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IMDbPro

Comedy Tonight

  • Série télévisée
  • 1970–
  • 1h
NOTE IMDb
7,9/10
24
MA NOTE
Comedy Tonight (1970)
SatireComedy

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSummer series where free-form topical satire was the norm.Summer series where free-form topical satire was the norm.Summer series where free-form topical satire was the norm.

  • Casting principal
    • Robert Klein
    • Peter Boyle
    • Madeline Kahn
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,9/10
    24
    MA NOTE
    • Casting principal
      • Robert Klein
      • Peter Boyle
      • Madeline Kahn
    • 6avis d'utilisateurs
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Épisodes8

    Parcourir les épisodes
    1 saison1970

    Photos

    Rôles principaux26

    Modifier
    Robert Klein
    Robert Klein
    • Self - Host
    • 1970
    Peter Boyle
    Peter Boyle
    • Self
    • 1970
    Madeline Kahn
    Madeline Kahn
    • Self
    • 1970
    Marty Barris
    • Self
    • 1970
    Barbara Cason
    Barbara Cason
    • Self
    • 1970
    MacIntyre Dixon
    MacIntyre Dixon
    • Self
    • 1970
    Boni Enten
    • Self
    • 1970
    Judy Graubart
    Judy Graubart
    • Self
    • 1970
    Laura Greene
    • Self
    • 1970
    Jerry Lacy
    Jerry Lacy
    • Self
    • 1970
    Lynne Lipton
    Lynne Lipton
    • Self
    • 1970
    Robert Merrill
    • Cameo…
    • 1970
    Shelley Berman
    Shelley Berman
    • Self…
    • 1970
    Ed McMahon
    Ed McMahon
    • Cameo…
    • 1970
    Jack E. Leonard
    Jack E. Leonard
    • Self
    • 1970
    Alan King
    Alan King
    • Self - Guest
    • 1970
    Nipsey Russell
    Nipsey Russell
    • Self - Guest
    • 1970
    Rodney Dangerfield
    Rodney Dangerfield
    • Self
    • 1970
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs6

    7,924
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    Avis à la une

    6Richard Keith Carson

    A pleasant enough memory

    Shelley Berman was one of the producers of this summer replacement show. It had a laugh track and no live audience. Robert Klein, as host, did some stand-up (with the laugh track, which was kind of weird) that included some bits later released on his albums, and the rest of the show was blackout sketches.

    For a while, I had at least one episode on audio tape, so I remember some bits. One funny bit they did was the "travel snob." Barbara Cason spent some time boring Laura Greene with news of her trip to Europe. Then Marty Barris cut in and said that in order to deal with a travel snob, "all you need is the ability to make up names quickly." Then the conversation resumed and turned to Greece, and Greene started saying things like, "Oh, then you must have been to Epididymis ... you know, just past the Thoracic Duct ..." and on and on, until Cason walked away crying, unable to compete further.

    Another sketch featured Klein as a kid at camp, reading letters out loud that he was writing to his parents, and that got progressively worse until finally we saw MacIntyre Dixon reading a letter he was writing, saying "Bobby will be out of the in-fir-ma-rary ... in a week .. just as soon as he dries out."

    Barris's catchphrase on the show was, "Ooh, am I gonna get yelled at!"
    8drexelgal

    Brits don't get it

    The "Brit" who snidely berated this program is further proof of why they should stick to trying to master the apparently lost art of dental care.

    American humor (or "humour", as they bloatedly spell it) is different from the brown-toothed British variety. That is, it is actually funny.

    While some of us on the advanced side of the Atlantic may find Monty Python to be marginally funny, British humor consists of actors speaking in squeaky voices, and men dressed as women --- somewhat akin to today's Democrat Party. Except, the Democrats are occasionally funny.

    And, while Benny Hill may have been considered funny, his act consisted of Red Skelton knockoffs. Furthermore, his lonesome decline and decay need no further mention.

    In short, the brown-toothed Brits should remember that the humor of this program is best critiqued by someone who culture is closer to that of the program itself.

    That is my opinion. I do NOT welcome yours.
    9musicbones

    The most brilliant TV series no one saw

    In the late 60s, Rowen & Martin's Laugh-In revived skit comedy television with a fast paced psychedelic vibe that was the talk of television. Despite the comedic brilliance of Arte Johnson, Ruth Buzzi, and Lilly Tomlin, and the giddy charm of Goldie Hawn, when the new decade arrived, the silly psychedelic appeal of Laugh-In began to fade. In a summer trial, Robert Klein hosted this deeper and more old fashioned paced comedy skit show, and it may have been the funniest series on TV I ever saw. Although, it owed its trial to Laugh-In, it's sophistication owed more to Cid Ceaser's Your Show of Shows and predated Saturday Night Live by a half decade. I can't explain why it took so long for that level of sketch comedy to recapture us. The talents of Madeline Kahn and Peter Boyle stood out, so it was not surprising they were the two artists from the Comedy Tonight troupe who went on to greater fame.
    F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Slightly appealing, largely appalling.

