Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Donald O'Connor Show

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

4.7/10
TV

Composer(s)
  
Walter Scharf

First episode date
  
9 October 1954

Network
  
NBC

Number of episodes
  
19

9.1/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy/Variety

Country of origin
  
United States

Final episode date
  
10 September 1955

Number of seasons
  
1

Written by
  
Sidney Miller Hal Fimberg

Directed by
  
Donald O'Connor Sidney Miller

Starring
  
Donald O'Connor Sidney Miller Joyce Cunning Olan Soule

Cast
  
Donald O'Connor, Mitzi Gaynor, Olan Soule

Similar
  
Startime, Hennesey, An Evening with Fred Astaire, Mrs G Goes to College, The Barbara Stanwyck

The Donald O'Connor Show (also known as Here Comes Donald) is an American musical situation comedy television series starring singer/dancer Donald O'Connor. It appeared on NBC from October 9, 1954, to September 10, 1955, alternating on the Saturday evening schedule with The Jimmy Durante Show; both were sponsored by Texaco.

Synopsis

O'Connor, the son of circus performers and formerly an alternating host on The Colgate Comedy Hour, and his co-director and co-star Sidney Miller portray young struggling songwriters trying to find buyers for their musical compositions. This scenario allows the two to break out in song and dance throughout the program. In the segment which aired on December 4, 1954, three daughters of a theater owner have a dream about O'Connor the dancer: he is viewed as a marshal in the American West, as a knight in the Middle Ages, or as a famous composer such as Beethoven, Chopin, or Arthur Sullivan.

Joyce Cunning, also known also as Joyce Smight, co-starred in the series in the role of Doreen, the songwriters' secretary. Other regulars were Regina Gleason, Joyce Holden, Jan Orvan, Olan Soule, and the Al Goodman Orchestra. Most musical programs at the time were shown live or on Kinescope. However, The Donald O'Connor Show was shot on film.

Guest stars included the dancer Sharon Baird, singer Mitzi Gaynor, singer and musical composer Johnny Mercer, 8-year-old Tim Rooney (son of Mickey Rooney), then 11-year-old Harry Shearer, Boris Karloff, Reginald Denny, and Douglas Fowley. The Robert Mitchell Boys Choir appeared with O'Connor and Miller on the Christmas night 1954 episode.

In 1964, nine years after the original The Donald O'Connor Show had folded, Lucille Ball tried in vain to revive the idea of another The Donald O'Connor Show script to ABC after it was rejected by NBC and CBS. That year her own The Lucy Show was the only Desilu Production on the networks.

O'Connor instead returned to television in the middle 1960s to host The Bell Telephone Hour; one of his episodes focuses on Cole Porter. In the 1968-1969 season, O'Connor hosted a syndicated talk show, also called The Donald O'Connor Show. This second series had Joyce Jameson as the announcer and the accompaniment of the Alan Copland Orchestra. Numerous well-known guest stars, such as Sterling Holloway, Meredith MacRae, Barrie Chase, Irwin Corey, Peter Breck, Mike Minor, Dana Wynter, and musicians Ike and Tina Turner. The programs aired unspecified episodes between November 18, 1968, and August 4, 1969, though it may have begun some weeks earlier than indicated.

References

The Donald O'Connor Show Wikipedia