TV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 723.3: Glenn Stewart, author of , talks to Ed about Patrick McGoohan’s peculiar relationship with as an actor, writer, and director. While McGoohan starred in two of the very best episodes of the original Columbo (“By Dawn’s Early Light,” “Identity Crisis”) and one of the better episodes of the ABC series (“Agenda for Murder”), he also contributed to some of the problems that plagued Columbo in the 1990s (including, most notably, the episode “Murder with Too Many Notes”). is available through Bonaventure Press and Amazon.com.
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 723.4: Ed welcomes Barry Pearl, the award-winning actor, director, and producer known to musical lovers around the world as “Doody” in Paramount’s iconic film (1978), although Barry’s association with Grease dates back to the early 1970s (and continues to this day). Barry is getting ready to direct a new stage production of , a witty, honest and affectionate look at modern love that is also the longest running revue in off-Broadway history. I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change runs Wednesday, Feb. 18 through Sunday, Mar. 8 at the in Long Beach, CA. For tickets and...
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 723.5: Actor, director, and producer Barry Pearl talks to Ed about teaching improv to special needs students at Inclusion Films (the film company, run by Joey Travolta, that teaches and employs people in the film industry who have developmental and physical disabilities); how actor and director Jerry Paris mentored Barry when Barry first came out to Los Angeles in the mid 1970s; Barry’s experience working with Don Rickles on in 1976; and how being eliminated from the cast of Sharkey in the spring of 1977 turned out to be a blessing in disguise, because it set into motion the events...
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 722.1: From January 2016: joins Ed for a look at the life and career of (1903-1988), the British actor best known to three generations of TV viewers as Alfred the butler on Batman. Jim is co-author of , a combination memoir, biography and filmography that is largely based on a manuscript that Napier wrote himself in 1969. Jim first learned about this manuscript in 1975, when he interviewed Napier for Films in Review. Over the ensuing years, he helped flesh out the manuscript (including the chapters on the last twenty years of Napier’s life) and eventually got it published....
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 722.2: , co-author of , talks to Ed about what an eloquent writer was; the variety of characters that Napier played in his stage and film career; and how Napier was often cast as older men (even when he was young) because of his height. is available through . You can also order it by calling (800) 253-2187. Audio clips of Alan Napier heard in this segment courtesy of Jeffrey Vance.
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 722.3: , co-author of , talks to Ed about how Alan Napier overcame a stammer when he was a child; why he likely enjoyed wearing the Batsuit on Batman when asked to do so; and Napier’s various collaborations with John Houseman and Orson Welles for radio, film, and television. is available through . You can also order it by calling (800) 253-2187. Audio clips of Alan Napier heard in this segment courtesy of Jeffrey Vance.
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 722.4: Part 2 of a conversation that began last week with , host of the award-winning and the author of , a deep dive into Johnny Carson’s thirty-year reign as host of The Tonight Show. Topics this segment include why the act of Carson inviting young comedians to join him on the couch after performing their set had a much greater impact in Los Angeles than when the show was based in New York; how Doc Severinsen became Johnny’s band leader in 1967; why Ed McMahon’s relationship with Carson was “friendly, yet fearful”; and the back story behind the night in December 1976...
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 722.5: Ed welcomes , one of the youngest members of , and one of the busiest voice actors in the entertainment industry today. Cam’s new book, is an oral history that not only traces The King Family’s imprint on entertainment over the past century (spanning the worlds of vaudeville, radio, record albums, musical films from the 1940s, and live venues all over the world), but, in many respects, also serves as a King family album. is available through Rare Bird Books as well as Amazon.com. Topics this segment include how the King Family musical act started on a Christmas morning...
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 722.6: Voice actor , author of , talks to Ed about his accidental path to becoming a voice actor; how he was mentored as a voice artist by ; and why a voice actor should “never audition with something you can’t sustain.” is available through Rare Bird Books as well as Amazon.com.
info_outlineTV Confidential with Ed Robertson
TVC 720.3: From December 2015: Tony, Donna, and Ed commemorate the premiere of Magnum, p.i. (CBS, 1980-1988) and the birthday of TV talk show legend Phil Donahue as part of This Week in TV History.
info_outlineTVC 718.6: Mark Shaw, author of Abuse of Power: Connecting Robert Kennedy’s Assassinaton with the Murders of JFK and Dorothy Kilgallen and The Reporter Who Knew Too Much, talks to Ed about how the City of New York honored Dorothy Kilgallen on Saturday, Nov. 8 by naming a street after her on the sixtieth anniversary of her death. Other topics this segment include why so many of us are enamored with real-life murder mysteries. Abuse of Power and The Reporter Who Knew Too Much are both available through Post Hill Press and Amazon.com.