Who Is Ernie Kovacs?

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The Hungarian-American comedian--The cigar was his trademark as was his ad-libbing comedy; setting the stage for comedians that followed!

 

Many comics today can thank Ernie Kovacs for paving the way for them!  He had a type of comedy routine that was the cutting-edge of the 1950s.  Well known for his ad-libbing comedy, he is also attributed to inventing many camera tricks that are used even today!

I was compelled to put together this particular lens for two reasons: I have included a "mention" of Ernie Kovacs in my lens, Kovacs aka Kovach, and I have created a number of lenses with the Hungarian flavor!  You see, Ernie Kovacs was Hungarian-American, so it seemed a natural for me.  And, I honestly must admit, I DO REMEMBER watching Ernie Kovacs and Edie Adams on black and white TV a LONG time ago!

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Kovacs invented many camera tricks that are still common today. One of his most popular gags was a bit where Kovacs (as one of his characters, "Eugene") sat down at a table to eat his lunch.

He took items out of his lunch box and one by one, each item mysteriously rolled down the table to a gentleman reading the newspaper at the other end. Kovacs then started to pour a glass of milk.

The milk appeared to pour from the thermos in an unusual direction. The visual trick, which had not been seen on TV before, was created with a tilted table and a camera tilted to the same angle as the table.

Ernie Kovacs at a glance 

Ernie Kovacs (January 23, 1919?January 13, 1962) was an American comedian whose uninhibited, often ad-libbed, and visually experimental comic style came to influence numerous television comedy programs for years after his tragic, early death in an automobile accident. Such iconoclastic shows as Rowan and Martins Laugh-In, Monty Python's Flying Circus, The Uncle Floyd Show, Saturday Night Live and even Captain Kangaroo and Sesame Street, and TV hosts like David Letterman David Walley, The Ernie Kovacs Phile (New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1987), pg. 202 are seen as having made use of Kovacs influence.

High School influence ...

Born to parents of Hungarian descent, Kovacs was influenced deeply by his Trenton Central High School drama teacher, Harold Van Kirk, and thus went to acting school after his 1937 graduation.

The Ernie Kovacs Show 

The Ernie Kovacs Show was a comedy show first hosted by comedian Ernie Kovacs in Philadelphia during the early 50s, then shown on national television, still hosted by Kovacs, during the rest of that decade. The original studio location was on the 4th floor of the WRCV-TV studio location at 1619 Walnut Street in Philadelphia. That studio was very small and accommodated approximately 45 audience members. The basement studio of the same building is where "The Mike Douglas Show" was aired from June 1965 until July 1972. The "Ernie Kovacs Show" studio was totally gutted and transformed into offices for an architectural firm in 2002.

Percy Dovetonsils at a glance ... 

The fictional character created and played by Ernie Kovacs!

Percy Dovetonsils is a fictional character created and played by television comedian Ernie Kovacs. It is probably the best remembered of Kovacs' many TV incarnations. Percy was always introduced with a sweeping flourish of harp music as a "poet laureate" who appeared onscreen as a bizarre effeminate "artiste" with weirdly slicked hair (including two carefully placed spit-curls on his forehead) and extraordinarily thick eyeglasses that appeared to have eyes painted on the backsides of the lenses. He would appear seated in a chair wearing a zebra-patterned smoking jacket, and reading from an oversize book lying open in his lap. Percy would address the audience in a syrupy lisp and read his poems out of the book while sipping from a martini glass (which often had a daisy for a swizzle stick) and/or smoking through a long cigarette holder.

The poems themselves were corny or silly, with titles like "Leslie the Mean Animal Trainer" and "Ode to a Housefly (Philosophical Ruminations on a Beastie in the Booze)." While clever, the real humor of the poems lay in the delivery, Percy's appearance and mannerisms, and his obvious self-satisfaction with his creations (as evidenced by a pursed-lip smile and a quiver of the head at the end of significant stanzas).

The character has characteristics of the stereotype of homosexuals common in the 1950s and early 1960s. In one segment, he looks up abruptly from his book and says "That cameraman has the motht muthcular legth..." It was probably a Kovacs ad-lib, if one can judge from the off-camera laughter and the momentary shaking of the camera. In one of his poems, about a cowboy, one of the lines was "Are you really a gay caballero?" The term "gay" in that sense was not often heard on television at that time.

