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2008-04-21 22:28:40 Description: Do you have what it takes to handle the tease of these voluptuous women? Can you stand the heat these girls bring from a mere glance in your direction? No man can escape their allure. *Pure (More) Do you have what it takes to handle the tease of these voluptuous women? Can you stand the heat these girls bring from a mere glance in your direction? No man can escape their allure. *Pure Bra-Busting, un-adulterated entertainment. Without compromise, without apology, and without question the greatest show on earth. This video will leave you drooling on the floor yet asking for more. *San Diego's Hottest, Hell on Heels Burlesque Revue Doing What They Do Best... Hell on heels THE San Diego burlesque event of the year. See San Diego's best 'n brightest, sweetest and tightest! Starring: RAVEN F'MOORE LADY BORGIA LOTTE DA LUCKS MARTINI BOMBSHELL BIBI BORDEAUX LUX B. ALLADEE MISS MIA DIABLO's hot debut LUNA NOUVEAU singin her heart out and a few special suprizes! hosted by: SHIRLEY TAKEN See how the girl next door UNDRESSES! Back by popular demand- Naked lady buffet. Saturday Febuary 2, 2008 @ Brick by Brick 1130 Buenos Ave San Diego, Ca. 92110 21+ 9pm. $12, dress up in your favorite vintage wears and it's only $10. (Less)
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2008-04-22 10:22:49 Description: WWW.SCREAMINGQUEENS.COM Screaming Queens Entertainment provides drag queens and other colorful performers for private parties and events. Peppermint Gummybear serves it up hot in her debut music (More) WWW.SCREAMINGQUEENS.COM Screaming Queens Entertainment provides drag queens and other colorful performers for private parties and events. Peppermint Gummybear serves it up hot in her debut music video! Book Peppermint: Peppermint@screamingqueens.com. Check out our blog: www.screamingqueens.blogspot.com. Screaming Queens Entertainment provides drag queens, celebrity impersonators, and theme characters for parties and events. Check out our website: WWW.SCREAMINGQUEENS.COM See what we're up to on our blog: WWW.BLOGSPOT.SCREAMINGQUEENS.COM Clients Include: The American Museum of Natural History Donna Karen Citibank Playboy istar Financial Diana Ross ABC Family Cartier MAC Saks Fifth Avenue Blaine Trump Beauty.com The National Association of Museums Bette Midler VH1 Marc Jacobs Soap Opera Digest The Whitney Museum of American Art Maxim Posner Cosmetics Leo Burnett New York Magazine Barbra Streisand Vivendi Universal Samsung Lucky Brand Jeans Crunch Fitness Colin Cowie Lifestyle Maxim (Less)
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2009-09-06 09:46:17 Description: Sexy hot black male dancers entertained at an all male revue in Chicago!
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2009-09-05 19:40:19 Description: Ashley Michelle Tisdale est une actrice, chanteuse, auteur-compositrice-interprète, productrice, danseuse, porte-parole et mannequin américaine, née le 2 juillet 1985 à (More) Ashley Michelle Tisdale est une actrice, chanteuse, auteur-compositrice-interprète, productrice, danseuse, porte-parole et mannequin américaine, née le 2 juillet 1985 à West Deal (New Jersey). Elle est notamment connue pour son rôle de Sharpay Evans dans les films High School Musical ou son rôle de Maddie Fitzpatrick dans La Vie de palace de Zack et Cody. Ashley Tisdale est la fille de Lisa Morris et Mike Tisdale, née en 1985, sœur cadette de Jennifer, également actrice. Elle est découverte dans un centre commercial à l'âge de trois ans par son manager actuel, Bill Perlman, dans le comté de Monmouth, au New Jersey, où elle réside[1]. Elle joue alors pour une centaine de publicités puis fait ses débuts sur scène dans des adaptations de La Mélodie du bonheur et Gypsy: A Musical Fable, montées par le centre de la communauté juive du comté de Monmouth à laquelle elle appartient[2]. À l'âge de huit ans, elle obtient l'un des premiers rôles de la comédie musicale Les Misérables puis joue dans une tournée internationale de Annie. La carrière d'actrice d'Ashley se poursuit par une succession de petits rôles, dans le film Donnie Darko (avec Maggie et Jake Gyllenhaal) et dans de nombreuses séries télévisées. Les téléspectateurs américains l'aperçoivent ainsi dans Beverly Hills 90210, 7 à la maison, Boston Public, Charmed, Malcolm ou Parents à tout prix. En 2005, elle décroche son premier grand rôle dans une série de Disney Channel (elle a déjà participé pour les mêmes studios au doublage de 1001 pattes (A Bug's Life), en 1998) : dans La Vie de palace de Zack et Cody, elle incarne Maddie Fitzpatrick. Ce rôle et le succès qui s'ensuit lui permettent, comme nombre de ses collègues de la chaîne, de participer aux téléfilms Disney Channel Original Movies. Ses qualités vocales lui permettent alors d'obtenir l'un des rôles principaux dans le téléfilm à succès High School Musical: Premiers pas sur scène. Si Ashley a auditionné pour le rôle de Gabriella Montez, les producteurs ont tout de suite trouvé qu'elle serait parfaite dans le rôle de la peste Sharpay Evans. Quatre singles sont extraits de la bande originale, qui connaît