21/12/2011 10:07 pm  #1


Please tell more about Miriam Karlin, in Bing's Dec. 61 London TV spec

I've been starting to watch BCE's Crosby video specials Volume Two: Christmas Specials.  I found the one filmed in London, and broadcast in early December of 1961, particularly charming.  It was fun to see Bing walking around London amid the people and traffic, and the interior scences are extremely realistic, as if they were filmed in actual buildings as opposed to in studio stage sets.   The comic skits are very engaging, beginning with the early one in a tea shop.  Bing being tried for singing on the street without a license was also a very humorous bit, reminding me a scenes from the later "Rumpole of the Bailey" program show in the US on PBS. 

Other than Terry Thomas, all of the British performers were new to me, and I particularly became curious about Miriam Karlin, who plays an abstract painter whose painting is a map of London if you turn it upside down, and  who in the spoken and sung parts of her scene with Bing seemed to be able to adopt particular characteristics rather fluidly and cleverly.  She seemed to have remarkable talent and personality and perhaps also a range of ability extending well beyond what could have been demonstrated in that short scene.  Was she a famous TV comediene?  Did she make films?  Did she have a long career?  Was she a particular favorite of any Crosby fans currently belonging to this discussion board?  If you tell me that she was for a period of time a British analog of a Carol Burnette, it would not be beyond belief to me.  It would be nice to see more of her working with Bing if such ever took place.

 

22/12/2011 3:45 am  #2


Re: Please tell more about Miriam Karlin, in Bing's Dec. 61 London TV spec

Actually she just died this year: (from Wikipedia)

Miriam Karlin, OBE (23 June 1925 – 3 June 2011) was a British actress who worked on screen for over 60 years. She was best known for her role as Paddy in The Rag Trade, a 1960s BBC and 1970s LWT sitcom , especially for her catchphrase "Everybody out!". Her trademark throughout her career was her deep, husky voice and London accent.

Born Miriam Samuels  in Hampstead, North London, she was brought up in an Orthodox Jewish family; members of her extended family were among those who later died at Auschwitz. She was the daughter of Céline (née Aronowitz) and Harry Samuels, a Jewish barrister, who specialised in industrial and trade union law. Her brother was Michael Samuels, a historical linguist, responsible for the Historical Thesaurus of the Oxford English Dictionary. When she was doing one of her first radio shows, Terry-Thomas's Top of the Town, she based some of the zany characters she invented and played on people who had appeared before the rent tribunal chaired by her father.

After training at RADA, Karlin made her stage debut for ENSA – the Forces Entertainment organisation – in wartime shows and subsequently appeared in repertory theatre and cabaret. She appeared in productions of The Diary of Anne Frank, The Bad Seed, The Egg, Fiddler on the Roof and Bus Stop, among others.

She made her film debut in 1952's Down Among the Z Men, as well as featuring in Room at the Top, Heavens Above!, Ladies Who Do and Mahler by Ken Russell.

In 1960, she appeared opposite Sir Laurence Olivier in the film of John Osborne's play The Entertainer. Karlin also had parts in A Clockwork Orange and The Millionairess. She appeared in the stage version of Fiddler on the Roof at Her Majesty's Theatre, starring the Israeli actor Topol. In 1972 Karlin took the title role in Mother Courage and her Children at the Palace Theatre Watford in a production notable for the force of her performance, and its faithfulness to the Brechtian Verfremdungseffekt.

On television, Karlin became known for playing the belligerent shop steward Paddy in the The Rag Trade, a British sitcom set in a textile factory. Paddy would use the slightest opportunity to cause a strike; her trademark was blowing a whistle and shouting "Everybody out!" She played the role, to great success, between 1961 and 1963. The show was resurrected by the BBC's rival channel, ITV, in 1977, but did not meet with the same success as the original[citation needed]. She later played Yetta Feldman, the Jewish ghost, in the BBC sitcom, So Haunt Me.

Karlin appeared on stage for the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford-upon-Avon, the Aldwych Theatre, and The Barbican Centre. She appeared in a national tour of 84 Charing Cross Road. In 1990 she became the first woman to play the title role in The Caretaker by Harold Pinter in a production at the Sherman Theatre in Cardiff. She appeared in the 1989 television film The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

In 2008 she appeared, aged 83, in the stage play Many Roads to Paradise by Stewart Permutt at the Finborough Theatre, London.

Karlin, who never married, lived in South London. She was a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association and a patron of the Burma Campaign UK, the London-based group campaigning for human rights and democracy in Burma.

In 2006, while filming an Agatha Christie television mystery, By the Pricking of My Thumbs, Karlin was told that she had cancer and that part of her tongue would have to be removed. Unfortunately, her lengthy bout with cancer was unsuccessful and she died on 3 June 2011.

Last edited by Lobosco (22/12/2011 3:46 am)

 

22/12/2011 11:54 am  #3


Re: Please tell more about Miriam Karlin, in Bing's Dec. 61 London TV spec

Anyone in the UK who is old enough will instantly recognise Miriam - both face and voice - and associate her with her role in 'The Rag Trade', which was as a feisty determined trade unionist who brooked no opposition and instantly sought a fight on any issue.  The comedy was a little 'over the top' but could be very funny, though in my opinion it has not aged well.  I do not recall any significant re-runs of the series.

In some ways it is a pity that she was so firmly associated with the character because her roles on the stage and film were of much greater range, albeit she was to a degree imprisoned by her face and voice into 'character' roles.

 

Board footera

 

Powered by Boardhost. Create a Free Forum

Spread the word about CROSBY FAN WORLD http://crosbyfanworld.boardhost.com