What's My Line? - Allan Sherman; Tony Randall & Anita Gillette [panel] (Aug 15, 1965)

  Рет қаралды 57,248

What's My Line?

What's My Line?

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 137
@Enregardant
@Enregardant 6 жыл бұрын
By far, Pamela Painter is my favorite non-celebrity contestant in the hundreds of episodes I've watched till now. She deserves a show of her own.
@TheCosmicVagabond
@TheCosmicVagabond 3 жыл бұрын
She was very feisty! 😎
@Deejaay83urj38
@Deejaay83urj38 3 жыл бұрын
Indeed, her and the remarkable "white Hunter". Man should have been another Errol Flynn
@sstavsky
@sstavsky 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheCosmicVagabond I agree! She had a very strong personality, something that you did not usually see with the "non-celebrity" guests.
@leannsherman6723
@leannsherman6723 Жыл бұрын
There was something about her I didn’t like. I think she was a little arrogant.
@bluecamus5162
@bluecamus5162 Жыл бұрын
Adorable. A statuesque beauty with a level of self-assuredness rarely found in any day. I imagine she has scads of interesting and funny stories to tell which she'll tell over a pint or two. What I ponder is, why would any country give license for a self-employed foreigner to dredge gold on their land?
@soulierinvestments
@soulierinvestments 10 жыл бұрын
First game -- really one of the most interesting and articulate contestants --- I think ever. Educational sequence, too.
@jacquelinebell6201
@jacquelinebell6201 Жыл бұрын
The gold miner was very self assured. She knew exactly what she was talking about and not afraid to say what she thought. I admire who because she's obviously not a "helpless" female. Times were definitely changing.
@scottmiller6495
@scottmiller6495 4 жыл бұрын
Allan Sherman was a brilliant entertainer and a super human being!!!!!
@omargonzalez2641
@omargonzalez2641 4 жыл бұрын
Two beautiful accomplished woman on one show plus Allan Sherman! A+
@bailinnumberguy
@bailinnumberguy 10 жыл бұрын
The first guest seemed like a really interesting woman. Stunningly tall and long-legged, studied geology, mined for gold in Brazil, nice personality and sharp.
@Merrida100
@Merrida100 6 жыл бұрын
Yes! I really liked her. Very no-nonsense, and bright, very direct and confident. I wish there was a way to speak more with her. She's a hidden gem, I think. She sounds brilliant and quite educated, and also very clever with her choice of words. I like that she isn't the typical "fashion/household/entertaining" type of housewife.
@ErisRising
@ErisRising 5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely charming, intelligent, and gorgeous. One of my favorite non-mystery guests, of all time, and my current favorite based upon personality rather than having an amusing job.
@karlschwinbarger105
@karlschwinbarger105 4 жыл бұрын
She's brilliant and it's refreshing when a guest grabs control the way she does. It is great television. But with the dismal hindsight that 54 years gives us anyone familiar with these miserable gold mining operations in the Amazon has to draw their breath to see how that mess began. No foul for this guest. So much really in hind sight looks God awful after 54 years. Depressing. But she's definitely not.
@rogeroge50
@rogeroge50 4 жыл бұрын
@@ErisRising A very interesting woman.
@waldolydecker8118
@waldolydecker8118 3 жыл бұрын
@@karlschwinbarger105 - agree, the woman was off the chart, but the massive criminal goldmining operations in the indigenous Amazon rainforests that have continued in varying degrees right up to today have led to catastrophic pollution and deforestation. Also would submit that 54 years of hindsight was not needed to know these operations were God awful. Like slavery, they were God awful when they were initiate; they simply were able to (and still do) politically get away with it.
@gregmoorhead7203
@gregmoorhead7203 5 жыл бұрын
Miss. Painter is very well spoken.
@romeman01
@romeman01 10 жыл бұрын
Allan Sherman is a brilliant mystery guest, here and in his earlier appearance when he did the voice of Frankie Fontaine. He added value to the voices, however; the value of a quick wit. Cerf: "Well, would you admit that you are a motion picture star?" Sherman: "I'd admit it, but it's not so, unfortunately." I roared with laughter at this. The mystery guests who were as skilled as Sherman must make up a very small list.
