1990

Wiseguy

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Wiseguy aired on CBS for four seasons, from 1987 to 1990.

Ken Wahl stars as Vinnie Terranova, a federal government agent in the Organized Crime Bureau who went deep undercover to capture criminals.

In the beginning of the show, he has just completed a year-and-a-half prison stint. It’s a set-up to give Vinnie a viable criminal background cover. To the outside world, he’s a wiseguy, a term applied to organized crime figures.

Jonathan Banks plays Frank McPike, Vinnie’s government handler who coordinates strategy with Vinnie. Banks appears in
Beverly Hills Cop as one of the henchman of Victor Maitlin, the nemesis of Eddie Murphy’s Axel Foley character.

Daniel Burroughs plays Jim Burroughs. Nickname: Lifeguard. Essentially, he is Vinnie’s communications link to McPike. His nickname is appropriate -- if Vinnie gets in danger, he calls Lifeguard with appropriate codes to send backup.

Wiseguy rarely contained self-contained episodes. Rather, it used story arcs comprised of multiple episodes.

The first story arc sees Vinnie become a trusted member of the crime family of mob boss Sonny Steelgrave, played by Ray Sharkey. Steelgrave electrocutes himself in front of Vinnie when he discovers Vinnie’s true identity.

The second story arc showcases Kevin Spacey as Mel Profitt, an international criminal with roots in arms dealing.

Other story arcs focus on white supremacy, the garment district in New York City, the record industry, a Japanese Yen counterfeiting conspiracy, mafia wars, a small town in the Pacific Northwest rooted in corruption, a Cuban-American crime lord, and the drug trade in the New York City school system.

ABC aired a reunion tv-movie in 1996. The canon is questionable.

In the fourth season of
Wiseguy, Vinnie is killed.

The 1996 tv-movie stars Wahl as Vinnie. So either the fourth season story line did not occur in official
Wiseguy canon or the events in the tv-movie occurred before his death.

Archie: The First Fifty Years

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

(This entry is an abridged version of an article featuring Archie. For the expanded article, click
here.)

He doesn’t have superpowers resulting from a yellow sun like Superman or a radioactive spider bite like Spiderman.

He’s not a quasi-vigilante hero avenging the death of loved ones like Batman or the Lone Ranger.

And he never saved the universe like Flash Gordon or Buck Rogers.

In fact, his extraordinary characteristics appear to be his uncanny ability to get in trouble and his immense inability to choose between two extremely attractive girls.

Who is this mere mortal?

Archie Andrews, of course. The All-American Teenager and Riverdale’s favorite son.

As the United States entered World War II in December of 1941, Archie debuted in
Pep #22 as a supporting feature. This initial Archie story also features Jughead and Betty.

MLJ Comics published
Pep, the arena for its contribution to the superhero genre -- The Shield. Three publishing colleagues formed MLJ. They named the company after their initials -- Maurice Coyne, Louis Silberkleit, and John Goldwater complemented each other with their experience as an accountant, publisher, and reporter/editor respectively.

Artist Bob Montana gave the Archie universe its center. He drew upon his own experiences growing up in Haverhill, Massachusetts.

Bob Montana drew. Vic Bloom wrote. Harry Shorten edited.

Truth be told, though, Montana gave the Archie stories their heart, soul, and ultimate appeal.

In the retrospective book
Archie: The First 50 Years, Charles Phillips credits Montana.

A rootless child who loved his high school years, Montana gave more than the statue of The Thinker, the hometown soda shop, and a number of his teenage pals to Riverdale. He gave the strip the emotional strength of his own nostalgia to create an idealized picture of teenage life that we all recognize but none of us quite lived.

Montana and the creative team behind Archie added new characters in the adventures of Riverdale’s red-headed Romeo. Waldo Weatherbee -- Riverdale High School’s beloved, bald, benign principal -- first appeared in Jackpot #5 (Spring 1942). The story contains the mainstay Archie elements of slapstick, Weatherbee’s rotund shape, and Archie’s penchant for getting in hot water with “the Bee.”

Jackpot #5 also introduces, albeit briefly, Reggie Mantle.

