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TV CAMEOS: Peter Falk
In Defense of His Faltering Series
By ID MISUREll
AMONG the varied things
talented Peter Falk la known
for are such characteristics as
talking out of the side of his
month, a knowledgeable em
ployment of slang in hla speech,
cockiness, during and a spirit of frank
ness interviews. Above
all, however, he is realistic
about the trade at which he
labors.
At the moment he is toiling
away as Danny O’Brien, an off
heat lawyer, in CBS-TV’s
Triab of O’Brien , and all his
trials are not concerned with
the problems he encounters on
camera. Off camera, his show
is running into deep ratings
trouble. A recent Nielsen list
ing placed O’Brien 97th in the
102 shows that were rated. In
consequence, network program
mers shifted the time slot from
8:30 to 9:30 Saturdays to 10
to 11 pun. Fridays in the hope
of picking up more viewers.
• • •
THE) move, the star of the
series figures, has Its merits,
"On a Saturday night,” he said,
"you get an older crowd—the
Lawrence Welk type of view
er—at home. The people from
about 18 to 00 are the ones
who are going to enjoy our
show most, and Saturday night
takes a lot of them out on the
town.”
On the negative side of the
time move is the fact that
O’Brien is now slotted against
the highly popular The Man
From UJf.CX.B. on NBC. The
latter series placed 18th on the
Nielsen listing that had Falk's
program in the 97th spot.
• • •
“IT WON’T be a pienft,” said
Falk, when the point was
brought up. But he still felt
that they will have a better
chance on Friday. “Our show
hasn’t really gone to bat yet.
There’s got to be a way that
a show appealing to four to
eight million people can stay on
the air. There is an audience,
and if we find it we’ll be
around for a long time.”
Although Falk is no new
comer to TV, O’Brien is the
first series in which he has
played a running role. After
winning an Emmy in 1962 for
his portrayal of a gentle truck
driver in The Price of Toma
toes on The Dick Powell Show
and two nominations for Oscars
for his work in movies, he was
besieged with offers to star in
some 50 different series. But he
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Lyle Wilson Opinion
Mayor Lindsay
Blew His Chance
By LYLE WILSON
United Press International
Mayor John V. Lindsay of
New York blew his chance to
stand ten feet tall In the
Republican party as the pub
lic’s defender against the
savage brutality of an illegal
transit strike.
Lindsay blew it big. Mike
Quill and his tough pals pushed
the mayor around like a bully
and his gang pushes around the
new kid on the block. Mike and
his lads scorned the mayor as
"pipsqueak.” Mike’s word.
They sneered at him.
When the city’s ordeal was
ended and Lindsay’s public
image had been cruelly
smeared, chief union negotiator
Douglas MacMahon summed up
the union’s contempt for the
charming young man in City
Hall. Said MacMahon: “I think
he got some good on-the-job
training.”
Lindsay had almost every
thing going for him in the
transit strike and still he blew
it. The public was for the
mayor or for anyone with the
guts to stand up to Mike Quill.
The law was on Lindsay’s side
because the strike was Illegal.
Not even Quill denied that.
Disgusts Labor 1
Quill’s outrageous perfor- |
mance disgusted some of his
own colleagues in the labor
union business. AFL-CIO Pres
ident George Meany gave Quill
the back of his hand. Tough
Mike defied ’em all, including
President Johnson. The Pres
ident sat this one out for lack [
of authority to deal with the
union, although LBJ had i
equally as much authority in' |
that area as ever he had to
1 deal with steel prices.
So Lindsay really had every
thing except the Johnson
administration going for him. I
But the mayor did not find
within himself the strength and
fortitude to take on Quill. The
mayor seemed to have no
stomach for the political
equivalent of a contact sport.
John Lindsay’s career as the
charming Moses who would
lead the lost Republicans to the
Promised Land seems not to
have survived the first fort
night of his term as mayor.
The labor, liberal and left-wing
pundits who were booming
Lindsay lor a Republican
presidential nomination are
strangely Linlsay’s silent.
After losing brush
Wednesday, Jan. 19, 1966 Griffin Daily News
! i
III! \i&
A
I
■
k : k ;
As flamboyant lawyer Danny O'Brien, Peter Falk talks to
a court attendant in this scene shot outside a jury room.
turned them down until O’Brien
came along.
"I took O’Brien," he ex
plained, “mainly because the
central character has so much
color, so much theatricality. The
heroes of most of the shows on
TV are so much alike that it’s
difficult to tell them apart.
