Soupy Sales
Soupy Sales | |
---|---|
Sales on Lunch With Soupy in 1960 | |
Birth name | Milton Supman |
Born |
Franklinton, North Carolina, USA | January 8, 1926
Died |
October 22, 2009 83) Bronx, New York, United States | (aged
Medium | Television, radio, film |
Years active | 1949–2009 |
Genres | Slapstick, word play, improvisation[1] |
Influences |
Marx Brothers[1] Harry Ritz[1] |
Influenced |
Howard Stern[2] Saturday Night Live Pee-wee Herman[3] Andy Kaufman[4] |
Spouse |
Barbara Fox (m. 1950–79) Trudy Carson (m. 1980–2009) |
Notable works and roles | Lunch with Soupy Sales |
Soupy Sales (January 8, 1926 – October 22, 2009)[3] was an American comedian, actor, radio-TV personality and host, and jazz aficionado.[5] He was best known for his local and network children's television show, Lunch with Soupy Sales; a series of comedy sketches frequently ending with Sales receiving a pie in the face, which became his trademark.
From 1968 to 1975, he was a regular panelist on the syndicated revival of What's My Line? and appeared on several other TV game shows. During the 1980s Sales hosted his own show on WNBC-AM in New York City.
Early life and career
Sales was born Milton Supman, in Franklinton in Franklin County, North Carolina, to Irving and Sadie Supman.[6] His father, a dry goods merchant, had immigrated to America from Hungary in 1894. Sales had two siblings, Leonard Supman (deceased) and Jack Supman (born 1921).[citation needed] His was the only Jewish family in the town; Sales joked that local Ku Klux Klan members bought the sheets used for their robes from his father's store.[7]
Sales got his nickname from his family. His older brothers had been nicknamed "Hambone" and "Chicken Bone." Milton was dubbed "Soup Bone," which was later shortened to "Soupy." When he became a disc jockey, he began using the stage name Soupy Hines. After he became established, it was decided that "Hines" was too close to the Heinz soup company, so he chose the Sales, in part after vaudeville comedian Chic Sale.[1]
Sales graduated from Huntington High School in Huntington, West Virginia in 1944. He enlisted in the United States Navy and served on the USS Randall (APA-224) in the South Pacific during the latter part of World War II. He sometimes entertained his shipmates by telling jokes and playing crazy characters over the ship's public address system. One of the characters he created was "White Fang", a large dog that played outrageous practical jokes on the seamen. The sounds for "White Fang" came from a recording of "The Hound of the Baskervilles".
Sales enrolled in Marshall College in Huntington, where he earned a Master's Degree in Journalism. While at Marshall, he performed in nightclubs as a comedian, singer and dancer. After graduating, Sales began working as a scriptwriter and disc jockey at radio station WHTN (now WVHU) in Huntington. He moved to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1949, where he worked as a morning radio DJ and performed in nightclubs. Sales began his television career on WKRC-TV in Cincinnati with Soupy's Soda Shop, TV's first teen dance program,[8] and Club Nothing!, a late-night comedy/variety program. [citation needed]
When WKRC canceled his TV shows, Sales moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where he hosted another radio and TV series on WJW-TV (Channel 8) and continued his nightclub act. It was in a skit on his late night comedy/variety TV series Soupy's On! that he got his first pie in the face. Sales claimed he left the Cleveland station "for health reasons: they got sick of me." [citation needed] He moved to Detroit in 1953 and worked for WXYZ-TV (Channel 7), ABC's O&O station.
He was asked once by The Temptations to write their liner notes to one of their albums, which was noted in an episode in which they appeared as musical guests in 1979.
