Yeah, I know, just what the planet needs, yet another Blog. But this one is the OFFICIAL Blog of Illustration-ist, cartoonist, humor- mongerist, greasy Stooge-Shemp Howard-enthusiast, Danny Thomas glass coffee table ponderist Drew Friedman! Happier now?
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Jackie Gleason's "The Honeymooners" caricature
Jackie Gleason by Sam
Berman
In Oct 1955, The Honeymooners starring Jackie Gleason as Brooklyn bus driver Ralph Kramden debuted as a weekly filmed sitcom on CBS television, Saturdays at 8.30. The show lasted just one year, producing 39 episodes ("The Classic 39") before it was canceled by CBS (finally trounced by the Perry Como show on NBC). The Honeymooners is of course now considered a television comedy classic, arguably the funniest show ever.
William Golden, the creator of the iconic CBS "eye" was CBS's creative director in the fifties and hired a number of top illustrators and designers to create artwork on behalf of the TV network. Included among them were fashion illustrator Rene Bouche who created a portrait of Jack Benny that would become the famous opening logo for TheJack Benny Program, and the famed caricaturist Sam Berman, the creator of the opening caricature sculptures for the 1937 screwball film comedy classic "Nothing Sacred", who would draw a circular wide-eyed Jackie Gleason head inside the Moon, rising above Brooklyn to the strains of Gleason's "You're My Greatest Love" at the beginning of each episode of The Honeymooners...
For years I speculated about who the artist was who drew that iconic caricature, yet, typically, no artist credit was ever given for the image in the show's closing credits, nor in any of CBS's Honeymooners publicity. There has also never been a single reference or mention of who drew that iconic image in any of the Jackie Gleason biographies or Honeymooners books, nor in any caricature or television history book. Apparently, not even worth mentioning or researching.
I've blogged at length on the career of the once celebrated, now mostly forgotten artist Sam Berman and based on his distinctive, lush yet economic style and his work for television advertising/publicity in the fifties, all indications finally pointed to him clearly being the artist. With the confirmation of caricaturist historian Zach Trenholm, (and, to my knowledge), for the first time I'm disclosing it here.
The fireworks in the open were shot by a fella named Al Stahl, who had a film editing studio in the north end Times Square for many years. I worked with him on a series of travelogs in the early 80's, he showed me the raw footage he said he shot out at Coney Island. Lost track of him many years ago, quite an eccentric in a cramped studio.
You are right. I met Al Stahl in the 70s, we were friends till his death and he gave me the original Gleason moon complete with directions in his handwriting to make a copy negative.
The fireworks in the open were shot by a fella named Al Stahl, who had a film editing studio in the north end Times Square for many years. I worked with him on a series of travelogs in the early 80's, he showed me the raw footage he said he shot out at Coney Island. Lost track of him many years ago, quite an eccentric in a cramped studio.
ReplyDeleteYou are right. I met Al Stahl in the 70s, we were friends till his death and he gave me the original Gleason moon complete with directions in his handwriting to make a copy negative.
ReplyDelete