un succès impressionnant aux États-Unis, puis dans le monde entier. Ashley Tisdale est ainsi la première artiste à placer ses deux premiers singles dans le Billboard Hot 100. Parallèlement, elle enregistre avec le Disney Channel Circle of Stars, une version modernisée du titre A Dream Is A Wish Your Heart Makes, pour la sortie du DVD de Cendrillon, en octobre 2005. L'année suivante, pour le DVD de La Petite Sirène, elle interprète seule la chanson Kiss the girl (Embrasse-la, en version française). Toujours pour Disney, elle est également une voix récurrente de la série Kim Possible. Fin 2006, elle participe à la tournée américaine de High School Musical aux côtés notamment de Lucas Grabeel ou Corbin Bleu. Le premier single d'Ashley hors de la licence Disney, He Said She Said, sort en décembre 2006 mais n'est commercialisé qu'en janvier 2007, avec Be Good to Me. Il existe trois versions de He Said She Said : une version destinée aux enfants, une autre aux paroles plus matures, et une troisième version chantée pendant la tournée High School Musical. Le premier album solo d'Ashley, Headstrong, sort le 6 février 2007, distribué par Warner Bros Records, et se retrouve en quelques semaines au top des meilleures ventes. Il alterne des sonorités urbaines et pop rock. Pour promouvoir l'album, elle se produit dans des centres commerciaux américains à partir d'octobre 2007[3]. Le 16 Juin 2009 sortira, après près d'un an d'enregistrement, le nouvel album de Ashley qui est intitulé "Guilty Pleasure", définit comme un album rock et totalement différent du premier, le premier single qui en est extrait, "It's Alright It's Ok" est sortie le 14 Avril aux États-Unis. Il sortira en Allemagne le 12 Juin, donc en avant première. Une sortie française de l'album est prévue pour le 15 juin. Côté cinéma , Ashley à un petit rôle dans une comédie intitulé Les Zintrus ( they came from upstair ) . Encore un rôle de fille qui préfère se faire bronzer plutôt que de travailler mais miss Tisdale est habitué à ça ! Une rumeur circule sur le fait que Ashley serait en pourparler avec les producteurs du film Teen Witch mais on n'y croit pas trop car le scénario n'est même pas écrit et miss Tisdale a révélé vouloir en finir avec les rôles d'adolescentes . Teen Witch raconterait l'histoire d'une lycéenne qui découvre qu'elle est une sorcière de salem ! Vue et Revue http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashley_Tisdale (Less)
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24,
03:01,
2008-04-21 17:13:53 Description: http://www.knuckleheadzoo.net MTV Video...READ THE SHOW SYNOPSIS HERE..... "B-Boy Nation™" is a reality "docu-drama" following the lives of nine young men that formed a (More) http://www.knuckleheadzoo.net MTV Video...READ THE SHOW SYNOPSIS HERE..... "B-Boy Nation™" is a reality "docu-drama" following the lives of nine young men that formed a break dance troupe to escape the pressures of youth, rose to the top in their industry and now find themselves on the verge of signing a major contract to star in their very own Las Vegas revue show. Quasi-celebrities at night, unemployed stiffs by day, each week the boys of Knucklehead Zoo set-it-off live on the Las Vegas strip, and across the nation, competing and performing at the hottest nightspots and most prestigious events around. Fiercely dedicated to the dance they love, living life hand-to-mouth, can this fledgling group take it to the next level and actually turn this "thing" into a career? Family disapproval, rocky relationships, money problems and injury all stand in the way. For this physically demanding dance of youth, age is a factor and time is ticking. Can these young men endure life's harsh realities, and hit the proverbial "jackpot" before it's time to turn in their Adidas? Follow their lazy days and sleepless nights as they "battle" their way, on the dance floor and through life, to become the brightest stars in "B-Boy Nation™" -------------------------------------------------------------------- VOTE HERE to see this show on TV. Post your comments or ideas and then sign our mailing list: list@knuckleheadzoo.net Keep updated on the pitch & production process and qualify for passes to the Vegas premiere party. www.knuckleheadzoo.net mtv video bboy nation breakers planet b-boy break dance spike tv entourage mena suvari dancer knuckleheadzoo hip-hop sexy hot videos bikini hilary duff bikini 50 cent angelina jolie anime asian babes beyonce bikini booty breast breasts briana banks britany spears britney britney crotch britney no panties britney paris britney spears britney spears crotch britney spears exposed britney spears flash britney spears flashing britney spears no panties britney spears panties britney spears photo britney spears photos britney spears pics britney spears pictures britney spears underwear brittany spears brooke burke candice michelle carmen electra carrie underwood celebrity cheerleader chris brown christina aguilera ciara cleavage ebony latina asian video (Less)
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858,
06:17,
