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DVD ALERT: The Merv Griffin Show (featuring Lucy)


Brock

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On November 4, MPI is releasing a mammoth box set of 44 episodes of The Merv Griffin Show, featuring Lucy!

 

From TVShowsonDVD.com:

 

The Merv Griffin Show is widely considered one of the premier talk shows in the history of television. Hosted by the charming and intelligent Merv Griffin, this ground-breaking show was known for in-depth interviews with celebrities and newsmakers, innovative stand-up comedy and stellar musical performances. Over the course of its run from 1962 to 1986, the show garnered 10 Emmy Awards and welcomed more than 25,000 guests, including many of the most important names in the fields of entertainment, politics, music, art, sports, fashion and literature.

This unprecedented 12-disc retrospective celebrating the enduring legacy of The Merv Griffin Show is packed with 44 classic episodes, over 7 hours of bonus extras, and features more than 200 guest stars. This material, unseen for decades, has been newly transferred from recently discovered master tapes making for a spectacular viewing and listening experience. Includes a 52-page booklet loaded with extensive liner notes and never-before-seen photos.

Features over 200 guest stars! Hollywood stars: George Clooney, Bette Davis, Laurence Olivier, Jane Fonda, Tom Hanks, John Wayne, Warren Beatty, Betty White, Gene Wilder, Farrah Fawcett, Orson Welles, Brooke Shields, Dennis Hopper, and Alec Baldwin. History makers: Martin Luther King Jr., Ronald Reagan, Robert Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Gore Vidal, and John Glenn. Comedians: Jerry Seinfeld, Steve Martin, Carol Burnett, George Carlin, Richard Pryor, Phyllis Diller, Woody Allen, Redd Foxx, Lucille Ball, Bob Hope, Andy Kaufman, Mel Brooks, Bill Maher, Bill Cosby, Joan Rivers, and Don Rickles. Music: Whitney Houston, Everly Brothers, Phil Spector, John Denver, Carole King, Aretha Franklin, and Merle Haggard. Art & Culture: Andy Warhol, Timothy Leary, Salvador Dali, Muhammad Ali, Alex Haley, Maya Angelou, and Willie Mays.
On November 4th MPI Home Video will release a 12-disc set of The Merv Griffin Show - 1962-1986 on DVD. This amazing collection is priced at $129.98 SRP, and the episodes are presented with new transfers from the original master tapes. Above and to the right is a small 3D look at the packaging, and below is a close-up of the front cover art:

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  • 2 weeks later...

Here is the list of episodes. The Lucy episode will be the 1973 interview with Lucy, Gary, Lucie, Desi Jr., Gale, and Bob Hope.

 

The Merv Griffin Show — 1962-1986

 

DISC #1

 

Episode #1 September 2, 1965 – Phyllis Diller, Capt. Mitsuo Fuchida, Frederick Ayer, Jr.

 

Episode #2 September 8, 1965 – Richard Pryor, Phil Spector

 

Episode #3 September 14, 1965 – Dionne Warwick, Dick Gregory

 

Episode #4 October 6, 1965 – Andy Warhol & Edie Sedgwick, Reni Santoni & Renee Taylor

 

Episode #5 October 21, 1965 – Carol Burnett, Roddy McDowall, Oscar Levant

 

Bonus Section

 

Episode #6 November 9, 1962 – Danny Kaye, Dolores Wilson, Shelly Berman

 

May 1965 – News Segment-Interview With Merv Griffin

 

 

 

DISC #2

 

Episode #1 November 11, 1965 – George Carlin, Henny Youngman,

 

Minnie Pearl, Frankie Laine, Col. John Glenn

 

Episode #2 February 4, 1966 – Willie Mays, Tallulah Bankhead, Lionel Hampton

 

Episode #3 July 18 & 19, 1966 – Dr. Timothy Leary, Mort Sahl, Marion Williams

 

Bonus Section

 

December 30, 1965 – Salvador Dali

 

January 10, 1966 – Bob Crane

 

February 23, 1966 – Phil Spector

 

March 7, 1966 – Redd Foxx

 

June 9, 1966 – Norman Rockwell

 

 

 

DISC #3

 

