I am old enough to have seen a few years of MASH in prime time. I also was in the Army for 8 years. Without realizing it while I was in the service, these characters showed up in my Army years. Although not in a medical scenario, I did see real people who showed the tendencies of the MASH characters. There was the super gung ho (Frank), the semi-gun ho but still career Army (Margaret), the person who needs to cope and joke around (BJ and Trapper), the one who is a jerk but turns out ok (Charles), the person who is all joker but is a pro when it hits the fan (Hawkeye), and the commanders who are sometimes hard and sometimes loony (Henry Blake and Sherman Potter). I could go on. After being a soldier, when I see these characters again I put real faces on them from my experience. There are also the people who just chug along and make everything work. (Radar, Klinger, Rizzo, Igor, all the rest). The show is closer to the Army way of life than maybe some of the actors know. In the military you have very serious things in front of you, you make a joke to not make it seem so serious or terrible, move forward and get it done, then joke about it again. It's a way of coping with things. After almost forty years since the end of the show and after being out of the Army for over twenty, I (as maybe some of my brothers and sisters) see the realism more than some can imagine. I now watch the show not just for my own nostalgia from my childhood, but also because of the great times, terrible times, and the great people that I served with in my past.
@@sudcciv6443 I dunno. I got her from the beginning. She wanted to be "the woman behind the man" because that was 1950s America. Later when Frank proved to not be man enough for her she started to grow until she learned that she needed to be her own person.
@@thephantomeagle2 There was a couple occasions where his(Charles) ego, or his narcissism did show up, and it did make him look extremely petty, and disliked. However his character learned, grew, and his anger for being there slowly faded and his dedication for his patients grew to where you knew it should be. Charles Emmerson Winchester III was a pompous arrogant narcissistic doctor at first. His development was done very well, extremely well actually. His character was handled perfectly. In the beginning Charles showed his skill. He was good, you knew it, HE KNEW IT, but more importantly he WANTED EVERYONE to know it. BUT as the seasons progressed his ego he learned could and would cause him to fail more than succeed. I grew to really appreciate his character and his humor was a bit off, but he was brilliant! Charles was another character that had to replace, no not replace, step in and become his own character. One more reason I truly respect M*A*S*H. They lost 2 of their TOP stars after season three. They didn't miss a beat. They also didn't get two copies of Trapper and Henry Blake. Same with Frank Burns and Charles Emmerson Winchester III. Every loss, they stepped up and moved on. The writers were amazing, the actors were brilliant, and the producers and directors were also incredibly talented! All in all, a perfectly casted, written, and developed show! From beginning to end.
Frank Burns had to be a difficult part to play. From what I have read, Larry Linville was actually a very smart, funny, flexible, & caring person. The only episode that even remotely showed Burns as being human was "Kim"; he actually appeared concerned about the safety of the boy once he wound up in the landmine.
I do remember him shouting fearfully along with the rest as the boy was in danger. That was a moment where Burns set his faux militarist exterior aside and became human.
@@brianarbenz1329 the funniest moments for Frank have to be the "air raid" scene in Dear Sigmund and the party in Private Charles Lamb. Seeing Frank drunk to the point of passing out was brilliant.
Charles was a snob, and a good frenemy for Hawkeye and BJ, but when it came right down to it was a decent guy. He and Frank were like night and day, and I'm glad Charles came along.
The man responsible for recording the incredible 12,000 vintage video library that we are in process of posting (2500 currently posted) at www.imasportsphile.com says that for last episode aired of M*A*S*H, he had 800 folks come to his bar to see this TV program legend....and he says there was not a dry eye in the house when it ended....man and woman.
tj1978love, thanks for your comment....as it speaks to the real reason for us posting 2000 vintage videos on our ImaSportsphile webpage....cuz folks have fond memories of spending times with folks they love....and to our way of thinking...there has never been better TV than M*A*S*H....for it was not only funny and entertaining....but it also had a way of touching our hearts and souls.
The baby boomers are dying off pretty rapidly....as we will see many more over the next decade....that's why our vintage video museum at our ImaSportsphile web page is so valuable to the world....cuz it showcases this generation that was so talented....and is so soon being forgotten....so, if you haven't visited our site yet, you should....cuz we have 2100 videos currently posted.....with 8,000 left to post.
that music was so gentle and soft that it was like the show was wafting into my living room. it was risky because if you wanted TV that jumped out at you, this may have not been for you. and indeed, it's reruns in the Summer caught the attention of the folks who had seen everything else during their first runs, and"gave it a chance"as Alda has said.
the best show since GUNSMOKE ,CBS or not. and they were both saved from cancellation by Bill Paley. the amount of actors that worked on both shows is almost incalculable. besides character actors, Switt, Linville, Morgan,& Rogers all did at least one or two GUNSMOKES and were impressive. I could mention supporting players, but it would take too long, and their names aren't known outside of showbiz.but one stand out was the shifty Sargent who comes up w/ the strawberry ice cream in the blazing heat. he did several GS's. "you read my brochure" that guy!