2008-04-21 16:17:50 Description: A 2007 Titillating Horror SitCom Where Psycho meets The Beaver Leave It to Beaver hit the airwaves in 1957. The show from which these video clips were taken was the Pilot and never aired. Jerry (More) A 2007 Titillating Horror SitCom Where Psycho meets The Beaver Leave It to Beaver hit the airwaves in 1957. The show from which these video clips were taken was the Pilot and never aired. Jerry Mathers played Theodore 'Beaver' Cleaver Barbara Billingsley was June Cleaver, his Mom. Hugh Beaumont would be Ward and Tony Dow, Wally Cleaver, after the pilot. For the first, unaired show, Casey Adams played Ward. And another actor played Tony. Ken Osmond as Eddie Haskell did not show in the pilot, let alone Larry Mondello. I think I saw Dennis the Menace's neighbor in there too... ! So I asked myself, "Wouldn't it be interesting to blend Alfred Hitchcoc's Horror / Thriller into that sit com?"' "No?" you say. Uh Ohhh - you must thus sit this one out for that's what I did anyway I combined Anthony Perkins as crazy Cleaver neighbor, Norman Bates - along with Janet Leigh as the other beaver, Marion Crane. Enjoy ! Bill Stoll StollCo Video - 2007 ~~~ Plot summary for Psycho (1960) Phoenix officeworker Marion Crane is fed up with the way life has treated her. She has to meet her lover Sam in lunch breaks and they cannot get married because Sam has to give most of his money away in alimony. One Friday Marion is trusted to bank $40,000 by her employer. Seeing the opportunity to take the money and start a new life, Marion leaves town and heads towards Sam's California store. Tired after the long drive and caught in a storm, she gets off the main highway and pulls into The Bates Motel. The motel is managed by a quiet young man called Norman who seems to be dominated by his mother. Written by Col Needham {col@imdb.com} For Marion Crane, it's been quite an eventful day. The day before, she had stolen $40,000 from her employer's client, packed her bags and driven all day on her way to join her paramour several hundred miles away. Now, she is taking a relaxing hot shower after her long day's journey. The remoteness of the motel suit her purposes perfectly. The only sounds heard are the chirping of the crickets, the splashing of the water, and her humming contentedly as the hot needles of water caress her aching shoulders. Written by filmfactsman Plot summary for Leave It to Beaver (1957) The Cleavers are the 1950's 'All-American Family' in this 'feel-good' family sitcom. Parents Ward and June, and older brother Wally, try to keep Theodore ('the Beaver') out of trouble. However, Beaver continues to end up in one kind of jam or another. Unlike real life, these situations are always easily resolved to the satisfaction of all involved and the Beaver gets off with a few stern moralistic words of parental advice. Instigator and troublemaker Eddie Haskal is an older kid who always manages to avoid being caught. ~~~ Quentin Tarantino - Where are ya when we need you. The perfect art for your team is this... Leave It to Beaver Leave It to Beaver is an American television situation comedy about an idealized American family of the 1950s. CBS first aired the show on October 4, 1957, but decided to drop it within a year. ABC picked it up and ran it for another five years, from October 2, 1958 to June 20, 1963. It was produced by Gomalco Productions (1957-1961) and by Kayro Productions (1961-1963), and distributed by Revue Studios. Premise The show is built around young Theodore Cleaver (Jerry Mathers) and the trouble he gets himself into while navigating his way through an often-incomprehensible, sometimes-illogical world. When he was a baby, his older brother Wally (Tony Dow) mispronounced "Theodore" as "Tweedor". Their firm-but-loving parents, Ward (Hugh Beaumont) and June Cleaver (Barbara Billingsley), felt "Beaver" sounded better. Beaver's friends include the perpetually apple-munching Larry Mondello (Rusty Stevens) in the early seasons, and, later, Gilbert Bates (Stephen Talbot), as well as the old fireman, Gus (Burt Mustin). His sweet-natured-but-no-nonsense elementary school teachers are Miss Canfield (to whom Beaver declares his love in the episode entitled "Beaver's Crush") (Diane Brewster) and Miss Landers (Sue Randall); Mrs. Rayburn (Doris Packer) is the principal. In the early seasons, Beaver's nemesis in class is Judy Hensler (Jeri Weil). His brother Wally is popular with both peers and adults, getting into trouble much less frequently. He letters in four sports and has little difficulty attracting girlfriends, among them Mary Ellen Rogers (Pamela Baird) and Julie Foster (Cheryl Holdridge). His pals include the awkward Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford (Frank Bank) and smart aleck Eddie Haskell (Ken Osmond), the archetype of the two-faced wiseguy, a braggard among his peers and an obsequious yes man to the adults he mocks behind their backs. Eddie often picks on the Beaver. The family lives in the fictional town of Mayfield. Beaver attends Grant Ave. Grammar School, and Wally, Mayfield High School (after graduating from Grant Ave. in season one). Cast =List of Leave It to Beaver cast members Jerry Mathers as Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver. The casting directors noticed that Mathers was uneasy and asked him where he'd rather be. Mathers replied that he'd rather be at camp. That boyish youthfulness got Mathers the part of Beaver.