erniebert1234ss
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Ann & Nancy Wilson! Their musical careers took off a year before TMS's premiere.
BJ
BJ
Oo, I like this one. May I take on this idea for one of my outlines?TotallySpiesFan said:Season 2:
Vicki Lawrence (circa George Burns, Dom DeLuise)
Hey, I just quoted myself. Still trying to reactivate my old account. Creepy.The guest I would have liked to see most on TMS is Frank Zappa. I realize a lot of his music was more of an adult nature, but I feel he would have fit in very nicely with The Electric Mayhem. He was also known for playing strange and experimental music early in his career, which would have worked well with the quirkiness of the show. Just my opinion. I would love to read some Frank Zappa Muppet fan fic.
I kid you not, I was thinking about a Peter Cook "Muppet Show" just the other day, probably because I watched part of their episode of SNL, in which not only is there a Muppet appearance (Scred with Gilda Radner) but they do those latter two sketches. Funny how the straight man is the one who always winds up with the better career- Dudley Moore vs. Peter Cook, Mike Myers vs. Dana Carvey, Tom Hanks vs. the other guy from "Bosom Buddies", to name a few.The late great Peter Cook would certainly have been welcome on TMS.
Cook was a groundbreaking British comedian, who, in the early 1960s, helped write and perform the successful stage revue Beyond the Fringe, along with Jonathan Miller, Alan Bennett, and Peter's soon-to-be partner in comedy, Dudley Moore. The show played in the West End, and eventually came to Broadway.
After the show, Cook and Moore created and starred in the popular television series Not Only...But Also.
The duo were regulars on several TV programs, and appeared in movies. Their most famous film was probably Bedazzled (1967). They also appeared in a bizarre adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles.
In 1973, Cook and Moore had a successful run on Broadway in Good Evening, another sketch revue show that incorporated new material as well as durable sketches from the past.
One of their most famous bits was "One Leg Too Few," in which Cook, as a casting agent, deals with a one-legged actor (Moore, with his left leg tied behind him) auditioning to be the next Tarzan. Cook tells him, "I've got nothing against your right leg. The trouble is, neither have you," and assures the "unidexter" that if a good, two-legged actor doesn't pass the audition within the next several months or so, there is a very good chance that Moore could be the first one-legged Tarzan.
Another sketch, "The Frog & Peach," has Moore interviewing the owner of a restaurant with a very limited menu, played by Cook.
This particular sketch might have worked as a season-one "round table" discussion between Kermit and Cook, who opened the restaurant on the premise "where can a young couple, who are having an evening out, not too much money, and they want to have a decent meal, a decent frog and a nice bit of peach, where can they go and get it?"