Hit Celebrity TV Commercials (compilation)
Picture:
C Sound: C Extras: C- Compilation: B+
Like the
shows they sponsored, the advertisements that used to appear on television were
some of the cleverest short films ever made.
Like the great radio ads before them, there used to be a genuine fun and
genuine pride in how they pushed their product.
Give or take “Retromercials” on the TV Land cable/satellite network, the
only way you can usually see these ads is on bootleg VHS, or if parts of them
turn up on a TV show or motion picture.
That is why the arrival of Hit
Celebrity TV Commercials on DVD is so welcome.
In what
is still a too-rare occurrence on legitimate, mainstream home video, here is a
collection of over 120 ads that are constantly entertaining to watch. What follows is a list by the product of each
of the ads:
9-LIVES
CAT FOOD – a full-color Morris The Cat classic.
A-1 STEAK
SAUCE – Boris Karloff
AMERICAN
EXPRESS – Mel Blanc, the Man of 1,000 Voices, esp. cartoons.
AQUA
VELVA – Lainie Kazan
AXION
DETERGENT – Arthur Godfrey
BIC INK
CRAYON BANANA PENS – Charles Nelson Reilly
BIZ –
Kaye Ballard
BIZ –
Eddie Albert
BORAXO
SOAP – Ronald Reagan & Patti Davis (in her teens, as a tie-in to the TV
series Death Valley Days.)
BOUNTY PAPER
TOWELS – Nancy Walker (the comic actress from Rhoda and McMillan &
Wife who was the product spokesman, later became a TV1 director, then
directed the disastrous Disco Musical Can’t
Stop The Music with The Village People, Valerie Perrine & Bruce Jenner.)
BRYLCREEM
– Joe DiMaggio
BUDWEISER
BEER – Two in a row with Ed McMahon
CAMAY
SOAP – Jaclyn Smith of the original Charlie’s
Angels.
CARNATION
INSTANT DRY MILK – Harry Morgan & Cara Williams
CARNATION
MUSTARD SAUCE – George Burns & Gracie Allen (a regular sponsor of their
show, reviewed elsewhere on this site.)
CHANEL #5
– Catherine Deneuve
CHAPSTICK
– Suzy Chaffee (Olympian became regular spokesman.)
CHARMIN –
Two with Dick Wilson as Mr. Whipple, one color, one monochrome.
CHEVROLET
– The Fifth Dimension
CHEVROLET
CAMARO (1970s) – Lloyd Bridges
CHEVROLET
NOVA – O.J. Simpson
CLAIROL
TRUE BRUNETTE HAIR COLORING – Raquel Welch
COCA COLA
– B.J. Thomas
COCA COLA
– Michael Jordan (very early ad for him.)
COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE – Howdy Doody & Buffalo Bill, with animation sequence.
COMET –
Jane Withers
COVER
GIRL – Susan Blakely
COVER
GIRL – Cheryl Tiegs
COVER
GIRL – Cybill Shepherd (the model later of Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show and much late of
hit TV series Moonlighting and Cybill.)
DE
SOTO/PLYMOUTH – Groucho Marx, on You Bet
Your Life (reviewed elsewhere on this site.)
DORITOS –
Avery Schreiber
DR.
PEPPER (in original 10-2-4 bottles) - Burt Young (Chinatown, Rocky)
DRANO –
James Coco
ENDUST –
Emmett Kelly
FAVOR
WOOD POLISH – Mariette Hartley
FEDDERS
AIR CONDITIONING – Farrah Fawcett (cameo at the end)
FEDDERS
AIR CONDITIONING – MacLean Stevenson
FLINTSTONES
VITAMINS (animated with the characters.)
FORD VANS
– Buster Keaton (in the silent movie style.)
FORMULA
409 – Vic Tayback (Mel from the hit TV series Alice.)
FOSTER
FARMS CHICKEN – Fred Williams & Gordon Jump (the DVD fails to note that the
female shopper is the great comic actress Valerie Curtin.)
FRANCO-AMERICAN
RAVIOLI – Al Molinaro (Al from Happy
Days)
FRITOS
CORN CHIPS – The Frito Bandito, an animated mascot that was quickly attacked as
a stereotype by Latino groups, including a big one led by Ricardo
Montalban. The result was that Frito-Lay
pulled the character, but it is ironically a favorite for memorabilia collectors,
who will appreciate the eraser offer in this ad. If you listen closely, the character was
voiced by Mel Blanc.
FRUIT OF
THE LOOM – Howard Cosell
FTD
FLORISTS - Louis Jordan
GABRIEL
SHOCK ABSORBERS – Roger Miller (singer of the hit King Of The Road, featured in the ad.)
GAIN
DETERGENT – Jean Stapleton (pre-All In
The Family.)
GENERAL
MILLS TOTAL CERIAL – Dick Van Patten (pre-Eight
Is Enough.)
GIBBONS
BEER – Frank Gorshin (the original Riddler from TV’s Batman, but the brief reference to the show is outdone by Gorshin’s
great Marlon Brando impersonation, which spoofs method acting.)
