Ray Rayner

Ray Rayner (born Raymond M. Rahner; July 23, 1919 – January 21, 2004) was an American television presenter, actor and author, he was the staple of Chicago children's television in the 1960s and 1970s on WGN-TV.

Ray Rayner
Ray Rayner with Chelveston and Cuddly Dudley on Ray Rayner and His Friends in 1968
Born
Raymond M. Rahner

(1919-07-23)July 23, 1919
Queens, New York, United States
DiedJanuary 21, 2004(2004-01-21) (aged 84)
Fort Myers, Florida, United States
Spouse(s)
Jeanne Rahner
(m. 1949; died 1995)

Marie Rahner
(m. 1997)
Children2
Career
ShowRayner Shine
The Ray Rayner Show
The Little Show
Popeye's Firehouse
Dick Tracy
Ray Rayner and His Friends
Rocket to Adventure
Bozo's Circus
Station(s)WGGB
WOOD (AM)
WBKB-TV (later WLS-TV)
WBBM-TV
WGN-TV
KGGM-TV
CountryUS

Early life

Rayner (the name was initially spelled "Rahner" but pronounced "Rayner") grew up in Queens, New York. He attended College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts; his first media job was working for WGBB radio in Freeport on Long Island while he was attending night school at Fordham University.[1]

World War II service

He enlisted in the Army Air Corps, serving as the navigator of a B-17 during World War II, when he was shot down over France April 3, 1943.[2] During 2 12 years as a POW in Stalag Luft III, he helped prepare the escape depicted in the film The Great Escape—though he was transferred to another camp before the escape took place. It was during his time as a POW that he discovered his talent for entertaining, namely through his fellow prisoners and his German captors. He was interviewed in a documentary titled "Stalag Luft III", produced by RDR Productions of Glenview, Illinois.[1][3][4]

Chicago

Rayner circa 1960

After briefly working in radio at WOOD in Grand Rapids, Michigan, as well as in New York and Dayton, Ohio following the war,[5] Rayner joined what was then WBKB, later to become WBBM-TV in Chicago as a staff announcer;[6] he also worked on a local morning program called Rayner Shine in 1953.[4][7][8] This was Rayner's first work with puppets, who were provided for the show by the Mulqueens.[9][10] He got a noontime program called The Ray Rayner Show in 1953, he and his co-host Mina Kolb hosted a somewhat free-form show that featured music, comedy skits, dance and pantomime.[11][12] The show, geared towards teens, ran for five years.[8][13]

WBBM asked Rayner to switch to a children's program in 1958, though reluctant at first, he did so with The Little Show, which was very much like Ray Rayner and His Friends; on this version, the duck he worked with had the name of Havelock.[1][14] It ran two years; he also hosted Popeye's Firehouse (as Chief Abernathy) for another two.[1][15][10][13] He moved to WGN-TV in 1961.

WGN-TV Channel 9

Rayner as Sergeant Pettibone, with Tracer puppet, circa 1961–1967
Rayner at left as Oliver O. Oliver on Bozo's Circus in 1966

His first role on WGN was as Sergeant Pettibone, the host of the Dick Tracy show.[16] He joined the cast of Bozo's Circus as country bumpkin clown Oliver O. Oliver. By 1965, Rayner's clown character, along with "Sandy", played by Don Sandburg, were added to Larry Harmon's Bozo coloring books.[17] Rayner left the show in 1971 because he wanted more time for other projects.[16][18] After that, he occasionally appeared on the show as Oliver and filled in for Ned Locke as "Mr. Ray" when needed.[17][19] Following the cancellation of Dick Tracy, a new afternoon program called Rocket to Adventure ran until 1968; this featured early appearances by Gigantor and Tobor the Eighth Man. Rayner hosted the show appearing as an astronaut.[10][16][17] In 1968, he also appeared in television commercials for McDonald's as Ronald McDonald.[1][17] At one point, WGN-TV had enough hope in being able to syndicate Rayner's Dick Tracy show to produce a pilot for that purpose.[20]

