Dean Martin Show
1
9 6 5 - 1 9 7 4 (USA)
Between 1965 and 1974 The Dean Martin
Show was a weekly (Thursday night) fixture on NBC and his Dean
Martin Presents musical-variety summer shows were hits for the
network from 1968-73. The hallmark of the show was Dean's easy
informality, as he welcomed guests into his cosy living room and
clowned around beside Ken Lane's grand piano.
"When the idea was brought to me, I
thought it was so crazy that I made a farce of it," Martin
said of his TV career in 1966.
"Then I said I wanted to own the
package 100 percent after the first showing of the series. I also
said I wanted to work Sunday only, and I reserved the right not
to sing on the show if I didn't want to. What I asked should have
been thrown back into my face, but the network accepted it - and it
was lucky for me, because the show has done wonderful things for
my records and it has given me a recognition that one doesn't get from
movies".
By 1968, Martin had signed a three-year
contract with the network for $34 million. The year before, he earned
$750,000 plus participation for each of three films, $2 million-plus
for 30 instalments of The Dean Martin Show, $825,000 for his
records and $150,000 for three weeks of work at the Sands!
A
stipulation in Dean's contract helped foster the air of informality on
the show, by allowing Dean not to show up until the day of taping each
week, when the show would be done with only minimal rehearsal.
A bevy of pretty young dancers called The
Golddiggers were added to the show as regulars in 1967, and four of
these later became the Ding-a-ling Sisters. In 1973 the title and
format were changed, as well as the time slot. The new title was The
Dean Martin Comedy Hour, and Dean and Ken Lane were once again the
only regulars.
Two new features were added. The first
was a country music spot, with top name country performers. The second
was the Man of the Week Celebrity Roast, in which several
celebrities seated on a dais at a banquet tossed comic insults at the
guest of honour. This feature proved so popular that after Dean's
regular series ended in 1974, the roasts continued on NBC as a
series of occasional specials.
Born Dino Crocetti, Dean dropped out of
school in ninth grade to work as a drugstore clerk, gas jockey, coal
miner, $25-a-match boxer and blackjack dealer before moving into
singing, changing his name to Dino Martini and ultimately Dean Martin.
He sang his way around the club circuit before teaming up with the
younger Jerry Lewis to do comedy on stage and in movies.
Their
break-up was legendary ("I hated being a dumb stooge,"
Martin said afterward) and from there Martin teetered on the precipice
of career failure after his first solo film, Ten Thousand Bedrooms,
bombed. But a huge pay cut and a role as a draft dodger alongside
Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift in 1958's The Young Lions
put him right back in it.
He became so successful as a singer,
actor, Las Vegas performer and key member of Frank Sinatra's Rat Pack
that many questioned why he'd bother weighing himself down with a
regular TV show.
According to Martin himself, who was
backed up by many who knew him at the time, the whole point of his act
was to behave like a drunk. What you saw on his show much of the
time was a glass of apple juice.
Martin silenced his critics by asking; "How
could a drunk get up at six o'clock in the morning, play nine holes of
golf and then spend the rest of the day working on a show he's never
even seen before, with music cues, tricky arrangements and all the
rest of it?".
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