Lunch with Soupy Sales
Sales is best known for his daily children's television show, Lunch With Soupy. The show was originally called 12 O'Clock Comics, and was later known as The Soupy Sales Show. Improvised and slapstick in nature, Lunch with Soupy Sales was a rapid-fire stream of comedy sketches, gags, and puns, almost all of which resulted in Sales receiving a pie in the face, which became his trademark. Sales developed pie-throwing into an art form: straight to the face, on top of the head, a pie to both ears from behind, moving into a stationary pie, and countless other variations. He claimed that he and his visitors had been hit by more than 20,000 pies during his career.[1] He recounted a time when a young fan mistakenly threw a frozen pie at his neck and he "dropped like a pile of bricks."[1]
History of the show
Detroit
Lunch With Soupy began in 1953 from the studios of WXYZ-TV, Channel 7, located in the historic Maccabees Building, in Detroit. Sales occasionally took the studio cameras to the lawn of the Detroit Public Library, located across the street from the TV studios, and talked with local students walking to and from school. Beginning in October 1959, Sales's lunch show was broadcast nationally on the ABC television network.
During the same period that Lunch With Soupy aired in Detroit, Sales also hosted a nighttime show, Soup's On, to compete with 11 O'Clock News programs.[9] The guest star was always a musician, and frequently a jazz performer, at a time when jazz was popular in Detroit and the city was home to twenty-four jazz clubs. Sales believed that his show helped sustain jazz in Detroit, as artists would regularly sell out their nightclub shows after appearing on Soup's On.[9] Coleman Hawkins, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Charlie Parker, and Stan Getz were among the musicians who appeared on the show; Miles Davis made six appearances.[5] Clifford Brown's appearance on Soup's On, according to Sales, may be the only extant footage of Brown, and has been included in Ken Burns' Jazz and an A&E Network biography about Sales.[9] Singer Jackie Wilson also performed on Sales' late show.
Sales briefly had a third dinner time show filmed largely in the Palmer Park section of Detroit. Sales' three shows were rumored to have earned him in excess of $100,000 per year. One of his character puppets was Willy the Worm, a "balloon" propelled worm that emerged from its house and used a high pitched voice to announce birthdays or special events on the noontime show – that character never appeared when Soupy moved to Los Angeles. In his lunchtime show, Sales always wore an orlon fabric sweater. In many of his shows, he appeared in costume, performed his dance, the Soupy Shuffle, introduced many characters such as Nicky Nooney, the Mississippi Gambler, etc., and took "zillions" of pies in the face. In one routine, Sales came onstage in a toga, reciting "Friends, Romans, Countrymen – lend me your ears!" Out of camera range, stage hands were dropping a box of rubber ears on his head.
Los Angeles
In 1960, Sales moved to the ABC-TV Studios in Los Angeles, California. ABC-TV cancelled the show in March 1961, but it continued as a local program on KABC-TV until January 1962. The show briefly went back on the ABC network as a late night fill-in for The Steve Allen Show in 1962 but was canceled after three months. All of the puppets on the show during its Los Angeles run were also operated by Clyde Adler. [citation needed].
New York
In 1964, Sales found a new weekday home at WNEW-TV in New York City. This version was seen locally until September 1966, and 260 episodes were syndicated by Screen Gems to local stations outside the New York market during the 1965–66 season. This show marked the height of Sales' popularity. It featured guest appearances by stars such as Frank Sinatra, Tony Curtis, Jerry Lewis,[1] Judy Garland[10] and Sammy Davis, Jr.,[11] as well as musical groups like the Shangri-Las, The Supremes and The Temptations.