Ray Rayner and His Friends

Starting in 1962, Rayner began hosting his own long-running Ray Rayner and His Friends, which had the title Breakfast With Bugs Bunny when he became its host; it was renamed in 1964.[17] The show featured old cartoons such as various Warner Brothers character cartoons, arts-and-crafts, which often ended up as a gluey mess, and animals such as Chelveston the Duck who was named after RAF Chelveston where Rayner was stationed during World War II. Chelveston occasionally bit and Rayner was notably wary. During these segments, Chelveston walked around the set, eat, or bathe while a then-current top 40 song was played.[10][17][21] Rayner later said he put duck feed in the cuffs of his coveralls so Chelveston nipped at them, then save himself from the duck by giving him a head of lettuce to pick apart.[4] What was not known to the public until after the program was no longer on the air was that Chelveston was actually played by four different ducks over the years.[8][22]

Rayner also had a talking dog puppet, Cuddly Dudley, created and voiced by Roy Brown, a.k.a. "Cooky the Cook" from Bozo's Circus and The Bozo Show.[17][23][24] The segment highlighted viewer mail which included many hand-drawn pictures submitted by children. The segment was often humorous as it was a chance for Rayner and Brown to interact and use comedic ad-libs.[10] He always wore a jumpsuit, covered with small pieces of paper that held reminders of what to do next on the program (a cartoon, a commercial, a visit from Chelveston, etc.).[10][21] He would also simulcast traffic reports from sister station WGN Radio over stock footage of traffic moving along the Chicago-area Interstates. During baseball season, he showed and narrated highlights of the Cubs and White Sox games from the previous day, wearing a custom-sewn ball cap that had the front half of each team's cap, resulting in a two-billed cap which he spun around, depending on which team's highlights were being shown.

The arts-and-crafts was a regular segment that always began with a finished version prepared in advance by someone "behind the scenes" (who quite often was the wife of Producer Dick Flanders) that was displayed to the audience, followed by Rayner's attempts to demonstrate the process in an amusing, all-thumbs effort, also set to music, that resulted in a comically sub-par facsimile that more resembled a random collection of felt, construction paper and glue. Rayner's version would then be displayed alongside the original further emphasizing his comical ineptitude regarding crafts.[1][4] Rayner contended that his failure at crafts made the show successful as the work of his young viewers was much better than the crafts he did on-air.[25] He held an annual jellybean contest where viewers were to submit guesses of the quantity in a large jar displayed for a period of time on the show. Every Christmas he had an Advent calendar and would reveal a date each day until the Christmas holiday. Another bit was a lip-synching sketch Rayner usually did to an older novelty song such as "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh" by Allan Sherman. However he also performed serious songs while actually singing. Another feature on the show was Ark in the Park, a taped segment of a trip to the Lincoln Park Zoo featuring the then-director of the zoo, Dr. Lester Fisher. The introductory music for this segment was "The Unicorn" by The Irish Rovers.[10][26] Rayner also featured a "How and Why" segment on his shows with J. Bruce Mitchell of Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry, as did Garfield Goose and Friends.[27] Along with Bozo's Circus, a video game was added to Rayner's show that viewers could play by phone called TV Powww.[19] Rayner hosted this show until his 1980 retirement from WGN.[4]

During his time at Channel 9, starting in 1974, Rayner also hosted a Thursday night broadcast of the Illinois State Lottery's then-weekly drawings, which featured a top prize of $300,000 ("Weekly Bonanza") and a second prize of $50,000 to a field of about a dozen contestants who had won a special lottery game over the preceding seven-day period. The show aired at 7:00 PM CT.

Actor and author

During his years in Chicago, he also frequently appeared in live theater, including plays at the Forum Dinner Theater in suburban Summit; receiving a Jefferson award nomination for one of his roles.[2][4] Rayner also did directing for student productions at Loyola University Chicago. He received an M. A. in Humanities from the University of Chicago in 1970, writing his thesis about children's television's first goal being to entertain.[16][28] He was a member of the Silver Circle of the Chicago chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and received many local Emmys for his television work.[1][28][29][30][31]

Rayner also wrote a book titled The Story of Television published in 1972. It is basically an industry guide to how a television show is made featuring many photos of Rayner from his Ray Rayner and Friends show. The book is quite rare and commands a high price, when available, from on-line auction sites.[32] One copy was donated to the Museum of Broadcast Communications about seven months after Rayner's passing.