@Deejaay83urj38
@Deejaay83urj38 3 жыл бұрын
Well spotted. Yes he was brilliant. I wasn't amused by the Downs syndrome at the start at all, but his bright intellect and comic excellence shone through after in dazzling style
@kingforaday8725
@kingforaday8725 2 жыл бұрын
Camp Granada!!! I remember hearing on the Perry Como show. Early 60's. Next day kids at school were constantly signing it!
@turquoisemama33
@turquoisemama33 6 ай бұрын
typo - but constantly signing it would be a sight to see...
@eepanusstar5940
@eepanusstar5940 6 жыл бұрын
Allan Sherman was stellar on this show. Thanks.
@Beson-SE
@Beson-SE 10 жыл бұрын
I discovered Allan Sherman some years ago. I find his way of using song parodies in front of a live audience very funny and my favorites are "Sarah Jackman", "Here's to the Crabgrass", "Shake Hands with Your Uncle Max", "Al 'n' Yetta", "Harvey and Sheila", "When I Was a Lad", "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh!", "I Can't Dance", "The Twelve Gifts of Christmas" and "Togetherness". Also the songs are educating for me since they contain many names, expressions and events that are unknown to me.
@strooomon
@strooomon 7 жыл бұрын
Heres to the Crabgrass is all the more brilliant both in being prescient and also cause it was based on an English Ditty, Country Garden
@DreamDancer82
@DreamDancer82 3 жыл бұрын
My first run in with Allan Sherman was when I was about four or five years old in 1987, when my parents taped the 1971 DePatie Freleng special "The Cat in the Hat" on a Disney Channel preview, and I didn't even know it back then!
@soulierinvestments
@soulierinvestments 10 жыл бұрын
Allan Sherman. Funny guy! Voice disguise is a cross of W C Fields and Sheldon Leonard. It's nice when you have been fired by G-T in 1956 that you can come back as a success. 1965 is the year of WML water. There's this problem with Allan Sherman's water. Previously, John used of a glass of water to put out that electrical fire when Jack Jones was mystery guest. Stayed tuned folks . . . . Milton Berle's episode coming up. Get a towel ready.
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
The gold miner had a gold miner's way about her. She looked as if she gave no ground to anyone. She looked like she was auditioning for her own show. Bravo for women's lib 1965!
@2508bona
@2508bona 10 жыл бұрын
Too bad she wasn't named Glittering Goldie O'Gilt. That would have been perfect. 😄
@jmccracken1963
@jmccracken1963 6 жыл бұрын
+shevegen Pamela Painter.
@kenyongray2615
@kenyongray2615 4 жыл бұрын
It was interesting how Miss Painter totally took control of things. There was almost no need for John Daly to explain certain nuances of the answers to the questions.
@linasaidso1355
@linasaidso1355 Жыл бұрын
I liked that. It's sometimes a little irritating, the way he repeats the question to the guest, and the answer to the panel, as though he needed to translate them!😂
@yeahnoonecaresifyouarefirst
@yeahnoonecaresifyouarefirst 11 ай бұрын
I think he was intimidated by her and I found her a little arrogant
@daler.steffy1047
@daler.steffy1047 3 ай бұрын
@@yeahnoonecaresifyouarefirst While I agree with the former comments (those just made ahead of yours), I actually do agree with you. I usually trust my first instincts, and that's how she came across to me: being a little too arrogant and overly assertive, and not in keeping with the protocols of that show as we are used to seeing them employed.
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
The first contestant, Miss Painter was stunningly beautiful. AND TALL! I would have thought she was at least a hat check girl or cocktail waitress. Or congresswoman.
@galileocan
@galileocan 10 жыл бұрын
There's not one shy bone in Miss Painter the Gold Miners body!
@soulierinvestments
@soulierinvestments 10 жыл бұрын
Since this was the first taping session, then this was the first time Anita Gillette was on WML. The broadcast with Marian Anderson was technically the first time she appeared on a WML broadcast. She appeared rather regularly in syndicated WML
@VahanNisanian
@VahanNisanian 10 жыл бұрын
Videotaped on April 11, 1965. Again, the same rule of thumb as in the last pre-taped episode: Any pre-taped episode that aired in August 1965, in which Dorothy was absent, was taped during two of her three absent periods in 1965. After April 18, Dorothy was never absent again, until her unexpected death on November 8.