[citation needed] Tony Dow as Wally Cleaver Hugh Beaumont as Ward Cleaver. Before he made Ward Cleaver his acting trademark, Beaumont sometimes played villains in film and television. Most familiarly, he played a former convict, Dan Grayson, struggling to go straight for the sake of his wife and son, in 1953's "The Big Squeeze" episode of Adventures of Superman, a few years before Beaver. He directed a number of Leave It to Beaver episodes in the last two seasons, including the final one, the retrospective "Family Scrapbook". Beaumont was an ordained Methodist minister, who from 1974 until his death, sold live Christmas trees. Barbara Billingsley as June Cleaver. Billingsley has said that June Cleaver's wardrobe was more than a fashion statement. The pearl necklace hid neck shadows and high-heeled shoes were employed to offset the boys' growing height. Ken Osmond as Eddie Haskell. Osmond became a cop, serving eighteen years with the Los Angeles Police Department. Diane Brewster as Miss Canfield Sue Randall as Miss Landers Stephen Talbot as Gilbert Bates. Talbot works as a reporter for PBS' Frontline. Rusty Stevens as Larry Mondello Richard Correll as Richard Rickover Stanley Fafara as Whitey Whitney Jeri Weil as Judy Hensler Burt Mustin as Gus the fireman Frank Bank as Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford Richard Deacon as Fred Rutherford, Lumpy's pompous, demanding father and Ward Cleaver's equally pompous, smug co-worker. Deacon was working a second job for much of the life of Leave It to Beaver; he was concurrently Alan Brady's (Carl Reiner's) brother-in-law/producer and Buddy Sorrell's Morey Amsterdam's foil on The Dick Van Dyke Show. Buddy Hart as Chester Anderson Tiger Fafara as Tooey Brown Pamela Baird as Mary Ellen Rogers Cheryl Holdridge as Julie Foster Cultural influence Leave It to Beaver often aimed toward a moral lesson and is referenced even now as an emblem of simpler American times. Ward stated that his father "had a fine sense of values",[1] and if Ward himself sometimes seemed possessed of the gentility of a man of the cloth, it may have come from Beaumont's own background: he had become an ordained minister before he took up an acting career. June Cleaver, likewise, became a model of the archetypal suburban 1950s mother who wanted nothing more than to stay at home and take care of the family. The show strongly promoted the importance of family. The recurring themes expounded parental expectations for children, while the moral messages stressed the importance of teaching children proper behavior. Proper parenting techniques and methods for resolving problems and achieving consensus were demonstrated. The pervasive influence of the show was the subject of a theory proposed in 1965: that a prime cause of the Watts Riots was "Television Kitchens." A study was done of they types of kitchens that appeared in TV commercials for cleaning products and in sit-coms, like Leave It to Beaver. Those shown on TV belonged in houses worth far more than the average house at the time. But these kitchens were being shown over and over, day after day, to people whose own kitchens did not match up. The implicit comparison was obvious: "That's typical, and this is what I've got?" [2] Episodes The pilot episode, which aired on April 23, 1957, was entitled It's a Small World.[3] It featured Max Showalter as Ward Cleaver, and Paul Sullivan as Wally Cleaver. TBS re-aired the pilot on Sunday, October 4, 1987, to commemorate the show's 30th anniversary. Syndication After 234 episodes, Leave It to Beaver ceased first-run production; however, the show didn't stay off the air for very long: reruns were part of CBS affiliates' lineups in the mornings for several years to come. TBS showed it for many years in the late 1980s, and now it airs on TV Land—where it has been shown since July 1998. Today, NBC Universal Television owns the syndication rights and all properties related to the series. Spinoffs A made-for-television reunion movie, Still the Beaver, appeared in 1983. The main original cast appeared, except for Beaumont, who had died the previous year. Ward Cleaver was still a presence, however: the film's story used numerous flashbacks to the original show, as it followed young-adult Beaver's struggle to reconcile divorce and newly-minted single fatherhood, straining to cope by what his father might or might not have done, while facing the possibility of his widowed mother selling their childhood home. June Cleaver is later elected to the Mayfield City Council. Its reception led to a new first-run, made-for-cable series, The New Leave It to Beaver (1985--1989), with Beaver and Lumpy Rutherford running Ward's old firm (where Lumpy's pompous, demanding father — played by Richard Deacon in the original series — had been the senior partner), Wally as a practicing attorney and expectant father, June having sold the old house to Beaver himself