The Seaforth News, 1957-08-29, Page 2Laughing 'Boy .On Television
By Dick Kleiner
NEA Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK—Critics of tele-
vision frequently charge that
the newest of the entertainment
media doesn't breed its own
stars. But nobody can deny that
ti develops amazingly talented
'second 'bananas"—mon like Sid
Caesar's Carl Reiner and Jackie
Gleason's Art Carney.
And now you can add a new
ON SCREEN, Louis Nye's face,
voice change with each role.
one, Steve Allen's Louis Nye.
His most frequent character —
the Madison Avenue laughing
boy, Gordon Hathaway - is a
small -gem, And Nye does so
many other characters on the
Allen show, many of them un -
is easily spotted. But Louis Nye's
face and voice and even his car-
riage change with each of his
portrayals. He is, first and fore-
most,- a highly talented actor.
This comedy streak in him is
a late -flowering facet of the
man. He was, for many years, a
radio actor, He called himself
"an emotional juvenile," and
generally played highly -charged
roles, He was also a competent
"double," a radio term meaning
that he could and did play two
parts on the same show.
"All this time," he says, "I had
a feeling; inside, that I was fun-
ny. To myself, I thought that I
was a funny guy. So what I'd do
would be to play benefits. I'd do
monologs, whatever came into
my head.
"One time, I did one of these
monologs and a Broadway col-
umnist was there. He wrote me
up for a whole column. I was
so scared somebody would offer
me a job as a comedian that I
ran home and hid."
Nye, during this period, had
no confidence in himself as a
funny man. There was something
inside him, wanting to come out,
but he would have died of fright
en a nightclub floor. It's a
strange situation, one he won't
go into very deeply, but one
that is happily over.
"Now," he says, "I could do a
nightclub. 13ut there's no long-
er the great need there once
was. Before, I wanted to, but I
couldn't. Absolutely could not
face it."
What changed him, more than
anything else, was the Army.
He began to do little things in
the recreation hall at Camp
Crowder, Mo. He did sad mono-
iogs and funny monologs and
patriotic monologs. (At one
time, he had. a partner for some
of these—Carl Reiner.)
He , ame out and went into
Broadway shows, like "Inside
der heavy make-up, that chances
are you don't recognize him half
the time he's on.
This, of course, is a tribute to
his own acting skill. Reiner is
always Reiner and even Carney
U.S.A." and the sensational flop,
"Flahooley." Andthen he began
to do some TV work, About
five years ago, he worked an
ABC-TV show called "Talk Of
The Town." At that same time,
Steve Allen , was doing the old
amateur song -writer show,
"Songs For, Sale."
Allen and Nye exchanged fan
letters. Then they met on, an ele-
vator and Steve said,'"You'll be
hearing from me." As soon as
Alien got his "Tonight" show,
he kept his word. He and Nye
have been working together
off and on, ever since..
Nye comes from Hartford,
Conn., where, as a kid, he says
he had to play a part.
"You know how kids are," he
says. "Every kid has a certain
role in .life to play. There's the
tough kid and the cry-baby kid
and the best ball -player kid. I
was kind of skinny and weak
and I -didn't have a part. So I
began to do imitations ofthe
neighbors and then' I hid a
part—the funny kid."
At 18, he was working on a
Hartfor radio station for $2.50 a
broadcast. He's been working
pretty steadily since then.
All these years, he's been ob-
serving people. He has a great
gift of mimicry, With a gesture,
a facial expression; a tone of
voice, he can capture a per-
sonality type. His Gordon Hath-
away is that sort of characteri-
zation; it is nothing like Nye
himself.
Where Hathaway is hail -fel-
low -well -met, Nye is quiet.
Hathaway has •a ridiculous ex-
pression. Nye is serious. Hath-
away thinks of himself as quite
a wit. Nye seldom says anything
funny. Hathaway is a dapper
dresser, Nye is a sober dresser.
They are opposites in every
sense.
Nye is married to Anita Leon-
ard, the songwriter who com-
posed "Sunday Kind of Love"
and the current hit, "Graduation
Rings." They have a 31 -year-old
son. While Nye leads a comfor-
table life, he admits to the urge
OFF SCREEN, Nye is serious
opposite of TV Hathaway.
to have his own show, "pro-
vided I find something that I
would fit into."
Meanwhile, he goes on with
Steve Allen. The strange thing
about this relationship is that
there is no contract. He waits
until Allen calls him, otherwise
he doesn't go on (and doesn't
get paid). The best second ba-
nana currently working, in other
words, is up for grabs,
The 18 -hole golf course, con-
structed on the high rolling
slopes east of Prospect Point,
offers a variety of hazards
which will test and delight the
average golfer visiting Saskat-
chewan.
X10 STEP THERE Nancy Jamieson looks as if she wants to
rake another step down as she acts as ballast duringa wild
tail on Lake Calhoun. Chivalry tooka beating, too, as her bro-
thers Tom and Jerry fake it easy inside the class D sailboat.