Episode #1 July 20, 1966 – Jayne Mansfield, Henny Youngman, Monti Rock III,

 

Dr. Henry Brill

 

Episode #2 August 1, 1966 – Everly Brothers, Richard Pryor, Jerry Lewis,

 

Dagmar, Charlie Callas

 

Episode #3 July 6, 1967 – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Harry Belafonte

 

Bonus Section

 

August 10, 1966 – Freddie Martin

 

September 1, 1966 – Adam West & Burt Ward

 

January 18, 1967 – Jane Fonda & Roger Vadim

 

 

 

DISC #4

 

Episode #1 October 3, 1967 – Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, Carl Reiner

 

Episode #2 December 20, 1967 – Richard M. Nixon, David Susskind

 

Episode #3 August 18, 1969 – Woody Allen, Moms Mabley, Hedy Lamarr,

 

Ted Sorensen, Leslie Uggams

 

Episode #4 November 21, 1970 – John Wayne

 

Bonus Section

 

May 14, 1970 – Gore Vidal

 

DISC #5

 

Episode #1 October 28, 1971 – Dennis Hopper, Willie Mays, James Brolin, Diane Baker

 

Episode #2 December 6, 1972 – Isaac Hayes, Staple Singers, Luther Ingram, Albert King, Johnnie Taylor, Carla Thomas, Emotions

 

Episode #3 April 27, 1973 – Jack Benny

 

Bonus Section

 

December 21, 1971 – Eva Gabor (Guest Host), Chuck Norris

 

December 27, 1971 – Roger Miller (Guest Host), Glen Campbell, Dick Clark

 

January 13, 1972 – James Caan

 

June 7, 1972 – Warren Beatty

 

 

 

DISC #6

 

Episode #1 July 31 & August 1, 1973 – Ingrid Bergman, Jacqueline Bisset,

 

George Segal, Richard Pryor, Kris Kristofferson & Rita Coolidge, Rex Reed

 

Episode #2 October 12, 1973 – Lucille Ball, Bob Hope, Lucie Arnaz,

 

Desi Arnaz, Jr., Gary Morton, Gale Gordon

 

Episode #3 November 29, 1973 – Bette Davis, Walter Pidgeon, Olivia De Havilland, Samantha Eggar, William Wyler

 

Bonus Section

 

December 5, 1975 – James Michener

 

 

 

DISC #7

 

Episode #1 February 16, 1976 – John Denver, Starland Vocal Band

 

Episode #2 November 30, 1976 – Farrah Fawcett-Majors, Lindsay Wagner,

 

Marie Osmond, Michael Learned, Gladys Knight

 

Episode #3 September 22, 1977 – Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Alex Haley, Louis Gossett, Jr.

 

Bonus Section

 

July 8, 1977 – Steve Martin

 

January 12, 1978 – Ray Bradbury

 

February 14, 1978 – Joan Rivers

 

 

 

DISC #8

 

Episode #1 November 7, 1978 – Lillian Carter, Andy Williams, Loretta Lynn

 

Episode #2 June 25, 1979 – President Gerald Ford, Gene Wilder

 

Episode #3 October 31 & November 1, 1979 – Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Anne Bancroft,

 

Rob Reiner & Penny Marshall, Gene Wilder, Gene Hackman

 

Episode #4 December 20, 1979 – Steve Martin, Carl Reiner, Jackie Mason

 

Bonus Section

 

November 21, 1979 – Barbara Walters

 

 

 

DISC #9

 

Episode #1 January 9, 1980 – Francis Ford Coppola, Gene Hackman,

 

Cindy Williams, Talia Shire, Frederic Forrest

 

Episode #2 May 28, 1980 – Brooke Shields & Christopher Atkins, Mickey Rooney

 

Episode #3 August 22, 1980 – Shelley Winters, Charles Grodin, June Carter Cash,

 

Irving Stone

 

Bonus Section

 

August 29, 1980 – Muhammad Ali, Larry Holmes

 

 

 

DISC #10

 

Episode #1 October 6, 1980 – Dick Cavett Interviews Merv Griffin

 

Episode #2 August 24, 1981 – Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Cosby

 

Episode #3 May 24, 1982 – William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley

