Groo Live! (And Other Topics)

Now, here's a scary image: Above, you see a gentleman named Buck Steele and, yes, that's his real name.  I know it sounds like a great TV western star of the fifties but Buck Steele is, in fact, 42 years old and he manages an AutoZone parts store in Pahrump, Nevada.  This year, perhaps from too many months sniffing all those crankcase oil fumes, he was seized by an inexplicable urge…to fashion a Groo costume and to don it for the Masquerade Competition at the Comic-Con International in San Diego.  Which, as you can see for yourself, is just what he did.  For his aberrant efforts, he won a $200 prize — which should serve to all as proof positive that there's money to be made by debasing yourself and performing aberrant actions in public.  This goes a long way to explaining the American political system.

My pal Jerry Beck is forever filling his Cartoon Research website with vital nuggets of animation info.  In case you haven't checked in today, I'll save you a click and mention this one:  A year or three ago, the folks over at Columbia/TriStar International Television decided to syndicate a package of old Columbia and UPA cartoons, including those of The Fox and the Crow and the early appearances of Mr. Magoo.  They hauled long-untouched negatives out of their vaults, struck off beautiful new prints, transferred them to video and packaged them into 65 half-hours they call Totally Tuned-In.  The series is being sold around the world but has yet to land an American berth.  I'm sure it will soon and then you'll get to see these lost treasures, many of which are quite wonderful.  In the meantime, you'll have to settle for this:  The website for a Singapore-based kids' network is offering up online clips from the shows it airs, which includes Totally Tuned-In.  Here's the link and if you go there right now, you may be able to catch a minute or two from one of the Fox & Crow cartoons.  But stop by Jerry's site first.

The longest-running musical in the world is the off-Broadway New York production of The Fantasticks, which opened on May 3, 1960.  That's right: May 3, 1960.  Every few years, it posts a closing notice, thereby arousing enough interest and business that they rescind the end date and keep it going.  Well, they're now saying it will close on August 12.  We'll believe it when it happens.

Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme have set up their very own website over at www.steveandeydie.com.  You can order a few of their CDs there (including a new issue of Golden Rainbow, a sixties' Broadway musical that fell into the "famous flop" category) but the real reason to visit is the gallery of vintage photos.  You forget how long they've been around and how they've worked with everyone.  I'm predicting here and now that, after the current resurgence of interest in The Rat Pack dies down, we'll be seeing Steve and Eydie biopics and impersonators.