Pep #26 (April 1942) introduces rich girl Veronica Lodge and compares her to Egypt’s Cleopatra and Hollywood’s Hedy Lamarr. Although Pep #26 showcases Veronica’s first appearance, Archie #1 (Winter 1942) revisits the origin of Veronica in the story Prom Pranks.

Prom Pranks sets the foundation for a well-known Archie hallmark -- the Archie-Veronica-Betty love triangle.

Where familiar themes provide reliability, stability, and continuity, signs of the times reflect an ever-changing society. They continually challenge Archie writers to pace fads, norms, and popular culture.

In the 1950’s, Archie stories frequently paralleled benchmarks of the rock and roll decade -- hula hoops, sock hops, beatniks.

Celebrities, fictional and real, also enjoy depictions in Archie stories -- Elvis Presley, Fonzie, Tom Cruise.

Social conscience features prominently in one story from the 1970’s --
A Matter of Prejudice. The story sends a powerful message about the dangers of prejudging the views of others. When Veronica explains that some of Archie’s friends are not welcome at her party because they simply don’t fit in, Archie immediately thinks the reference points to Chuck Clayton, a black student at Riverdale High.

In fact, Veronica likes Chuck. She declares,
He’s welcome at my house any time he pleases to come.

Jughead, on the other hand, needs to change his slovenly ways for the party. Chuck and Archie tell him that Veronica is prejudiced...against slobs!

Expanding into other media was inevitable for the Archieverse. It occurred almost from the beginning. Archie and the gang found success on a radio program in the 1940’s.

In the late 1960’s and throughout the 1970’s, Archie characters found success in Saturday morning animation.

In 1978, two live-action music and comedy specials on ABC featured the characters. Dennis Bowen plays Archie.

Riverdale High’s 15-year reunion served as the basis for the 1990 NBC tv-movie
To Riverdale and Back. Archie returned to Riverdale, reunited with friends, and reignited passions for Betty and Veronica. This time, he’s in Riverdale to stay. But the choice between Veronica and Betty remains undecided.

Some things never change.

The best things never do.

(For an expanded article on Archie, click
here.)

Beverly Hills 90210

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

In the Summer of 1991, FOX showed us what high school students do during summer vacation.

They work.

They party.

They go to summer school.

Beverly Hills 90210 premiered in the Fall of 1990.

During its freshman season,
90210 added value to the youth-oriented programming on FOX. But the show about privileged kids in the country’s most famous zip code did not overwhelm the competition with its counter-programming content.

Enter the summer.

A time when networks traditionally burn off unsold pilots, episodes of unsold shows, and regular programming in reruns for a third broadcast.

But FOX is not a traditional network. And it certainly wasn’t a traditional network in its nascent days.

When FOX started in 1986, it was not airing a full slate of programming, so it legally, logically, and historically could not be called a “television network.”

In any case, FOX saw an opening in the summer schedule.

Airing new episodes of
90210 in the summer would be true counter-programming.

Original episodes against burned off pilots and reruns.

And perfectly logical.

High school students have lives from late June to early September.

90210 reflected that reality.

Summer relationships.

Summer jobs.

Summer vacation.

The six original episodes of
90210 in the Summer of 1991 helped launch the show into the stratosphere.

It helped stretch story lines across multiple episodes, contrary to the self-contained episodic story line format in the first season.

And it helped open up new story lines for the second season.

The programming exercise was successful and FOX repeated it in the Summer of 1992 with six new episodes.

By this time,
90210 was a Goliath.

It also spawned a spinoff in the Summer of 1992 --
Melrose Place.

The CW presently airs revived versions of both shows.

Elvis

by David Krell
david@davidkrell.com

Elvis.

More than thirty years have passed since he went to rock and roll heaven in 1977.

And just the mere mention of his name opens a lockbox of tremendous memories.

His movements.

His movies.

His portrayals.

Elvis Presley moved on stage like no other performer before him, swiveling his hips to the delight of teenage girls, the jealousy of their boyfriends, and the fright of their parents.

Elvis’ movies may have been formulaic.

Sing a few songs. Charm a few girls. Win the heart of the female lead.