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
And John goes out of his way to prevaricate by wishing Miss Gillette a happy birthday "tomorrow" August 16th. Broadcast standards should apply here too. John would never introduce a filmed or taped news reports as "live", why lie about what day it is?
@TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods
@TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods 8 жыл бұрын
+Vahan Nisanian Does anyone know the reason for her absence? Oddly, the panel doesn't allude to it.
@VahanNisanian
@VahanNisanian 8 жыл бұрын
fishhead06 She had injuries on her shoulder, and had slipped on a bear skin rug.
@TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods
@TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods 8 жыл бұрын
Again? Or was this a recurrence of the injury? After all she'd been back.
@stevenginsberg8471
@stevenginsberg8471 7 жыл бұрын
So John was being cute when he referenced Anita's birthday as "tomorrow."
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
When Bennett asks the question at about 20:10 "are you known for mimicking people" could he have possibly been thinking about Vaughn Meader, whose career had died on November 22nd, 1963. Who else was famous as a mimic and record seller in those days? Gee, wiz, Bennett!
@jvcomedy
@jvcomedy 9 жыл бұрын
+Joe Postove Frank Gorshin was very popular at the time and had done numerous guest spots on the Ed Sullivan Show and The Tonight Show as an impressionist so he would have been very well known. Also Rich Little was starting to make a name for himself at this time and had made several TV show appearances. Not sure who Bennett was thinking of, but it could have been any one of these guys and maybe some others I may not be remembering.
@jmccracken1963
@jmccracken1963 6 жыл бұрын
+Jeff Vaughn Speaking of Frank Gorshin AND Anita Gillette..... Four years after this episode aired, Frank Gorshin (Jimmie Walker), Julie Wilson (Allie Walker), and Anita Gillette (Betty Compton) would co-star in the musical "Jimmy" ("A Musical of the Life and Good Times of Jimmy Walker"), which ran on Broadway at the Winter Garden Theatre from 23 October 1969 through 3 January 1970 - only 84 performances. (The week the show closed was the week that the Metropolitan Opera re-opened, after a long and acrimonious strike which lasted 5 months.) The music and lyrics for the show were by Bill Jacob and Patti Jacob; the book was by Melville Shavelson (based on "Beau James," by Gene Fowler). The show was produced by Jack L. Warner, directed by Joseph Anthony, choreographed by Peter Gennaro, and conducted by Milton Rosenstock, with sets designed by Oliver Smith, costumes designed by W. Robert LaVine, lighting designed by Peggy Clark, and projections designed by Charles E. Hoefler and James Hamilton. As Anita Gillette says in the book "Sing Out, Louise!", the main reason for the failure of the show was Frank Gorshin, who played Jimmy Walker as a street punk, quite unlike the larger-than-life real Jimmy Walker. Gorshin also fought with the director and most of the cast. But Jack L. Warner liked Gorshin's impression of long-time Warner Bros. contract player James Cagney, and he would have pulled his money out of the show had Gorshin been replaced.
@loissimmons6558
@loissimmons6558 5 жыл бұрын
I'm not surprised by Anita Gillette's explanation. I never considered Frank Gorshin very talented: a man of a million voices, all of them sounding like Cagney, Burt Lancaster, and maybe a little bit of Kirk Douglas. I also consider him one of the worst guest stars on "Star Trek" (TOS). I have no doubt that Gorshin's limitations as a impressionist contributed to his decision to play Mayor Walker out of character.
@poetcomic1
@poetcomic1 Жыл бұрын
Allan Sherman was a huge success with his My Son the Folksinger (Hello Mudder, Hello Faddah). He invented the show 'I've Got A Secret' and was a TV producer as well.
@roaminggnome6878
@roaminggnome6878 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, Pamela Painter was awesome! Finally, a contestant with some personality! They usually act like zombies or something.
@soulierinvestments
@soulierinvestments 10 жыл бұрын
Easy to see why G-T thought of Anita when hiring panelists for syndicated WML. Very charming and witty here.
