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Found! Candy Candido’s lost TV pilot, Botsford’s Beanery

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Candy Candido    Posted date:  January 29, 2015  |  No comment


Remember Candy Candido? He’s the comic singer I thought I’d never heard perform before last month who it turns out I’d known all my life, in everything from The Wizard of Oz and Sleeping Beauty to the ’60s TV series Gentle Ben, where he provided the voice of … the bear.

I fell in love with the guy, and immediately tried to track down everything about him I could, which in addition to the videos I’d shared earlier led me to a 1988 radio interview and something far more mysterious—a reference to a TV pilot unmentioned by either IMDb or Wikipedia.

A man named Ray Fiola, whose company Chelsea Rialto Studios restores classic film soundtracks, mentioned on a bulletin board that he owned “a very rare 16mm print of a Hal Roach TV pilot, BOTSFORDS BEANERY, in which he co-starred with Don Barclay.” How rare is info about this pilot? So rare that the only reference I could find anywhere online was in 1949 and 1952 issues of Billboard, as well as Hal Roach’s 1992 obituary in the L.A. Times—none of which mentioned Candido. No wonder the project wasn’t turning up on any Candido-related pages!

Apparently, as the market for film shorts was dying, Hal Roach, famous for his Our Gang and Laurel and Hardy films, decided to enter the TV market, and so filmed six TV pilots, of which Botsfords Beanery was one. As far as I can tell, though some local stations aired some of these as one-offs, none of them ever made it to series.

I immediately contacted Fiola and begged him for a copy. But he did better than that—he posted the entire pilot to YouTube, so now you get a chance to see it, too.

CandyCandidoTVPilot

The star of the pilot is Don Barclay (perhaps best known to modern audiences as Mr. Binnacle in Mary Poppins), playing restaurant owner Montgomery Botsford, with Ann Triola (best known for her comedy numbers in Lullaby of Broadway) as Agnes his wise-cracking waitress. Candido, who gets third billing, is the proprietor of Joe’s Barber Shop, with broad strokes reminding me of another TV Italian from that era, Joe Kirk as Mr. Bacciagalupe from The Abbott and Costello Show.

Roach filled the pilot with bits that even audiences at the time had seen many times before, such as when Barclay cracks open an egg to find a baby chick, or when he flips an omelette that seems to vanish, ends up stuck to the ceiling, and then goes splat on his face. Plus the episode ends in a pie fight with gangsters. Even the talking parrot admits we’ve seen much of this sort of thing before, because after seeing a tough guy push a grapefruit into Agnes’s face, it says, “Very reminiscent of James Cagney, only he did it better.”

The leads manage to overcome the handicap of this familiar material with their sheer likability and enthusiasm. I doubt I’d ever want to eat at Botsford’s Beanery, but it was fun place to spend 26 minutes.

You can watch this long-lost classic below. (And for Candido fans who’d prefer to skip ahead—he makes his appearance at the 7:16 mark.)

Kudos to Ray Fiola, who has done a good deed in saving this lost TV pilot from oblivion!





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