Comedy Cafe

Comedy Cafe is a Canadian comedy television series which aired on CBC Television in 1969.

Comedy Cafe
Genrecomedy
Written byJohn Morgan
Martin Bronstein
StarringBarrie Baldaro
Dave Broadfoot
George Carron
Joan Stuart
Ted Zeigler
Peter Cullen (Unknown at This Time)
Country of originCanada
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons1
Production
Producer(s)Dale Barnes
Production location(s)Montreal
Running timevariable
Release
Original networkCBC Television
Original release1 February 
8 March 1969
Chronology
Followed byComedy Crackers

Premise

This Montreal-produced series featured performers from CBC Radio's Funny You Should Say That series, namely Barrie Baldaro, Joan Stuart and Ted Zeigler. They were joined by additional performers Dave Broadfoot and George Carron. The series borrowed from material already broadcast on the radio series such as "The Tavern" in which men have a conversation at a bar, or "L'Anglaises" about a French-speaking husband (Carron) and his English-speaking wife (Stuart). The series also featured Broadfoot's frequently-performed Member for Kicking Horse Pass character.

Comedy Cafe already aired as a local series in Montreal since late 1968. It was brought to the national network to fill in the time slot left vacant by the demise of Barris and Company. The series also transitioned to colour broadcasts due to its national exposure.

Episodes were recorded at Montreal's Windsor Hotel in the Versailles Room.[1]

Scheduling

This half-hour series was broadcast Saturdays at approximately 10:15 p.m. (Eastern) from 1 February to 8 March 1969, following the conclusion of the Hockey Night in Canada broadcast.

gollark: Check under /lib somewhere?
gollark: I think OpenOS has some kind of native support for that.
gollark: If you just have a stream, you often have to handle stuff like figuring out exactly where each bit of it starts and ends, which is annoying when there's an underlying packetized protocol anyway.
gollark: Or possibly some API which lets you mix both somehow, that would be neat.
gollark: Honestly, I think that in many applications arbitrary-size packets map better to what you're doing than streams.

References

  1. Corcelli, John (May 2005). "Comedy Cafe". Canadian Communications Foundation. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.