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Showing posts with label Alvy Trogle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alvy Trogle. Show all posts

33-08-05 Vic, the Housework Dodger

STARRING: ART VAN HARVEY, BERNARDINE FLYNN AND  BILL IDELSON
Sade has plans to varnish the living room floor and needs all of the furniture moved out of the house.  Vic is pre-occupied...

SCRIPT (part 1) (part 2)
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Honestly, not much going on in this one.  The episode does provide a bit of a window into Consolidated Kitchenware, but not much.

TRIVIA:

+ In 1933 (at least) Alvy Trogle worked with Vic in the bookkeeping department of Consolidated Kitchenware.

+ Conrad is a 'new man' who also works with Vic, probably in bookkeeping.

+ The Kitchenware Quarterly goes back to at least 1925.  We know this because Vic found an old copy.

42-09-07 Kansas Expulsion Assignment

STARRING: ART VAN HARVEY, BERNARDINE FLYNN AND BILL IDELSON
Vic's been given the opportunity to travel to Emporia, Kansas to expel the Exalted Big Dipper of the Taurus Rampant Chapter (E.W. Smith.)

The problems begin when Sade finds out that Vic must pay for 80% of the travel costs.  Vic is willing to absorb those costs, but is stopped in his tracks when he finds out that Smith is noted in his lodge library as being violent.

SEE THE SCRIPT (PART 1) (PART 2)
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Trivia:

+ Alvy Trogle's brother lives in Emporia.

+ Sade once again uses the archaic spondulix, a word used often by Charles Dickens, as she is somehow apt to do.  Not too long after in the script, writer Paul Rhymer has Van Harvey use, discomfiture, a 15th century word meaning embarrassment. Being curious, I looked up the word and it's association with Dickens.  On the first Google page, I found six different Dickens' stories that used the word; I didn't bother going further.

On the other hand, Sade uses the amusing word, squillionaires.

+ The biography of Smith: Before reforming, Sky Brother Smith was associated with the Mankel Brother's Big-top Freak and Novelty Show, where he acted as roustabout and general utility man.  Because of his quick temper - which he has never been able to control - Sky Brother Smith underwent a personal terrible encounter with his employer, the latter spending eight months in the hospital.  After a year's stay at a penal farm in Arkansas, where Sky Brother Smith faced a false mayhem charge, he joined the pugilistic arena, successfully knocking out such well-known figures such as Horrible Howard Higginson, Iron-man Lester Noovel, Stone-head Williams the Eskimo welter-weight, and Fried-egg Chalker, now dead.  Sky Brother Smith's fierce and sudden temper brought him further trouble when he attacked, single-handed, six Detroit truck drivers and managed to injure them all so severely they were...

33-01-02 New Year's Day - What to Do?

