Word: liebmans
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...hours) of the returning shows was Saturday Night Revue (Sat. 8 p.m., NBC-TV). The Revue is divided into unequal parts: the hour-long Jack Carter Show, a melange of slow jokes and vaudeville turns, and Your Show of Shows, brilliantly staged by Broadway's Max Liebman and reaching a TV high in literacy, talent and theatricality. Stars of Liebman's show are Sid Caesar, TV's best home-grown comic, and tiny Imogene Coca, an ex-nightclub comedienne. Whether playing the part of young marrieds having the boss to dinner, or a fellow and a girl...
With hardly any waste motion behind the scenes, Liebman gets plenty of movement on the TV screen. In 27-year-old Sid Caesar he has a TV-raised multi-dimensional comedian who is equally convincing as a slot machine, a head-lolling infant, a British general or a Freudian psychiatrist just off the plane from Vienna. Caesar's comedy partner is pint-sized Imogene Coca ("No one knows how old she is"), who can switch from a prim Victorian to a stripteaser to a Wagnerian Valkyrie without missing a nuance or a laugh...
Caesar and Coca are supported by such guest stars as Gertrude Lawrence, Rex Harrison or Jose Ferrer, and by a chorus and well-trained ballet. To "add a sprinkling of cultural items," Liebman pairs off the Metropolitan Opera's Baritone Robert Merrill and Soprano Marguerite Piazza, in neatly scissored scenes from light and grand opera...
...more than satisfied with Liebman's press notices on the Show of Shows, which have generally been raves. But the network has not yet figured out how to sell the package. At present, one half-hour is cooperatively sponsored by Swift & Co., RCA and United Fruit Co. More sponsors are needed* before the $40,000 weekly price...
...Liebman confidently expects that these financial headaches will be eased by the aspirin of top-notch entertainment. CBS has already shifted the Ed Wynn Show, the Saturday Night Revue's strongest competitor, to Tuesdays. "We're trying to make people feel that they're eavesdropping on a Broadway show," says Liebman. "I think we can do it, too." There was only one evidence of self-doubt: "I just hope NBC doesn't expect us to keep this up 52 weeks a year...