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l grew up to and on M*A*S*H. l have mourned each one we have "lost" and celebrated each one when they accomplished. This show made me laugh, cry and celebrate life. lt made me honor those who served in all wars. Thanks to all main actors, secondary actors and those behind the scenes for this series of the soul
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@@imasportsphile6247 It would be helpful . . . valued that you provided FULL shows, rather than partials, which has been experienced as your uniform standard. As I consumed/focused on the last doctors comments . . . the picture went BLACK, mid-sentance. Do it as my original drill sergeants imbedded in me (Mom/Dad) - 'Either you do it right, or . . . you do not do it at all' ! This was deepened even further by my Air Force Basic Training Drill Sergeant - TSgt Hall, at good ol' Happy Valley - Lackland Air Force Base, 3723 Basic Military Training Squadron . . . way down in San Antonio, Texas ! 🇺🇸
I'm not very motivated in viewing you massive video collection . . . only assuming that it will AT BEST parallel your MASH collection. You inevitably, messed up on that . . . as well ! 💀 😱 🎭
I watched this a child!!! and I continue watch it now!! abd I'm 49 Years old! Huge Crush on Alan Alda!! Hawkeye! and I still do!!! Missing All Those that have passed! 😞
Loved seeing David Ogden Stires talk about his character on MTM & how they thought they could use that, then his humor at the end of his telling of it! Never saw the real D.O.S. before! That was delightful!
This was and still is one of the best series on TV. Quality writing, quality acting, topics that are still relevant today. They didn't stoop to the lazy, disrespectful, raunchy comedy that current series seem to think is necessary.
I also believe wholeheartedly that M*A*S*H was the best show ever made. They faced and surpassed adversity, they also dealt with other issues, yet everytime they conquered them. In season three they learned Henry Blake was leaving, a TOP Star! And honestly a incredible actor and a man I don't know HOW they lost him. Then Trapper John McIntyre also left. So two of the biggest stars of the show leave. They ended season three with one of the biggest GUT PUNCHES EVER! Henry Blake's plane crash and his death. Now M*A*S*H however didn't try and replace or copy Henry and Trapper. No, instead they got two actors whose characters were the exact opposite of the ones that left. BJ Hunnicutt was a family man who was faithful to his wife, his family. Yes he had an issue or two but he was NOT Trapper. Colonel Potter was again the opposite of Colonel Blake. A true army Colonel. Not a doctor in a army uniform. Potter was an Army Doctor. He took his command seriously. These changes were surprisingly well done, well written, and their actors performed these characters perfectly! This show did something that very few, if ANY accomplished. They lost two of their top stars and NEVER MISSED A BEAT! M*A*S*H was the most well made show ever in my opinion! Also EVERY actor in the show go their own episode to shine. From Hawkeye's dear Dad, to Klinger's wedding and divorce, to Hot Lips' wedding and also her divorce. EVERY SINGLE CHARACTER got their own episode. Even Nurse Kelly got her own episode. This was another reason why M*A*S*H was so unique and so amazing! They allowed everyone a chance to grow. M*A*S*H IS MY NUMBER ONE 📺 TV 📺 SHOW OF ALL TIME! Seasons 1-3 are my favorite shows, but seasons 4 until the end, they also had some brilliant ideas, and wonderfully written and acted scripts! #M*A*S*H#1
Add Edward, Roy, Robert, Johnny, John, David, Allan, Marcia, Soon-Tek, Mako, Jack, Sorrell, Pat, aka Colonel Flagg, Goldman, Dr Morelli, Sgt Zale, Ugly John, Maj Winchester, Maj Freedman, Lt Cutler, Ralph, Lt Park, Charlie Lee, General Barker, Capt Pak, among many others who made this show what it was............and still is.
never bothered me when they changed characters on the show, happens in real life in the service, people come and go all the time. Actually, it made the show more realistic.
The first three seasons are my favorite. I wish Blake and Trapper hadn’t left the show. I love Charles though. He made those last six seasons worth watching.