STARRING: ART VAN HARVEY, BERNARDINE FLYNN AND BILL IDELSON
  • Early afternoon on New Year's Day:  the family sits quietly. Rush complains that there's nothing to do. He wants to go over to Squirt's house.
  • Sade's already told him twice he can't because Squirt's mother has company coming in from Rockford. He suggests he could take his sled over to Roosevelt Hill.  She says nobody'll be there, and she'd like him to stay home: "You shouldn't be thinkin' of somethin' to do all The time.  New Year's Day is when families should stay home an' be nice to each other."
  • Vic comments on a news story: "Milton Cagey froze only one toe. Thinks maybe he had a weakness in that toe. Sade recalls Pete Spokes had a weakness in his head and everytime he ate anything fried he went crazy.
  • Rush spots Mr. Trogle walking by. Sade comments it's good to know he's all right – almost had pneumonia recently.
  • Rush continues to insist there's nothing to do. Sade cautions him to be grateful.  She suggests he read a book and offers to make fudge later. He'd rather go outside.  She offers to go out with him in the backyard to make snowballs. 
  • Vic suggests they go to the movies; Sade says not on New Year's Day. She suggests visiting someone. Vic stretches out for a nap. She wants to talk – he promises he won't fall asleep. Rush wants to go visit Fat Henry. Sade doesn't want to be left alone, which she'll be if Vic falls asleep.
  • Phone call from Mike "Cheat" Williams: The big boss is in town to address the personnel at Plant #14. Vic has to be there.  Vic: "He's gonna start in about twenty minutes. I got to hump."
  • Sade doesn't think she can get ready in twenty minutes. Vic says she's not expected to be there.
  • Rush tells Sade Gus Plink just passed by and signaled "Happy New Year" like a deaf ‘n' dumb fella.  Rush: "I expect he's goin' down to the depot an' watch the Hummer come in." 
  • Sade is willing to do whatever Rush wants to do for enjoyment. Rush wants to go see the Hummer come in.  Sade goes for her coat. Rush sees Mis' Marshall go by. Sade tries to attract her attention through the window but Mis' Marshall's hurrying.  
  • The phone rings. Earl Keefer invites Rush over for a game of indoor horseshoes.  Rush pleads for her permission. Sade hesitates, but gives in. Rush's excited because Earl's Uncle Joe the ventriloquist will be there. Sade insists he put on a clean shirt. Rush mentions Pig Jeffers will be there and Rush might be able to collect the eight cents owed to him. Sade thinks about visiting Mis' Fisher, then asks Rush if any of the kids' mothers will be at Keefer's.Rush: "No, all The ladies went for an auto ride. Nobody home but The kids and Uncle Joe."
  • Rush and Vic leave and see Sade in the window. They both decide to return home to keep her company on New Year's Day, making a detour to the drug-store to buy her some chocolate ice cream. - compiled by Barbara Schwarz, edited by Jimbo Mason
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In the later episodes, Sade is always occupied with something or someone so why would she feel left out?  Sade is not a needy person at all in the later episodes.

Vic wanting to go to the movies?  This is not the Vic of later programs.

It appears as if the "indoor horseshoes" idea was first formulated by Rush's friend, Earl Keefer rather than Ike Kneesuffer.

42-08-09 Thimble Club Plans Visits

STARRING: BERNARDINE FLYNN AND BILL IDELSON

Since Vic is away, the Thimble Club has arranged surprise visits by members and their husbands to Sade's house so that she won't get lonely; this breaks up Rush and Sade going to the Bijou to see a Gloria Golden - Four-Fisted Frank Fuddleman picture.
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Not the funniest episode in the series but with almost flawless sound. This episode might sound better than any to be found, especially after I did some minor work on it.

Trivia:

+ The movie at the Bijou is I Place My Heart in Your Hands, Part-time Freight Agent Lewis.

+ We find out in this episode that Mis' Cheevers, Mis' Trogle and Mis' Feeby are all members of the Thimble Club.

+ Rush states that Smelly Clark's Uncle Strap has more coincidence happen to him than anyone on the face of the earth.

+ Schedule of people who are coming by to visit Sade:
  • 7:30 - 8:00 - Mis' Cheevers and her husband, who works at the People Bank.
  • 8:15 - 9:00 - Mis' Trogle and her husband, Alvy.
  • 9:15 - 10:00 - Mis' Feeby and her husband; they live on the 800 block of West Elm
Download the complete commercial-free, sound-improved episode!

41-02-24 Uncle Fletcher To Meet 1 AM Train

STARRING: ART VAN HARVEY, BERNADINE FLYNN, BILL IDELSON AND CLARENCE HARTZELL
The Gooks are about to retire for the evening when lo and behold, Uncle Fletcher stops by. It seems the kind-hearted Uncle of Sade has taken it upon himself to meet Mis' Trogle's one o'clock AM train so her husband Alvy can get some much-needed rest as he has to get up early for work.

That's Uncle Fletcher - the little kindnesses he does for people... he is extremely thoughtful.

In order to kill time until he must go and meet the train, he figures he would hang out with the Gooks. But the burden of staying up late and listening to Fletcher's stories and viewing his tiresome mementos is too much for Vic and Sade. They retire to bed shortly after his arrival.

