL S1;E18), filmed on January 5th and aired on February 11, 1952.    

    January 25, 1952, the date this issue hit the newsstands, was also the date that “I Love Lucy” filmed “The New Neighbors” (ILL S1;E25). 

    The back cover advertises the January 1952 daytime schedule for WNBT, the flagship station of NBC, now known as WNBC-TV. “I Love Lucy” was a CBS-TV show. 

  • ROY ROWAN

    January 25, 1920

    Roy Rowan was born in Paw-Paw, Michigan. He became an announcer for CBS Radio, eventually leaving to freelance for CBS TV starting with “I Love Lucy” (1951-57) and “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” (1957-60).  After “I Love Lucy” ran its course of 179 shows, Rowan worked for Ball on 156 episodes of “The Lucy Show” (1962-68), and 144 segments of “Here’s Lucy” (1968-74).

    His first of very few on-camera appearances was as the announcer for the radio show “Mr. and Mrs. Quiz,” part of the plot of “Lucy Gets Ricky on the Radio” (S1;E32) first aired on May 19, 1952. He was such a hit, he became a regular part of the Desilu family. 

    When the season two favorite “The Handcuffs” (ILL S2;E4) was repeated during season four, Roy Rowan introduced the encore broadcast on camera sitting on the desk of the MGM office of Mr. Reilly in 

    n “Ricky Needs an Agent” (S4;E29). Lucy and Desi closed the repeat with a pitch for their summer replacement series, “Those Whiting Girls.”  These scenes were not included in the syndicated episodes. 

    On “The Lucy Show” he was heard announcing the TV football game in “Lucy is a Referee” (TLS S1;E3)… 

    …and made a rare on-camera appearance in “Lucy Takes Up Golf” (TLS S2;E17) on January 27, 1964. 

    When there was a voice coming from a TV, radio, or loudspeaker, it generally belonged to Rowan.  

    Rowan eventually became part-owner of radio stations in Las Vegas, Stockton and San Jose. In 1968 he joined the media brokerage firm Blackburn & Co. and headed its Beverly Hills office for 22 years, handling the sales of TV stations and hundreds of radio stations. When Blackburn closed its West Coast offices, Rowan formed Rowan Media Brokers in Encino. 

    Roy Rowan died in 1998 at age 78. He was survived by his wife, Marilyn, and two daughters.

  • LUCY’S GIFT OF GAB

    January 24, 1965

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    By TERRENCE O ‘FLAHERTY, SAN FRANCISCO

    “Yeah, I take my tape recorder with me everywhere I go now,“ said Lucille Ball. "I even took it to Catalina and that’s a pretty dull little island as you know. I thought I might run into a fish that talks." 

    It’s all part of the redhead’s new job a radio show, Monday through Friday, arranged recently with the CBS network. Miss Ball was a radio star back with "My Favorite Husband.” That was before she switched to television and the emphasis was taken off the husband. 

    “I find people wherever I can and we talk. I’m not profound in any way, but I hope to talk to fans and show a side of me they don’t write about in the movie magazines. And I have some friends that I’ll talk with like Benny and Danny Kaye and Hope." 

    Studio Head 

    The first question that comes to mind is why would a star as rich and as busy as Lucille Ball want to undertake a daily radio show in addition to her weekly television show and her duties as the head of a major Hollywood studio? 

    I suspect that part of the answer lies in the restlessness and need for activity that is part of the nature of a performer. But Miss Ball told me something else that is meaningful: 

    "Sometimes I think that an actress knows more about the average public than the poll people do. After listening to them talk and reading their letters for many years I find an astonishing similarity. They ask the same things; they almost seem to be the same people.” 

    "One of the things I find ‘out there is boredom. I hear from a lot of bored people who don’t know what to do with their spare time. This makes me mad and I’ve got a helluva list for them. 

    Two Offspring

    “The public can be kind, but they can also be awful. I remember one time I was walking with my two children. Now, everyone had heard about my son because he was practically born on the television show, but a woman came up to me and nodded toward my daughter and said in a loud voice ‘Is she adopted?’ Can you imagine that?" 

