The Dean Martin Show

The Dean Martin Show

1965
The Dean Martin Show
The Dean Martin Show

The Dean Martin Show

8.1 | en | Comedy

The Dean Martin Show, also known as The Dean Martin Variety Show, is a TV variety-comedy series that ran from 1965 to 1974 for 264 episodes. It was broadcast by NBC and hosted by entertainer Dean Martin. The theme song to the series was his 1964 hit "Everybody Loves Somebody."

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Seasons & Episodes

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EP30  Episode #270
Apr. 05,1974
Episode #270

Show #270 Guests: Joe Namath, Don Meredith, Weeb Eubank, Paul 'Bear' Bryant, Dick Butkus, Jim Plunkett, David Janssen, Angie Dickinson, Charlie Callas, Slappy White

EP29  Episode #269
Mar. 29,1974
Episode #269

Guests: Hank Aaron, Lou Rawls, Eddie Matthews, Dizzy Dean, Jackie Kahane, Lynn Anderson, Jeannine Burnier

EP28  Episode #268
Mar. 22,1974
Episode #268

Guests: Steve Lawrence Richard Dawson Arte Johnson

EP27  Episode #267
Mar. 15,1974
Episode #267

Guests: Audrey Meadows, Steve Lawrence, Foster Brooks, Euell Gibbons, Henny Youngman

EP26  Episode #266
Mar. 08,1974
Episode #266

Guests: Bobby Riggs, Chuck Connors, Wayne Newton, Leo Durocher, Vincent Price, Alex Karras, Lynn Anderson, Rosemary Casals

EP25  Episode #265
Mar. 01,1974
Episode #265

Guests: Redd Foxx Demond Wilson Slappy White John Barbour Jim Bailey

EP24  Episode #264
Feb. 21,1974
Episode #264

Guests: Jack Benny James Stewart Pearl Bailey Wayne Newton Gary Burghoff Demond Wilson Zubin Mehta

EP23  Episode #263
Feb. 14,1974
Episode #263

Guests: Ralph Nader, Mort Sahl, James Brolin, Jack Klugman, Jane Withers, Steve Landesberg, Donna Fargo

EP22  Episode #262
Feb. 07,1974
Episode #262

Guests: Charlie Callas Carol Channing Kirk Douglas Lorne Greene Jack Klugman Cliff Robertson Telly Savalas

EP21  Episode #261
Jan. 31,1974
Episode #261

Show #261

EP20  Episode #260
Jan. 24,1974
Episode #260

Guests: Truman Capote Rocky Graziano Ted Knight Anna Moffo Donald O'Connor Johnny Russell Jean Simmons Joseph Wambaugh

EP19  Episode #259
Jan. 17,1974
Episode #259

Guests Leo Durocher Dizzy Dean Bobby Riggs Maury Wills Alex Karras Gene Kelly Chuck Connors

EP18  Episode #258
Jan. 10,1974
Episode #258

Guests: Donna Fargo Zsa Zsa Gabor Buddy Hackett Donald O'Connor Lonnie Shorr Mel Tillis

EP17  Episode #257
Jan. 03,1974
Episode #257

Show #257

EP16  Episode #256
Dec. 27,1973
Episode #256

Thursday December 27, 1973

EP15  Tony Randall & Jack Klugman (celebrity roast)
Dec. 21,1973
Tony Randall & Jack Klugman (celebrity roast)

Tony Randall & Jack Klugman (of TV's ""The Odd Couple"") are roasted by Dean Martin and guests. Scheduled guests: Leonard Barr, Gary Burghoff, Ruth Buzzi, Jack Carter, Mike Connors, Loretta Lynn, Soupy Sales, Jackie Vernon.Also:--Dean Martin sings ""Turn the World Around"" and ""As Times Goes By""--Doug Kershaw performs ""Louisiana Man"" and ""Sweet Jole Bion""

EP14  Episode #254
Dec. 13,1973
Episode #254

Show 254

EP13  Episode #253
Dec. 06,1973
Episode #253

Guests: Carroll O'Connor Barry Goldwater John V. Lindsay Robert Wood Redd Foxx Gene Kelly Mike Connors 'Mama' Cass Elliot Marty Allen

EP12  Episode #252
Nov. 29,1973
Episode #252

Show 252

EP11  Hubert Humphrey (celebrity roast)
Nov. 23,1973
Hubert Humphrey (celebrity roast)

Senator Hubert Humphrey is roasted by Dean Martin and others. Scheduled guests include Senator Lowell Weicker, Foster Brooks, Gene Kelly, Ted Knight, Audrey Meadows, Nipsey Russell and Mort Sahl.