But he surrounded himself with veteran actors who shouldered the load. In lesser hands, the movies would have been unwatchable instead of simply enjoyable.

Angela Lansbury in
Blue Hawaii.

Gary Merrill and James Gregory in
Clambake.

Gale Gordon and William Schallert in
Speedway.

Portrayals of Elvis on television also add to the King’s legacy by interpreting, explaining, and depicting certain aspects of his life.

Okay. So you may not remember some of them. But they deserve a second look, if for no other reason than a sense of completion in looking at Elvis’ career.

We’ve all seen the black and white footage of Elvis dancing and singing
Jailhouse Rock in the 1957 movie of the same name, a precursor to the dance videos that would appear during the early days of MTV twenty-five years later.

But did you see
Elvis and the Colonel, a 1993 tv-movie starring Rob Youngblood as Elvis and Beau Bridges as Colonel Tom Parker, the manager and mastermind behind a highly significant part of Elvis' career?

How about
Elvis and the Beauty Queen, a 1981 tv-movie starring Stephanie Zimbalist as the King's girlfriend, Linda Thompson, and Don Johnson as Elvis? Zimbalist and Johnson made terrific contributions to NBC's revival as a television network powerhouse in the 1980's. She starred in Remington Steele and he made pastels fashionable in Miami Vice.

In 1988
, Dale Midkiff portrayed Elvis in Elvis and Me, a four-hour miniseries told from wife Priscilla Presley's point of view. It was based on the book of the same name that Priscilla wrote with Sandra Harmon.

In 2005, Jonathan Rhys-Meyers played Elvis in another four-hour miniseries simply titled Elvis.

Michael St. Gerard filled the shoes of a young Elvis when he played the aspiring King of Rock and Roll on the cusp of breaking into the record business.
Elvis was an ABC television series that showed the rarely explored early years of Elvis Presley. The show had a brief run in 1990.

St. Gerard's portrayal was not limited to the small screen, however. He played Elvis in a non-speaking role in the 1988 Jerry Lee Lewis biopic
Great Balls of Fire.

But the one that started it all was a two-and-a-half tv-movie that aired on February 11, 1979, just two-and-a-half years after the King's death. Kurt Russell starred in
Elvis, a highly anticipated tv-movie. Produced by Dick Clark Productions, Elvis captured the imagination of fans still reeling from the King's death on August 16, 1977. John Carpenter directed Elvis. Coincidentally, Elvis' character in the movie Change of Habit was named John Carpenter.

Kurt Russell actually appeared in one of Elvis' movies. In
It Happened at the World's Fair, he kicks Elvis in the shins. But the connection between the two men do not end there. In the movie 3000 Miles to Graceland, Kurt Russell plays an Elvis impersonator.

Finally, the 1980's revival of
The Twilight Zone gave a twist on Elvis' life, legacy, and allure. In the episode The Once and Future King, an Elvis fanatic and impersonator named Gary has an agent named Sandra. She tells him that she met Elvis during one of his Las Vegas stints when she was 18. After avoiding an accident, Gary somehow travels back in time and meets Elvis in 1954 Memphis. The meeting happens right before Elvis is supposed to record That's All Right, Mama, also known as That's All Right, his initial record.

Elvis believes that Gary is really Jesse Aron Presley or a reincarnation of him. Jesse was Elvis' twin brother who died at birth. When Gary tells Elvis about
That's All Right, Mama and the massive success awaiting him, Elvis is simply not interested. He thinks the music that Gary plays is the devil's music. When argument between Gary and Elvis escalates to a violent level, Elvis dies in the fight.

There's only one way out for Gary. Become Elvis. Gary buries him and assumes his identity.

Confession time occurs at the end of the episode set some time during the early 1970's in Las Vegas. Elvis is talking to a groupie. He reveals that he tried to perform the songs and acting roles as closely as he could remember from the original Elvis.

The groupie is Sandra, Gary's agent in his previous life.

The meeting takes place just as she described earlier with Elvis talking for hours and showing signs of paranoia. Only this time, she met with Gary.

Or was it really Elvis?