@waldolydecker8118
@waldolydecker8118 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, and many today are still shaving with her brand of razor blades over fifty years later.
@soulierinvestments
@soulierinvestments 10 жыл бұрын
Gil Fates in his WML book praised Sherman's book "The Gift of Laughter," plugged here. In about 4 years, Sherman was involved in writing one of the biggest flops in the history of Broadway.
@jmccracken1963
@jmccracken1963 6 жыл бұрын
That flop was "The Fig Leaves Are Falling," for which Allan Sherman wrote the book and the lyrics (the music was by Albert Hague) - based on his 1966 divorce, after 21 years of marriage. (I'm thinking that this show was the polar opposite on the subject of marriage of "I Do! I Do!") The show opened at the Broadhurst Theatre on Thursday, 2 January 1969 - and closed on Monday, 6 January 1969, after only 4 performances (preceded by 17 preview performances). What a colossal waste of talent, including Barry Nelson, Dorothy Loudon, Jenny O'Hara, Kenneth Kimmins, Helen Blount, and David Cassidy (all of them in the cast; this show was David Cassidy's Broadway debut), George Abbott (director), Eddie Gasper (choreographer), Abba Bogin (music director), William and Jean Eckart (set design), Robert Mackintosh (costume design), and Tharon Musser (lighting design)!
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
The second contestant wasn't going to be a pushover either.
@VahanNisanian
@VahanNisanian 10 жыл бұрын
Notice Tony introducing Anita, saying that this is "her first time". Technically this is correct, because this was taped a week before the next she came on this show, and the April 18 edition was Live.
@mtp4430
@mtp4430 5 жыл бұрын
Allan Sherman blew it when he said he worked with Tony Randall recently. Had he just acknowledged that he worked with Tony Randall, he would have fooled them, because Tony Randall has worked with hundreds of people, and it wouldn't have been so easy narrowing it down
@preppysocks209
@preppysocks209 5 жыл бұрын
He wanted to be guessed at that point. If you have ever read anything Allan Sherman ever wrote, it is clear that he was one of the most insecure people on the planet. He obviously enjoyed playing with the panel for a bit but I don't think his ego would have taken not being guessed because that meant he wouldn't have been a huge celebrity. So he didn't blow it, meaning making a mistake -- given the clip that someone posted above, there was no way Tony Randall was not going to know it was Sherman, which was the whole point of adding "recently."
@joelfogelsanger5773
@joelfogelsanger5773 2 жыл бұрын
I think he sensed they were getting close to guessing his identity plus they had been questioning him so long that he decided to give himself up.
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 Жыл бұрын
Bennett refers to "The Hollywood Palace" as "just upstairs". Wasn't the "Palace" TV show in the old Jerry Lewis studio in Hollywood?
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
About 5 months after this taping Anita Gillette would be 29 years old.
@daler.steffy1047
@daler.steffy1047 3 ай бұрын
Pamela Painter, the gold miner from Califipornia, who was on this episode of "What's My Line," was a guest who offered a refreshing change from many of her predecessors whose comments were always a bit stilted (although that was partly because Mr. Daley couldn't keep his mouth shut long enough for them to say anything). However, there is often a delicate balance in place when measuring seemingly opposing situations; and in the way Miss Painter came across to the panelists, while I agreed with her displaying a knowledgeable and assertive presence, I think she was a little bit too aggressive; and in doing so, she stepped outside the protocols that were in place for "proper conduct" on that program. But there was something also refreshing about her, and about many of her contemporaries that had been already on that program, which I have enjoyed watching over the last several months through these posted episodes. It's wonderful to see women who aren't (all) ridiculously "decorated" in out-of-control tattoos, weird hair colors, and piercings, including nose rings and earrings and eyeball rings and brain rings and nip*le rings and knee rings and toenail rings and ring-a-ding dings; and false eyelashes and mascara put around the eyes in such great quantities that looks like they were given two black eyes by somebody who tried to rob them in the alleyway before they got to their destination. People with their massively stupid tattoos and/or piercings think they are "expressing" their true individualism, by displaying themselves in the manner of believing they are being so "unique," so different; but ironically, they are just like millions of other people who look just like them, and that saturates the sense of what truly identifies as an individual spirit, thus making them part of just another click, where they think they are being a "true individual"; but, ultimately they are wanting to be like everybody else who want to be individuals and have a bunch of tattoos and piercings so they can be, in fact, like everyone else--and NOT get left behind (but "behind what" I wouldn't know!). You have to think about that one, because there is a lot of truth in it! It takes a True Individual to know what a true individual really means--or really is. It's a Grand Uniqueness set apart from everybody else's.
