The Honeymooners Lost Episodes S01E09 The Ring Salesman











>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=Yfoffeifwrw

   / @midulcevida4558   • #MiDulceVida • #AyDiosMio • #VivetuMejorVida • #VeganBeast #MiDulceVida #TheVonVegans #EverydayisSaturday • #DreamitBelieveitAchieveit •    / @midulcevida4558   • Although he tried very hard to become a movie star as well as create and • produce television entertainment that was a lot flashier, like it or • not, The Honeymooners ended up being the single creation for which Jackie Gleason • was best known. One irony surrounding its recognition over the decades • was that, as a series in its own right, it was only on for a single • season, 1955-1956, with 39 episodes running 26 minutes each. They were • performed in front of a live audience but shot on film to be broadcast • later. All of the other Honeymooners shows -- the so-called Lost Episodes -- were comedy sketches of varying lengths, performed and broadcast live as part of Gleason's • larger variety program The Jackie Gleason Show; they were preserved on • kinescopes, films shot of the show off of a studio monitor. The results • were crude, but effective, rather like the sketch comedy itself. The • sketch performances of The Honeymooners • from 1952-1955 may have established the setting, the premise, and the • characters, but those 39 filmed episodes showed what could be done with • them under ideal circumstances. • Set in a working-class section of Brooklyn (actually resembling • Bushwick, but referred to as Bensonhurst because the latter sounded more • Brooklyn-like to people from outside New York), the series told of • the daily life of bus driver Ralph Kramden (Jackie Gleason) and his wife Alice (Audrey Meadows) of 328 Chauncey Street, a rundown, walk-up apartment building, and their neighbors and best friends, Ed Norton (Art Carney), a sewer-worker, and his wife Trixie (Joyce Randolph). • Most of the action took place in the Kramdens' dimly lit, dingy • apartment, with its table, chairs, dresser, and ice-box; we occasionally • see the Nortons' better-decorated apartment upstairs, and every so • often a scene might be set at Ralph's bus company or on a street • adjacent to where Norton was working in a man-hole or the local pool • room. Rarely there would be a scene in a fancy restaurant or at the home • of one of Ralph's bosses or a wealthy acquaintance. Most of the scripts • dealt with one of Ralph's million-dollar ideas and how they seemed to • inevitably end in disaster for Ralph and Norton, usually with Alice • (often joined by Trixie) watching sardonically from the sidelines. This • often occurred after an argument in which Ralph has gesticulated with • his fist in Alice's direction and muttered, Bang! -- Zoom! or Do you • want to go to the Moon? Some of the other scripts dealt with Ralph and • Norton's lodge, the Loyal Order of Racoons, or Ralph's stormy • relationship with Alice's mother.

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