Percy would sometimes talk to the off-camera crew (who were frequently heard laughing at Kovacs' ad-libs), or to his unseen "friend," Bruce. The lisping of both names helped reinforce the supposedly effeminate nature of those two names, a fact which George Carlin would later sometimes reference when discussing gay issues.

Although a stereotype (and one which would be considered politically incorrect today), it was clear from his characterization that Percy was thoroughly comfortable with himself.

Kovacs created the character for his program Three to Get Ready on WPTZ in Philadelphia (the station that is now KYW-TV). The prop glasses he used were discovered by his associate Andy McKay at a novelty store. Kovacs was inspired by the TV poetry readings of Ted Malone.

Percy Dovetonsils video 

Ernie Kovacs as Percy Dovetonsils

Kovacs was a pioneer of TV comedy in the 1950's, edging closer, I think, to performance art than what people typically think of as comedy. Even with Percy Dovetonsils the comedy is odd, low key, and character generated, even though there is a poetic punch line toward the end.

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The Nairobi Trio at a glance ... 

A skit Ernie Kovacs performed several times for his TV shows!

The Nairobi Trio was a skit Ernie Kovacs performed several times for his TV shows. It combined many existing concepts and visuals in a new and novel way.

People in gorilla suits have always been a comedy staple. The notion of well-known or predictable music pieces gone awry has long been practiced by artists as diverse as Stan Freberg, Spike Jones or P.D.Q. Bach. The "slow burn" of one character annoying another resulting in eventual retaliation was not new. But the combination of all those ingredients, combined with impeccable timing, produced a unique and memorable result.

It was a live-action version of a child's animatronic wind-up music box, performed to the tune "Solfeggio" by Robert Maxwell. Allegedly, when Kovacs first heard a recording of the tune, he immediately came up with a mental image of what would become The Nairobi Trio: three gorillas (wearing derby hats and long overcoats) mechanically miming to the music like wind-up toys. In the middle sat the "head gorilla," always played by Kovacs (with a cigar, of course), conducting with a baton or (sometimes) a banana. To the viewer's left another gorilla stood, holding two oversized timpani mallets. (The identity of this ape varied, but among Kovacs' celebrity friends both Jack Lemmon and Frank Sinatra are known to have performed in the skit.) And seated at screen right at a piano was a female simian (often Kovacs' wife, Edie Adams), robotically thumping up and down on the keys.

Nearly all skits operated in the same general fashion, involving the gorilla with the mallets, who repeatedly uses the center gorilla's (Kovacs') head as a drum at the end of every phrase, punctuating a sharp "ba-da-BUM" bongo riff. Every repeat brings a slightly changed and escalated response from the victim, as he tries to anticipate the mallet assault and outwit the perpetrator. Ultimately staring him down, he is eventually distracted by the third gorilla for one final blow, moving him to smash a prop vase over the percussionist's head.

The bit was repeated several times over the course of Kovacs' career. The definitive version is likely the last, performed for one of Ernie's 1960s ABC specials shortly before his untimely death. The combination of a bigger budget, videotape, and the luxury of retakes helped him to perfect the timing of the sketch.

The Nairobi Trio has entered popular culture beyond the television screen. A popular New Zealand jazz group adopted the name, and writer Jim Knipfel wrote an account of his six-month stay in a psychiatric ward entitled Quitting the Nairobi Trio, using a picture of Kovacs in simian drag on the cover. And a video for Harry Nilsson's novelty song "Coconut" features three gorillas playing as a trio.

Nairobi Trio video 

Ernie Kovacs Nairobi Trio (original music)

The Nairobi Trio from the Ernie Kovacs show...

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Ernie Kovacs videos 

Check these out to see his humor ...


Ernie Kovacs- Aesop Broadcasting Co.

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Ernie Kovacs Skit

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Kitchen Symphony (1961)

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Ernie Kovacs for Dutch Masters cigars

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Closing Credits to Ernie Kovacs show

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Ernie Kovacs Skit 2

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Ernie Kovacs - Elephant Hunter

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Neanderthal Man - Hotlegs

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His wife, Edie Adams at a glance 

An American singer, Broadway, television and film actress.

