Author Topic: Uncle Floyd Live  (Read 5814 times)

Shaggy 2 Grote

  • Space Champion!
  • Posts: 3892
Uncle Floyd Live
« on: June 07, 2008, 12:55:04 PM »
Dear Tom,

I thought you might want to know about this.  I will probably not be attending if anyone wants to not have a FOT meetup.

Grote



The Cutting Room is proud to present:

THE UNCLE FLOYD SHOW featuring PALLO & LEIVE

Thursday June 12, 2008 8pm $15

Known primarily for his influential comedy/variety television program The Uncle Floyd Show, which ran more than 4,000 original episodes from 1974 to 1998, Floyd "Uncle Floyd" Vivino is a show-biz veteran.

A seasoned comedian, a talented entertainer, and a gifted piano player, Floyd has been entertaining audiences for more than 40 years. However, Floyd is a lot younger than people may think, having started in show-biz as a teenager in 1968.

Today Floyd performs as a stand-up comedian, emcee, and musical entertainer on stage and in nightclubs in Atlantic City, Las Vegas, and all over the New York/New Jersey area, in addition to appearances at all sorts of public events and private functions. Floyd appears on two weekly radio shows as well as taking the occasional film role. Always in demand, Floyd is booked well in advance and plays hundreds of dates each year.

Floyd's greatest talent is his versatility. His comedy transcends all age groups, ethnicities and demographics. One night he'll be joking in Italian for an Italian-American audience, the next night he'll play to a late-night crowd at a rowdy night spot, then an afternoon show for children or a dinner theater production for seniors. There is no audience Floyd can't entertain.

As the top banana in Uncle Floyd's Last Authentic American Traveling Burlesque Show, Floyd recreates the lost American art form (for adults only) that has all but disappeared from theaters today. A sister show called The Last American Variety Show starring Uncle Floyd and His Friends is an old-fashioned vaudeville revue that's fun for the whole family. The Uncle Floyd Show featured Floyd's trademark style of honky-tonk piano, as well as his amazing arsenal of comedy characters. Among the hundreds of guests on the TV show are such popular performers as The Ramones, Bon Jovi, Chubby Checker, Monty Python, Davy Jones and Peter Tork of The Monkees, Cyndi Lauper, Eddie Money, David Johansen, The Smithereens, Jan & Dean, Squeeze, Dave Edmunds, Rick Derringer, Benny Bell and Tiny Tim. Fans of the TV show included John Lennon and David Bowie (who wrote a song about Floyd called "Slip Away" on his recent CD).

In films, Floyd has acted alongside stars including Robin Williams, Paul Simon, Matt Dillon, Dudley Moore and Daryl Hannah. On television, Floyd has had roles on Law & Order and Cosby, among many others.

Mercury Records released an Uncle Floyd record album, in addition to a number of Floyd's own singles including "Deep In The Heart of Jersey" by his alter ego Cowboy Charlie, a favorite on the Dr. Demento radio show.

Steeped in the traditions of Tin Pan Alley, Floyd is able to perform literally hundreds of pop songs and novelties from the early part of the Twentieth Century. Floyd set a Guinness World's Record for Continuous Piano Playing by playing (and singing!) some 700 songs in a 24-hour period in front of a live audience.

For this special show at The Cutting Room, Floyd will be performing with comedians Pallo and Leive. Don't miss this chance to see the Legendary Uncle Floyd up close and personal.
Oh, good heavens. I didn’t realize. I send my condolences out to the rest of the O’Connor family.

buffcoat

  • Space Champion!
  • Posts: 6214
Re: Uncle Floyd Live
« Reply #1 on: June 07, 2008, 03:40:50 PM »
I thought this said "Count Floyd."   :-\
I really don't appreciate your sarcastic, anti-comedy tone, Bro!

Omar

  • A Recapper/A True Star.
  • Space Champion!
  • Posts: 2009
Re: Uncle Floyd Live
« Reply #2 on: June 07, 2008, 08:29:00 PM »
Another Weirder Jon therapy session from Dr. Omar ($375/hour if anyone else is interested):

- Weirder Jon from Maplewood asks Tom to help him decide if he should regret missing "Uncle Floyd" Vivino's recent performance at the Maplewood Library. In short: no. Tom doesn't think Jon's kids would have enjoyed a set of depressing Tin Pan Alley garbage, even if Vivino brought his puppet, "Oogie." He tips his hat to Vivino for having a 45,000-episode run, but he ultimately occupies the middle ground between talentless and really talentless. Tom recommends that Jon either have his kids create their own entertainment or take them to see good attractions. Jon says he was considering the Uncle Floyd show as an opportunity to share a bit of his youth with his kids, but Tom thinks he was being a little tight with the purse strings. He also imagines the horror of people trying to study with old-timey piano and puppet shows clanging around in the background. Jon mentions that the television show generally relied heavily on inside jokes. Tom suspects that the inside jokes have diminished in recent years.
"Let's have a device-a-thon, just you and me." -- Montgomery Davies

Phantom Hugger

  • Achilles Tendon Bursitis
  • Posts: 510
Re: Uncle Floyd Live
« Reply #3 on: June 07, 2008, 09:55:58 PM »
I was sitting at my auto mechanics garage today and saw this...


http://www.salvagevanguard.org/index2.php


I'm no theater type but I WILL be seeing this.

You go Grote! ;D

Shaggy 2 Grote

  • Space Champion!
  • Posts: 3892
Re: Uncle Floyd Live
« Reply #4 on: June 07, 2008, 10:50:22 PM »
Another Weirder Jon therapy session from Dr. Omar ($375/hour if anyone else is interested):

- Weirder Jon from Maplewood asks Tom to help him decide if he should regret missing "Uncle Floyd" Vivino's recent performance at the Maplewood Library. In short: no. Tom doesn't think Jon's kids would have enjoyed a set of depressing Tin Pan Alley garbage, even if Vivino brought his puppet, "Oogie." He tips his hat to Vivino for having a 45,000-episode run, but he ultimately occupies the middle ground between talentless and really talentless. Tom recommends that Jon either have his kids create their own entertainment or take them to see good attractions. Jon says he was considering the Uncle Floyd show as an opportunity to share a bit of his youth with his kids, but Tom thinks he was being a little tight with the purse strings. He also imagines the horror of people trying to study with old-timey piano and puppet shows clanging around in the background. Jon mentions that the television show generally relied heavily on inside jokes. Tom suspects that the inside jokes have diminished in recent years.

This was even funnier the second time around, and I laughed out loud repeatedly when I listened to it on the podcast.

I was sitting at my auto mechanics garage today and saw this...


http://www.salvagevanguard.org/index2.php


I'm no theater type but I WILL be seeing this.

You go Grote! ;D

Thanks, PH!  In all seriousness, PM me if you want a free ticket - every friend I have in Austin is already affiliated with Salvage Vanguard, so I have a couple of lingering unused comps.
Oh, good heavens. I didn’t realize. I send my condolences out to the rest of the O’Connor family.

John Junk 2.0

  • Guest
Re: Uncle Floyd Live
« Reply #5 on: July 09, 2008, 02:10:25 PM »
I always loved Uncle Floyd as a kid, but not for actually watching the show.  Whenever I tried to watch it, I had no idea what was going on, why it was supposed to be funny, etc.  My dad seemed to laugh sometimes.  I think it was all the bad puns.  I mostly loved the idea of Uncle Floyd, and I liked his commercials he did for "Wild West City".
[youtube]Iu4--K0V0gU&hl[/youtube]
(this video quality is terrible)