As with his earlier shows, Sales performed musical numbers on the show and his extensive jazz record collection was used in his TV work. "Mumbles" by Oscar Peterson with Clark Terry was Pookie's theme. "Comin' Home Baby!" by Herbie Mann was the theme for Sales' "Gunninger the Mentalist" character (a parody of Dunninger the Mentalist). This was also the period when Sales starred in the movie comedy Birds Do It. During the run of the New York show, actor Frank Nastasi played White Fang, Black Tooth, Pookie, and all the "guy at the door" characters. [citation needed]
The New Soupy Sales Show: Los Angeles
The New Soupy Sales Show appeared in 1978 with the same format, and ran for one season. 65 episodes were briefly syndicated, through Air Time International, to local stations in early 1979. It was taped in Los Angeles at KTLA, with Clyde Adler returning to work as a puppeteer with Sales. [citation needed]
Characters on the show
Clyde Adler, the show's floormanager and a film editor at Detroit's WXYZ-TV, performed in sketches and voiced and operated all puppets on Sales' show in Detroit in the 1950s and in Los Angeles from 1959 to 1962 and in 1978. Actor Frank Nastasi, who played the part of Gramps on WXYZ-TV's other kids show "Wixie Wonderland", assumed the role of straight man and puppeteer when Sales took the show to New York from 1964 to 1966. Nastasi was originally from Detroit and had worked with Sales at WXYZ. Appearing on the show were both puppets and live performers.
The puppets were:
- White Fang, "The Biggest and Meanest Dog in the USA", who appeared only as a giant white shaggy paw with black triangular felt "claws", jutting out from the corner of the screen. Fang spoke with unintelligible short grunts and growls, which Soupy repeated back in English, for comic effect. White Fang was often the pie thrower when Soupy's jokes bombed.
- Black Tooth, "The Biggest and Sweetest Dog in the USA", also seen only as a giant black paw with white triangular felt claws, and with more feminine, but similarly unintelligible, dialogue. Black Tooth's trademark was pulling Soupy off-camera to give loud and noisy kisses.
- For a short time there was a third dog character that became White Fang's girlfriend, Marilyn Monwolf. She caused some rivalry of affections between Blacktooth and White Fang, but later jilted them both for Joe Dogmaggio.
- Pookie the Lion, a lion puppet appearing in a large window behind Soupy (1950s), was a hipster with a rapier wit. For example: Soupy: "Do you know why my life is so miserable?" Pookie: "You got me!" Soupy: "That's why!" One of Pookie's favorite lines when greeting Soupy was, "Hey bubby... want a kiss?". In the Detroit shows, Pookie never spoke but communicated in whistles. That puppet also was used to mouth the words while pantomiming novelty records on the show.
- Hippy the Hippo, a minor character who occasionally appeared with Pookie the Lion and never spoke. Frank Nastasi gave Hippy a voice for the New York shows. Clyde Adler also voiced Hippy in the shows done in the late 1970s.
Regular live characters included:
- Peaches, Soupy's girlfriend, visually played by footage of Sales in feminine costume.
- Philo Kvetch, a private detective played by Sales in a long-running comedy skit during the show's New York run (a parody of early 20th century fictional detective Philo Vance).
- The Mask, evil nemesis of Philo Kvetch, revealed in the last episode to be Nikita Khrushchev, who had been deposed about a year earlier.
- "Onions" Oregano, henchman of The Mask, played by Frank Nastasi, who ate loads of onions. Every time Oregano would breathe in Philo's direction, Philo would make all sorts of comic choking faces, pull out a can of air freshener, and say "Get those onions out of here!"
- Hobart and Reba, a husband and wife who lived in the potbelly stove on the New York set.
- Willie the Worm was a 35-cent toy Sales got from Woolworth's, according to WXYZ art director Jack Flechsig. With animated squeezings of his rubber air bulb, the latex accordion worm flexed in and out of a little apple. Willy was "The Sickest Worm in all of Dee-troit" and suffered from a perennial cold and comically explosive sneeze. He helped read birthday greetings to Detroit-area kids while the show was on WXYZ. Willie did not survive the show's move to the Big Apple.
