Kiki Presents: Tuck

I had the pleasure of meeting Evan George Vourazeris the other day in one of my favorite hangouts. He was as relaxed and natural in person as he is on the show. Of course he denied being Tuck but come on…who are we kidding?! Great on the show and great in person he later confided in me that it’s a bit much that people are hugging and kissing him all the time at which point I hugged and kissed him but he knew I was just kidding with him, well sort of kidding! We became fast friends and can hang out together any time we want. Tuck!

Evan George Vourazeris as “Tuck”  on Netflix original series Ozark

Kiki’s Obits: Harlan Ellison Part 3

I forgot to mention that I was a huge fan of Ellison when I was in HS going into college. My friend and I read everything we could find written by him including his nonfiction stuff like The Glass Teat about television.

People did not know that I was aware of his prophetic stories but I took note of them a few years ago. I also thought when I read them how cool it would be to have those abilities. As I questioned Harlan is still alive and I juiced him up yesterday, gave him a good charge. 🙂

Kiki’s Obits: Harlan Ellison Part 2

Harlan Ellison was a prophet. Some of his stories were identical to events that have recently gone on that would have been impossible to predict because they were impossible.

  1. Harlan wrote a story about a man who was able to target and destroy military weapons and people would send him the locations of these secret sites and he  would destroy them.
  2. Another story told of a man who could grant wishes for people. He held a meeting and people shouted out what they wanted including breast and penis enlargement (not on the same people).

Kiki’s Obits: Harlan Ellison Part 1

A giant has passed, Harlan Ellison. He called himself a speculative fiction writer and if you dared to call him a science fiction writer he said he’d come to your house and nail your dog’s head to the table. He was an extremely prolific writer and last one day working for Disney when he stood up in the cafeteria and announced he was going to make a porn movie of Mickey and Minnie having sex. Here’s some more info about him:

Harlan Ellison

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Harlan Ellison
Harlan Ellison at the LA Press Club 19860712 (cropped portrait).jpg

Ellison in 1986
Born Harlan Jay Ellison
May 27, 1934
ClevelandOhio, U.S.[1]
Died June 28, 2018 (aged 84)
Los AngelesCalifornia, U.S.
Pen name Cordwainer Bird, Nalrah Nosille, and 8 others[2][3]
Occupation Author, screenwriter, essayist
Period 1949–2018[3]
Genre Speculative fictionscience fictionfantasycrime fictionmysteryhorrorfilm and television criticism
Literary movement New Wave
Notable works Dangerous Visions (editor), A Boy and His Dog, “I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream“, ” ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ Said the Ticktockman
Spouse
  • Charlotte B. Stein (m. 1956; div. 1960)
  • Billie Joyce Sanders (m. 1960; div. 1963)
  • Loretta (Basham) Patrick (m. 1966; div. 1966)
  • Lori Horowitz (m. 1976; div. c. 1977)
  • Susan Toth (m. 1986)
Website
harlanellison.com/home.htm
Harlan Ellison

Harlan Jay Ellison (May 27, 1934 – June 28, 2018)[4] was an American writer, known for his prolific and influential work in New Wave speculative fiction,[5] and for his outspoken, combative personality.[6]

His published works include more than 1,700 short stories, novellasscreenplays, comic book scripts, teleplays, essays, a wide range of criticism covering literature, film, television, and print media. Some of his best-known work includes the Star Trek episode “The City on the Edge of Forever“, A Boy and His Dog, “I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream“, and ” ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ Said the Ticktockman“, and as editor and anthologist for Dangerous Visions (1967) and Again, Dangerous Visions (1972). Ellison won numerous awards, including multiple HugosNebulas, and Edgars.

I suspect he’s either part of the family or close to it; he was close friends Robin Williams and Diane Disney starred in, “The City on the Edge of Forever” as Joan Collins. (Major shout out to Joan for doing “The Stud” in 1978 and as a follow up, “The Bitch” in 1979.)