but living with him as a doting grandmother to Beaver's two small sons. Eddie Haskell runs his own contracting business and has a son, Freddie, who is every inch his father's son — right down to the dual-personality. Feature film 1997's movie adaptation of the series starred Christopher McDonald as Ward, Janine Turner as June, Erik von Detten as Wally, and Cameron Finley as Beaver. It was panned by many critics, except for Roger Ebert, who gave it a three-star rating. It flopped at the box office, earning only $11,713,605. Original TV co-stars Barbara Billingsley, Ken Osmond, and Frank Bank made cameo appearances in the film. The Cleaver house The Cleavers' address for the first two seasons was 485 Mapleton Drive, Mayfield. In the season-one episode "Beaver's Old Friend", Beaver states that the teddy bear (the "old friend") was given to him by his aunt at their old house, which implies that the Mapleton Drive was their second home. The family moved to 211 Pine Street, also in Mayfield, in season three. This house can still be seen at Universal Studios, though with the facade built for the 1996 production of the Leave it to Beaver movie — the original facade sits in storage elsewhere on the Universal lot (it was replaced in 1988 by the Klopek house for the following year's The 'Burbs) and is not shown on the tour. In 1969, it was used as the house for another Universal-produced television hit, Marcus Welby, M.D.. Musical theme The show's playfully-bouncy theme tune, which became as much of a show trademark as Beaver's baseball cap or Eddie Haskell's false obsequiousness, was "The Toy Parade," composed by David Kahn, Melvyn Leonard, and Mort Greene. For the final season, however, the song was given a jazz-like arrangement by veteran composer/arranger Pete Rugolo. The lyrics to the theme song are: Hey! Here they come with a rum-tee tum they're having a toy parade. A tin giraffe with a fife and drum is leading the kewpie parade. A gingham cat in a soldier's hat is waving a Chinese fan, A plastic clown in a wedding gown is dancing with Raggedy Ann. Fee fie fiddle dee dee they're crossing the living room floor Fee fie fiddle dee dee they're up to the dining room door. They call a halt for a choc'late malt or cookies and lemonade Then off they go with a ho ho ho right back to their toy brigade. DVD releases Universal Studios Home Entertainment has begun releasing Leave It to Beaver on DVD Region 1. They have released Seasons 1 and 2 thus far, and it is expected the remaining four seasons will follow. DVD Name Ep # Release Date The Complete First Season 39 November 22, 2005 The Complete Second Season 39 May 2, 2006 The Complete Third Season 39 TBA The Complete Fourth Season 39 TBA The Complete Fifth Season 39 TBA The Complete Sixth Season 39 TBA Urban legends In the mid 1970s, Mathers appeared on The Tomorrow Show hosted by Tom Snyder. Snyder pointed out that he hadn't worked for a long time and that there was rumor going around that he had been killed "in the war in Southeast Asia". Mathers politely replied that he had heard that rumor and that he had no idea how it got started. The earliest appearance of the story in print was in a student newspaper at the University of Kansas in 1972. Later the author admitted that she had only heard the story from someone who had heard it a party in Omaha, Nebraska earlier that year. The paper printed a retraction but by then the story had swept the nation and this silly rumor joined the rest of the legends of Americana. The story was later attributed to a member of a defunct Omaha comedy improv group whose hobby was concocting outrageous stories and then convincing people they were true. "Beaver died in Vietnam"[1] was a classic urban legend, memorable for its juxtaposition of prelapsarian 1950s imagery with the chaos and violence of the 1960s. Another urban legend was that actor Ken Osmond (Eddie Haskell) became porn star John Holmes. Holmes took Osmond's name and did several movies satirically under the name "Eddie Haskell". It started because there was some facial resemblance between the two men, which porn distributors exploited by using the name Eddie Haskell in advertising Holmes's films. "It was a pain in my butt for eleven years," says Osmond,[citation needed] who brought a defamation suit against porn houses, producers and distributors. Mr. Osmond launched a $25 million suit. The suit went all the way to the California Supreme Court. The court ruled for Mr. Holmes, saying the name was protected as a satire. This case set a precedent in the matter, and is still referred by other cases in California today.[4] In a Rolling Stone interview with rock singer, Alice Cooper stated that he was "Eddie Haskell" as a child. He was speaking metaphorically, yet some readers interpreted him literally.[citation needed] Horror SitCom Horror Sit Com Horror Sit-Com (Less)
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183,
06:17,
2007-07-03 16:29:39 Description: A 2007 Titillating Horror SitCom
Where Psycho meets The Beaver
Leave It to Beaver hit the airwaves in 1957. The show from which these video clips were taken was the Pilot and never aired.
