Irish Daily Mail

TV guests of honour

- Pete Skellon, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria.

Was M*A*S*H the first TV show to feature celebrity guest appearance­s?

THERE is a long tradition of American TV shows, particular­ly westerns, featuring guest stars.

Wagon Train, which ran from 1957 to 1965, told stories of life on a huge wagon train as it leaves post-Civil War Missouri for California through plains, deserts and the Rocky Mountains.

The first episode, The Willy Moran Story, featured Ernest Borgnine in the title role as a drunk, but heroic wagon driver. He had won the Best Actor Oscar for Marty the previous year.

The Willy Moran role was revived in season two of the show and Borgnine was a guest star in two other episodes, The Estaban Zomaro Story and The Earl Packer Story.

Double Oscar winner Bette Davis appeared in three episodes of Wagon Train as different characters: Ella Lindstrom and Madame Elizabeth McQueeney in 1959, and Bettina May in 1961. Claire Trevor, who won the best supporting actress Oscar for Key Largo in 1948, played the title role in The C L Harding Story, which also featured country music legend Johnny Cash.

Other stars of the silver screen who appeared in Wagon Train included: Debra Paget, Dane Clark, Charles Bickford, Forrest Tucker, Joseph Cotten, Rhonda Fleming, Dan Duryea, Jane Wyman, Virginia Mayo, Lee Marvin, Mickey Rooney and Lou Costello, one half of the comic act Abbott and Costello.

Future US President Ronald Reagan turned up as the character Captain Paul Winters.

Other westerns such as Rawhide, Gunsmoke, Laramie, Bonanza and The Virginian had guest stars in the saddle.

And it wasn’t uncommon to see stars such as Clint Walker of Cheyenne, James Garner and Jack Kelly of Maverick, Ty Hardin of Bronco and Will Hutchins of Sugarfoot, produced under the Warner Bros banner, moseying onto the set of each other’s shows.

Terry Cutts, by email. NIELSEN ratings, an audience measuremen­t system developed in the Twenties by Arthur C. Nielsen, are assessed in a process called sweeps that take place in November, February, May and July. A strategica­lly placed guest star can boost ratings and affect how much the network can charge for advertisin­g.

Over its 11 seasons – from 1972 to 1983 – M*A*S*H churned out more than 250 episodes, which meant a large number of nurses, soldiers and patients passed through the tents of the 4077th.

The final episode of the series, which aried on February 28, 1983, had a Nielsen rating of 60.2 and was watched by an estimated 125million people worldwide.

To this day, it stands as the most-watched finale of any series, as well as the most-watched singular episode.

It could be argued that this is due, in part, to the series’ fondness for including famous faces as guest appearance­s.

Memorable faces to look out for include Leslie Nielsen, James Cromwell, Pat Morita (aka Mr Miyagi from Karate Kid), Ron Howard, Brian Dennehy, Shelley Long, Patrick Swayze and Laurence Fishburne. My favourite was George Wendt (Norm from Cheers) as Private La Roche, who got a pool ball stuck in his mouth at Halloween.

Andrew Moles, Durham.

When was the concept of nostalgia created?

THE Swiss physician Johannes Hofer coined this term in his 1688 medical dissertati­on.

It is derived from the Greek nostos, or homecoming, and algos, or pain.

Though the term suggests homesickne­ss, it was a diagnosis for a specific disease among soldiers. Hofer’s nostalgia was a chronic debilitati­ng disorder where the sufferer became manic with longing.

He was giving name to a disorder that had been recognised during the horrors of the Thirty Years War (1618-1648), when it was called mal del corazon, which means trouble of the heart in Spanish.

It was particular­ly associated with Swiss soldiers, who were reportedly so susceptibl­e to falling ill when they heard the traditiona­l milking song Khue-Reyen that its playing was punishable by death.

By the 1850s, nostalgia was seen as a symptom or stage of a pathologic­al process, a form of melancholi­a rather than a particular disease – though it was still being diagnosed as late as the American Civil War, 1861-1865.

From the late 19th century, it came to be considered as a benign and even positive feeling.

We now consider it as something that reminds us of an event or item from our past, and the resulting emotion might be sorrow or pleasure.

Dr Ian Smith, Cambridge.

Was there a city-centre public clock in London before the Victorians built Big Ben?

FURTHER to the recent answer about Thomas Harris’s 1671 clock in Fleet Street – believed to be London’s oldest clock which bears a minute hand – figures representi­ng Gog and Magog were also found in an alcove over the 1840s Sir John Bennett clock shop in London’s Cheapside.

At the time of street improvemen­ts in 1929, the building’s front- age was sold to US industrial­ist Henry Ford.

Gog and Magog were re-erected in a modified facade in his museum in Dearborn, Michigan.

My great-uncle, Herbert Morton, brokered the sale on behalf of Ford and supervised the dismantlin­g.

In his unpublishe­d book Spend Me Ten Millions (the sum Ford was willing to pay during his spending spree collecting British artefacts), Morton says: ‘I advised that Bennett’s premises should be erected in some shady angle outside… the main Edison Institute building… but Mr Ford thought otherwise and I could not dissuade him from erecting the slender, three-storied building on an open site… of brand new brick work [where] it lost all its ancient appearance…’

Over five years, Morton spent many thousands of pounds on antiques and works of art on Ford’s instructio­ns.

He ‘took down and later set up again in America many great engines and some historic buildings’.

IS THERE a question to which you have always wanted to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question raised here? Send your questions and answers to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Irish Daily Mail, Embassy House, Herbert Park Lane, Ballsbridg­e, Dublin 4. You can also fax them to 0044 1952 510906 or you can email them to charles.legge@dailymail.ie. A selection will be published but we are not able to enter into individual correspond­ence.

 ??  ?? Guest appearance: Ernest Borgnine in the series Wagon Train
Guest appearance: Ernest Borgnine in the series Wagon Train

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