    'Comedy Tonight' was a 1970 summer-replacement comedy/variety series that tried to be a hip version of "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In". The only problem with this idea was that "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In" was doing quite nicely itself in 1970, and already *was* hip. Whereas "Laugh-In" offered lightning-fast blackout comedy skits between elaborately choreographed production numbers, "Comedy Tonight" offered slow skits and stand-up comedy turns between slow musical numbers with no choreography at all.

    At the beginning of each episode of 'Comedy Tonight', the cast would stand stock-still like a clump of plinths on a bare stage, singing the title song (by Sondheim) ... but, in between verses, the show would confusingly cut to a skit, then cut back to the song, and so forth, taking it in turns.

    After the audience got sea-sick, Robert Klein (nominally the show's compere and star) would offer one of his stand-up routines, such as his memories of his trip to the dentist or his deconstruction of an old 'Our Gang' movie short.

    The musical numbers (NOT by Sondheim!) written for 'Comedy Tonight' were vastly inferior to those on "Laugh-In". Barbara Cason, a chanteuse with a distressing tendency to pop her eyes, showed up in a cocktail dress -- with the lower half of her body out of frame -- to warble 'August in Anchorage', a song that was obviously inspired by 'April in Paris' but couldn't quite decide whether it wanted to be parody, pastiche or flat-out imitation. At the end of this unfunny song, Cason walked away to reveal that she was wearing snowshoes. This was forty years after Beatrice Lillie did a better version of this gag (with roller skates), and it wasn't very funny when Beatrice Lillie did it.

    When I saw videotapes of 'Comedy Tonight' in London in 1972, the real surprise of this series for me was Peter Boyle, singing quite impressively and demonstrating his superb comedic ability. In one skit, Boyle played an actor auditioning for a musical. He keeps showing up and singing the opening bars of "I Could Have Danced All Night" (the same way every time), only to be told to leave. Every time Boyle comes back, he's wearing a different disguise ... but always with his bald pate exposed. Finally he shows up in a toupee, sings the same opening bars the same way, to be told by the casting director: 'I think we can use you.' 'You mean ME?' asks Boyle, peeling off his toupee ... and the casting director promptly rejects him again. I'm not describing it well, but Boyle was hilarious.

    All of the repertory company on 'Comedy Tonight' were at least marginally talented except for Marty Barris, a grossly unfunny American imitation of English comedian Frankie Howerd. All of Barris's skits had the same stupid punchline, with Barris wreaking unfunny havoc and then (with hand to cheek, like Frankie Howerd) intoning his catchphrase: 'Ooh, am I gonna get yelled at!' Ha bloody ha.

    Jerry Lacy, one of the regulars on this brief series, looked and sounded amazingly like Humphrey Bogart. Many of the 'Comedy Tonight' skits were spoofs of old movies, so I couldn't understand why the scripters of this series didn't write a Bogart skit as a vehicle for Lacy. Years later, I learnt that Lacy had already been typecast as a Bogart lookalike, and so he was turning down trenchcoat roles. Sorry, Mr Lacy.

    'Comedy Tonight' would have been funnier if it had been a bit less pleased with its own hipness, and if it had been more visual ... especially with choreography during the songs. You know there's something wrong with a variety series when the most visual element is Robert Klein's range of facial expressions during his dentist routine.
    rudy-30

    Amusing social satire of the 1970's

    Robert Klein and Jerry Lacy, among others, hosted and participated in skits satirizing movies and television shows. It is a fore-runner to "Mad TV". Four hosts, Klein, Lacy, etc., would sing the title song, and then sit back in their chairs, looking like four news anchors. "Dean Martin Presents" tried a similar concept, in which Andy Kaufmann was first featured.

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    • Anecdotes
      Robert Klein with beard, hippy shirt and dew rag on his head walked out on stage in front of police tape with a guitar over his back and with harmonica firmly in hand performed for the very first time his "Have I got the right to sing the blues."

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    Détails

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    • Date de sortie
      • 5 juillet 1970 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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    Comedy Tonight (1970)
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    By what name was Comedy Tonight (1970) officially released in Canada in English?
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