WHILE OUR THROATS ARE PARCHING -Beer is king for a day in
the Bavarian town of Riedenburg, Germany, as these foaming-
"beer mugs" march through the streets during the festival of
the "Day of Beer." Held for the first time, the cerebration drew
thousands of visftors.It featured the symbolic marriage of "Miss
Barley and Mr. Hops."
fi: J' F�A8LL
c cmc AnciDews.
Long summer days lag some-
times, especially for teen-agers
who are used to being in school.
Suggest that they use their in-
genuity to invent new drinks
and desserts. The turn -around
method may appeal to them—
for instance instead of making
a chocolate soda with vanilla
ice cream, make a vanilla soda
with chocolate ice cream. The
same method may be used with
strawberry or pineapple or peach
sodas. Color may be added to
marshmallow sauce— green, red,
or yellow, and different flavors
added, too. For instance, a sun-
dae or parfait may be made with
chocolate ice cream and this
marshmallow sauce colored
green and flavored with pepper-
mint writes. Eleanor Richey
Johnston in The Christian
Science Monitor.
s * *
Fifteen minutes is all that is
required to bake these country -
style buttermilk biscuits.
Buttermilk Biscuits
5 cups flour
2 teaspoons soda
3 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons salt
6 tablespoons lard
• 2 cups thick buttermilk
Sift dry ingredients together
and cut the lard into them until
all is grainy. Beat in the butter-
milk. Knead slightly in the bowl.
Turn out onto floured board and
roll to 1/4 -inch thickness. Cut
with 3 -inch cooky cutter. Place
in greased tins and bake 15 min-
utes in hot oven.
* * F
A good bread you may want
to try during the summer sand-
wich season is made with sev-
eral flours. You can add 6 table-
spoons soy flour, 6 tablespoons
dried milk and 4 tablespoons
wheat germ to it if you desire
more grains in your bread. This
was sent in response to a re-
quest for a 7 -grain bread.
SPECIALTY DARK BREAD
1 cake compressed yeast
34 cup molasses
3/ cup lukewarm water
1 cup milk scalded
4 cup water
2 tablespoons shortening
1 tablespoon salt
4 cups sifted flour
cup whole wheat flour
3a cup cracked wheat
34 cup rye flour
1 cup oatmeal
Dissolve yeast in the 1/4 cup
lukewarm water and about half
the molasses. Pour hot milk over
shortening and salt; add water
and remaining molasses and cool
to lukewarm. Combine with
yeast mixture. Combine flours
and oatmeal and add mixture to
liquid mixture, 1 cup at a time,
beating until smooth after each
addition.
When dough is stiff, turn out
on lightly floured board, and
knead, until smooth and elastic
(about 10 minutes). Shape into
a ball, grease top lightly and
place in greased bowl. Cover
and let rise in warm place
(80°85° F.) until double in bulk.
Punch down. Let rise again.
When half again its original
size, divide into two parts. Roll
in balls. Cover and rest 15 min-
utes. Mold into loaves. Let rise
until double in bulk. Bake at
450° F. for 15 minutes. Reduce
temperature to 375° F. .and bake
40 minutes longer. Turn out on
rack and let cool away from
drafts.
* * *
Here are two sandwich
spreads which may be new to
you. They're well worth trying.
ANCHOVY SUPREME
11/2 teaspoons 'anchovy paste
2 tablespoons mayonnaise or
salad dressing -
1 dash each, garlic powder
and seasoned salt
3�s teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons each, chopped
celery and chopped Chinese
cabbage
1 hard -cooked egg chopped,
3Q medium avocado, crushed
1 tablespoon chopped pecans
or cashew nuts
Blend all ingredients together
and serve on toast.
t * *
GREEN PEPPER CHEESE
DELIGHT
5 medium or 4 large green
peppers, washed, seeded and
cut up
1 medium onion
2 tablespoons salad oil
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
Juice of 1 lemon
1 package (6 -ounce) Dream
cheese
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
Grind peppers and onion in
meat chopper. Add sugar, salt
and lemon juice. Allow this
mixture to stand in refrigera-
tor 2 hours or longer. Drain in
colander. Combine cheese and
mayonnaise and add to first
mixture. Stir until well mixed.
* * *
You may like to top off your
party with some colorful gum
drop cookies.
GUM DROP COOKIES
1/i cup shortening
1/2 cup sugar
3� cup brown sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon grated orange rind
1 teaspoon vanilla
34 teaspoon salt
1 cup flour
34 teaspoon each, baking pow-
der and soda
1 tablespoon water
1 cup rolled oats
3/,-, cup shredded coconut
s/a cup gum drops (small
Britons Go In For
Odd Societies
Are you interested in avicul-
ture? Do you like folk -dancing,
or do you .feel strongly about
smoke pollution? If so, there is
a society of fellow enthusiasts
waiting to welcome you to their
ranks For in Britain to -day
hundreds of such organizations
are ;flourishing.
