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TV Series

Series Name:   Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
(Laugh-In)
Format:TV Series
IMDB:IMDB Page
Years:1968 - 1977
Country:  USA
Language:English
Genre:Comedy
Rating:7.4  Rate
Collection:  Seen It     Wishlist 
Community: 20 Have Seen
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Selected CastDan Rowan as host
 Dick Martin as host
 Gary Owens as announcer
 Ruth Buzzi
 Eileen Brennan
 Judy Carne
 Goldie Hawn
 Henry Gibson
 Larry Hovis
 Artie Johnson
 Jo Anne Worley
 Alan Sues
 Charlie Brill
 Roddy Maude-Roxby
 Dave Madden
 Lily Tomlin
 Teresa Graves
 Richard Dawson
 Robin Williams as regular (1977 specials)
 Moosie Drier


Notes

Preceded by a special that aired in 1967. During its run a spin-off series Letters to Laugh-In aired briefly, and the motion picture The Maltese Bippy is considered a spin-off as well. In 1977, several specials titled Laugh-In aired, featuring Robin Williams as a cast member; the specials did not involve Rowan and Martin. When Williams' series Mork & Mindy became a hit the specials were rebroadcast in 1979 as a limited series.

The series is comparable only to Saturday Night Live in regards to the percentage of its regular cast, most of whom where unknowns at the time, who went on enduring film and TV stardom.

On DVD & Blu-ray World

DVD Box Set

Rowan And Martin's Laugh In - The Complete Series - Time-Life - USA (2017)


Images



Number: 799263  THUMBNAIL
Uploaded By: 23skidoo
Description: title screen


Comments and Reviews
 
zabadak
17th Jul 2015
 Very interesting, but stupid! :eek:
 

 
Record Collector
17th Jul 2015
 Gary Owens who voiced roger ramjet
 

 
23skidoo
17th Jul 2015
 @RC Its appeal today is as a time capsule. For example, for better or for worse, it's actually credited with helping Richard Nixon win the presidency because he was "cool enough" to come on the show while a candidate and do a quick 10 second joke (he just turned to the camera and said "Sock it to ME?") while Hubert Humphrey, his competitor, refused. You also had many stars of the day coming on and having fun, and the show also made some biting political commentary. There was one episode where a black actress flirted with James Garner ending in a "your place or mine" reference as they walk away, after which one of the regular actors turned to the camera and said "Very funny. But right now the station in Birmingham is showing a test pattern. Believe it." Laugh-In was able to get away with jokes that cost the Smothers Brothers their show a year or so earlier, I think because the format obscured them enough from the censors. Turn-On, a series that was commissioned as pretty much a rip-off of Laugh-In, tried the same thing but failed and its jokes were one reason why it was cancelled after one single episode (interestingly Teresa Graves, who was hired as a regular for Turn-On, later became a regular on Laugh-in).

In many respects it was like Monty Python in a way. Lots of humor in that show is dated too, but it remains a fascinating and valuable time capsule of how British culture was in the early 1970s. Such was the case with Laugh-In.
 

 
Record Collector
17th Jul 2015
 I remember seeing laugh in around 1987 but the gags were dated by then
 

 
Neil Forbes
17th Jul 2015
 I remember taping several episodes of this, condensed into half-hour versions(originally broadcast in a 1-hour format when first aired here in Australia BC[er, that's "Before Colour"]). NBN in Newcastle was running it in the 1980s and/or 1990s at about 10.00 AM. Allowing for the jokes relating to the late 1960s I thought the show still managed to pack a comical punch. There was a revived version with a pathetically fake ventriloquist, Waylon Flowers and his puppet, "Madam". The revived version was shown here but didn't last long(whew, what a relief).
 

 
Monolith
16th Jul 2015
 I had great memories of this when I was a kid, the best laugh ever.

Then I saw it a couple of years ago, oh dear, I should've left well alone.
It was painful.
 

 
23skidoo
16th Jul 2015
 I couldn't find an acceptable title screen from 1968-69. This one is from around 70-71. I bent the rules slightly; Robin Williams wasn't involved in the original series and the specials that followed in 77 weren't a series (though they later were rebroadcast as one), but given his notoriety I think we can get away with sneaking in a credit for him here.
 


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