WONDERAMA - 1974


Saturday Morning TV Show

Hosted by Bob McCallister
Marty Allen Stars as A Wrestler
Bill Farrell, Olympic Coach shows Marty a few moves, Marty reigns supreme champion at the end of this bout!
Marlo Thomas also appears.


















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GALAXY OF STARS UNDER THE SKIES


PRESENTED BY:
YOUNG ISRAEL OF REDWOOD
AT SHEA STADIUM
SEPTEMBER 19, 1965
Sammy Davis Jr.
Woody Herman & His Orchestra
Allen & Rossi
Bernie Berns
Robert Guillaume
Four Ayalons
Soupy Sales
Marilyn Michaels
William B. William
Dustin Brooks










July 01, 2003

Longtime Las Vegas headliner Hackett dies at 78

By Ed Koch
LAS VEGAS SUN

Prior to a New Year's Eve performance in the 1960s, a top executive of the Sahara Hotel walked into Buddy Hackett's dressing room and warned him to keep his act clean.

The executive told Hackett that the resort's then-owner, Del Webb, and his wife, would be in the audience and it would be advisable for Hackett to tone down his trademark raunchy act.

"Buddy told him 'I promise you, I will not use one four-letter word,' " said longtime Las Vegas entertainer Pete Barbuti, a close friend who was there that night.

"True to his word, Buddy didn't tell a dirty joke. He just walked out onstage naked. (Actually, he wore a strategically placed silver dollar, as Hackett would later tell it.) You never told Buddy which path to follow."

Hackett, a rubbery-faced standup comic and actor who was one of Las Vegas' top headliners during the 1950s and 1960s, died at his Southern California beach house late Sunday or early Monday. He was 78.

The cause of death was not immediately known, but his son, longtime Las Vegas comedian Sandy Hackett, said his father suffered from diabetes.

"If I was going to a corporate job somewhere, I'd call him up, and he'd rattle off 10 jokes," Sandy Hackett, 47, recalled. "He never called just to say, 'Hello.' He'd call and say: 'A guy walks into a bar ...' "

Barbuti said Buddy Hackett was a "complex guy -- one day he would be the nicest person in the world and the next day the most difficult. But, God, what a talent.

"Buddy is one of the last great ones who helped build this town. He worked every hotel."

Prior to and after his star turns in Las Vegas, Hackett's more than 50 years in show business also included appearances in movies and in shows on Broadway and television.

Although Hackett was pudgy, Barbuti said he nevertheless was a good athlete, excelling at golf and skiing -- he long had a home at Brianhead, Utah, one of the world's top ski resorts -- and was a fair amateur boxer. Most of all, Barbuti said, Hackett was a hard worker.

"The object is to keep working -- if you are not working you are not in the business," Buddy Hackett told the Sun in an April 1992 story.

"A guy sitting at home alone is not a comedian. A guy standing up and talking in front of four people might be a comedian or he might just be a guy talking to four people."

Hackett said it was not the money but the love of show business that keeps an entertainer going.

"If you don't enjoy doing this for $5 a night, you won't enjoy it for $25,000 a night," Hackett said in the 1992 interview. "This is a business where you've got to like it. You've got to understand rejection. You've got to understand the people's right not to like you."

Of his raunchy sense of humor, Hackett said all types of comedy were good medicine. A person with a headache, he said, laughs and doesn't feel so bad.

"So, whether what I do walks the line of acceptability, please don't condemn me until you hear me," Hackett said. "Because if you condemn me, you're condemning yourself to have that headache forever."


All contents © 1996 - 2003 Las Vegas Sun, Inc.

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December 15th, 1964 "I HAD A BALL" at the Martin Beck Theatre in New York City. (The production opened December 15th, 1964 at the Martin Beck Theatre and ran for 199 performances.)

The musical starred BUDDY HACKETT (seen in the cover photo) and featured RICHARD KILEY, KAREN MORROW, STEVE ROLAND, LUBA LISA, JACK WAKEFIELD, AL NESOR, TED THURSTON, CONRAD YAMA, MOROCCO, MARTY ALLEN and ROSETTA LeNOIRE ..... CREDITS: Book by JEROME CHODOROV ("Wonderful Town", "The Girl In Pink Tights"); Music and Lyrics by JACK LAWRENCE and STAN FREEMAN; Sets designed by WILL STEVEN ARMSTRONG; Costumes designed by ANN ROTH; Choreographed by ONNA WHITE; Directed by LLOYD RICHARDS; Produced by JOSEPH KIPNESS



The Comedy Survival Kit
Kraft Music Hall
Episode Number 103
First Aired February 28, 1968

Guest Stars: Steve Allen, Jerry Stiller, Anne Meara, Louis Nye, Allen and Rossi, The Marquis Chimps.

Synopsis
"The Comedy Survival Kit" hosted by Steve Allen
--Steve Allen - does a man-on-the-street interview with Louis Nye
--Allen & Rossi - do a burlesque routine
--Steve Allen and Allen & Rossi - recite lyrics from rock songs
--Stiller & Meara - routine about a secretary and her boss on their first date
--Louis Nye - plays a harried schoolteacher directing a children's pagent
--The Marquis Chimps







Comedian Marty Allen, who likes to make people laugh, is serious about proper diet and food suppliment, which he explains to Dr. Pike on "View point on Nutrition." (1973)





BARBRA STREISAND - From her performance in LAS VEGAS at the RIVIERA Hotel in November of 1970! Drink menu featured this very 70's photo of Barbra. Inside is drink menu and advertisement for other venues at the Riviera, this menu was signed by Comedian Marty Allen who attended the show!