    The memory of the incident brought Miss Ball to her feet. She walked over to me and shook her finger in my face. "Well, I went up to her and said ‘No, she’s not adopted, but if she were, and I hadn’t told her, you would be in very great trouble at this very moment, Madam!’ 

    "Part of the show sometimes I’d like to devote to the problems of being a child of a celebrity. With all of the obvious advantages there are a lot of terrible disadvantages. My youngsters go to a school with other celebrity children and it’s not easy." 

    Pizza Parlor 

    At this point her husband, comedian Gary Morton, popped into the room and immediately started to talk. "I first met Miss Ball three years ago. I remember it well. It was in a pizza parlor…” 

    "Quiet, you idiot!” said Miss Ball good-naturedly. 

    “May I have the afternoon off?” he asked. 

    “So long,” she said and he was gone. 

    I asked if her husband would be on the show with her. “No thanks! I’ve had that bit! Right now I’m involved in a movie based on family life. When we first made the deal with them they had 19 children. Now they’ve got 21. I figure we’d better hurry up and make the movie or the public won’t believe it.” 

    Suddenly I realized what is perhaps the best reason why Lucille Ball is doing a daily radio show: she likes to talk. And she does it very well.

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    “Let’s Talk To Lucy” aired 5 days a week from September 7, 1964 to her birthday, August 6, 1965. There were 240 episodes over 48 weeks.

  • LUCY & DESI COLORAMA

    January 24, 1954

    THE real secret of the phenomenal success of the “I Love Lucy” show seems to center around Lucille Ball’s unrestrained acting, with Desi Arnaz as the perfect foil for her zaniness. Now in its third year, at last count it still was the Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz television program with the Number One rating in Philadelphia, although “Dragnet” had edged it out by a slight margin nationally. Lucy and Desi soon will be seen in their first motion picture together, The Long, Long Trailer, which they made last summer during their vacation. Adapted from Clinton Twist’s novel, this M-G-M film about a young couple who marry and decide to honeymoon in a trailer on a cross-country trip, is well suited to the comedy styles of Lucy and Desi.

    [Although this photo was originally in color – hence appearing in the “Colorama” section of the Sunday newspaper – no color scans were available to share.]

    Fake News! – January 24, 1954

    Elsewhere in the papers that day….

  • Life, Death & Money – REELZChannel

    Tabloid TV does Lucy.  

    Life, Death & Money – REELZChannel

  • ERNIE KOVACS

    January 23, 1919

    Ernest Edward Kovacs was an American comedian, actor, and writer who was born in Trenton, New Jersey to Hungarian immigrants. Coincidentally, Lucille Ball also briefly lived in Trenton, several years before Kovacs was born. 

    Though a poor student, Kovacs received an acting scholarship to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1937.     

    Kovacs’s first paid entertainment work was during 1941 as an announcer for Trenton’s radio station WTTM. His first TV show was “Pick Your Ideal”, a fashion and promotional program for the Ideal Manufacturing Company.

    Before long, Kovacs was also the host of “Deadline For Dinner,” “Now You’re Cooking”, and “Three to Get Ready”.   Also during the early 1950′s his name was in the titled with “It’s Time For Ernie,” “Ernie in Kovacsland,” “Kovacs on the Corner,” and “The Ernie Kovacs Show.”  

    In 1945 he married Betty Lee Wilcox and they had two children. They divorced in 1952.

    Kovacs got custody of his oldest two daughters after his divorce, but in 1953 their mother kidnapped them and they were not returned to him until 1955.

    In 1954 he married actress Edie Adams. They also had a child together. 

    On April 1, 1960 (April Fools Day) Kovacs and his wife Edie Adams played themselves on the final episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” titled “Lucy Meets the Mustache.”  

    His iconic mustache and his love for cigars were incorporated into the script.

    At a dinner party at the Ricardo home, Kovacs performs some of his famous prop comedy. 