Rush, on the other hand, is game to Uncle Fletcher's exciting and hilarious tales of a man's youth that has long faded. Well, for about 5 minutes anyway...
MIS' CROWE SAYS:
Another classic Uncle Fletcher episode. This time, he shows up at almost 11 o'clock at night hoping to kill time at the Gooks’ until a 1 A.M. train comes in. (Side note: is anyone else besides me surprised at how late the Gooks stay up? Often their card games with the Stembottoms don’t even start until 8:30 or 9, which is when I usually go to bed. They’re much more exciting than me.) Sade is aghast and Vic is amused at the appalling presumption on Fletcher’s part but nobody can be mad at him because they know that’s just the peculiar way he is.

Fletcher comes bearing antique Christmas cards from his youth, which he assumes, correctly, that Rush will enjoy looking at. In true Uncle Fletcher fashion, he doesn’t have any idea who most of the people named in the Christmas cards are. Particularly relevant to those interested in the more mysterious aspects of Uncle Fletcher’s mythology is a card where U.Q. Tuttle (a name Fletcher claims he doesn’t recognize) fondly remembers “jolly times” with Fletcher in Boone, Iowa. In the face of this eyewitness testament to his having been in Boone, Fletcher doubles down on his denial that he’s ever visited the city. His noisy objections to suggestions that he’s been in Boone always make me wonder if he’s protesting too much. What happened in Boone so many years ago? Fletcher, just what are you hiding?

I like how Uncle Fletcher continues holding forth all by himself after Vic and Sade have both gone to bed and Rush has passed out on the davenport. He loves an audience, but he doesn’t really need one.

SEE THE SCRIPT (transcription by Lydia Crowe)
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Fletcher's kindness to one can be a burden to someone else, as demonstrated by this episode.

This is the second surviving audio episode where Fletcher actually appears and though he is the center of attention after his arrival, it's his lack of reaction to the others (particularly Sade and Vic, respectively, as they wander up to bed) that's the real winning piece of comedy here.

Trivia:

+ The show begins with Vic reading from Volume 7 in his lodge library.

+ Fletcher virtually ignores Sade and Vic when they go to bed. Both instances are good moments...(EDITED): {{{HEAR}}}

People mentioned in the Christmas cards brought over by Uncle Fletcher:
+ James S. Dread (Christmas card sent to Edna, Bess, Arhur and Bug Eye.)
+ U. Q. Tuttle - He claims he knew Fletcher back in Boone, Iowa, a place Fletcher denies he's ever been.

+ George Yeeply - Fletcher never knew him. He knew George Yipper and George Wheatland though.
+ Eleanor Sweeting - Fletcher said he never knew her.

+ Ed Niledorf and Charlie Slime - Fletcher knows Ed, "Like he knows his own brother" but he has no idea who Charlie Slime is. He and Ed worked together at Webber's grocery store on the city limits of Sterling, Illinois. Ed loved to eat popcorn late at night. He'd pop it and keep it in his bedroom. Ed would rather eat popcorn than apple pie.
 + August and Henrietta Fishelby - Fletcher has no idea who they are.
Download the complete commercial-free, sound-improved episode!

