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    CHARLES NELSON REILLY AND HIS GHOST

    Charles Nelson Reilly
    Charles Nelson Reilly in 2000

    I wrote an essay on an appearance by Charles Nelson Reilly on the Tonight Show that was televised many decades ago!

    http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/dikkday48yahoocom/2008/12/charles-nelson-riley-christmas.php

    I am watching a Dickens marathon. Now it is on the old movie channel. They already showed my favorite 1951 version. Now they are on the musical of 1970.  Earlier on another channel I watch Patrick Stewart perform his version of Scrooge. Yesterday I saw General Patton's version.

    I never tire of this movie, this novel, this play. Its like My Fair Lady/Pygmalion. At any rate as I think of Christmas, I think of Charles Nelson Riley.  And this is why:

    I had a lot of trouble liking Charles Nelson Riley.  His effeminate gesturing and sarcastic persona did not impress me, it left me at a loss. I was never a fan of game shows anyway and that was about the only time I ever saw him. Although there was much more to his life than those silly shows.

    That was my impression of Charles Nelson Riley, until he made an  appearance on Johnny Carson.

    He related a story about his childhood.  He grew up in NYC and his father, like my father, had a taste for liquor.  Every Christmas, his father would buy cheap vodka.  However, he kept a cache of old liquor bottles of a better  ilk.  His dad would then fill these bottles with his vodka and pretend he had a real bar set up.

    The Rileys would always go out and get their tree on Christmas Eve and bring it home and decorate it. But father Riley had created a protocol for this decoration that was long and involved and each step was cherished.  During every step, the Riley patriarch would sip from his grand bar until he was more than quite tipsy, so to speak.

    The last step and grandest of them all was when good ole Dad would put the finishing touch on the masterpiece.    It was always Midnight when Dad would crown the tree with the magnificent star. And every time this happened, the tree would fall over.  Every single Christmas.

    When Charles was older Dad announced that it was time to follow the maxim of Horace Greeley and everybody packed up the old car and they drove to California.  The move was made during the holidays and they reached California on Christmas Eve.  As they reached the famous intersection of Hollywood & Vine, Charles looked up to see one of the most magnificent Christmas Trees he had ever seen. Right at the intersection.

    And just as they stopped at the traffic light, at midnight on Christmas Eve, a wind came up and that tree fell over, right onto the street.

    My poor alcoholic father could not stand a tree up to sell his soul.  Of course he refused to go to a hardware store and purchase a good tree stand for four or five dollars. Instead he used some used cup with a steak in it that I assume he got from his mother's garbage can.

    The tree was always purchased a week or more before Christmas so that it had an opportunity to fall over at least three times.  At that point, Dad was so mad he would pound some nails in the corner walls and hold up the tree with string. Thus it was every Christmas.

    After that, I always loved and cherished Charles Nelson Riley.

    Can you believe that I found this on Google, at TPMCafe, with all the comments. Hahahahahahah

    I did not think that was possible.

    Well it turns out that he had his own Broadway Play that was turned into a movie!

    And it was written by him with help by a Paul Linke, and I just found it at Netflix! Ha

    I have to confess that as an Irish Catholic I had all of these biases against THE GAYS! The prejudice came from my father, my Church and my peers!

    They were just homosexuals in the old days of course, otherwise how could the Good Ole US of A have dropped an atomic bomb with a plane named the Enola Gay?

    The Play or Movie was entitled: The_Life_of_Reilly!

    This play is remarkable! Just remarkable!

    It takes you back to the Mark Twain portrayal by Hal Holbrook

    As I noted in Christmas of '08 (which I thought would have been a year or two later), Charles Nelson Reilly was much more than some idiot panelist on a game show that gave away hundred dollar bills based upon...idiocy!

    Charles (who died at the age of 76 in 2007) talks about both his parents.

    Mommy would scream from her third floor apartment, get the hell away from my kid you Kike!

    But Dad, Dad was like my Dad.

    His dad had to go away so that experts could cure his nervous breakdown!

    As I stated in my first blog, there were already abundant similarities between Reilly's dad and my dad.

    But I had no idea that his dad had a 'nervous breakdown' just like mine. And I could not help but assume the 'breakdown' had a lot to do with booze before all of these 12-step programs and rehabilitation clinics had been invented.

    As a star of the stage, Mr. Reilly was called to a TV casting call. This he listed as occurring in 1950.