@Baskerville22
@Baskerville22 Жыл бұрын
The lady gold-miner was impressive
@kentetalman9008
@kentetalman9008 8 ай бұрын
Pamela Painter was also a contestant on TTTT.
@loissimmons6558
@loissimmons6558 5 жыл бұрын
In her youth, Anita Gillette published a horse racing tout sheet. Who knew?
@WhatsMyLine
@WhatsMyLine 10 жыл бұрын
Again, with the "Fluffy"? I thought we were finally done with this when they plugged "Amanda" in Tony Randall's last appearance. For a movie that played as long as it apparently did, it's impressive how totally forgotten it is. . .
@sabinebeyer9249
@sabinebeyer9249 8 жыл бұрын
Finaly i've seen the "Fluffy" picture. It isn't as quite as bad as I thought. It has some funny moments. It's good entertainment for a rainy afternoon for example. If one isn't expect to much sense in the movie. One can see this whithout pain ;-)
@bigoldinosaur
@bigoldinosaur 7 жыл бұрын
Who wants to go to Camp Grenada?
@PhilBagels
@PhilBagels 7 жыл бұрын
Camp is very entertaining.
@bigoldinosaur
@bigoldinosaur 7 жыл бұрын
Eeyup.
@jmccracken1963
@jmccracken1963 6 жыл бұрын
+bigoldinosaur Not Camp Grenada, certainly - unless I was part of Gunnery Sergeant Highway's recon platoon. Nor Camp Grenada, either; remember that "All the counselors hate the waiters - and the lake has alligators. Our director wants no sissies; so he reads to us from something called 'Ulysses.'"
@ErisRising
@ErisRising 5 жыл бұрын
Depends on the weather.
@Kat-fw9se
@Kat-fw9se 4 жыл бұрын
Me!😝
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
I think (correct me if I'm wrong) that the second contestant got a lot more whistles than the first one. They must have been for...(ahem) 'scuse me, that rather large derrière. Her fronterrière was not that great. I think the boys in the audience were intimidated by contestant #1, huh?
@Beson-SE
@Beson-SE 10 жыл бұрын
Where did they get the male audience from? Sailors on leave after six months in a submarine? :)
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
Johan Bengtsson t seems that way sometimes. Or maybe remnants from the Hal Block Appreciation Society!
@ModMokkaMatti
@ModMokkaMatti Жыл бұрын
@@MrJoeybabe25 Blockheads, but not from the Ian Drury camp?
@joelfogelsanger5773
@joelfogelsanger5773 2 жыл бұрын
Leave it to Arlene to get Ms. Painter's profession.
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 10 жыл бұрын
Anita Gillette is alive and 78 years old.
@granthoops
@granthoops Жыл бұрын
She did a good job playing along with the game and not bringing it to an abrupt halt as numerous comedians did.
@MrJoeybabe25
@MrJoeybabe25 Жыл бұрын
@@granthoops Miss Gillette is alive at 86 and will be 87 on August 16th, 2023!
@Lisa-di1wi
@Lisa-di1wi 5 жыл бұрын
Anita Gillette's birthday also falls on the anniversary of the deaths of both the King of Rock and Roll and the Queen of Soul.
@toddmccreary4579
@toddmccreary4579 Жыл бұрын
The beautiful Anita Gillette only turned 29 the day after the show aired.
@elizabethramirezsierra3700
@elizabethramirezsierra3700 Жыл бұрын
The Cat in the Hat in What's My Line
@Traderjoe
@Traderjoe 11 ай бұрын
Miss Painter is gorgeous
@waldolydecker8118
@waldolydecker8118 3 жыл бұрын
Two very nice looking professional women guests on this show.