Ellison on occasion used the pseudonym Cordwainer Bird to alert members of the public to situations in which he felt his creative contribution to a project had been mangled beyond repair by others, typically Hollywood producers or studios (see also Alan Smithee). The first such work to which he signed the name was “The Price of Doom”, an episode of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (though it was misspelled as Cord Wainer Bird in the credits). An episode of Burke’s Law (“Who Killed Alex Debbs?”) credited to Ellison contains a character given this name, played by Sammy Davis Jr.[42]

ED- He signed Cordwainer Bird to City on the Edge of Forever. Probably on the top ten Star Trek episodes for anyone who is counting.

ED- I watched a lot of “The Outer Limits” but for whatever reason I only remember one episode, the one below. It drew on an emotional level and captivated the viewer. It was about some guy running around with a glass hand and looking for his fingers. As he found them he would pop them in. Great show and Harlan wrote it. I’m going to do a part 2 about Harlan where I’ll describe him in even larger greatness.

Demon with a Glass Hand

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Demon with a Glass Hand
The Outer Limits episode
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 5
Directed by Byron Haskin
Written by Harlan Ellison
Cinematography by Kenneth Peach
Production code 41
Original air date October 17, 1964
Guest appearance(s)
Episode chronology
← Previous
Expanding Human
Next →
Cry of Silence
List of The Outer Limits episodes

Demon with a Glass Hand” is an episode of The Outer Limits television series, the second to be based on a script by Harlan Ellison, which Ellison wrote specifically with actor Robert Culpin mind for the lead role. It originally aired on 17 October 1964, and was the fifth episode of the second season.[1]

In 2009, TV Guide ranked “Demon with a Glass Hand” #73 on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes.[2]

Opening narration[edit]

“Through all the legends of ancient peoples — AssyrianBabylonianSumerianSemitic — runs the saga of the Eternal Man, the one who never dies, called by various names in various times, but historically known as Gilgamesh, the man who has never tasted death … the hero who strides through the centuries …”

(Narrator Vic Perrin mistakenly says “Sumerican” instead of “Sumerian”.)

Synopsis[edit]

Trent (Robert Culp) is a man with no memory of his life before the previous ten days. His left hand has been replaced by an advanced computer shaped like his missing hand and protected by some transparent material. Three fingers are missing; the computer tells him they must be reattached before it can tell Trent what is going on. Trent is being hunted by a handful of humanoid aliens called the Kyben; they have the missing appendages. The action takes place in a large rundown office building which the Kyben have sealed off from the world. In this deadly game of hide-and-seek, Trent enlists the help of Consuelo Biros (Arlene Martel), a woman who works in the building.

For reasons unknown to him, Trent was sent into the past via a “time mirror”, located in the building. A captured Kyben tells Trent that both of them are from a thousand years in the future. In that future, Earth has been conquered by the Kyben, but all the surviving humans except Trent have mysteriously vanished. The aliens are being obliterated by a “radioactive plague” that is killing all intelligent life on the planet, apparently unleashed by the humans in a last-ditch effort to repel the invasion. In a desperate attempt to find a cure for the plague and to extract whatever knowledge is stored in the hand/computer, the Kyben have followed him back in time with the missing fingers.

Eventually, Trent defeats all of his Kyben hunters by ripping off the medallion-shaped devices they wear to anchor them in the past. Trent successfully destroys the mirror and recovers the missing fingers, one by one. When the computer is whole, he learns the terrible truth: he is not a man, but a robot. The human survivors have been digitally encoded onto a gold-copper alloy wire wrapped around the solenoid in his thorax. Immune to disease, he must protect his precious cargo for 200 years after the Kyben invasion, by which time the plague will have dissipated. Then he will resurrect the human race.

Trent had thought he was a man, as he and Consuelo had begun to develop feelings for each other. With the truth revealed, she leaves him, pity mixed with horror in her eyes. Trent is left to face 1,200 years of lonely vigil.

Closing narration[edit]

“Like the Eternal Man of Babylonian legend, like Gilgamesh, one thousand plus two hundred years stretches before Trent. Without love. Without friendship. Alone; neither man nor machine, Waiting. Waiting for the day he will be called to free the humans who gave him mobility. Movement, but not life.”

Kiki’s Shows: Monkey Monkey Bottle of Beer, How Many Monkeys Have We Here

Ron Howard wrote the show “Monkey, Monkey, Bottle of Beer, How Many Monkeys Have We Here”. I saw it on PBS many long years ago and I don’t remember much of it, perhaps something about a teacher and a special child. I’ll find some more info about it.