GILLETTE
RAZORS – Pee Wee Reese/Don Zimmer/Roy Campanella
JACK La
LANNE’S GLAMOUR STRETCHER (La Lanne promotes an exercise device with a chart,
and a phonograph record made of “unbreakable” vinyl)
HALEY’S
M.O. – Ted Knight (who was already a voice-over announcer, character actor and
voice on many cartoons, prior to The
Mary Tyler Moore Show and Too Close
For Comfort.)
HEAD
& SHOULDERS SHAMPOO – Vicki Lawrence (already know through her association
with Carol Burnett.)
HEFTY
TRASH BAGS – Jonathan Winters
HEINZ
PICKLES – Arte Johnson (dressed as a pickle in a jar, he was already a hot
property form the TV classic Laugh-In.)
HOSTESS
CRUMB CAKES – Ann Blyth (using her Hollywood image to distinguish this
particular Hostess product from their other snack lines, deemed to be aimed
squarely at kids. The product is still
in production, so it worked.)
HUNTS
CATSUP (aka KETCHUP) – A tie-in to My
Three Sons offers the cast, including Fred MacMurray, Barry Livingston,
Stanley Livingston, and William Demarest.
I CAN’T
BELIEVE IT’S A GIRDLE from Playtex – Rue McClanahan (Prior to her success on Maude and later The Golden Girls, Rue stands out in this huge hit TV as that helped
sell big this very successful product.
Who is that saleswoman?)
IVORY
SOAP – Donna Mills (Before Knots Landing,
this is even prior to her work in Clint Eastwood’s directorial debut Play Misty For Me in 1971.)
JELL-O
SOFT SWIRL PUDDING – Florence Henderson (The Brady Bunch mom in one of her long series of memorable TV ads.)
JENO’S
PIZZA ROLLS – A Lone Ranger tie-in
with original Ranger Clayton Moore and original Tonto Jay Silverheels, includes
some surrealistic party behavior and the use of the famous classical piece The William Tell Overture by Rossini.
KELLOGG’S
CORN FLAKES – A Beverly Hillbillies
tie-in with Buddy Ebsen, Max Baer Jr., and Donna Douglas in black and white.
KELLOGG’S
– MacLean Stevenson early in his career at the Kellogg’s “computer factory”
circa late 1960s.
KELLOGG’S
FROSTED FLAKES – Tony The Tiger in an early color ad, when they finally settled
on the look he has now.
KELLOGG’S
RICE KRISPIES – Jimmy Durante, singing.
KELLOGG’S
SPECIAL K CERIAL – Lily Tomlin, simply dubbed SPECIAL K CERIAL on the DVD menus.
KINDNESS
HAIR CONDITIONER – Elizabeth Montgomery in a Bewitched tie-in.
KLEAN ‘N
SHINE – Florence Henderson
KODAK –
Ozzie Nelson (1950s, black and white.)
LAY’S
POTATO CHIPS – Two from a series of promotions starring Buddy Hackett
LAY’S
POTATO CHIPS – Tim Conway
LIPTON
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP – Arthur Godfrey (1950s, early packaging, black & white,
which is longer than most on this DVD.)
LISTERINE
– Nancy Allen (later of Brian De Palma classic thrillers Carrie, Dressed To Kill,
and Blow Out, then the Robocop films.)
LUSTRE-CRÈME
SHAMPOO – Yvonne DeCarlo (Pre-Munsters,
as a tie-in to her work in the William Dieterle Republic Pictures feature film Magic Fire from 1956. She plays piano. The film is about composer Richard Wagner.)
MAXIM
INSTANT COFFEE – Patricia Neal (Hud)
MAXWELL
HOUSE – Danny Thomas
MINUTE
MAID ORANGE JUICE – Bing Crosby Family
MR.
COFFEE – Joe DiMaggio in his famous ploy of personally sending money in his
name to all who buy the machine.
NESTLE’S
QUIK – Two with Roy Rogers, when the only flavor was chocolate, and Dale Evans
joins in on the second ad, both tie0ins to his show.
NYQUIL –
Sherman Hemsley (soon to be George Jefferson on All In The Family and The
Jeffersons.)
OLD MILWAUKEE BEER – Tony Dow, trying to break
his kid image from Leave It To Beaver.
OPEN PIT
BARBEQUE SAUCE – Color tie-in to The
Andy Griffith Show with Griffith, Ron (Ronny) Howard, Aneta Corsaut, and
Jack Dobson.
OVALTINE
– Joe Namath, Jerry Philbin, Emerson Booser, John Dochrie
PACQUIN
HAND CREAM – Jaclyn Smith (videotaped, prior to Charlie’s Angels.)
PALMOLIVE
– Jan Miner as the Manicurist Madge, with the famous “softens hands while you
do the dished”, but later ads dropped “the” to match the bottle’s phrasing.
PAMPERS –
Susan Sarandon
PEPSI –
Don Johnson, joined by Eagle-gone-solo Glenn Frey and is the only letterboxed
ad on the DVD.
