Ben Model presents "Kovacsland Online!": the internet's first Ernie Kovacs fansite (est. 1996)

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In January 1957, NBC got Jerry Lewis to host one of its Saturday Color spectaculars or "specs" (as they were called then). Lewis had recently split up with Dean Martin, and this would be his first show without him. The problem for NBC was, the spec was 90 minutes, and Lewis only wanted to do 60, and they couldn't find anyone who wanted to follow 60 minutes of Jerry Lewis. Until they asked Ernie, who had been hosting "Tonight!" on Monday and Tuesday nights (Steve Allen hosted Weds-Fri) since October.

The 30-minute show Ernie did was devoid of any dialogue, and featured the silent character Ernie had been developing, Eugene, as well as the Nairobi Trio. The show's centerpiece was an extended series of surreal sight gags following Eugene, a mute, meek character as a fish out of water in a stuffy men's club. The sketch included the famous gag involving the gravity-defying olives and thermos of coffee.

While everyone's expectations and focus had been on Jerry Lewis, it was Ernie Kovacs and his understated visual humor which used the medium of television that everyone was talking about the next day. "The Silent Show" was what really put Ernie Kovacs on the map. The show won Ernie the Sylvania Award that year (a precursor of the Emmys), as well as movie offer from Columbia, and a feature story in Life Magazine with his photo on the cover (pictured below).

What is most interesting about the article is its discussion of the future of comedy on television. Both in an interview with Ernie, and in a sidebar article interviewing Jackie Gleason, Sid Caesar, George Gobel and others, the comics all felt that the style of comedy prevalent on TV at the time, with its roots in nightclubs, vaudeville and the borscht belt, was on its way out. It was difficult to create that kind of material every week, and the comics all felt tapped out, and also felt audiences were growing tired of it as well. The articles say that the type of comedy Ernie employed, which was meant specifically for television, was possibly to be the next wave.

The "Silent Show" - Kovacs' only TV program in color - and the Life cover article became a turning point in his life and work. Ernie and Edie moved to Calfornia, and Ernie's TV work - aided by the advent of videotape and the luxury of pre-recording his shows - became more personal, technologically advanced, and visually driven.

In spite of this shared opinion of TV comedians, the next wave in comedy wound up being laugh-track-ridden filmed sit-coms, and Ernie's work was to continue to be an acquired taste.



Life Magazine has posted many of the photographs taken by Ralph Morse for the feature article in this issue, and some that weren't used as well, on their website.  Click here to take a look.



(The irony of course is the date of this issue is April 15th, and it was Ernie's attitude toward the IRS and his earnings that began to be his financial undoing in the years that followed.)





* * * Last updated  January 10, 2010 * * *