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The Red Skelton Show

  • Serie de TV
  • 1951–1971
  • TV-G
  • 1h
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
8,1/10
1,5 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Red Skelton in The Red Skelton Show (1951)
Trailer for The Red Skelton Hour in Color: Crown Prince of Comedy
Reproducir trailer0:48
1 vídeo
99+ imágenes
Comedia de sketchesSlapstickComedia

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaComedian Red Skelton hosts a variety show of comedic sketches, and a range of stars, to speak to an entire generation.Comedian Red Skelton hosts a variety show of comedic sketches, and a range of stars, to speak to an entire generation.Comedian Red Skelton hosts a variety show of comedic sketches, and a range of stars, to speak to an entire generation.

  • Creación
    • Marcel Marceau
  • Reparto principal
    • Red Skelton
    • David Rose and His Orchestra
    • Art Gilmore
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    8,1/10
    1,5 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Creación
      • Marcel Marceau
    • Reparto principal
      • Red Skelton
      • David Rose and His Orchestra
      • Art Gilmore
    • 11Reseñas de usuarios
    • 2Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 2 premios Primetime Emmy
      • 4 premios y 16 nominaciones en total

    Episodios660

    Explorar episodios
    DestacadoMejor puntuado

    Vídeos1

    The Red Skelton Hour: The Red Skelton Hour In Color: The Crown Prince of Comedy
    Trailer 0:48
    The Red Skelton Hour: The Red Skelton Hour In Color: The Crown Prince of Comedy

    Imágenes123

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    Reparto principal99+

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    Red Skelton
    Red Skelton
    • Self - Host…
    • 1951–1971
    David Rose and His Orchestra
    • Themselves…
    • 1951–1971
    Art Gilmore
    Art Gilmore
    • Announcer…
    • 1954–1971
    Tom Hansen Dancers
    • Themselves…
    • 1957–1970
    Jan Arvan
    Jan Arvan
    • Paw Kadiddlehopper…
    • 1953–1971
    The Alan Copeland Singers
    • Themselves…
    • 1964–1969
    Bob LeMond
    Bob LeMond
    • Announcer…
    • 1951–1955
    Ray Kellogg
    Ray Kellogg
    • Police Officer…
    • 1953–1971
    The Skelton Dancers
    • Themselves…
    • 1956–1964
    Lucille Knox
    Lucille Knox
    • Self - Commercials…
    • 1951–1953
    Gilchrist Stuart
    • Butler…
    • 1954–1971
    Currie Pederson
    • Dancer
    • 1962–1970
    Jimmy Cross
    Jimmy Cross
    • Drunk…
    • 1954–1970
    Chanin Hale
    Chanin Hale
    • Silent Spot…
    • 1963–1971
    Pat McGeehan
    • Self - Announcer…
    • 1951–1952
    David Rose
    • Orchestrator…
    • 1954–1968
    Bonnie Evans
    • Dancer
    • 1964–1970
    David Sharpe
    David Sharpe
    • Old Lady -- Silent Spot…
    • 1964–1969
    • Creación
      • Marcel Marceau
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios11

    8,11.4K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    6DKosty123

    Red Skelton -An Original Modern Clown

    The networks always took the trouble until the very end with Red to write scripts & provide an orchestra (Nelson Riddle) & create an outstanding forum for Red to perform on. In turn Red showed how he could clown in every direction.

    Each show would open with some music & dancing. Then Red would do a monologue & he could do a monologue very well. Johnny Carson, as a writer for Red, went to school & learned from Red how to do monologues which served Johnny well for 30 years when he took over the Tonight Show & late night TV. He had learned from the best.

    In fact, Red taught Johnny how to ad-lib and Red was the master of the ad-lib. No matter what part of the show something went wrong in, Red would ad-lib something & make it funnier for his viewers. After the monologue, there would always be a sketch with Red as one of his characters. This is usually when his guest stars for that show would appear.

    Almost everybody appeared as a guest on his shows. It didn't matter if they were other comedians or serious dramatic actors, they would appear with Red and he would play off all of them with his unique comedy. After the sketch, some shows would then feature either a musical guest or a Nelson Riddle number.

    Then would come the "silent spot". These were classic sketches in which you hoped the picture on your screen (pre TV cable) wasn't too snowy so you could see what was so funny. In a way, the Silent Spot & Jackie Gleason's "The Poor Sole" who also did silent comedy were the only silent comedy the Vietnam Generation were really exposed too.

    Then Red would close the show by coming on stage & politely wishing all a "good night & God bless." He was right, God did bless us that his talent was with us so many years on this show. Skelton's comedy was never cerebral, just always funny.