EP10  Episode #250
Nov. 15,1973
Episode #250

Show #250

EP9  Wilt Chamberlain (celebrity roast)
Nov. 09,1973
Wilt Chamberlain (celebrity roast)

Wilt Chamberlain is roasted by Dean Martin and others. Also:--Dean Martin sings ""Young At Heart"" --Ferlin Husky and Dean Martin sing a medley (""Down by the Riverside,"" ""Rosie Cries A Lot,"" ""Houston"" and ""Ramblin' Rose"")

EP8  Episode #248
Nov. 01,1973
Episode #248

Guests: Johnny Carson Jack Benny Redd Foxx Hubert Humphrey Bette Davis Doc Severinsen Mike Connors Dionne Warwick Jack Klugman Tony Randall Wilt Chamberlain Kent McCord Martin Milner Howard Cosell

EP7  Episode #247
Oct. 25,1973
Episode #247

Show #247

EP6  Episode #246
Oct. 18,1973
Episode #246

Show 246

EP5  Episode #245
Oct. 11,1973
Episode #245

Show #245

EP4  Episode #244
Oct. 04,1973
Episode #244

Show #244

EP3  Episode #243
Sep. 27,1973
Episode #243

Guests: Ed McMahon Ernest Borgnine Dionne Warwick Charo Pat Buttram

EP2  Episode #242
Sep. 20,1973
Episode #242

Show 242

EP1  Episode #241
Sep. 13,1973
Episode #241

Guests: Ronald Reagan Jack Benny Jonathan Witners Kris Kristofferson Rita Coolidge

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8.1 | en | Comedy | More Info
Released: 1965-09-16 | Released Producted By: NBC , Claude Productions Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

The Dean Martin Show, also known as The Dean Martin Variety Show, is a TV variety-comedy series that ran from 1965 to 1974 for 264 episodes. It was broadcast by NBC and hosted by entertainer Dean Martin. The theme song to the series was his 1964 hit "Everybody Loves Somebody."

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The tv show is currently not available onine

