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The Uncle Al Show was a children's television program originating in Cincinnati. The show was hosted by Cleveland native Al Lewis (1924–2009) (not to be confused with the actor who played Grandpa on The Munsters ), and later was co-hosted by his wife, Wanda.
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, L > R: Ruth Buzzi Joanne Worley, John Wayne, Tiny Tim, Alan Sues, Dick Martin, Dennis Roy Allen, and Henry Gibson. Alan Grigsby Sues (March 7, 1926 – December 1, 2011) was an American actor and comedian widely known for his roles on the 1968–1973 television series Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In.
Smith was with The Uncle Al Show for six years. Smith achieved his greatest fame by the late 1960s, when he went to then-new TV station WXIX in Cincinnati to host an afternoon puppet/cartoon show which came to be called Larry Smith's Cartoon Club, which he hosted throughout the 1970s. Smith and his puppets were the first stars of WXIX when they ...
The Weird Al Show is an American television show hosted by "Weird Al" Yankovic. Produced in association with Dick Clark Productions and taped at NBC Studios, it aired on Saturday mornings on CBS. The show ran for one season, from September 13 to December 6, 1997, with reruns airing until September 26, 1998.
Lewis' own program, The Uncle Al Show, ended its run in Cincinnati a year after Captain Kangaroo left CBS. Keeshan and Bunny Rabbit promote an auto seat belt campaign, 1970. CBS aired the program on weekday mornings, initially telecast live in the Eastern and Central time zones at 8:00 am (ET)/7:00 am (CT) for its first four years (it would ...
Uncle Al may refer to Albert Moss, a Miami disk jockey known as DJ Uncle Al; Albert Lewis, host of the children's television program The Uncle Al Show broadcast from Cincinnati. Aleister Crowley; Al Jourgensen, frontman of Ministry (band), an American industrial metal band, and co-owner of 13th Planet Records
Carl William Demarest (February 27, 1892 – December 28, 1983) was an American actor, known especially for his supporting roles in screwball comedies by Preston Sturges and as Uncle Charley in the sitcom My Three Sons from 1965-72. [1]
Raymond Gilmore Allen (March 5, 1929 – August 10, 2020) [1] was an American television actor. He was known for his appearances on television during the 1970s. He had recurring roles as Ned the Wino on Good Times, as Aunt Esther's husband, Woodrow "Woody" Anderson on the NBC sitcom Sanford and Son, and as mechanic Merle the Earl on Starsky and Hutch. [2]