    He was turned down for some TV role.

    The interviewer told Charles Nelson:

    QUEERS CANNOT BE PUT ON TV!

    Charles would have been 19 at the time, 19 years older than me.

    Charles did just fine, in spite of bias and prejudice.

    He had a good life.

    I hope that I could have another 15 years or so on this planet.

    There were times I did not feel for another month, let alone years.

    Oh before I go.

    As I listen to this movie, Charles Nelson Reilly tells the story he told of on the Johnny Carson Show.

    A fun movie.

    Charles died in 2007.

    But unlike plays, movies last forever!

    You gotta see:

    THE LIFE OF REILLY!

    A wonderful experience.

    My Dad, as racist and prejudiced as he was would tell me every single day of his life with me that to judge you must:

    Walk a mile in the other guy's shoes.

    the end

    Well almost the end, because I keep thinking of this Lyle Lovett tune:

     

     

     

    Comments

    What few remember now was that he was a supporting lead in the original Broadway production of Hello Dolly, introducing the song, 'It Only Takes a Moment'.  He also was in the original Broadway production of How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying, playing the Boss' nephew, Bud Frump.  Later, he became a very well-respected stage director, nominated for a Tony award, I believe, for directing Julie Harris in the Belle of Amherst, a one woman show about Emily Dickinson.  

     


    Smith! You were the one who gave the history in my 3 year old blog. hahahahahaha

    Yes.

    Charles was a great man!

    And then and now, you reminded us both of this!

    Damn.

    You have been my friend for a long time! for sure!

     


    I remember vaguely thinking I had written this response before ... LOL

    Glad I could be of service once again in adding some background info.  I grew up going to Broadway shows, and when TV was centered in NYC in the 50's and early 60's, it was only natural they'd look to Broadway to recruit game show panelists.  Peggy Cass had been a hit in the non-musical play of Auntie Mame, for example, and Paul Lynde had been in Bye Bye Birdie.  Kitty Carlisle, besides being a pretty fair singer in her youth (she starred in the Marx Bros. movie Night at the Opera) was also married to playwright / director Moss Hart for many years.  Why I have this strange affinity for remembering such trivial factoids, I don't know.  It's scary sometimes.   

    Time flies, doesn't it? 

     


    I was reminded reading your blog that I had seen Stewart do his one man version of Scrooge live on stage in L.A in the late 90's. It was the most amazing performance. Originally I had wondered how a one man show could possibly keep one entertained for at least two hours. But the performance was spectacular. A few items on the stage, some lighting, etc. But Stewart's range of voices, including women, and the Cratchet family and intonations and stage delivery were mesmerizing.

    The great thing about doing this with bright folks like y'all is that the grey matter is kept in flux and one remembers things long forgotten. Thanks.

    BTW, speaking of "How to Succeed" I had watched Mad Men for a year before I realized who was playing the Agency President.

     


    Yes yes and yes.

    I have recently been drawn to the new generations of comedians.

    How in the hell do you keep the audience rapt for an hour, for an hour and a half or more?

    It is true talent.

    The One Man Show as it used to be called!

    Hal Holbrook was the first for me as I recall watching PBS before it was even called PBS.

    Lecturing is an art as I just discussed in a blog on a Joseph Campbell.

    They stand upon the stage with no notes and perform their craft!

    Stewart did one hell of a job as Scrooge in a movie based upon this play to which you refer.

    Oh, and thanks for chiming in!

    This old blog was important to me!


    He was also in the kids show Lidsville by Sid and Mary Croft.


    He talks about this show and the Ghost & Mrs. Muhr and a lot of other experiences.

    It is a fun movie!


    D. D. ..My dad would come home drunk on xmass Eve and just knock the tree over. After me and my brothers got old enough to understand the problem, we would just put the tree half way up with few lights and tinsel. Then after midnight mass we would wait in our beds for the xmass tree toss to end. After all was quiet and my dad was snoring loudly, whoever was still awake would creep down the steps to clean up. We would retrim the tree with things we had made and the reserve lights. When it was all finished, we would eat toast in front of the tree enjoying our masterpiece and grateful for the blue law on xmass day.

    This is really touching.

    Yes, sometimes the kids clean up after the parents.

    Your comment is like it came out of Dickens.

    But your story and my story and Reilly's story are not that much different.

    There is a reality there for sure!


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