New Year's Day incident
On January 1, 1965, miffed at having to work on the holiday, Sales ended his live broadcast by encouraging his young viewers to tiptoe into their still-sleeping parents' bedrooms and remove those "funny green pieces of paper with pictures of U.S. Presidents" from their pants and pocketbooks. "Put them in an envelope and mail them to me", Soupy instructed the children. "And I'll send you a postcard from Puerto Rico!" He was then hit with a pie.[12] Several days later, a chagrined Soupy announced that money (mostly Monopoly money[13]) was unexpectedly being received in the mail. He explained that he had been joking and announced that the contributions would be donated to charity. As parents' complaints increased, WNEW's management felt compelled to suspend Sales for two weeks. Young viewers picketed Channel 5. The uproar surrounding Sales' suspension increased his popularity. Sales described the incident in his 2001 autobiography Soupy Sez! My Life and Zany Times.[14]
Claims that Sales told dirty jokes on the air
An urban legend claimed Sales sneaked off-color humor onto his show for the amusement of his huge adult audience. This has been denied repeatedly, including by Snopes.com. However, according to Sales' 2001 book, Soupy Sez! My Life and Zany Times, at least one viewer of his WNEW show remembers distinctly the "Why is it every time I see F, you see K" routine, including an image of the TV screen moving up and down as the show's cameraman laughed at Soupy's joke. There were some instances of adult themed humor, possibly geared towards older teens or parents watching the show. In an exchange with Pookie [15] before the puppet performs Stevie Wonder's "High Heeld Sneakers"
Soupy to Pookie: So do you have a little number for us today? Pookie: Yeah but she couldn't make it!
For many years, Sales had a standing offer of $10,000 to anyone who could prove he worked "blue" on his kids' shows. Nobody ever took the offer, although the rumor persisted. Sales states in his autobiography:After many years, I think I finally figured out how these ridiculous stories got started. Kids would come home and they'd tell a dirty joke, you know, grade school humor, and the parents would say, "Where'd you hear that?" And they'd say "The Soupy Sales Show", because I happened to have the biggest show in town. And they'd call another person and say, "Gladys, did you hear the joke that Soupy Sales was telling on his show?" and the word of mouth goes on and on, until people start to believe you actually said things like that.[14]
Topless dancer pranks
The show's set included a door in the background. During the show, Sales would answer a knock at the door and interact with an actor seen only as an arm. Occasionally, the person at the door was a celebrity, such as Burt Lancaster or Fess Parker. Once, while the show was being broadcast live from Detroit, Sales' studio crew pulled a prank on him: when he opened the door, he saw a topless dancer partially covered with a balloon. Some reports say the gag was furthered by the crew switching the studio monitors so that Sales would think the stripper image was going out over the air.
A second, nonbroadcasting, camera captured the uncensored version, while a stagehand moved a balloon back and forth in the doorway, giving at least some indication to the home viewers what was supposed to be behind the door. Sales was forced to try to keep the show going without revealing the risque scene backstage. The prank was recreated when the show originated in Los Angeles. The Los Angeles prank footage survives.[16]
Records
One of the fans of the Soupy Sales show was Frank Sinatra. When Sinatra started his own record label, Reprise Records, he signed Sales to a recording contract. Two albums were produced with Reprise, "The Soupy Sales Show" in 1961 and "Up In The Air" in 1962.[17]
Sales' novelty dance record, The Mouse, dates from the mid-1960s period of his career, when his show was based in New York. Sales performed The Mouse on The Ed Sullivan Show in September 1965, just prior to The Beatles' segment of the show. Sales signed with Motown Records in 1969 releasing a single, "Muck-Arty Park" (a play on the 1968 hit "MacArthur Park"), as well as an album "A Bag of Soup". Soupy and Frank Nastasi also cut and recorded a comedy and song story disk "Spy With A Pie" for ABC/Paramount. "Spy With A Pie" was rereleased by "Simon Says" children's records.