MONKEY MONKEY BOTTLE OF BEER, HOW MANY MONKEYS HAVE WE HERE?

ISBN:

OUT OF STOCK

OVERVIEW

This psychological mystery is set in the waiting room of a clinic where five mothers await word on the futures of their mentally handicapped children. They have been given the opportunity to change their children into geniuses, and the play explores the hopes, fears, and guilt of each woman. As the drama moves forward, the very nature of parent child love is examined.

This is pretty much what I remember.

Marsha Sheiness “Author” of Monkey Monkey

2013 Midtown International Theatre Short Lab Festival presented Debbie and Me, directed by Cailin Heffernon.

2013 Outworks Festival at Louisiana State University produced Pioneer Women: The Wild Boar, directed by Evleen Nasir. Produced Off-Broadway, Off-Off Broadway, television, regional, community, university, and high school theatres across the US. Also produced in Japan, Canada and England.

The 2011 Midtown International Theatre Festival presented her one-act comedy-drama, Lost And Found(nominated for Best Production and Best Director) at the Jewel Box Theatre in NYC and the 2011 Downtown Urban Theatre Festival also presented Lost And Found. Mirror Repertory produced her 2009 stage adaptation of John Colton’s Shanghai Gesture Off-Broadway at the Julia Miles Theatre, directed by Robert Kalfin, starring Tina Chen.

As an original playwright-in-residence at Playwrights Horizons in NYC she participated in nine productions of her work. Sheiness has written plays about a 40-year old woman’s past selves; about the most extraordinary of twelfth century Europe; about a Jewish Texas couple in their 70s; about gay, lesbian, transgender, and bisexual teenagers; about mothers of mentally retarded children; about an eccentric college professor and his/her students; about characters with dementia; about spelling bee contestants, and many others.

As a director, Sheiness has been at the helm of more than thirty plays, guiding actors to their full potential in fulfilling their roles in a way that best enhances the playwright’s intent. Her background as a playwright and years of directorial experience gives her tremendous insights into all facets of production.

As a teacher, Sheiness currently mentors individual playwrights. She has taught playwriting at The New School and at Eccentric Circles Theatre in NYC, as well as at the Harbor Playhouse School of Dramatic Arts in Corpus Christi, Texas.  She has served as Guest Lecturer in playwriting at Drake and Rutgers University among other educational institutions. In the words of Robert King, a playwright she has mentored, “Marsha is one of the few true experts on plot, character development, and motivation. And she provides a safe and nurturing space to grow as an artist, never judging, always encouraging.”

Best All ‘Round was produced Off-Broadway at the Perry Street Theatre in NYC, Professor George and The Spelling Bee were first presented by the O’Neill National Playwrights Conference, and her play, Monkey, Monkey Bottle Of Beer, How Many Monkeys Have We Here? (Available on DVD) aired on “Theater in America” produced by PBS Channel 13/WNET following its premier production at Cincinnati Playhouse in the park directed by Harold Scott.

Her musical adaptation of Great Expectations, music and lyrics by Robert Bendorff, was a 1997 finalist for the Richard Rodgers Award, and the Festival of Contemporary Musical Theatre. ASCAP Musical Theatre Workshop presented forty-five minutes of Great Expectations, and AMAS produced the entire musical as a staged reading directed by Gabriel Barre.

A Virtual Woman/Lipstick Politics (conceived by Donna Trinkoff), a musical review dramatizing the plight of women around the world had two developmental staged readings at AMAS Musical Theatre and a developmental presentation at Theatre Building Chicago under the title Half The Sky.

Becoming Eleanor, comedy-drama about the early life of Eleanor of Aquitaine, opened to excellent reviews at its World Premier at Theatre Conspiracy in Fort Myers, Florida directed by Robert Kalfin. (Published 2010, Dramatic Publishing)

With a BA in Speech and Drama she began her professional career as an actress in Los Angeles performing both on stage and television. After moving to New York City she toured with the National Repertory Theatre Company under the direction of Margaret Webster, performing onstage with Eva Le Gallienne, Sylvia Sydney and Leora Dana. She was Artistic Director of The Young People’s Theatre at The Harbor Playhouse in Corpus Christi, Texas and Interim AD of The Harbor Playhouse. She has directed many productions of her own work as well as Bus Stop, Little Shop Of HorrorsanThe Miracle Worker. Other directorial credits: New York’s HB STUDIO – ten-minute play festivals.