With a few exceptions, the first three seasons’ episodes were too silly for me. Even though I loved Charles (who arrived in the sixth season), the fourth and fifth seasons are my favorites. The writing took a big leap forward with the arrival of Potter and “pre-mustache” B.J. Those two seasons are filled with gems.
I thought about it for quite a long time, while the show was still on prime time, and even now when I see reruns; and IMO, the actor with the most challenging role on the series was Larry Linville. The other actors played characters that were fairly consistent - and it’s not my intention to infer that the other actors on the show were any less talented, because even with the changes over the years, it remained a stellar ensemble cast - but Frank Burns was such a diverse character, more complex than the others. In addition to being mercurial, insensitive, dishonest and at times idiotic, Frank Burns was also a very FUNNY character - and in a comedic way that was elevated, and not meant to garner “cheap laughs”, or through the predictability of reoccurring catch phrases that became tired and cliche over time on other shows...and Linville’s comic sense was genius. He played all those strange traits of Frank Burns beautifully. In some ways, I think it could be logically argued that Larry Linville may have been the most talented actor on the show. At the very least, I think he had the most challenging job as an actor. RIP, Good Sir. Thank you for playing a big part in the magic that was M*A*S*H. 🙏
I still love this show. Its 2018 and im 33, i grew up watching this show and to this day i watch reruns.... when i was in Iraq in the army myself i bought the entire set of dvd's with every episode and wore out each dvd. Thank god for the internet
Steve Hughes, thanks for your comment....as it is "spot on" as far as we are concerned....for in our opinion at ImaSportsphile.... this video is one our the biggest and brightest "nuggets of gold" in our treasure chest of 10,000 vintage videos that we are currently posting on our webpage.
Sorry Steve Hughs . . . I messed up ! Ima Sportsphile messed up my attitude, with these incomplete videos . . . on RU-vid. Can we team up . . . have Ima 'clean up her act' ? 🇺🇸
William Christopher came in with Season 1, Episode 3, and Jamie Farr was in the pilot as an uncredited announcer and started as Klinger in Season 1, Episode 4. Beginning to end in my book.
Radar was actually in the movie then to t.v. Then leaving to do other things. "After MASH" was klinger, father mulcahy. Col. potter, for 2 seasons. Radar tried to break off doing his own show as a peace officer but failed after several episodes.
@@stonerdude4611 Walter only got a pilot that wasn't picked up. AfterMASH lasted two seasons. Trapper John M.D. was technically/legally a spinoff of the movie
I Love this show,even watched the 1970 movie with Eliot Gould as Trapper and Donald Southerland as Hawkeye. But I'd have to say my favorite recurring character was the neurotic Lt.Col. Flagg, when he was pitted against Hawkeye&BJ and idolized by the flaky/ferret face-Major Frank Burns,and swooned over by Hot Lips/Major Hulahan. Some of the funniest episodes of the series.😂😂😂 👀🚽🐀💋🇺🇸
This show has always been special to me, the music in the intro brings back amazing memories of my childhood. I remember my best friend Brittany she lived 3 houses down from me, We use to play "MASH" in my backyard, we got in an argument one day because I wanted to be "Hawkeye" she insisted his name was "HotGuy" not "Hawkeye" we fought for 20 minutes about it! Lol
I got into this show late. I just turn 50... I grew up with this show with my parents... I started watching the whole series about 4 months ago... I am up to season 9... and I am so hooked on this show. I will watch it over when I get thru all the seasons. I record it faithfully every morning on my dvr. It's a wonderful show, and I'm so sad I didn't get into it earlier... I love all the characters. Some got on my nerves, but overall..... It's just such great acting, meaningful, funny, and I can tell off screens they are family ~... LOVE IT , AND ONE of the best shows ever ~
I was there from the beginning,with Trapper John,Coronal Blake and Frank Burns, and their eventual replacements by equally interesting characters. I think I especially liked Major Winchesters stuffy highbrow contrasting personality, that played well against that of Hawkeyes, fly by the seat of your pants vibe.👱👍👴👨🎪😷 😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
We at www.imasportsphile.com responsible for posting this video along with 2800 others like it (currently) on our site.....are glad you enjoyed it....and want to know what Tim Davis was doing with the production of M*A*S*H from the beginning?