PHILIP
MORRIS – Lucille Ball & Desi Arnaz
POLAROID
LAND CAMERA – Ali McGraw (monochrome)
POST
TOASTIES CEREAL – Andy Griffith
PRINGLES
– Bernie Kopell (When they first came
out, Proctor & Gamble was allowed to call them Potato Chips, but since they
were made of mashing potatoes and reforming them in chip shapes (without
oversimplification), they were later renamed “potato crisps” as they are now
known. This ad is before the change.)
PROM HAIR
CARE – Chico Marx & Harpo Marx
RCA
Televisions – Lloyd Bridges
REMCO
MOVIELAND DRIVE-IN THEATER – Patty Duke (listed under Movieland on the menus.)
REMINGTON
MIST-AIR HOT COMB – Ed Burns, playing up his “Kookie” image form the 1950s hit
TV series 77 Sunset Strip.
RISE
SHAVING CREAM – Dick Butkus
ROGER
MARIS ACTION BASEBALL GAME starring the man himself.
SCHMIDT
BEER – Mike Farrell
SCOTTIES
TISSUES – Jimmy Durante playing piano, the idea being that they can take care
of even his famous big nose.
SIMONIZ
CAR WASH – The Three stooges, in their second era with Curly Joe.
SKITTLE-POOL
– Don Adams, playing indirectly off of his Get
Smart persona.
SPEED-O
BIKE – Spanky McFarland, a tie-in with the Little
Rascals/Our Gang films, actually made for movie theaters. Sadly ironic when we know how much money he
was cheated out of by adulthood. His
lawsuits never worked out before his death, but he remarkably never complained publicly.
STUDEBAKER
LARK – A Mr. Ed tie-in with Alan
Young joined by the talking horse.
TANG –
Jim Lovell, later the subject of Ron Howard’s Apollo 13, helped to establish the drink as that of astronauts.
THAT’S MY
COLOR by Technique – Gloria De Haven (typo in the menu)
TIDE XK
DETEGENT - George Fenneman & Rose Marie (typo in the menu)
TOASTA
PIZZA – Art Linkletter
TOP JOB
CLEANER – Paul Dooley
ULTRA
BRITE TOOTHPASTE – Farrah Fawcett
UNION OIL
– Marilyn Monroe
VENTURE
HAIR TONIC – Johnny Bench.
VICTORS
COUGH DROPS – Charlotte Rae (long before Differ’nt
Strokes or The Facts Of Life,
and she is a hoot here.)
VITALIS
DRY TEXTURE CRÈME – Howard Cosell & Don Meredith
VOLKSWAGEN
FASTBACK SEDAN – Dustin Hoffman (just before he hit it big with The Graduate & Midnight Cowboy.)
WESTINGHOUSE
AIR CONDITIONERS – Frank Gifford
WHEATIES
– Bob Richards (Olympic Champion)
WHEATIES
– Bruce Jenner, the Olympic Champion in the infamous ad that was criticized for
implying that you could win the Olympics by eating them.
WHEATIES
– Ray Scott (sports announcer, on NFL Rookies Of The Year promotion)
That
order does not reflect the actual order the ads appear on the DVD, ort on the
two menus provided, but are extended reference for fans. There literally is something for everyone,
though some of them are obviously must-sees.
Many are hit classics that were played for years, due to how effective
and memorable they were. Even in these
brief ads, the star appeal of these known names (or later-knowns) is obvious in
pretty much all cases. How star personalities
were used to push products varies in interesting ways throughout and certainly
throughout many periods. Some are just
gems that are simply brilliant.
The ads
are all full screen (save the Don Johnson ad), though they vary from black and
white to color. Letterboxing on TV is a
very recent development. As a matter of
fact, the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) used to have people monitor
TV broadcasts all the time to make sure broadcasters were using the entire area
of the 1.33 x 1 screen. Prior to the
slick filmmaking (or anti-filmmaking if you will) that MTV ushered in, many of
these people were neglected by TV and motion pictures, but some still went into
those fields as well. Sadly, information
on directors, cinematographers and production designers is not available and
deserves to be researched and published.
Image quality varies, but sometimes, they look really good. A few of them even originated on videotape.
Dolby
Digital 2.0 Mono is the sound on all ads, which is just fine. All of them, except maybe the Miami Vice tie-in, were always that
way. It reminds us how lame TV audio
standards used to be, but that monophonic sound is not always a bad thing. Though there are no extras, the ads are
listed by celebrities and products in the menus. That kind of cross-referencing deserves to be
recognized with some merit, so this may be the only time we will ever count any
kind of chapter selection as a legitimate extra. The menus do not always work right and the
chapter selection sometimes has to be tricked to work or to get to a certain
ad, but this is still better than VHS.
All
together, this all lasts around 95 minutes and has immense rewatchability. Those who are skeptical are especially
encouraged to look into this, as there must be at least one ad you are curious
about here and the price is not bad. The
companies who still exist protect their advertising histories closely, so that
alone is reason enough to outright buy Hit
Celebrity TV Commercials. It has a
great price and we can only hope this will become a DVD series.
- Nicholas Sheffo