Cast

Dean Martin

Director

Greg Garrison

Producted By

NBC , Claude Productions

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Reviews

bkoganbing One Take Dino is what the man was known as. I'm surprised it took him so long to find his proper niche as host and lead performer of one of the last and most popular variety shows ever. If Dean Martin wanted it and was still with us today, he'd probably still have that variety show which morphed into the roasts. He was that popular.Martin was legendary for doing everything in one take and whether he missed the lines on the cue cards, he just kept on going and grinning. It was part of the charm of the show. But Dean wanted to get out on the links for some golf or a little serious imbibing. What was important in life.The Dean Martin Show was one of the last television variety shows and one of the best. That format is gone now, performing nowadays just doesn't lend itself to that kind of format and that's a pity. The only time you really see it is on those telethons that Jerry Lewis, Dean's erstwhile partner is the master of. Lewis had a variety show also, but it never got the popularity of Dino's.The best talent in the world appeared on that show. Where else could you have a variety show that would first feature Orson Welles doing a speech from Falstaff and then a trio number with Dean Martin and James Stewart? Those are priceless moments. Back in the day Dean's equivalent would be Bing Crosby's Kraft Music Hall on radio. Bing had the first hour long variety show when Kraft Music Hall debuted in 1936. Stars from film and the legitimate stage as well as musical performers all vied to appear on Kraft. Like Dino on television, Bing was so relaxed and informal he put them all at ease and they performed some really silly skits quite charmingly.On the liner notes to one of his albums Bing said of Dean Martin that while he had the reputation of being a relaxed and natural performer, this lasagna lover from Steubenville made him look like a Prussian drillmaster. Truer words were never written and with such affection.When the variety show morphed into the roasts I remember the critics were savage in their condemnation. The humor was juvenile, puerile, in bad taste and terribly politically incorrect. Yet the best in show business continued to appear on them. Today DVDs and VHSs of them are big sellers.I do miss variety shows like we had back when I was a lad. But we'd have to have people like Dean Martin to host them and perform. They're not common things we find now.But if you want it to happen, keep those cards and letters coming in. Somewhere Dean Martin will appreciate it.
Ben Burgraff (cariart) "The Dean Martin Show" was, perhaps, the most thoroughly enjoyable variety series of the sixties, due, in large part, to it's legendary host. Dean Martin refused to take things seriously, on-camera, and his relaxed, flippant attitude seemed to bring out the very best qualities of his guests. Certainly it made his show the 'in' place for virtually every major performer of the era, and while Ed Sullivan might have been able to boast more 'debuts' of up-and-coming stars, where else would you find Orson Welles performing magic, John Wayne and Jimmy Stewart singing, or the Golddiggers bumping and grinding while Martin would sing "All I need is a room somewhere..."Politically correct? Absolutely not! But at a time of political and social upheaval, a ghastly war, and a nation in turmoil, Martin's show was a 'safe harbor', where the tuxedo-clad host smoked on-camera, joked about his drinking, large family, and inability to read cue cards, and encouraged his viewers to "keep those cards and letters coming in". For a member of the elite 'Rat Pack', Dean Martin seemed eminently accessible, family-friendly (even at his naughtiest), and without malice towards anyone.Despite the spontaneous 'look', there was a basic structure to "The Dean Martin Show". After the opening bars of "Everybody Loves Somebody", Martin would stumble down a flight of steps (eventually switching to sliding down a fireman's pole), and sing a bouncy pop standard, tell a few jokes, and introduce his guests. Each musical guest did a solo number, then a duet with Dean, each non-singer would chat and do a skit. At the halfway point of the show, Martin would adjourn to his 'music room', peeking into a doorway where an unscheduled guest would make a cameo...he never knew who would be behind the door, and the surprise was a show highlight. Then he'd launch himself onto Ken Lane's piano to knock off a few song parodies, then sing a romantic standard. Each program would finish with a big production number, closing with Martin thanking his guests, and the audience, with a smile.The formula was irresistible, and Martin, who actually did knock the Beatles' "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" out of Number 1 on the Pop Charts in 1964 with 'Everybody Loves Somebody", was unbelievably popular, nation-wide. Certainly, to everyone who worked with him, he was as laid-back and friendly as his on screen persona (even his ex-partner, Jerry Lewis, called him the most "gifted" performer he ever knew), and NBC, appreciating his contributions, gave him, in 1967, the most lucrative contract an entertainer had ever received from the network, to that time.When Dean Martin's series finally faded, it was more because of the overall decline of the variety show concept than of any failure on his part; restructuring his show into a comedy 'roast', producer Greg Garrison found a new format that allowed the entertainer several more years as an NBC 'staple'.While Martin's last years would be haunted by the tragedy of his son's untimely death (Dean Paul Martin, an Air Force pilot, would perish in an airplane crash, in 1987), for nearly two decades, Dean Martin was, undeniably, one of television's greatest stars.
occupant-1 At one time the most suggestive show on television, Dean's show not only commented on other variety shows (a form in decline even in the mid-sixties) but continued in spinoff form with the later 'roast' format, a homage to the Friars' Club affairs of society page legend. Dean was able to use his own singing, joking and acting in a situation that could lampoon the past, push the envelope in risk and still seem like good, semi-clean fun. Spontaneity (in short supply after the invention of videotape) was literally forced on the actors and crew by doing (consciously or not) what Jackie Gleason did or didn't do - he showed up minutes before airtime knowing the sketch but totally unrehearsed with the other players. Whatever happened, happened. When it was on the money, it was a high point in midcentury comedy.
Brian W. Fairbanks "The Dean Martin Show," which ran on NBC for nine seasons starting in September 1965, always seemed less like a variety show than a subtle parody of the format. In that sense, it was almost a forerunner of David Letterman's show which pokes fun at the conventional TV talk show by maintaining a slightly subversive air. Martin, of course, was legendary for his casual, spontaneous persona, and everything about his variety show seemed casual and spontaneous, no doubt due to the star's refusal to rehearse. It was obvious that Martin was reading most of his lines from cue cards since he even made jokes about doing so. The sloppy, slightly unprofessional atmosphere that permeated many of his movies at this time, worked on television, making "The Dean Martin Show" one of the more interesting variety shows of the era.The first episode is available on videocassette in a black-and-white version. Frank Sinatra sings the title track from his Grammy winning "September of My Years" album, Joey Heatherton does a bump and grind, Diahann Carroll warbles a tune, Bob Newhart does a comedy routine, and Dino croons a few bars of "Everybody Loves Somebody" and also performs his hit, "Houston." It's a reasonably pleasant time capsule from a bygone era, and nothing more.