Edie Adams (born April 16 1927) is an American singer, Broadway, television and film actress.

Edie Adams video 

Singing That's All ...

Edie Adams - That's All

I'll try to upload a better quality version soon. Check out the website for the mp3 version of this song and others. http://vouluweb.blogspot.com/

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Kovacsland: Biography Of Ernie Kovacs 

Get his biography and learn more ...

Kovacsland: Biography Of Ernie Kovacs

Amazon Price: $19.00 (as of 08/21/2008)
List Price: $19.00

This straightforward portrait of Kovacs (1919-1962), creator of such mid-'50s TV characters as Percy Dovetonsils and the Nairobi Trio, details his first wife's kidnapping of his children, his compulsive gambling and his abundant generosity. According to PW , "Rico falters . . . in her attempt to describe what it was about Kovacs's weekly shows that so delighted viewers." Photos. Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Library Journal: Author Rico is obviously a big fan of Ernie Kovacs's style of comedy--wacky, improvisational, even bizarre--which explored the potential of the newly developing television of the 1950s. This detailed biography of the ill-fated comedian shows him to be a workaholic who drove himself endlessly in search of a laugh, a gambler and spendthrift who was a creative genius. His personal life, including a two-year search for his kidnapped daughters and his marriage to Edie Adams, is skimmed over in favor of endless descriptions of comic sketches and quotes from a multitude of friends. His last few years, making movies in Hollywood, took a toll on both his marriage and his creativity, but he needed the money in order to pay the fortune he owed in back taxes. Of most interest is his early career in radio and live television, but the book seems padded and repetitive. -- Marcia L. Perry, Berkshire Athenaeum, Pittsfield, Mass.

His tragic death in a car accident 

Kovacs died in a car accident on January 13, 1962, 10 days before his 43rd birthday, in Los Angeles.

He was driving a Chevrolet Corvair Lakewood station wagon. During a rare Southern California rainstorm, he lost control of the car while making a fast turn and crashed into a power pole at the corner of Beverly Glen and Santa Monica Boulevards.

Kovacs was thrown halfway out the passenger door and died almost instantly -- his chest and head taking fatal injuries. A photographer was on the scene moments later, and a morbid image of Kovacs' dead body appeared the next day on the front pages of newspapers across the United States.

His close friend, actor Jack Lemmon, identified Kovacs' body at the county morgue when his wife proved unable to do so.

The buzz on Ernie Kovacs 

Mobile Insider: Mobilizing Ernie Kovacs
The other day while browsing the mobile version of YouTube, I serendipitously called up old Ernie Ko...
ERNIE KOVACS DRAG
Ernie Kovacs was a legendary comedic nut... He lost his legs in a HIDEOUS car accident! THEN he proc...
Bell, Book and Candle
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On DVD: Television Under the Swastika
When you think "early television," you think Ernie Kovacs and The Twilight Zone and Edward R. Murrow...

Some cool Ernie Kovacs books 

Nothing in moderation: A biography of Ernie Kovacs

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Ernie Kovacs Phile

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List Price: $8.95

The Vision of Ernie Kovacs

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Sing a Pretty Song: The Offbeat Life of Edie Adams, Including the Ernie Kovacs Years

Amazon Price: (as of 08/21/2008)
List Price: $19.95

Zoomar

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Ernie Kovacs info 

Ernie Kovacs.net
Cool site! LOTS of relevant links for the person serious about learning about Ernie Kovacs, with a couple of extras thrown in for fun.

Are you in the Ernie Kovacs Fan Club? 

Love him or hate him? Share your stories, sightings, thoughts, rants, raves, whatever.

RufusQuail

My Mom was the big Kovacs fan in the family. If not for her I would never have known about him. Too bad Comedy Central quit airing his show.

Posted August 02, 2008

charlino

Ernie Kovacs was my Dad's favorite TV show, so I grew up with him. Definitely one of my favorite creative forces. Wonderful lens.

Posted March 07, 2008

Another lens you might like ! 

For more info on the Kovacs/Kovach name ...

Creative Commons License 

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