    His prowess with Physical Comedy was only rivaled by Jackie Gleason, but Red was just a little better at the physical. Even in later years when Johnny Carson did sketches on TONIGHT which he tried physical comedy, a lot of his inspiration came from working with Red. This was an era of kinder, gentler comedy. There were no dirt, or lewd routines. Red did do political humor. Johnny Carson picked up on that too.

    I wish they would produce some of the entire seasons of The Red Skelton show on DVD. The singlets I have seen on VHS & DVD so far don't do overall justice to him. Red's movies were too few, though some of them were quite good. If the seasons came out, a couple of Red's shows that would be interesting would be the night Johnny Carson replaced an injured Red, & the often forgotten show where Red was ill & Ed Sullivan stepped in to replace Red!!. Red later returned the favor on the ED SULLIVAN SHOW when Ed was ill too.

    Those were the days, & now all these folks are gone. If DVDs get far enough into the Skelton archives, they won't be forgotten.
    10hines-2000

    Awe-inspiring, wondrous Red Skelton

    It was wonderful to have a youth where our family would get together weekly to watch the miracle performer of all time Red Skelton. Red had world class scripts or could be an ad-lib genius and improvise to perfection. The characters he created are beloved for the ages, Clem Kadiddlehopper, San Fernando Red, Freddie the Freeloader, Cauliflower McPugg, tippler Willie Lump-Lump, Sheriff Deadeye, Lord Beaverhead, and George Appleby. He had the cream of the crop of entertainers including, John Wayne, Milton Berle, Martha Raye, Tim Conway, Phyllis Diller, Mickey Rooney, Nipsey Russell, George Gobel, Robert Goulet, Merv Griffin,Vincent Price, Lou Rawls and Liberace. The wonder was our family felt like we were part of his family. The whole world was a better place when Red Skelton was in it.
    F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Karloff & Vincent Price steal Kadiddlehopper's brain.

    Red Skelton's TV show was a well-produced variety hour that had an impressively long run, largely due to the big-name guest stars who appeared opposite Red. Although I sometimes laugh at Skelton, I'm not hugely a fan of his work. Red Skelton was one of the most undisciplined performers in the history of showbiz (which is saying a lot!), and he was notorious for 'corpsing' his guest-stars: trying to make them break character and laugh. Supposedly, Skelton had a wide range of comedic characterisations, but most of them were just Red Skelton playing himself with minor changes in costume and situation. Freddie the Freeloader was Skelton playing himself as a hobo, San Fernando Red was Skelton playing himself as a con-man, Cauliflower McPugg (a real Al Capp name!) was Skelton playing himself as a boxer, George Appleby was Skelton playing himself as a henpecked husband, Willie Lump Lump was guess-who as a drunk, Sheriff Deadeye was guess-who as a cowboy, Forsooth was Skelton again as a mediaeval peasant, and so forth. I find Skelton's customary sign-off very annoying: 'Good night, and may God bless.' God bless what or whom? Why couldn't Skelton say 'God bless YOU', or 'God bless us, every one', or something that makes grammatical sense? His other famous catchphrase was 'I dood it', but in this case he doodn't.

    The most original part of Red Skelton's show was the closing segment of most episodes. Called 'The Silent Spot', this featured Skelton in a wordless skit, utterly silent except for sound effects and the audience's laughter. TV TRIVIA: The guy who invented the laugh-track machine used audio recordings of Red Skelton's 'Silent Spot' segments as the source for his canned laughter: these contained no dialogue, so the inventor merely cut out the sound effects and had long audio samples of undiluted laughter. Skelton always performed his silent skits alone, sometimes abetted by stuntmen and mute bit players but without any co-star. The only time Skelton varied this formula was (fittingly enough) with guest star Harpo Marx in a World War One sketch, with Skelton as a doughboy and Harpo as a German officer sharing a dugout in No Man's Land.

    The 24 September 1968 episode of Red Skelton's show had the unfortunate title 'He Who Steals My Robot Steals Trash'. This episode guest-starred Vincent Price and Boris Karloff in a prolonged spoof on horror movies. Skelton portrayed Clem Kadiddlehopper, who was (as usual) Red Skelton playing himself as a hillbilly. In the first half of the two-act skit, Vincent Price played a mad scientist in search of a brain for his robot. Guess whose brain he decides to use. Encountering farmboy Kaddidlehopper in a field (a very obvious indoor stage set), Price lures him to his lab. All the gags can be seen a mile off. When Clem's hillbilly father learns that Clem has been abducted by a mad scientist, he sadly mourns "I've lost Clem, I've lost Clem..." only to immediately become elated and rush offstage cackling "I've lost Clem! I've lost Clem!"