(More) A 2007 Titillating Horror SitCom
Where Psycho meets The Beaver
Leave It to Beaver hit the airwaves in 1957. The show from which these video clips were taken was the Pilot and never aired.
Jerry Mathers played Theodore 'Beaver' Cleaver
Barbara Billingsley was June Cleaver, his Mom.
Hugh Beaumont would be Ward and Tony Dow, Wally Cleaver, after the pilot. For the first, unaired show, Casey Adams played Ward. And another actor played Tony. Ken Osmond as Eddie Haskell did not show in the pilot, let alone Larry Mondello. I think I saw Dennis the Menace's neighbor in there too... !
So I asked myself, "Wouldn't it be interesting to blend Alfred Hitchcoc's Horror / Thriller into that sit com?"'
"No?" you say. Uh Ohhh - you must thus sit this one out for that's what I did anyway
I combined Anthony Perkins as crazy Cleaver neighbor, Norman Bates - along with Janet Leigh as the other beaver, Marion Crane.
Enjoy !
Bill Stoll
StollCo Video - 2007
~~~
Plot summary for Psycho (1960)
Phoenix officeworker Marion Crane is fed up with the way life has treated her. She has to meet her lover Sam in lunch breaks and they cannot get married because Sam has to give most of his money away in alimony. One Friday Marion is trusted to bank $40,000 by her employer. Seeing the opportunity to take the money and start a new life, Marion leaves town and heads towards Sam's California store. Tired after the long drive and caught in a storm, she gets off the main highway and pulls into The Bates Motel. The motel is managed by a quiet young man called Norman who seems to be dominated by his mother. Written by Col Needham {col@imdb.com}
For Marion Crane, it's been quite an eventful day. The day before, she had stolen $40,000 from her employer's client, packed her bags and driven all day on her way to join her paramour several hundred miles away. Now, she is taking a relaxing hot shower after her long day's journey. The remoteness of the motel suit her purposes perfectly. The only sounds heard are the chirping of the crickets, the splashing of the water, and her humming contentedly as the hot needles of water caress her aching shoulders. Written by filmfactsman
Plot summary for Leave It to Beaver (1957)
The Cleavers are the 1950's 'All-American Family' in this 'feel-good' family sitcom. Parents Ward and June, and older brother Wally, try to keep Theodore ('the Beaver') out of trouble. However, Beaver continues to end up in one kind of jam or another. Unlike real life, these situations are always easily resolved to the satisfaction of all involved and the Beaver gets off with a few stern moralistic words of parental advice. Instigator and troublemaker Eddie Haskal is an older kid who always manages to avoid being caught.
~~~
Quentin Tarantino - Where are ya when we need you. The perfect art for your team is this...
Leave It to Beaver
Leave It to Beaver is an American television situation comedy about an idealized American family of the 1950s.
CBS first aired the show on October 4, 1957, but decided to drop it within a year. ABC picked it up and ran it for another five years, from October 2, 1958 to June 20, 1963. It was produced by Gomalco Productions (1957-1961) and by Kayro Productions (1961-1963), and distributed by Revue Studios.
Premise
The show is built around young Theodore Cleaver (Jerry Mathers) and the trouble he gets himself into while navigating his way through an often-incomprehensible, sometimes-illogical world. When he was a baby, his older brother Wally (Tony Dow) mispronounced "Theodore" as "Tweedor". Their firm-but-loving parents, Ward (Hugh Beaumont) and June Cleaver (Barbara Billingsley), felt "Beaver" sounded better.
Beaver's friends include the perpetually apple-munching Larry Mondello (Rusty Stevens) in the early seasons, and, later, Gilbert Bates (Stephen Talbot), as well as the old fireman, Gus (Burt Mustin). His sweet-natured-but-no-nonsense elementary school teachers are Miss Canfield (to whom Beaver declares his love in the episode entitled "Beaver's Crush") (Diane Brewster) and Miss Landers (Sue Randall); Mrs. Rayburn (Doris Packer) is the principal. In the early seasons, Beaver's nemesis in class is Judy Hensler (Jeri Weil).
His brother Wally is popular with both peers and adults, getting into trouble much less frequently. He letters in four sports and has little difficulty attracting girlfriends, among them Mary Ellen Rogers (Pamela Baird) and Julie Foster (Cheryl Holdridge). His pals include the awkward Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford (Frank Bank) and smart aleck Eddie Haskell (Ken Osmond), the archetype of the two-faced wiseguy, a braggard among his peers and an obsequious yes man to the adults he mocks behind their backs. Eddie often picks on the Beaver.
