My mention of character actor Will B. Able the other day brought some e-mails with info about him. Thanks to all of you and especially Jeff Abraham.
I'm not sure why I'm so interested in Mr. Able except that he was in a lot of TV shows I watched when I was younger — and at 6'5" and having a body as malleable as Plastic Man's, he was easy to notice. He was also in one of my favorite movies, The Night They Raided Minsky's. He played "Clyde," whose name was not mentioned in the film nor did he have any lines…but he was the tall, skinny dancer doing anatomically-impossible moves in several numbers.

Mr. Able — who, by the way. was born Willard S. Achorn in 1923 — appeared on TV now and then but mostly toured the country in two kinds of plays — fairy tales for children and burlesque shows for adults. The fairy tale roles came about because of his involvement with the Prince Street Players, a group that presented original musical versions of classic stories. Some of these were taped and aired as prime-time specials on CBS.
I don't know how many of them were broadcast but four of them are on YouTube. I won't embed them here because I doubt anyone will watch them but if for some reason you want a peek, you can click on the following shows' names to get one. In no particular order, they were Jack and the Beanstalk (Able played — who else? — The Giant), Aladdin (Able played The Genie), Pinocchio (Able played Antonio) and The Emperor's New Clothes (Able played Emperor Maximillion the Most).
These were all original musicals written by Jim Eiler, Jeanne Bargy and sometimes Richard Hayman. They all featured a lot of the same performers (including Able's wife, Graziella) and I believe the scripts, if not the entire productions, had lives as stage productions, as well. That was one kind of show Mr. and Ms. Able did.
At other times, they toured — or did time in Reno or Vegas — in a burlesque show called the Will B. Able Baggy Pants & Company Burlesque — and I'm going to guess that it started because of the success of Ann Corio's This Was Burlesque, a show that toured for many years and spawned many imitations. Ms. Corio had been a star burlesque performer but as the circuit for such shows disappeared, she made a new one, assembling touring shows that purported to re-create an evening at a burlesque house.
Her casts were drawn from the vast pool of veteran burley-q performers who were now outta work, including my old friend Dexter Maitland, who was also in the Minsky's movie. I recall reading somewhere — or maybe Dexter told me — that theaters and auditoriums could book the Corio shows in two versions: With or without women who removed clothing on stage. Presumably, the ladies who disrobed were too young to have been seasoned, veteran burlesque performers. Dexter starred in burlesque shows, for Corio and others, well into his nineties.
There were several of these traveling burlesque shows and in the early days of "cable channels" (as we called them then) like HBO and Showtime, such shows were taped and aired. Those new networks wanted to offer something you couldn't get on regular broadcast TV and some of what they aired seemed to have been selected for its naughty language or naughty nudity. A lot of it also did not involve hiring members of The Writers Guild or other labor organizations. That meant comedy could come from stand-up comedians and touring shows like the burlesque ones. The sketches in the burlesque revues were all or mostly old public domain material.
I was going to embed a video of one here but these have not aged well. Some of the content is classic comedy but a lot of it is just embarrassing today. If you absolutely must see one, here's a link to one of Ann Corio's that brought in Morey Amsterdam as a "name." [CAUTION: Contains semi-naked women, cheap sexist jokes and Dexter Maitland.] Note that in the long, long list of credits at the end, there is no mention of any writers.
The Will B. Able Baggy Pants & Company Burlesque show premiered on HBO on August 27, 1978 about three years before he passed away. It reran many, many, many times. I recall seeing it on OnTV, SelecTV or Theta Cable — all services which were briefly available to bring "pay" programming to Los Angeles.
I haven't seen Able's show since and I have the feeling I'm remembering it as better than it was. But I've always had a certain fascination with non-mainstream Show Business. We all know about performers who star in real movies, network TV series and Broadway shows…but there are also performers who spend most months of their lives in touring shows. Will B. Able seems to have been one of them and, like I said, he always stood out.