 

Kiki Klarifies: Andy Kaufman

Andy Warhol, with Caitlin Clarke, Debbie Harry and Andy Kaufman who appeared together in the Broadway show ‘Teaneck Tansi: The Venus Flytrap’ The show ran for only one night, April 20, 1983
April 01, 1983

https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-production/teaneck-tanzi-the-venus-flytrap-4218

https://dangerousminds.net/comments/when_debbie_harry_wrestled_andy_kaufman_1983

I knew the picture above was important for research and I was trying to find out who Andy Kaufman was and now I believe it’s Ron Howard. Why Ron? Who else could it be?

Andy Kaufman

Andy Kaufman shows up with Deborah Harry in this photo. Deborah Harry is Cheryl Howard, Ron and Cheryl were inseparable at this time by default this should be Ron if Deborah is Cheryl. Let’s look at Andy without a shirt. We see the same scars on Andy as on Ron, look at the forearms. This looks to be a motorcycle accident, scars on the knees and legs as well.

Now interestingly enough my wife used to hang with Donna Pescow, every morning in High School when Donna was a senior and my wife a junior. Donna would skip school and my wife would counsel her that she needed to go to school in order to get a job. Donna would whine that she didn’t have to go to school, she was going to be an actress. My wife would counter that she was never going to be an actress and she needed to study and finished High School. My wife, committed to getting her through High School did all her papers for her. In return she directed a film my wife did with her friends about the French Resistance in WWII. Donna went on to do Saturday Night Fever with John Travolta. 

I argued with Marcia that Donna must be well connected as they would never give such a big role to someone ordinary just showing up for an audition. She also said she was going to be an actress. We argued this for years until I figured out out that Travolta was Ron Howard. By default this would make Donna Pescow, Cheryl Howard. Now Cheryl did not need any help with her school work. She’s a genius in her own right and wrote Harry Potter and Diary of a Wimpy Kid as well as dozens of other books; she just hated school.

I also asked Marcia, after all those months with Donna/Cheryl Ron must have been hanging around. She could not remember seeing him at all, however, in a little known bowling alley in Sheepshead Bay Brooklyn an up and coming comic got up and did what is now a famous sketch called, “Mighty Mouse”. Andy Kaufman would get up on stage and play the theme song to Mighty Mouse but only sing the parts where Mighty Mouse would sing, “Here I come to save the day!”

 

 

Kiki’s Kronikles: What people don’t know about Ed.

This blog chronicles, “The Howards” but over 80 percent of it is about Ron. While I’m having large hiatuses I do take notes about Ron as they come to me so in the spirit of the last post I’ll post some more things Ron was involved in.

Ron helped with the commercial and the product, “Clackers” (not too be confused with “Click Clacks” which damaged more brains than  mercury laden vaccines given to newborns.

at some point the prize was a cylindrical plastic whistle similar to the ones for calling ducks. You’d blow it and yell, “Clackers, clackers wake up for clackers”… I kid you not!

I like that they’re sprinkling sugar on this cereal which needed no additional sweeteners. I ate enough of this sugary cardboard to wind up in the ICU in diabetic coma. Ron did a lot of cigarette ads which didn’t help my diabetes induced coma.

BTW… I can see why Ron mocked me about going into psychology/industrial psychology so I could do advertising when I met him and Cheryl after seeing the show Mummenschanz.  Little known fact about me and Ron. I have gotten into either an argument or nearly life-threatening altercation every time I’ve run into him through the years.

I have too many more…I’ll do one more thing that Ron worked on..

Jean LaFoot, The Barefoot Pirate

sounds like the cast of Rocky and Bullwinkle

  1. Mummenschanz
  2. The nite before Wigstock, you and Donald, as close to being beaten to shit as I’ve ever come except for a NJ court house once
  3. After meeting the BB Queen spooning essentially mac and cheez (your quote-Knowing Bryce I don’t think this is the last I’ve seen of this guy)