Possibly you consider King
Charles I w,as wrongly executed
in 1649.. If so, -there are at least
two societies who would like
your support.
One is the Royal Martyr
Church Union, whose object is
"to rescue the memory of Char-
les I. from the tradition of a
damaging fiction which passes
for history." Another is the So-
ciety of King Charles the Mar-
tyr, who also agree with the
aim of the RM.C.U.
Due to the cancer scare, many
people have given up smoking.
They would be welcomed by
the National Society of Non-
Smokers. This society, which
publishes a quarterly magazine
called "Clean Air," safeguards
the privileges of non-smokers,
particularly in trains One of the
aims ofthe society is the prohi-
bition of smoking in restaurants
and cinemas.
Then there is the Smell So-
ciety who want to make every-
one smell -conscious, The So-
ciety's keen noses were once
called in by the authorities of
a seaside town to assist in lo-
cating an unpleasant smell which
was driving visitors away.
Are you fond of goats? If so,
there is a British Goat Society
which will tell you all you want
to know about these sensitive
creatures.
Another animal organization
with a wider scope is the So
pieces). Use scissors dipped
in water for cutting. Do not
use black or spiced drops.
Cream together the shorten-
ing and sugar. Add egg, orange
rind, vanilla, and salt. Sift to-
gether the flour, soda and bak-
ing powder. Add to first mix-
ture. Add all remaining ingred-
ients. Press into rolls 2 inches
in diameter; wrap in waxed
paper; chill overnight in refrig-
erator. Slice; place on greased
cookie sheet. Bake at 340° F. 8
minutes.
ciety for the Preservation
Fauna of the Commonwealth.
There are more than forty
societies devoted .to the caul®
of temperance, but the P.U.P.S.,
• or Pub Users' Protection So-
ciety, is definitely on the other
side of the fence.
Members of this organization
who havereason to suspect a
landlordof giving short meas-
ure are liable to whip out a spe-
cially devised ruler which will
calculate the bulk loss due to an
excessive quantity of froth on
their beerl
Many trades and professions
have their own special societies,
among them flour millers, dow-
sers, magistrates, coroners, for-
esters, cab drivers and oyster
merchants There are societies
for the protection of wild life
and flowers, for equal citizen-
ship, for the preservation of
place names, for the introduc-
tion of the decimal system, for
early closing, and the abolition
of slavery.
Before the formation of the
. London Fire Brigade, members
of the Society for the Protection
of Life against Fire manned the
fire appliances of the metropo-
lis To -day their active partici-
pation in the work of fire -fight-
ing is no longer necessary. •
But the funds of this same
organization are now deyoted
to the provisionof rewards for
acts of bravery in fire -fighting
and grants for the dependents
of ..firemen and others killed
while trying to save life in fires.
Beekeepers, numismatists
(coin expert s), toxophilites
(archers), ornithologists (bird
experts), bankers and railway
guards have their own profes-
sional societies. The Society of
London Moonrakers preserves a
link with old-time lawlessness,
but its members whose presi-
dent is the Duke of Somerset,
are strictly law-abiding these
days.
This Society, all Wiltshiremen,
takes its naive from a gang of
Wiltshire smugglers who were
once surprised by excisemen as
they were dredging a pond with
rakes in the light of a full moon.
When challenged, they said
they were trying to get the "fine
big Cheese" they could- see re-
flectd in the water. After the
officers had departed, chuckling
at the stupdity of countrymen,
the "moonrakers" proceeded to
fish out their keg of illicit
brandy undisturbed!
WILL KEEP ON TRYING—At Stateville Prison, Joliet, III., Nathan
Leopold, 'who was denied executive clemency by Gov. Wil-
liam Stratton, tells newsmen that he will keep trying to win
his freedom until "my dying breath." Leopold is serving 85
years for the slaying of 14 -year-old Bobby Franks in 1942.
FOOLPROOF PHOTOGRAPHY—The energy of 1'
to provide home moviemakers with correctly
has a new, 8 -mm camera with a built-in etc
sets the lens opening for correct exposure. M
only job is to start the camera in motion. Sk
works. Light entering the photoelectric cell (b
current. The current flows through the meter
the iris gears. This opens or closes the iris a
light to reach the movie film. l'he exposure
ously, with no attention from the photograph
camera is running. When there is not enough
the viewfinder warns the rtotographer to sto
ght itself -solar or artificial—has been tapped
exposed film. The Bell & Howell Company
ctric eye that "reads" the light and automatically
an at left photographs a baseball ;game. His
etch at right shows how the exposure control
ottom of camera) sets up a flow of electris
coil, moving a gear mechanism that conlrok
perture to permit exactly the right amount of
control operates instantaneously and continu-
er, even though the light changes while the.
Dight to make good pictures, a beacon light in
p shooting.