Game shows
From 1968 to 1975, Sales was a regular panelist on the syndicated revival of What's My Line? He usually was the first panelist introduced and occupied the chair on the far left side (facing the camera), opposite Arlene Francis. In 1976, Sales was the host of Junior Almost Anything Goes, ABC's Saturday morning version of their team-based physical stunt program. Sales was also a panelist on the 1980 revival of To Tell the Truth; he had appeared as a guest on the show during the mid- to late 1970s. Other game show appearances included over a dozen episodes of the original Match Game from 1966 to 1969, a week of shows on the 1970s edition of The Gong Show, a few guest spots on Hollywood Squares (December 12, 1977 and April 4, 1978) as well as a few appearances on the combined version on (The Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour) in 1983–84 and a recurring role in all versions of Pyramid from 1973 to 1988 and 1991. He also made an appearance on Pictionary in 1997. [citation needed]
Radio show
Sales hosted a midday radio show on WNBC in New York from March 1985 to March 1987. His program was between the drive time shifts of Don Imus (morning) and Howard Stern (afternoon),[2] with whom Sales had an acrimonious relationship. An example of this was an incident involving Stern telling listeners that he was cutting the strings in Sales' in-studio piano at 4:05 p.m. on May 1, 1985. On December 21, 2007, Stern revealed this was a stunt staged for "theater of the mind" and to torture Sales; in truth, the piano was never harmed.[18] Sales' on-air crew included his producer, Ray D'Ariano, newscaster Judy DeAngelis, and pianist Paul Dver, who was also Soupy's manager.[19]
When Soupy's show was not renewed, his time slot would be taken over by D'ariano. Near the end of his contract, Sales lost his temper on the air, and began to speak very frankly about how he felt he had been treated poorly by the station, and how he felt betrayed that D'ariano would be taking over the show. The show went to break after a commercial - Sales was off the air, replaced without comment or explanation by program director Randy Baumgarten. Soupy would not return to the air.
Film
He had a sporadic film career that spanned over 40 years, including:
- 1961 – The Two Little Bears
- 1963 – Critic's Choice
- 1966 – Birds Do It (a starring role)
- Sales was vocal in his dislike for Birds Do It.
- 1977 – Don't Push, I'll Charge When I'm Ready
- 1983 – Superman III (cameo appearance)
- 1993 – And God Spoke: The Making of... His memorable appearance as himself, hired by two incompetent filmmakers to portray Moses because Charlton Heston was not available.
- 1999 – Palmer's Pick Up
- 2000 – A Little Bit of Lipstick
- 2000 – Behind the Seams
- 2001 – This Train
- 2005 – The Innocent and the Damned
- 2005 – Angels with Angles
Television
- 1964 - "This is Going to Hurt Me More Than It Hurts You" Route 66, Episode 113 in the fourth and last season, fourth to last episode.
- 2001 Black Scorpion - super-villain Professor Prophet
Animation
In 1983, Sales did voice work for Ruby-Spears, voicing Donkey Kong in the animated show Saturday Supercade.
Personal life
Sales was married twice: first to Barbara Fox (from 1950 until their divorce in 1979). They had two sons, both of whom are rock musicians: bassist Tony Sales and drummer Hunt Sales. In 1980, Sales married dancer Trudy Carson, who survives him.[1]
Sales died on October 22, 2009, at Calvary Hospice in the Bronx, New York, aged 83, from cancer.[20]
According to writer/columnist Mark Evanier, comedian Tim Powers reported that a fan left a cream pie on Sales' Hollywood Walk of Fame star.[21]
Legacy
- Sales' first dramatic acting roles came in 1960 as an unnamed stable owner in "The Legacy" and as Meyers in "The Hope Chest" on the ABC western television series, The Rebel, starring Nick Adams.
- ABC replaced The Soupy Sales Show in 1961 with Cynthia Pepper's short-lived sitcom, Margie. Sales and Pepper later became good friends. Sales appeared as himself in one of the later episodes of the CBS military sitcom/drama series, Hennesey, starring Jackie Cooper.
- Howard Stern named Sales as one of his childhood heroes, and in an interview on the 2007 Sirius Satellite Radio program "The History of Howard Stern", he expressed regret over his harsh words and actions towards Sales.[18]
- There is a brief track called "Soupy Sales" on the album Coroner's Office by the death metal band Post Mortem.
