The 83-year-old woman who Joseph Granahan rescued was my grandmother. I was seven years old at the time. I never met Granahan, so this video means a great deal to me. My grandmother lived in a tenement on east 34th St. When the tenement adjacent to it was demolished to make way for the Warren House on the northeast corner of 3rd Ave. and 34th St., my grandmother's tenement fell into the space where the other tenement had stood. It should have been buttressed. Granahan's rescue was a courageous and heroic act.
This show always pulls off a surprise or two every once in a while. I wonder where Johnny met the very attractive Barbara Cooper. Thanks for the video.
Dina Merrill’s mother built Mar-a-Lago. She was Marjorie Post, heiress of Post Cereal. Can you imagine how revolted they would all be were they still with us.
That would be awesome if a relative of Sam Harris the New York tailor to JFK, could tell us about JFK and the other people he was a tailor to and if they would want to become a tailor.
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Johnny was rude in his comments about waiters. They are hard workers, get lousy pay and have to put up with rude patrons, much like the likes of people like Carson.
I think he really wanted to congratulate the hero but maybe he realised he was going on a bit to much and he just seemed to dry up. It was a bit weird, but he usually seems a really nice polite guy, except the other week when he mysteriously just got up and walked off the show without saying a word. That was even more wired! Keith UK
@I've seen the Twinkie and the damage done - I will watch it again. Love the shows from this period. I also watch What’s My Line, The Names the Same, and best of all You Bet Your Life with Groucho Marx.