    And Broadway star Edie Adams sings a song titled “That’s All.” 

    The song is especially appropriate as this will be the last time viewers will see the Ricardos and the Mertzes. 

    Kovacs was killed in a car accident in Los Angeles during the early morning hours of January 13, 1962, 10 days shy of his 43rd birthday. 

    A 1958 Emmy winner for comedy writing, he was posthumously awarded a second Emmy in 1962. 

  • MISS BALL GOES TO BAT!

    January 23, 1941

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    On January 23, 1941, film star Lucille Ball was the subject of a full page article by Hollywood correspondent Lucie Neville, including cartoons by Carol Johnson and three photographs in the Franklin Repository Public Opinion (PA).  

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    By LUCIE NEVILLE, HOLLYWOOD 

    THE still-man on the set of “Three Girls and a Gob” was trying to snatch some pictures between scenes and was having no luck at all. Electricians trailed lengths of cable through the tripod legs; prop men strolled in front of the camera. Just as there was some inquiry about who would like a good poke in the nose, Lucille Ball broke in with a shouted, “You let him alone! He minds his own business and does his work. G’wan, Fred…shoot the picture.” And she struck a leggy pose, smiled wistfully into the lens, then made a snoot at the crew.

    Knowing how it feels to get shoved around, Miss Ball vigorously defends all weak, helpless creatures, from union photographers to underprivileged producers. But she really goes to bat for anybody who, like herself, asks no favors, minds his own business and does his work. That’s doing things the hard way and doesn’t promote reams of publicity and sudden stardom. But it’s showing steadily increasing results for Miss Ball. 

    The honey blond with the big blue eyes has been a major decoration of RKO films for five years, and she has been picked time and again as a can’t-miss star prospect. Her invitation to join the small but select cast of “Mr. Pinky” makes 1941 success pretty definite for her. 

    THERE has been no colossal publicity on Lucille Ball, largely because her studio hasn’t boasted its smart, hard-working blond. But some of the fault is hers, because she isn’t good at aimless conversation and doesn’t eagerly volunteer dabs of personal information. Her early movie interviews she remembers as pretty flat because she had no exciting anecdotes and didn’t believe anybody could be interested in knowing whether she liked apples and what time she got up. Well, how about that time she landed her plane on the ice on Lake Chautauqua and rescued a couple of youngsters? “Oh, that! It happened a long time ago.” the heroine said un-encouragingly. “Why bring it up now? It doesn’t matter.” 

    In those first Hollywood days, she was an independent little package whose swaggering what’s-it-to-you air helped cover easily hurt feelings, but didn’t encourage sympathy or friendships. Now, with more poise and assurance, her tongue isn’t so sharp, and she has relaxed. But she still is cagey with gossip columnists whenever she suspects one of trying to make her say what he thinks.

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    The pencil-and-paper boys got plenty of copy without asking any nosey questions, though, when the Lucille Ball – Desi Arnaz flame began to burn. All they had to do was watch, from the day the Latin from Manhattan musicals started work in “Too Many Girls.” Since Hollywood long had accepted Director Al Hall as the actress’ steady beau, it figured the new romance was just routine publicity that would end with the premiere. But it didn’t. Until Senor Arnaz reluctantly went back to Broadway to rehearse for a new show, he and Miss Ball might have been seen every noon, beaming at each other and paying very little attention to food. Rhumba spots called it a dull night when the two didn’t drop in. And instead of giving gossip-itemizers the usual brush-off, the actress welcomed chances to talk about the boy friend. 

    Servants like to work for her, only they’re forbidden to brag or gossip about her to other movie-colony domestics. Plump, sepia-skinned Harriett, who is her personal maid, watches every scene from a canvas chair stenciled with her name. Miss Ball had the studio fix it specially so Harriett could rest her feet, just like a star or a director. 