- There is a track on Jim Bryson's 2000 album The Occasionals called "Soupy Sales".
- The phrase "After that, I get silly like Soupy Sales" is used in the song "You're Pretty When I'm Drunk", by The Bloodhound Gang.
Reruns
Beginning in 2011, Jewish Life Television (JLTV) began showing a handful of reruns of existing New York City and late 1970s Los Angeles shows.
As of September 2013 his 1970's show is being shown on the Retro Television Network.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Goldstein, Richard (October 23, 2009). "Soupy Sales, Slapstick Comedian, Dies at 83". The New York Times. pp. A26. Retrieved October 23, 2009.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Woo, Elaine (October 23, 2009). "Soupy Sales dies at 83; slapstick comic had hit TV shows in 1960s". Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Comedian Soupy Sales Dies". WWJ (AM). October 22, 2009. Retrieved October 23, 2009.
- ↑ Dinunno, Gina (October 23, 2009). "Comedian Soupy Sales Dies at 83". TV Guide. Retrieved October 23, 2009.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Ratliff, Ben (October 23, 2009). "Soupy Sales, Jazz Maven, Brought Gigs to the Small Screen". The New York Times. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
- ↑ Irving Supman was born on July 4, 1890, according to his World War I draft registration
- ↑ Carlson, Michael (October 31, 2009). "Soupy Sales: Anarchic and pioneering children's TV personality". The Independent.
- ↑ http://www.amdest.com/stars/ssales.html
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Donaldson, Bill (February 2003). "Interview with Soupy Sales, December 28, 2001, New York, NY". Cadence Magazine (Redwood, NY: Cadnor Ltd.) 29 (2): 9–12. ISSN 0162-6973.
- ↑ Hinckley, David (October 23, 2009). "Friend remembers Soupy Sales as someone who'd 'do anything for you'". Daily News (New York). Retrieved October 24, 2009.
- ↑ "Soupy Sales, 1926–2009". New York Post. October 24, 2009. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
- ↑ New Year's Eve incident
- ↑ "Beloved By 60's Era Kids, TV Host Soupy Sales Dead". CBS News. October 22, 2009. Retrieved October 23, 2009.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Sales, Soupy; Charles Salzberg (2001). Soupy Sez! My Life and Zany Times. New York: M. Evans and Co. ISBN 0-87131-935-7.
- ↑ YouTube
- ↑ Detroit Kid Show.com website
- ↑ Crazy College.org site
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 "End Of The WNBC Era". The History of Howard Stern. Episode 5. 2007-12-21. Sirius Satellite Radio. Howard 100.
- ↑ "Comedian Soupy Sales Dead at 83". www.shortnews.com. October 23, 2009. Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ↑ According to The New York Daily News, Friday, October 23, 2009, article on Sales' death (page 4), the paper reported that "The funnyman's longtime friend Dave Usher said Sales succumbed to cancer at Calvary Hospice in the Bronx."
- ↑ Evanier, Mark (Friday, October 23, 2009). "Custard's Last Stand". POV Online.
Further reading
- Kiska, Tim. From Soupy to Nuts!: A History of Detroit Television (Momentum Books, 2005) ISBN 1-879094-70-3; ISBN 978-1-879094-70-3
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Soupy Sales. |
- Soupy Sales at the Internet Movie Database
- Soupy Sales at the Internet Broadway Database
- The Soupy Sales Show at the Internet Movie Database
- "Soupy Weighs In", On the Media, 2006-02-04 (accessed 2004-04-04)
- "Coins & Currency", TVAcres.com (accessed 2004-04-04)
- The Soupy Shuffle (.ram file)
- Soupy Sales on YouTube
- "No More Pies in the Face for Soupy Sales", Christian Science Monitor, 1996-05-23
- Archive of American Television interview
- Soupy Sales – Daily Telegraph obituary
- Soupy Sales at Find a Grave
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