The Honeymooners: Ralph and Alice and Ed and Trixie
by Marjorie Dorfman
Why were the Honeymooners so special and why does their
magical chemistry still have a hold on television viewers today? Read on
for more commentary.
Surely no homage to the golden age of
television could ever be made without paying tribute to the wonderful
sit-com, The Honeymooners, which aired for the first time
on September 20, 1952.
The first episode was memorable; Ralph’s new bowling ball, which his
fingers get trapped in. It’s hard to believe that the series itself
was on for only one season (1955-56 on CBS). Gleason introduced the The
Honeymooners in 1951 during his first variety series, Cavalcade
of Stars.
The Honeymooners started out as one sketch
among many, lasting less than ten minutes each. Over the course of time,
the episodes grew longer, many of them exceeding thirty minutes.
The poignancy of post-war poverty and the
attempt to achieve the American dream is always a motivating factor for
the actions of bus driver, Ralph Kramden and sewer worker, Ed
Norton.
The Kramden address, 328 Chauncey Street, (now part of Bedford
Stuyvesant), was Gleason’s own when he was a poor boy growing up and
living with his mother in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn.
Who could ever forget some of the
outstanding episodes highlighted by the comedic genius of Art Carney as
the inimitable Ed Norton?
Two stand out in my mind; the Name That Tune parody and Ed’s
sleepwalking venture, in which he searches for his little dog, Lulu, who
got lost at Coney Island in "the tunnel of love." He parades
around the Kramden apartment with arms outstretched in a total trance
except for a moment when he opens the Kramden refrigerator and steals a
piece of chicken.
The other episode presents Ralph memorizing every song ever written and practicing
with Norton on the piano. Norton, in order to warm up, plays a bar or
two of Swanee River. When Ralph appears on the
show, confident that he has learned every song ever written, the first
song he is asked to identify is Swanee River. When asked
who the composer was, he stammers and then after a moment replies,
"Ed Norton?"
What are some of YOUR favorite episodes?
Check out the Honeymooners website (http://www.honeymooners.net)
for all kinds of trivia, information and shopping items related to this
wonderful show.
more articles by Marjorie
Dorfman
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