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#16 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Jul 16, 2006
Location: LA
Posts: 204
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You can now watch ten My Living Dolls on Hulu for free share this with everyone you can watch the shows and help me find and restore Doll.
http://www.hulu.com/my-living-doll Every view get's me closer to finding the show. |
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#17 | |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Sep 24, 2011
Posts: 293
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Quote:
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Last edited by Leslie Eckhardt; 03-31-2013 at 07:05 PM. |
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#18 |
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Member
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Jul 16, 2006
Location: LA
Posts: 204
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Thank you so much for the kind words and your support, Finding and restoring My Living Doll is a task I take to heart.
When you see what a wonderful job Julie Newmar is a party to in it, frankly it would be tragic not to return this show back in full. Seven years and counting I will not stop until it is once again complete. Keep watching and getting all your friends and family to do the same, the more awareness we have the better chance to find the missing shows. I 100% know they exist out there now it's only a matter of time and getting that collector to contact us to get it back for all of us. So SHARE and watch it on Hulu and do pick up a copy of the volume one DVD from MPI. |
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#19 |
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Member
Occasional Poster
Join Date: May 13, 2014
Location: Montgomery, Alabama
Posts: 32
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To: My Favorite Martian
Re: My Living Doll, Present Status Of Remaining 15 Film Prints. Hi, I am a new member. I purchased the My Living Doll Volume 1 DVD set (MPI) when it was released in 2012. I have enjoyed the 11 episodes immensely and I think a wonderful job was done on the prints that were on the DVD's considering how rare the show is. I was 2 when it aired so I missed it obviously but prior to 2012 had heard about it and read about it in TV reference books so I couldn't help but be curious. I was just wondering what the present status of the search for the remaining prints was and possibly when a second volume of the series might be forthcoming. I share the sentiments of the MLD fans. I can't wait to see the rest of the show, and I for one would most definitely buy it! And is it true that the original 35 mm. film prints were destroyed in the 1994 Northridge, CA earthquake according to Wikipedia (and not by Jack Chertok as has been the decades-old Hollywood story)? I personally never believed the latter. I mentioned this topic in a different forum (My Favorite Martian & My Living Doll) so please pardon the repetition. I figure both posts would get coverage. Thanks for listening. I look forward to a reply when it is possible for you. |
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Last edited by blacksheepone; 05-13-2014 at 04:05 AM. Reason: Repeat Of Thanks line. |
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#20 |
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Member
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 29, 2001
Location: Long Beach
Posts: 1,692
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Regardless of what became of the elements, the facts remain that the remaining 15 episodes likely no longer exist. Anything is possible however and long lost movies and shows do turn up from time to time. Just not very often. There's no definitive explanation. Jack Webb, for example, got tired of paying storage on some of his shows which had no market value or interest, such as Noah's Ark and Pete Kelly's Blues, and had all of the prints and negatives destroyed. Knowing that for a fact, I don't understand why people don't want to believe that Chertok did the exact same thing.
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#21 |
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star trek fan
Eternal Member
![]() Forum Fanatic Join Date: Feb 25, 2002
Location: Conshohocken, pennsylvania
Posts: 14,490
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this has nothing to do with MLD, but just wanted to say-Jackie Gleason was going to destroy all the kinescopes of those "lost" HONEYMOONERS episodes at one time because they were taking up too much room.
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__________________
the Clampetts are in a fancy Beverly Hills jewelry store. Granny points to a tray of rubies. Granny: "How much fer one o' them red diamonds?" clerk: "Madam, those are rubies." Granny: "OK ask her kin we buy one offa her." clerk: " The ruby I am talking about is not a lady." Granny: "Lissen, how she got them diamonds is her business. I'm just sayin' ask her kin we buy one from her." |
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#22 |
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Member
Occasional Poster
Join Date: May 13, 2014
Location: Montgomery, Alabama
Posts: 32
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Reply to recent posts.
