Last of the Moe Haircuts (The Influence of The Three Stooges on Twentieth-Century Culture)
| Air Date/Released | Saturday, May 2, 1964 |
|---|---|
| Station/Studio | NBC / Danny Thomas Enterprises |
| Featuring | Joe Besser (Solo) |
Joey Barnes hosts a network, late-night New York talk show. Episodes revolve around his professional and personal life, with celebrities appearing as themselves. At home are Joey's beautiful wife Abby, and maid Hilda. Joe Besser costars as Mr. Jillson, the barely competent apartment building superintendent, a high-strung man with a heart of gold. Rounding out the main characters is Larry Corbett, Joey's best friend, head writer and manager.
Tony Bennett's illness leaves Joey without a guest for that night's show. The Dodgers are in town that afternoon playing the Mets, so Larry comes up with the idea to book some of the players... until the game goes into 27 innings! Filling in for Bennett, Don Drysdale sings "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," and leads his teammates in a Dodger-themed version of "High Hopes."
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