 

Episode #4 May 26, 1982 – Sylvester Stallone, Burgess Meredith, Talia Shire,

 

Mr. T, Carl Weathers

 

Bonus Section

 

November 2, 1981 – Olivia Newton-John & John Travolta

 

February 15, 1982 – Maya Angelou

 

June 25, 1982 – Orson Welles (Guest Host), Andy Kaufman

 

 

 

DISC #11

 

Episode #1 June 30, 1982 – Carole King, Gloria Steinem, Jane Fonda,

 

Loretta Swit, Lee Grant

 

Episode #2 December 22, 1982 – Sir Laurence Olivier

 

Episode #3 June 23, 1983 – Whitney Houston, Cissy Houston, Clive Davis, Sandy Duncan

 

Episode #4 September 27, 1983 – President Ronald Reagan, Nancy Reagan

 

Episode #5 July 19, 1984 – Jim Henson & Frank Oz, Muppets, Dabney Coleman

 

Bonus Section

 

January 17, 1983 – Don Rickles & Mr. T

 

March 24, 1983- Rosa Parks

 

 

 

DISC #12

 

Episode #1 October 14, 1985 – Orson Welles, Barbara Leaming

 

Episode #2 November 5, 1985 – Betty White, Bea Arthur, Rue McClanahan, Estelle Getty

 

Bonus Section

 

October 19, 1984 – Alec Baldwin

 

November 2, 1984 – Bill Maher

 

October 9, 1985 – George Clooney

 

February 6 & 11, 1986 – Merv Teaches Jay Leno How To Host A Talk-Show

 

Jay Leno (Guest Host), Jerry Seinfeld

 

 

 

ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN

 

Hilarious moments from the Westinghouse show 1965-1967

 

 

 

MUSICAL MOMENTS

 

December 6, 1965 – Freddie & The Dreamers – “I’m Telling You Now”

 

June 6, 1966 – Mrs. Miller – “Downtown”

 

September 21, 1966 – Screamin’ Jay Hawkins –“ I Put A Spell On You”

 

October 11, 1966 – The Mitchell Trio (Featuring John Denver) – “Your Friendly, Liberal, Neighborhood KKK”

 

November 11, 1966 – Nina Simone – “Work Song”

 

September 17, 1967 – Stevie Wonder – “I Was Made To Love Her”

 

November 1, 1967 – Aretha Franklin – “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man”

 

February 20, 1971 – Merle Haggard – “Amazing Grace”

 

August 11, 1972 – Sammy Davis, Jr. – “The Candy Man”

 

August 5, 1976 – Liberace – “Chopsticks”

 

July 3, 1981 – Hank Williams, Jr. –“Family Tradition”

 

July 14, 1981 – Smokey Robinson – “The Tracks Of My Tears”

 

June 29, 1984 – Weird Al Yankovic – “I Lost On Jeopardy”

 

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:DwbrAF5vYbIJ:mervgriffin.com/dvd-box-set-breakdown/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...

Got mine today and watched the Lucy segment.  They CUT the "Mame" clips!  And bleeped out "soggy crotch"!  If they showed any other clips from the series, they were cut too, but they also cut any intro.  Not so with the Mame clip that has Lucy looking at the monitor in anticipation, then cross dissolving to her being thrilled at having seen what we didn't see.  I do remember this show.  It aired in the fall and Mame wasn't released until the following March, but the clips sure looked good: a little dance sequence from "It's Today", her best sung line in the whole movie "You're my best beau. You're handsome and brave and strong...."  (her "strong" note had a great vibrato); and then a clip of the Mame number.

Gary gets his share of laughs but when he interrupts Merv's intro to the Mame clips to explain that it's just a "color answer print" (what that is, I'm still not quite sure), Merv says "Are you with the show?".

Hope is in top form.  Evidently he had just had a house fire.  There are plenty of jokes about that. They both knock "Critic's Choice" saying they did 3 out of 4 good ones.  Lucy won't even mention the name.

Desi Jr. has his long locks tinted a blonde/red.  His movie "Marco Polo" with Zero Mostel is mentioned.  Has anyone ever seen it?  I don't even know if it was released in the US.