In regards to the loss of the original 35 mm. negatives, the story I heard was that when the series was cancelled, Jack Chertok the producer was so angry at then CBS- President James Aubrey who was supposedly responsible for the cancellation that he burned the negatives. This according to TV reference books I have read. It could have gone either way: Chertok destroyed them himself or they were destroyed in the earthquake. Take your pick. The point is, regardless of cause, they were destroyed and it is a terrible loss to those who care about this show, are genuinely interested in it today, and would love to see it on DVD other than the 11 episodes MPI Home Video released in 2011. Which I bought and didn't care how much I had to pay for it. I even wrote Julie Newmar herself an E-mail and told her how much I enjoyed it and gave her positive feedback on her part as Rhoda Miller, AF-709. Her reply was a prompt and very short, "Thank you." Other examples of non-caring parties destroying film history not realizing the value of these treasures to future generations (which I was at the time) who might want to actually see them: According to game show host Peter Marshall of the original Hollywood Squares in a TV Guide article (1980's), after NBC cancelled it they burned over 700 videotapes of it. Their excuse was they needed to make room in their storage warehouse. And here we had this priceless film footage of now-departed beloved people like Charley Weaver (AKA Cliff Arquette), Wally Cox, Paul Lynde, etc. Yes, there are a lot of us out here who actually CARE what happens to these people even though we don't know them and never will or meet them; and not all of us fans can be fortunate enough to live near or get to Hollywood either much less attend autograph shows, film festivals, or comic book/science-fiction/Star Trek or other such media conventions, either! DVD is as close as we can get to these series! They sure don't air most them in local syndication any more, unless they were really "popular" like The Andy Griffith Show (which airs here in Montgomery, Alabama for example, probably edited to the point where it's totally unrecognizable). You can keep the video streaming stuff, I'll take watching a classic TV show--long running or short-lived/ cancelled after 1 season alike--on DVD on a DVD player and a TV set than on a computer, I-Pod, cellphone or other such electronic gadget any day of the week. And that goes for the trash on TV today like all these ridiculous reality shows, too, while we're at it! Example # 2 (and then I'm done): NBC--again--reportedly burned 52 film negatives of the 50's game show You Bet Your Life hosted by the late Groucho Marx (another classic--"Say the secret woid and win 50 dollars" and this was way before my time, but I remember it from reruns on CBN Cable in the mid-80's) after the show ended for the same reason they got rid of Hollywood Squares. This according to the book Cult TV by John Javna, published in the 80's. Quite frankly, I am sick of these classic series being mistreated on cable/local TV syndication reruns. If they're shown at all! Content edited for the sake of adding more commercials. We have to suffer through enough of them already as it is! Split-screened end credits. End credits flashing by at the bottom of the screen. Time-compression. Ads for upcoming other shows, movies, or specials at the bottom of the screen after return from commercial breaks. Oh--and let's not forget the present curse of Political Correctness! This is why we can't see shows like Wild Wild West, Have Gun Will Travel, Daniel Boone, and most of the Westerns today not to mention the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoons without some special-interest group being "offended" about the content, protesting it, fussing about it, or requesting it be removed from the airwaves. That my friends is what the channel changer on the remote and the on/off switch on the TV set is for. Don't push what amounts to censorship on the viewers and the fans of these shows who fondly remember, watch, and care genuinely about them and the actors in them just to push some liberal agenda. To quote William Shatner-- "It's only a TV show! Get a life!" and Marvin The Martian: "Don't worry, folks. It's only a cartoon!" With all this junk we the viewers have to contend with, it's no wonder TV show fans want to spend on a small fortune on these DVD's, and I can't say that I really blame them having done it myself many many times. I have the WB Looney Tunes Golden Collection DVD sets (6 volumes) which have a disclaimer at the beginning of the discs about the shorts being a "product of their time" and reflecting "the prejudices of their era" which do not reflect today, also "not showing them in their original form would be the same as saying those prejudices never existed" (paraphrasing here). Every time I see those I have to keep from laughing. And this is over a cartoon that's 50 plus years old? Really? Don't you liberals (referring to Hollywood powers-that-be) have anything better to do? There is an old-fashioned word for this sort of thing and you have forgotten it: Censorship! Such disclaimers disgust me, I just skip them (and Whoopi Goldberg's introductions on Volumes 1-3) and go straight to the cartoons. The disclaimers are a waste of DVD space and our time. The fans do not care about this nonsense. We want to watch the show, enjoy it, and have fun! That's it and that's all! (with apologies to Ross Martin from Mr.Lucky, another short-lived 50's classic that was cancelled by CBS because of the "gambling" theme. Phooey!) I have a DVD collection of both classic and short-lived favorite TV series--including TV Westerns, World War II shows, science-fiction, mystery-detective dramas, super-hero shows, fantasy series, action-adventure series, sitcoms (60's & 70's), cartoons, and the Three Stooges shorts/cartoons. I am personally here to tell you, I would rather watch that collection than suffer through all the garbage that is currently airing on network and cable TV (mostly). I just wonder how many other shows like My Living Doll from the 50's and 60's also no longer exist as far as the original film negatives go. It's a miracle they actually survive to get on DVD at all. Thank goodness for DVD, and stations like ME-TV, Antenna TV, and INSP that DO air these classic shows in some kind of decent good condition. Thanks for listening. I would interested to see what the gentleman from Jack Chertok Television who was searching for the surviving MLD film prints has to say about the present status of the last 15 episodes. If he is still participating in this forum, that is. "My Favorite Martian"--are you out there?
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Last edited by blacksheepone; 06-02-2014 at 11:59 AM. Reason: Wanted to add extra sentences |
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