M.A.S.H temporarily was apart of that iconic CBS 70s Saturday night line up with All In The Family, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Bob Newhart Show and The Carol Burnett Show. We don't have line ups like that anymore and Saturday nights are a dead zone for tv.
one of Farrell's best scenes ever. it wasn't until this rare film that I realized that Dr.s did 'mutilate' officers.some 30 yrs. after I saw it originally. I never liked comedy that tried to deal w/ serious things until scenes like that one between Hawkeye and BJ, and M*A*S*H in general.
In reference to the Hawkeye/BJ conflict over the appendectomy scene - I think I would trust a doctor who would perform surgery in an attempt to save lives over another doctor who would take a huge gulp of gin only minutes before wounded are supposed to arrive.
The final episode of M*A*S*H left a lasting impression of Charles Winchester....as he taught the "refugee musicians" how to play a classical piece....as we have a recording of this in our library....but utube won't let us post it....however, ImaSportsphile web page won't need the tube any more in the near future....and we will have it on our site....so, stay tuned.
+Ima Sportsphile I loved the final episode, even the saddest part when their on the bus going through dangerous territory and a chicken that someone has on board is making too much noise and they tell the lady to keep it quite and she resorts to killing it- and then thug reveal that it wasn't a chicken,but a baby that was smothered to keep it quite- very dark and sad moment. 😳🚍👶👩
@@timdavis9566 I always wondered why that didn't bother anyone else on the bus? Also, I was really bothered by the fact that Charles, after being at MASH and doing "meatball surgery" for several years, and seeing countless soldiers die, only mourned the deaths of the Korean soldiers because they were musicians, like all the rest of them didn't matter to him. That made him seem heartless to me, after all the "humanization" he had evolved through.
Seeing the characters in regular clothes, not army fatigues was so unique. Loretta Swit who I always had a crush on with her sunglasses on her head looked so cute. This video was a very good look into the behind the scenes of how this show worked. M*A*S*H = ICONIC!
If you see this message this is taken from another Making Mash Special. Here is the link for it ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-jiFqjhSY0mA.html
Agreed. Hearing him as the narrator in the opening shots of Disney’s animated 1991 movie Beauty and the Beast made me go, Whaaaaaaat?! David Ogden Stiers’ “normal voice” is so different from that of Charles
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@@imasportsphile6247 It's be 7 years, and you still haven't posted part 2 of this video. Sounds like you guys are terribly understaffed. If you're not able to post things in any kind of reasonable amount of time, then why the hell do you even bother having a RU-vid channel in the first place? 7 YEARS?? WTF.
@@bluebluesky3170 I just replied back to the ones who posted this video, and just in case you don't get a notification about it, here's what I just said to them. My message may end up falling on deaf ears, but it sure felt good to write it none the less. Here it is. "It's be 7 years, and you still haven't posted part 2 of this video. Sounds like you guys are terribly understaffed. If you're not able to post things in any kind of reasonable amount of time, then why the hell do you even bother having a RU-vid channel in the first place? 7 YEARS?? WTF".
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@@ObamaFromKenya No, he was born and grew up in Peoiria Illinois. His family moved to Oregon I think when he was a teenager. I dont know of any connexion with Texas. He died in Oregon
I have often wondered how these writers could come up with these wonderful episodes. Did they sleep with a tablet by their bedside? That would be my only solution for fabulous writing.
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J D yep. Robert Alda. Alan’s half brother Anthony Alda is the one laughing smiling in black across the table, next to bill Christopher. Episode is “lend a hand”.
The most interesting thing in this special is hearing David Ogden Steirs speak without the deep Bostonian accent. The actor is from Chicago, where the r is pronounced with hardness, the opposite of the r-less New England “ah.” On his first episode as Winchester, he let a Chicago hard r slip out in the word “here,” saying: “I don’t intend to be here long enough to get chummy.” I’m fascinated with dialects and accents, so it mattered to me. But I forgave him.
No, he was never fired. They offered Larry Linville a new two year contract but he refused. He had grown tired of the role. There was no character development.
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I saw an interview with him. He said he understood the character and why he could never evolve the rest of the cast said he was very gracious about it. During a phone interview he said frank burns is a doctor an accountant a public official. Everyone knows a frank burns. The reporter said thats NOT true and he slid into character and said is too is too!!!😂😂😂
Yep. Robert Alda. Alan’s half brother Anthony Alda is in black sitting between William christoper and Mike Farrell across the table. He played the aid station medic in “lend a hand” - episode being table-read at 02:22.
5:00 Some times you must do an evil thing to prevent an even more evil thing from taking place. For example, fighting a war. WWII was fought to destroy the Nazis, because the Nazis were the greater evil. It doesn't make the evil thing any less evil, but it does justify it.