Poor Desi gets ribbed about having tried college: a little on the cruel side, I think. His movie career still had promise at this point.

Lucie makes some crack about Bob Wood (head of CBS programming?) "bald man, you'd love him.." probably still miffed that he passed on "The Lucie Arnaz Kim Carter Show" spin-off.  (Could anyone blame him?).

They had filmed "Frankie Avalon" earlier that day.    By this time, they were filming their shows on Thursday afternoon instead of the evening, which is when I saw them.   No mention yet that this would be the last season of HL.

Lucy is charming but at one point she takes out her compact and touches up her makeup for quite a while as Hope is talking!

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WOW - amazing news, I love to watch the old talk shows and it's hard to find them umm  "authorized" and usually they are in mediocre shape at best.  Hope all of these episodes are uncut, would be interesting to see even the long forgotten celebs of yore.  Can't wait to see on this set:
 

 

 Phyllis Diller

 

Carol Burnett, Roddy McDowall, Oscar Levant

George Carlin, Henny Youngman,Minnie Pearl (what an extraordinary and unique comedy trio!)

Tallulah Bankhead, Lionel Hampton

 

Salvador Dali

 

Jayne Mansfield,

Everly Brothers, Dagmar

 

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Harry Belafonte
[

Adam West & Burt Ward

Jane Fonda & Roger Vadim

Woody Allen, Moms Mabley, Hedy Lamarr (another unbelievable star trio :lucywow: )
Jack Benny

Warren Beatty

Ingrid Bergman, Jacqueline Bisset,

Lucille Ball, Bob Hope, Lucie Arnaz, Desi Arnaz, Jr., Gary Morton, Gale Gordon

 

 Bette Davis, Walter Pidgeon, Olivia De Havilland, Samantha Eggar, William Wyler

Farrah Fawcett-Majors, Lindsay Wagner, Marie Osmond, Michael Learned, Gladys Knight

Joan Rivers

 

Loretta Lynn

 

Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Anne Bancroft,

 

Brooke Shields & Christopher Atkins

Shelley Winters, Charles Grodin, June Carter Cash,

Olivia Newton-John & John Travolta (man oh man I hope this is the FULL episode because if I'm not mistaken it's the

Olivia tribute episode from 1981 with The Carpenters and an unbelievably beautiful Rick Springfield - poor Johnboy couldn't quite hide his attraction to this hunk of handsomeness.)

Carole King, Jane Fonda,

Loretta Swit

Sir Laurence Olivier

Sandy Duncan

Orson Welles, Barbara Leaming

Betty White, Bea Arthur, Rue McClanahan, Estelle Getty

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Got mine today and watched the Lucy segment. They CUT the "Mame" clips! And bleeped out "soggy crotch"! If they showed any other clips from the series, they were cut too, but they also cut any intro. Not so with the Mame clip that has Lucy looking at the monitor in anticipation, then cross dissolving to her being thrilled at having seen what we didn't see. I do remember this show. It aired in the fall and Mame wasn't released until the following March, but the clips sure looked good: a little dance sequence from "It's Today", her best sung line in the whole movie "You're my best beau. You're handsome and brave and strong...." (her "strong" note had a great vibrato); and then a clip of the Mame number.

Gary gets his share of laughs but when he interrupts Merv's intro to the Mame clips to explain that it's just a "color answer print" (what that is, I'm still not quite sure), Merv says "Are you with the show?".

Hope is in top form. Evidently he had just had a house fire. There are plenty of jokes about that. They both knock "Critic's Choice" saying they did 3 out of 4 good ones. Lucy won't even mention the name.

Desi Jr. has his long locks tinted a blonde/red. His movie "Marco Polo" with Zero Mostel is mentioned. Has anyone ever seen it? I don't even know if it was released in the US.

Poor Desi gets ribbed about having tried college: a little on the cruel side, I think. His movie career still had promise at this point.

Lucie makes some crack about Bob Wood (head of CBS programming?) "bald man, you'd love him.." probably still miffed that he passed on "The Lucie Arnaz Kim Carter Show" spin-off. (Could anyone blame him?).