O’Brien in his own way is an
impossible man. He’s a little
crazy, but he’s bright and I
think he’s good. Just because
a guy is impossible to live with
doesn’t mean he isn’t a good
lawyer and a good guy. He is
both tough and soft He’s er
ratic, moody, messy and un
shaven. In short, he’s colorful.”
Surprisingly, for the position
he’s achieved in the theatrical
world, Falk has only been act
ing professionally for about ten
years. Bom in New York City
on Sept 16, 1927, he moved
with his family to Ossining,
New York, as a youngster. At
Ossining High School he was
an A student and a three-letter
athlete for track, baseball and
basketball. After attending
Hamilton College for a while,
he joined the Merchant Marine.
After a number of voyages, he
1 with tough Mike Quill, the
Lindsay - for - President enthu
siasts may be having second
thoughts. Second thoughts such
as; Would John Lindsay be the
best equipped American to go
up against Red China's Mao
Tse-Tung in a contest o f will
and wits for world dominion: or
against some Kremlin bully
boy?
Understandable Doubt
C 0 n s e rvatlve Republicans
may be forgiven a disposition
to doubt that Lindsay is the
man to send against Red Mao.
Conservative doubts about
Lindsay as a Republican party
leader were seeded by uneasy
suspicion that Lindsay was less
a Republican than he was a
free wheeling, left of center :
advocate of policies
associated with the triumphant
Democrats from FDR’s New
Deal to tBJ’s Great Society. 1
Lindsay demonstrated that
this kind of unhitched, free
wheeling is a good way to get
elected. But he also demon
strated that important Republi
can party principles must be
abandoned if an election Is to
be won in such a constituency
as New York City. Lindsay
chose to slip his Republican
moorings for a lead rope to
New York’s Liberal party. By
that strategy he obtained
election to be m ayor of New
York City.
Nothing has happened since
to explaln t0 most Republicans
and t0 aI1 Conservatives how it
is posslblft f0r 8 P° litical
candidate anywhere to cam
paign for pubI!c office on a
com bination of Liberal and
Republican Policies. They do j
not mlx ’ !
M5et Smart /
r. 1 V GALS...
) shop the
«
returned to New York and at
tended the New School for So
cial Research where he earned
a B.A. in political science. Next,
he went to Syracuse University
where he won a M.A. in public
administration.
• * •
THIS led to a Job with the
Connecticut Budget Bureau in
Hartford. In his spare time, he
worked with a little theater
group. In 1955, he met noted
actress Eve Le GaJlienne with
whom he began to study. In
time he began appearing in
such off-Broadway productions
as The Iceman Cometh and St,
Joan, and various video shows.
His portrayal of gangster
Abe Reles in Murder, Inc.
brought him fame and an Os
car nomination in 1961; in the
following year he won his sec
ond nomination for a Runyon
esque hoodlum role in Pocket
ful of Miracles.
Thinking back over his acting
career and his aborted busi
ness career, Falk quipped.
“That’s not even the same
horse race. I was a displaced
person in the Connecticut Bud
Bureau.”
Father Objects
To Sex Class
For Children
CHRISNEY, Ind. (UPI) —A
46-year-old father of three,
conceding he may be "old
fashioned,” vowed today he
would go to jail rather than
send his 14-year-old daughter to
a high school where sex was
discussed in coeducational clas
ses.
Eugene Masterson, a tree
nursery owner, said the girl left
school two weeks ago after she
was “embarrassed” by a
biology class discussion. His 17
year-old son quit previously
following a class covering birth
and contraception and another
daughter, 1C, left after seeing
film showing the birth of a
buffalo, he said.
North Spencer School Super
intendent Thomas Brumett has
signed an affidavit charging
Masterson with refusing to send
a child under the age of 16 to
school as rquired by state law,
Although the affidavit has not
h een served. It was believed
Masterson would have to
answer the charge fn Spencer
Circuit Court Saturday,
"I guess I’m old fashioned,”
Masterson said. “I have strong
convictions about such things,
but I’ll go to prison If
something is not worked out.”
Two other Masterson child
ren, Don, 17, and Linda, 16,
have quit school, he said,
because they, too, were “em
barrassed” by sex talks in
mixed classes.
Betty Lou, 14, returned from
school two weeks ago and
asked not to be forced to go
back, the father said. He said
told him she was “embar
rassed” by a sex education
discussion during a coeduca
tlonal blolo «y class -