The family lives in the fictional town of Mayfield. Beaver attends Grant Ave. Grammar School, and Wally, Mayfield High School (after graduating from Grant Ave. in season one).
Cast
=List of Leave It to Beaver cast members
Jerry Mathers as Theodore "Beaver" Cleaver. The casting directors noticed that Mathers was uneasy and asked him where he'd rather be. Mathers replied that he'd rather be at camp. That boyish youthfulness got Mathers the part of Beaver.[citation needed]
Tony Dow as Wally Cleaver
Hugh Beaumont as Ward Cleaver. Before he made Ward Cleaver his acting trademark, Beaumont sometimes played villains in film and television. Most familiarly, he played a former convict, Dan Grayson, struggling to go straight for the sake of his wife and son, in 1953's "The Big Squeeze" episode of Adventures of Superman, a few years before Beaver. He directed a number of Leave It to Beaver episodes in the last two seasons, including the final one, the retrospective "Family Scrapbook". Beaumont was an ordained Methodist minister, who from 1974 until his death, sold live Christmas trees.
Barbara Billingsley as June Cleaver. Billingsley has said that June Cleaver's wardrobe was more than a fashion statement. The pearl necklace hid neck shadows and high-heeled shoes were employed to offset the boys' growing height.
Ken Osmond as Eddie Haskell. Osmond became a cop, serving eighteen years with the Los Angeles Police Department.
Diane Brewster as Miss Canfield
Sue Randall as Miss Landers
Stephen Talbot as Gilbert Bates. Talbot works as a reporter for PBS' Frontline.
Rusty Stevens as Larry Mondello
Richard Correll as Richard Rickover
Stanley Fafara as Whitey Whitney
Jeri Weil as Judy Hensler
Burt Mustin as Gus the fireman
Frank Bank as Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford
Richard Deacon as Fred Rutherford, Lumpy's pompous, demanding father and Ward Cleaver's equally pompous, smug co-worker. Deacon was working a second job for much of the life of Leave It to Beaver; he was concurrently Alan Brady's (Carl Reiner's) brother-in-law/producer and Buddy Sorrell's Morey Amsterdam's foil on The Dick Van Dyke Show.
Buddy Hart as Chester Anderson
Tiger Fafara as Tooey Brown
Pamela Baird as Mary Ellen Rogers
Cheryl Holdridge as Julie Foster
Cultural influence
Leave It to Beaver often aimed toward a moral lesson and is referenced even now as an emblem of simpler American times. Ward stated that his father "had a fine sense of values",[1] and if Ward himself sometimes seemed possessed of the gentility of a man of the cloth, it may have come from Beaumont's own background: he had become an ordained minister before he took up an acting career. June Cleaver, likewise, became a model of the archetypal suburban 1950s mother who wanted nothing more than to stay at home and take care of the family.
The show strongly promoted the importance of family. The recurring themes expounded parental expectations for children, while the moral messages stressed the importance of teaching children proper behavior. Proper parenting techniques and methods for resolving problems and achieving consensus were demonstrated.
The pervasive influence of the show was the subject of a theory proposed in 1965: that a prime cause of the Watts Riots was "Television Kitchens." A study was done of they types of kitchens that appeared in TV commercials for cleaning products and in sit-coms, like Leave It to Beaver. Those shown on TV belonged in houses worth far more than the average house at the time. But these kitchens were being shown over and over, day after day, to people whose own kitchens did not match up. The implicit comparison was obvious: "That's typical, and this is what I've got?" [2]
Episodes
The pilot episode, which aired on April 23, 1957, was entitled It's a Small World.[3] It featured Max Showalter as Ward Cleaver, and Paul Sullivan as Wally Cleaver. TBS re-aired the pilot on Sunday, October 4, 1987, to commemorate the show's 30th anniversary.
Syndication
After 234 episodes, Leave It to Beaver ceased first-run production; however, the show didn't stay off the air for very long: reruns were part of CBS affiliates' lineups in the mornings for several years to come. TBS showed it for many years in the late 1980s, and now it airs on TV Land—where it has been shown since July 1998. Today, NBC Universal Television owns the syndication rights and all properties related to the series.
Spinoffs
A made-for-television reunion movie, Still the Beaver, appeared in 1983. The main original cast appeared, except for Beaumont, who had died the previous year. Ward Cleaver was still a presence, however: the film's story used numerous flashbacks to the original show, as it followed young-adult Beaver's struggle to reconcile divorce and newly-minted single fatherhood, straining to cope by what his father might or might not have done, while facing the possibility of his widowed mother selling their childhood home. June Cleaver is later elected to the Mayfield City Council.