    Few people call her Lucille, and she has dozens of nicknames. Usual one is Lucie. Director Eddie Ludwig calls her Apples. During New York schooldays, she was Bobbie, or, because of her Montana birthplace, Two-Gun. While she imitated movie idol Clara Bow’s hairdo and makeup, she liked to be called Paris – the It Girl’s name in one movie – and proudly lettered PARIS across the chest of her basketball sweater. 

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    SHE knows publicity tricks, recently proved it when she got in a free plug for her boss, his picture and herself at the same time. In New York at the end of a personal appearance tour with “Dance, Girl, Dance,” she was wired to hurry home Harold Lloyd had turned producer and wanted her for “Three Girls and a Gob.” But Miss Ball didn’t depend on just being met by a couple of photographers at the airport. 

    Instead, she hied herself to the World’s Fair grounds, arranged for one of the long-distance telephone calls on which thousands of visitors could listen in, and talked to Lloyd in Hollywood asked him all about the picture and himself, what her role would be, when the film would release. After this smart stunt, Lloyd isn’t bothering much about looking for another pretty and clever comedienne for his other pictures. 

    The main reason she appreciates her business manager is because he has cut down on her hand-outs, won’t let her be a generous sucker. But the manager doesn’t cost Miss Ball a cent; she made her agent furnish, and pay him. For a while, she owned an artificial flower shop here but closed it, and later, her gown shop, as soon as it showed a loss. Lots of customers, she said, but an actress doesn’t have time to attend to business details the way she likes. And Miss Ball is strictly business, except where long-distance telephone calls are concerned. She has absolutely no conception of toll charges. 

    She avoids local conversations, but given the faintest excuse to talk to anybody in New York or Miami, she’ll call several times in an evening, hang on until pried loose. Her toll charges probably will give her business manager gray hairs while Desi Arnaz is on Broadway. 

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    NEXT largest extravagance is hats. “I buy ‘em like spinach. I hate ’em but think they’ll be good for me,” she explained. “Every time I’ll say to myself, ‘Look, Lucy, it cost a lot be a good girl and wear the nice hat.’ Then I leave it on the shelf until it’s out of style." 

    She has had the acting bug since she was three years old a precocious brat who danced and sang on the street corners of Jamestown. N.Y. "I picked up quite a little change that way, until my mother found out,” Miss Ball said. For a while she planned to be a concert pianist like her mother, but two years of music study after high school disillusioned her. 

    The stage idea came back, and she entered John Murray Anderson’s drama school, toured for a while in stock. But back in New York, she could get only show-girl jobs, lasted briefly in Ziegfeld and Earl Carroll choruses. Even changing her name to Diane Belmont, obviously theatrical, didn’t help. So when she was hired as a manikin for Hattie Carnegie’s snooty salon, she gave up stage ambitions. But she determined she’d be the best model in New York, or else. 

    “I was always the girl who had to show the organdies and nets,” Miss Ball recalled. “I got so sick and tired of ruffles that everything I bought for myself was tailored and still is. But the frills helped get me to Hollywood.” 

    “I was posing for commercial photographers, besides modeling, and one job was a cigarette ad had me in a fluffy blue frock with a couple of white wolfhounds. The tobacco people picked me for special advertising because of it, and when Samuel Goldwyn hired all the poster girls for ‘Roman Scandals,’ I came along with all the others.”  She stayed. 

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    Speaking of hats and fitted couture, this photo and blurb appeared on the same date (January 23, 1941) in the Santa Ana Register (CA). 

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    On the same day in a different paper, fashion writer Ruth Penney mentioned Lucille Ball’s blouse in “A Girl, A Guy, and a Gob.”

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    Not to be outdone, the January 23, 1941 Hazelton Plain Speaker (PA) included a casually attired Lucille Ball on vacation in Miami Beach, Florida. 

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    Also on January 23, 1941, in Harrison Carroll’s syndicated column “Behind the Scenes in Hollywood” he reported that Lucy and Desi were in a car wreck where she got a black eye.

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    Different column, same day: Robbin Coons reported in his “Hollywood Sight…and Sounds” column that Desi had written a new song for his new bride.