They had filmed "Frankie Avalon" earlier that day. By this time, they were filming their shows on Thursday afternoon instead of the evening, which is when I saw them. No mention yet that this would be the last season of HL.

Lucy is charming but at one point she takes out her compact and touches up her makeup for quite a while as Hope is talking!

Thanks for letting us know, Neil. It's disappointing to hear that the Mame clips were cut. They also showed a clip from LA at Last! was that cut as well? "Soggy crotch" was bleeped in the original broadcast. It was not censored when Lucy says it on Dinah! three years later.

 

I have seen Marco Polo. It is not particularly memorable. It was available on Amazon Instant Video earlier this year. It still may.

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I saw Marco also and Lucy was right in thinking it would never make any money.  As for this LUCY on MERV, one of the all time BEST interviews she ever did, surrounded by family and friends and having just finished the taping of her own show and busy promoting Mame, it was like heaven for her.

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Robert Osbourne said of Lucy when they were backstage visiting Betty Davis in one of her plays..that Lucille took her compact out and started touching up her makeup... which is the rudest thing you can do when someone is talking.. she did it wiith Lee Tannen while watching Shirely MacLaine in Terms of Endearment... Maybe she just heard the same story from Bob Hope before lol

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I wonder what Desi,Sr. thought watching this show with Lucy, Gary and his children presented as a family.  No mention of his name.  Must have been hard.

Same thing much earlier when Allen Ludden referred to Lucy and Gary as "Mom and Dad" when Lucie and Desi played "Password".  Probably worse this time because the kids were so young.

 

Notice in this Merv Griffin that when the discussion turns to Bob Hope, Lucie and Desi are not included in any of the shots, but Lucie is quite vocal, laughing loudly and sounding a lot like Lucy.  Desi,jr. is mum. 

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  • 3 weeks later...

I just got this set and saw that episode -- mag-nificent!

 

I'd heartily recommend it to everyone on this board -- have never seen Lucy look so happy and relaxed -- and some rather odd events happen during the show: an audio message from Governor Ronald Reagan (someone referred to him 'like the voice of God'), very sincere.

 

Also great seeing Bob Hope come out of nowhere, and never knew that "Critics Choice" had been a flop (Bob blames Lucy for it, saying the movie had come out just when Gary and Lucy went on their honeymoon) -- also Lucie and Desi jr were excellent, although Desi did look a little uneasy when mention of him dropping out of college was mentioned. Also Gary was terrific as he and Merv Griffin had performed together on stage years before -- also Gary was extremely complimentary about both Lucie and Desi and their careers so far.

 

For me the highlight was the great Gale Gordon, who Lucy called her 'rock of Gibraltar' on camera -- and one saw he as he really was for one of the few times ever -- very low key, pretty shy, very proud of both his parents who had been in the business as far back as vaudeville. Quite true about the sound drop out (had no idea they called him that, most likely because he was usually hit with buckets of water when sitting) -- and the compliment Richard Burton had paid him while watching the rushes for their "Here's Lucy" episode.

 

I'm not surprised that the scenes from "Mame" were not included, most likely for music clearance reasons -- it was October 1973 when this show went to air so the movie was most likely still being edited and the 'answer print' line Gary uses was most genuine -- would have probably come straight from the Warner Bros labs to Merv Griffin's production team. Lucy says it was the very first time she'd seen a second of it (although when she was dubbing her songs, line by line, she probably saw quite a bit of it beforehand), but her happiness at the end of the clip is a sight to behold (as is everyone's) and am so sorry it did not do as well as it should have when it came out around 7 months later (blame "The Exorcist" I guess).

 

Lucy said that the press had reported that a girl named Lisa Kirk was going to dub her songs but she denied it outright, as nobody could match her speaking voice with anyone else's singing voice but hers. Also Merv Griffin constantly ribs Bob Hope about how much money he has and I can quietly see Bob Hope nearly burst a blood vessel on occasion (I suspect also that Bob's house had recently burned down)

 

An amazing show -- I hope Warner Bros includes it on any bluray release of "Mame" there might be in the future. This dvd boxset --look, just go to Amazon right now and buy it. This show and Orson Welles' final appearance anywhere, from 1985, another fantastic show, is reason enough to get this set.