@D0S81
@D0S81 5 жыл бұрын
it came up 'horse race handicapper' and i just saw her going around with a mallet handicapping horses by smackin em in the knees, ''she must woik for da mafioso methinks''
@MajorSeventh
@MajorSeventh 10 жыл бұрын
Hello lamp post, Whatcha' knowin? Come to watch your Flowers growin'. Aintcha' got no Rhymes for me-e Dootin' dootin' dootin' dootin' feelin' groovy.
@kumppi
@kumppi 10 жыл бұрын
Don't really understand what the first guest meant when she implied that gold grows. It does not do so on earth considering that gold is the byproduct of a dying star. The only way to get more gold on earth is if an outer space object containing gold hits earth. Even then I wouldn't consider it growing.
@alanfollett6242
@alanfollett6242 8 жыл бұрын
+kumppi The belief that precious metals grow in the earth was once widespread. It's alluded to, for instance, in John Dryden's "Heroic Stanzas on the Death of Oliver Cromwell": "As wands of divination downward draw / And point to beds where sovereign gold doth grow." Still, it does seem unlikely that the contestant, who had studied geology and was obviously a smart cookie, still held this ancient belief three hundred years after Dryden. I'd love to know what she meant.
@loissimmons6558
@loissimmons6558 5 жыл бұрын
I believe Miss Painter was referring to the fact that gold has a crystalline structure and that crystals have the ability to grow in the sense of expanding volume (not in the sense of producing more gold).
@pattimaeda6097
@pattimaeda6097 4 жыл бұрын
kumppi yeah I’m sure the person with a degree in geology got it wrong🙄
@winonafrog
@winonafrog 8 ай бұрын
Yes, strange argument by someone I otherwise would marry immediately nqa. Gold does not grow! All I can think is she meant accumulates?
@petersanders5321
@petersanders5321 2 жыл бұрын
Lovely women, period. So much civility, too.
@ChrisHansonCanada
@ChrisHansonCanada 3 ай бұрын
*_GOLD MINER_* *_HORSE RACE HANDICAPPER (GIVES TIPS FOR BETTORS ON RADIO)_*
@kentetalman9008
@kentetalman9008 8 ай бұрын
"Is this product larger than an elephant blanket?"
@exapnomapcase
@exapnomapcase 5 жыл бұрын
Finally a guest who can get Daly to STFU and not answer guests' questions before they can! #gold :)
@preppysocks209
@preppysocks209 5 жыл бұрын
I know of only one other guest who was able to do this, a highly articulate male guest from a few years earlier. Ironic that this was the night Bennett said Daly couldn't stop talking, which was true in virtually every other show but this one.
@MM-fr9yh
@MM-fr9yh 4 жыл бұрын
I thought Alland Sherman was Dorothy Killgelan's son.
@kentetalman9008
@kentetalman9008 8 ай бұрын
She would have had him when she was 11.
@loissimmons6558
@loissimmons6558 5 жыл бұрын
A taped episode of Password aired three days earlier (8/12/65) with Tony Randall and Phyllis Newman as the celebrity players. "Fluffy" gets plugged once again, as well as Tony's newest movie which had just been completed but not released. By this time it is plugged as "The Alphabet Murders", not "Amanda". For those who enjoy Password, it has some excellent game play, including very good lightning rounds. kzbin.info/www/bejne/pJOTgXSefdhgotU
@2508bona
@2508bona 10 жыл бұрын
Anita Gillette's hairdo wasn't styled. It was woven.
@MrErsamo
@MrErsamo Ай бұрын
Did I miss something? While Tony Randall clearly indicated he knew who it was, neither he nor anyone else on the panel actually said, "It's Allan Sherman."
@rmelin13231
@rmelin13231 20 күн бұрын
Yeah, I suspect maybe a brief moment of the kinescope ended up on the cutting room floor. We also didn't see the panel members remove their blindfolds..
@SueProv
@SueProv 3 күн бұрын
John was peevish about the spilled water. The poor man apologized 4x and John mopped it up in high drama and no alleviating the mystery guests embarrassment.