41-01-22 A Very Pleasant Noon Hour

STARRING: ART VAN HARVEY, BERNARDINE FLYNN AND BILL IDELSON

It's noon and the Gooks have finished eating. It's time to relax and talk and try not to nod off...
MIS' CROWE SAYS:
Just a pleasant lunchtime (or, as they’d say, dinnertime) conversation.
This is a fun episode even though nothing happens in it. I think this one is especially interesting from a historical standpoint — so many “Vic and Sade” episodes are timeless, but this one really tell s us a lot about how people lived in their time. The whole family comes home, eats lunch together, and even has some time to laze around in the living room and chat, a ritual very similar to the Spanish siesta — just a little shorter and with no nap (as much as Vic wants one). This tells us that Vic’s and Rush’s lunch hours were probably a lot longer than those in modern times (most of us get a thirty-minute lunch, and elementary and high school students are lucky to get twenty). Vic and Rush walk home from the office and school, showing us that people’s commutes were much more reasonable back then. Vic expresses shock that Rush, a high school student, “cannot differentiate between Greek junk and Latin junk,” which tells us that the expectations of public school were changing from Vic’s generation to Rush’s — Latin and Greek were probably foundations of a good education in Vic’s day, but not so much now. One detail that surprises me a little is Sade’s mention of a “fancy grocery store” that she will pass by on her errands today. I think of the specialty grocery store as a product of our time, interested as we are today in trying exotic foods and buying organic, natural products. I wonder what kinds of items Sade’s “fancy grocery store” carried, and how similar or different it would be to a Trader Joe’s or a Whole Foods. 
I’m starting to notice that Paul Rhymer uses the “eccentric smart person” trope quite a bit:
RUSH: …He’s funny about stuff. Wears garters but no socks.  Wears a necktie but no collar. Wears cuffs but no sleeves. Wears bicycle pants clips and don’t own a bicycle. Smokes away on a pipe that’s got no tobacco inside.
VIC: Is he a halfwit?
RUSH: Yeah.
SADE: He is not! Smart as a whip. Took all the honors when he graduated from high school. What do they call the fella that does that?
VIC: Valedictorian.
SADE: Sure. No, when it comes to brains, there’s no flies on Frederick Henderson. 
Recall the episode “Mr. Sludge Calls his Mother,” in which we find out that Mr. Sludge — an eccentric if there ever was one — was quite the intellectual in his younger days. I wonder if Rhymer encountered a lot of people who excelled academically but floundered when it came time to enter the “real world.” This is, of course, not uncommon. Maybe Sludge and Henderson ought to have been sheltered in a university somewhere.
 SEE THE SCRIPT (transcribed by Lydia Crowe)
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Uncle Fletcher-type stories, without Uncle Fletcher!

Trivia:

+ Sade says Mr. Erickson was there the day before and this morning also; he is trying to make excuses on how to avoid wallpapering upstairs, including the ruse of informing Sade that there is a shortage of wallpaper and the South Americans are hanging on to their supply.

+ It is inferred that Mis' Heddles lives on West Monroe Street. Mis' Trogle also lives on that street. Sade plans to visit them both.

That street is almost infamous because that is the street where Smelly was accidently hit in the head with a falling hammer.

+ Mis' Heddles is married to Charlie and Mis' Trogel is married to Alvy. Vic knows both of the husbands.

+ It is also inferred that Mis' Trogle either has a daughter or daughter-in-law named Margaret who recently had a child and has some new photos to show Sade.

+ Sade says "slippery as an owl" rather than perhaps the better simile, "slippery as an eel." She then says Mis' Donahue says it too: {{{HEAR}}}

+ Market Street is the home of  a "fancy grocery place", but it went unnamed.

+ Rush seems to like very large black olives.

+ Rush (Billy Idelson) sounds like he may have a cold or some other sinus sickness in this episode.

+ The show keeps incorporating Sade's eccentric Uncle Fletcher, even though he doesn't appear. We know that he actually will appear within 4 surviving audio episodes. Brace yourself!

+ Fletcher may or may not be coming over for dinner at the Gooks. He's hard to pin down.

+ Frederick Henderson is mentioned. He's described as very odd. Wears bicycle pants clips but doesn't own a bicycle, puffs on a pipe without any tobacco, wears garters but no socks, wears a necktie but no collar and wears cuffs but no sleeves. Vic and Rush assume he is a "halfwit", but Sade says he was Valedictorian of his graduating class!

+ People who live in the Henderson household: Al, George, Cora and her man, Henry and his college chum and the college chum's cousin, Edna and her man and baby, Charlie and his wife, the old folks and now Frederick, his wife and two kids.

+ Vic infers that Volume 7 of his lodge "libary" contains R.J. Konk's wisdom about the noon hour, then recites at least part of it from memory, in Latin.  It includes the "Latin" phrase, easy money: {{{HEAR}}}

Download the complete commercial-free, sound-improved episode!