Its reception led to a new first-run, made-for-cable series, The New Leave It to Beaver (1985--1989), with Beaver and Lumpy Rutherford running Ward's old firm (where Lumpy's pompous, demanding father — played by Richard Deacon in the original series — had been the senior partner), Wally as a practicing attorney and expectant father, June having sold the old house to Beaver himself but living with him as a doting grandmother to Beaver's two small sons. Eddie Haskell runs his own contracting business and has a son, Freddie, who is every inch his father's son — right down to the dual-personality.
Feature film
1997's movie adaptation of the series starred Christopher McDonald as Ward, Janine Turner as June, Erik von Detten as Wally, and Cameron Finley as Beaver. It was panned by many critics, except for Roger Ebert, who gave it a three-star rating. It flopped at the box office, earning only $11,713,605. Original TV co-stars Barbara Billingsley, Ken Osmond, and Frank Bank made cameo appearances in the film.
The Cleaver house
The Cleavers' address for the first two seasons was 485 Mapleton Drive, Mayfield. In the season-one episode "Beaver's Old Friend", Beaver states that the teddy bear (the "old friend") was given to him by his aunt at their old house, which implies that the Mapleton Drive was their second home. The family moved to 211 Pine Street, also in Mayfield, in season three. This house can still be seen at Universal Studios, though with the facade built for the 1996 production of the Leave it to Beaver movie — the original facade sits in storage elsewhere on the Universal lot (it was replaced in 1988 by the Klopek house for the following year's The 'Burbs) and is not shown on the tour. In 1969, it was used as the house for another Universal-produced television hit, Marcus Welby, M.D..
Musical theme
The show's playfully-bouncy theme tune, which became as much of a show trademark as Beaver's baseball cap or Eddie Haskell's false obsequiousness, was "The Toy Parade," composed by David Kahn, Melvyn Leonard, and Mort Greene. For the final season, however, the song was given a jazz-like arrangement by veteran composer/arranger Pete Rugolo. The lyrics to the theme song are:
Hey! Here they come with a rum-tee tum they're having a toy parade.
A tin giraffe with a fife and drum is leading the kewpie parade.
A gingham cat in a soldier's hat is waving a Chinese fan,
A plastic clown in a wedding gown is dancing with Raggedy Ann.
Fee fie fiddle dee dee they're crossing the living room floor
Fee fie fiddle dee dee they're up to the dining room door.
They call a halt for a choc'late malt or cookies and lemonade
Then off they go with a ho ho ho right back to their toy brigade.
DVD releases
Universal Studios Home Entertainment has begun releasing Leave It to Beaver on DVD Region 1. They have released Seasons 1 and 2 thus far, and it is expected the remaining four seasons will follow.
DVD Name Ep # Release Date
The Complete First Season 39 November 22, 2005
The Complete Second Season 39 May 2, 2006
The Complete Third Season 39 TBA
The Complete Fourth Season 39 TBA
The Complete Fifth Season 39 TBA
The Complete Sixth Season 39 TBA
Urban legends
In the mid 1970s, Mathers appeared on The Tomorrow Show hosted by Tom Snyder. Snyder pointed out that he hadn't worked for a long time and that there was rumor going around that he had been killed "in the war in Southeast Asia". Mathers politely replied that he had heard that rumor and that he had no idea how it got started. The earliest appearance of the story in print was in a student newspaper at the University of Kansas in 1972. Later the author admitted that she had only heard the story from someone who had heard it a party in Omaha, Nebraska earlier that year. The paper printed a retraction but by then the story had swept the nation and this silly rumor joined the rest of the legends of Americana. The story was later attributed to a member of a defunct Omaha comedy improv group whose hobby was concocting outrageous stories and then convincing people they were true. "Beaver died in Vietnam"[1] was a classic urban legend, memorable for its juxtaposition of prelapsarian 1950s imagery with the chaos and violence of the 1960s.
Another urban legend was that actor Ken Osmond (Eddie Haskell) became porn star John Holmes. Holmes took Osmond's name and did several movies satirically under the name "Eddie Haskell". It started because there was some facial resemblance between the two men, which porn distributors exploited by using the name Eddie Haskell in advertising Holmes's films. "It was a pain in my butt for eleven years," says Osmond,[citation needed] who brought a defamation suit against porn houses, producers and distributors. Mr. Osmond launched a $25 million suit. The suit went all the way to the California Supreme Court. The court ruled for Mr. Holmes, saying the name was protected as a satire. This case set a precedent in the matter, and is still referred by other cases in California today.[4]
In a Rolling Stone interview with rock singer, Alice Cooper stated that he was "Eddie Haskell" as a child. He was speaking metaphorically, yet some readers interpreted him literally.[citation needed]
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