    The second act takes place in Price's lab. It turns out he's the junior partner in a father-and-son team of mad scientists. And now here comes his father, to huge applause from the studio audience: Boris Karloff! The skit itself is unfunny, although it's pleasant to see Karloff gamely guying his own image.

    After the commercial break, Karloff and Price take a bow as themselves and perform a jolly little song about their screen careers, in which Price sings the line 'I was the Fly'. It's a bit disorienting to hear him sing this; Vincent Price did indeed star in 'The Fly' but he did NOT play the title role, and he often encountered film fans who thought he HAD played that role.

    I'm a fan of Karloff, but at this point (only a few months before his death) that great actor's health was so bad that his appearance is very distressing. Throughout this episode, Karloff spends his entire screen time sitting down, clearly too weak to stand. In the lab sketch, he makes his entrance (and it IS quite an entrance!) aboard a motorised chair that looks like something Blofeld might favour. The chair is extremely bulky, suggesting that Karloff's oxygen tank is stowed aboard. By this time, the lung complaint that would eventually end Karloff's life was so severe that an oxygen cylinder was always close at hand.

    During the third-act musical number, Karloff and Price are both seated on a platform that mechanically trundles through the proscenium curtain. Again, it's an effective entrance, and Price's presence aboard the platform makes it less obvious that Karloff is too weak to stand.

    I've seen Vincent Price on a much earlier episode of Skelton's show, from the 1950s. His hammy personality worked well with Skelton's humour. Karloff too had made at least one 1950s appearance (famously referenced in a 'Honeymooners' episode) on Skelton's show. If only Karloff and Price had appeared together opposite Skelton circa 1957, when Karloff was still comparatively healthy, that might have been a comedy skit to cherish. As it is, though, Karloff's (inappropriately) cadaverous appearance makes this guest shot a very depressing one indeed. And, given its spookfest atmosphere, I wonder why this pre-recorded episode was aired in September, rather than delaying it another month and showing it at Hallowe'en.
    RedRiver48

    And May God Bless, Goodnight!

    This show is the best show that I have seen in a long time. It has my old buddy Red Skelton. I think this show is extrordinary If you want laughs, watch this This show is very well done
    lonnadams

    what made it last so long?

    Red Skelton was watched weekly even before I was born. As I watched the shows, it was if he was part of our family. My father would laugh and giggle along with the rest of us. What made the show funny was not only the rehearsed script, but the ad lib comments. He included us as if we were right there with him. While some considered him as unprofessional by causing others to crack up on stage, we the audience found it funny to see the serious characters laughing and smiling on screen. I am sure the performers came on the program to enjoy a bit of lighthearted performing. If the program had been a professional polished perfect performance, I don't think the program would have lasted as long. It was funny, entertaining, and at times, very poignant. I think one of my most memorable performances was Freddy the freeloader with the Raggedy Ann doll that changed to a 'live' partner. It taught me that all people crave someone. It touched my heart then and every time I think of it. It was a Yuletide performance and it is in my memory as a child. Red Skelton wasn't only a performer, but a human being to share his humor and wit. It is one of the programs such as Leave it to Beaver, Father knows Best, and others to build a set of standards that make me a better man today! The statement God Bless was a statement at the end to wish everyone in every aspect of life to have their life improved.

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    • Curiosidades
      Red Skelton had a reputation among comedy writers as being extremely difficult to work with, since he didn't like writers in general, and resented CBS for insisting that he use them on his show. He wanted to write all the sketches himself, his reasoning being that no one knew his characters as well as he did. Prior to taking the position as head writer on the show, Sherwood Schwartz, had it written into his contract with CBS that Skelton was under no circumstances allowed to discuss anything about a show's script with him before he was given it prior to taping, which often resulted in Skelton not knowing what a sketch was about, nor even what character he would be playing until shortly before airtime. That's why Skelton would often break character in the middle of a skit and turn to the audience and say something like "Don't blame me, folks, I don't write this stuff."
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Blushing Bloopers (1990)
    • Banda sonora
      Holiday for Strings
      by David Rose and Sammy Gallop

      WB Music Corporation (ASCAP)

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    Preguntas frecuentes18

    • How many seasons does The Red Skelton Hour have?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 30 de septiembre de 1951 (Estados Unidos)
    • Países de origen
      • Canadá
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • The Red Skelton Hour
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • CBS Television City - 7800 Beverly Boulevard, Fairfax, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Empresas productoras
      • CBS Television Network
      • National Broadcasting Company (NBC)
      • Sursum Corporation
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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