@berwyn58
@berwyn58 6 жыл бұрын
I'd whisper sweet nothings into Anita Gillette's ear any day - oops, sorry, the Hal Block inside me escaped for a moment - LOL
@phildirt3
@phildirt3 7 ай бұрын
Hello mudda hello fahda
@daler.steffy1047
@daler.steffy1047 3 ай бұрын
Sorry..., but I just thought of something else. Miss Painter mines gold on a river in the Amazon through a dredging process. I wonder how gentle that is on the environment, especially in the "sensitive" Amazon basin/rainforest region. That doesn't appear that anyone cared--or was paying attention--to conservation issues, or having any conservation measures put in place before ripping the gold out of the river! (But who cares about the delicate balance that nature has had to accept in that area of the world, or anywhere else! Money is far more important than nature's True Offerings! Or is it?)
@ModMokkaMatti
@ModMokkaMatti Жыл бұрын
Timex takes a licking and keeps on ticking.
@TheBraveIntrovert
@TheBraveIntrovert 9 жыл бұрын
Not all women are gold diggers. I don't wear jewelry that much. Other than earrings I wear maybe my mothers ring or my grandmothers necklace from time to time.
@WhatsMyLine
@WhatsMyLine 9 жыл бұрын
Sorry-- I'm not clear what you're responding to when you say "not all women are gold diggers." Replying, I assume, to something that was said in the program?
@TheBraveIntrovert
@TheBraveIntrovert 9 жыл бұрын
One of the guest was a goldminer and she said women are gold diggers or something like that.What's My Line?
@WhatsMyLine
@WhatsMyLine 9 жыл бұрын
Purple Capricorn I figured it was something along those lines! :)
@jess4metoo
@jess4metoo 8 жыл бұрын
I think she meant they all like nice things.
@jmccracken1963
@jmccracken1963 6 жыл бұрын
+shevegen She wrote it right up there on the board; you can go back and re-run it any time you like. For the record, her name is Pamela Painter.
@scottpardee6303
@scottpardee6303 Жыл бұрын
Anita Gillette was born in 1936, so she would be celebrating her 29th birthday. Sorry tell the secret.
@cathykinn4516
@cathykinn4516 3 ай бұрын
What a contrast between the assured Gold Miner & the dolly bird on the panel. There seemed to be 2 different types of Woman or there were Women & then there were females in the 60s. Self assured Women & silly girly dolly birds. The dolly has not stood the test of time. No Dorothy again. She had a lkt of problems leading up to her death its stated - was afraid she'd lose her home even.
@joelfogelsanger5773
@joelfogelsanger5773 2 жыл бұрын
Anita Gilette was a lousy panelist. She seemed confused most of the time and didn't pay attention to responses to previous questions.
@charleskeefer3043
@charleskeefer3043 2 жыл бұрын
Tickles colored breakfast comb dental appt for fright night at bogarts flamingos of children order at Oxford glacier buck beep.
@Fush1234
@Fush1234 Жыл бұрын
Imagine dealing with that personality. My god. Divorced in weeks
What's My Line? - Steve Lawrence; Alan King [panel] (Aug 22, 1965)
23:53
Beat Ronaldo, Win $1,000,000
22:45
MrBeast
Рет қаралды 98 МЛН
Players push long pins through a cardboard box attempting to pop the balloon!
00:31
Don’t Choose The Wrong Box 😱
00:41
Topper Guild
Рет қаралды 38 МЛН
Quilt Challenge, No Skills, Just Luck#Funnyfamily #Partygames #Funny
00:32
Family Games Media
Рет қаралды 46 МЛН
What's My Line - Air Date: October 23, 1960
25:40
Marcus Charles
Рет қаралды 29 М.
I've Got A Secret! - Ed Begley , Sr. & Allan Sherman 4/20/1964
27:51
I've Got A Secret!
Рет қаралды 15 М.
What's My Line? - Milton Berle; George Hamilton [panel] (Jul 18, 1965)
25:02
What's My Line? - Cesar Romero (Dec 14, 1952)
26:27
What's My Line?
Рет қаралды 150 М.
Hollywood Squares (December 1972)
22:20
Ross Martin (actor)
Рет қаралды 42 М.
What's My Line? at 71 - Tribute video
13:37
Teddy Todorova
Рет қаралды 20 М.
Beat Ronaldo, Win $1,000,000
22:45
MrBeast
Рет қаралды 98 МЛН