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I wonder what Desi,Sr. thought watching this show with Lucy, Gary and his children presented as a family.  No mention of his name.  Must have been hard.

Same thing much earlier when Allen Ludden referred to Lucy and Gary as "Mom and Dad" when Lucie and Desi played "Password".  Probably worse this time because the kids were so young.

 

Notice in this Merv Griffin that when the discussion turns to Bob Hope, Lucie and Desi are not included in any of the shots, but Lucie is quite vocal, laughing loudly and sounding a lot like Lucy.  Desi,jr. is mum. 

OMG just never even thought of that mom and dad thing on Password.

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I just got this set and saw that episode -- mag-nificent!

 

I'd heartily recommend it to everyone on this board -- have never seen Lucy look so happy and relaxed -- and some rather odd events happen during the show: an audio message from Governor Ronald Reagan (someone referred to him 'like the voice of God'), very sincere.

 

Also great seeing Bob Hope come out of nowhere, and never knew that "Critics Choice" had been a flop (Bob blames Lucy for it, saying the movie had come out just when Gary and Lucy went on their honeymoon) -- also Lucie and Desi jr were excellent, although Desi did look a little uneasy when mention of him dropping out of college was mentioned. Also Gary was terrific as he and Merv Griffin had performed together on stage years before -- also Gary was extremely complimentary about both Lucie and Desi and their careers so far.

 

For me the highlight was the great Gale Gordon, who Lucy called her 'rock of Gibraltar' on camera -- and one saw he as he really was for one of the few times ever -- very low key, pretty shy, very proud of both his parents who had been in the business as far back as vaudeville. Quite true about the sound drop out (had no idea they called him that, most likely because he was usually hit with buckets of water when sitting) -- and the compliment Richard Burton had paid him while watching the rushes for their "Here's Lucy" episode.

 

I'm not surprised that the scenes from "Mame" were not included, most likely for music clearance reasons -- it was October 1973 when this show went to air so the movie was most likely still being edited and the 'answer print' line Gary uses was most genuine -- would have probably come straight from the Warner Bros labs to Merv Griffin's production team. Lucy says it was the very first time she'd seen a second of it (although when she was dubbing her songs, line by line, she probably saw quite a bit of it beforehand), but her happiness at the end of the clip is a sight to behold (as is everyone's) and am so sorry it did not do as well as it should have when it came out around 7 months later (blame "The Exorcist" I guess).

 

Lucy said that the press had reported that a girl named Lisa Kirk was going to dub her songs but she denied it outright, as nobody could match her speaking voice with anyone else's singing voice but hers. Also Merv Griffin constantly ribs Bob Hope about how much money he has and I can quietly see Bob Hope nearly burst a blood vessel on occasion (I suspect also that Bob's house had recently burned down)

 

An amazing show -- I hope Warner Bros includes it on any bluray release of "Mame" there might be in the future. This dvd boxset --look, just go to Amazon right now and buy it. This show and Orson Welles' final appearance anywhere, from 1985, another fantastic show, is reason enough to get this set.

Great review and very accurate too.  Although Mame did not match expectations because of some lousy direction and musicals being quite PASSE at that time.

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OMG just never even thought of that mom and dad thing on Password.

I thought he said 'these are the youngsters' rather than actually mum and dad although I could be wrong. They clip is on YouTube although I think this interviews has sadly been taken off :( I always wishes that Desi sr would have come on that interview. Everyone else was there so it might have worked without being so very uncomfortable. I always wanted at least one interview of them together with the kids grown! Plus having Gary there as well would have been extra good.

 

Kudos to Lucy looking so happy. The best I had seen her look in years. Truly relaxed and happy with friends.

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One of the public domain tapes has a brief bit of an interview with Desi Sr. And Lucie. Looks to be from around 1970. Does anyone know what show this is?

This was from The Mike Douglas Show in 1970. Desi served as co-host for a week and Lucie, Desi Jr., Vivian, Eddie Bracken, and former band vocalist Jane Harvey were among his guests. Lucie performed a wonderful medley of They Can't Take a That Away From Me/Thanks for the Memories/You're the Top in tribute to her father, which moves him to tears.

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