Later years and legacy

He moved to KGGM-TV, the CBS affiliate in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1981, before retiring from television in 1989.[1][33] He cited the harsh Chicago winters as the motivating factor.[7] Rayner was the station's weatherman, complete with notes pinned to his jacket as they were to his coveralls in Chicago; he also hosted the local PM Magazine in Albuquerque.[2] He returned to Chicago for the 25th and 30th anniversary shows for Bozo's Circus.[33][34] Rayner continued to accept some Chicago theater roles and took some time to patiently answer children's questions about his work even after moving to Albuquerque. He did a week-long stint filling in at weather and other duties at Chicago's Fox Thing in the Morning on WFLD in May 1995.[35] Rayner took some courses at the University of New Mexico, did some teaching and wrote a column for a local newspaper there.[2]

Rayner moved to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after his wife, Jeanne, a former nurse, died of lung cancer in 1995.[4][7] His activities there included reading to the blind, Grant A Wish (for terminally ill children), and delivering Meals on Wheels.[36]

He died on 21 January 2004, of complications from pneumonia in Fort Myers, Florida, at the age of 84.[3][4] He is survived by his second wife, Marie, a daughter and a son, and four grandchildren.[1]

Clips from Rayner's shows are featured in the WGN Christmas special, Bozo, Gar and Ray: WGN TV Classics. In 2005, the Museum of Broadcast Communications awarded WGN-TV's Studio 1 a plaque to commemorate the forty years of children's television broadcast from the studio. Ray Rayner and Friends with a likeness of Rayner and Chelveston, is on the plaque along with Frazier Thomas and Garfield Goose and Friends and Bob Bell and Bozo's Circus.[37][38] Rayner's coveralls, complete with notes, is part of the museum's collection.[39][40] Cuddly Dudley and his doghouse from The Bozo Show are also part of the museum's collection.[41][42] A photo of Rayner on the set of his television show with two guests was chosen as the cover photo for Chicago Television, published for the Museum of Broadcast Communications in 2010.[43]

See also

References

  1. "Ray Rayner, Star Of "Ray Rayner and his Friends," on WGN-TV In The 1960s And '70s, Dies". WGN-TV. 21 January 2004. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  2. Anderson, Jon (27 December 1993). "Bozo Days". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 18 February 2011.
  3. "TV Host Rayner Clowned Around". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. 23 January 2004. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  4. Hageman, William (21 January 2004). "WGN personality Ray Rayner dead at 84". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  5. Plotnik, Gene (19 May 1951). Vox Jox. Billboard. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
  6. Plotnik, Gene (16 May 1953). Vox Jox. Billboard. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
  7. "Jeanne Rahner, 67, TV Performer's Wife". Chicago Sun-Times. 5 August 1995. Retrieved 18 February 2011. "Jeanne Rahner, 67, the wife of former WGN-TV performer Ray Rayner, died Tuesday in Presbyterian Hospital, Albuquerque, N.M. She was working as a nurse in Brooklyn when she met and married her husband. In 1953, they came to the Chicago area.Mrs. Rahner resumed her nursing career in the late 1960s at Highland Park Hospital. She left there in the mid-1970s. In 1981, fed up with Chicago winters, the couple left Northbrook to move to New Mexico, where her husband worked as a weather reporter for Albuquerque television station KRQE-Channel 13. Mrs. Rahner was born in Brooklyn. She was a graduate of Long Island..." (pay-per-view)
  8. Libman, Norma (27 September 1992). "Coming To Chicago-a Career Decision That Made His Career". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
  9. Okuda and Mulqueen 2004, pp. 70-72.
  10. "Ray Rayner". Chicago Television. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  11. Disk Jockey Move To Video Is Still A Long, Hard Trip. Billboard. 13 November 1954. p. 58. Retrieved 12 March 2011. ray rayner.
  12. Plotnik, Gene (4 December 1954). Vox Jox. Billboard. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
  13. "Forgotten Friends". ChicagoTelevision. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  14. Okuda and Mulqueen 2004, p. 71, 77.
  15. Okuda and Mulqueen 2004, p. 227.
  16. Van Huesen, Phil (November 6–12, 1971). "Clowning, Marching, and Enjoying the Mail". TV Week/Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 20 February 2011.
  17. "Bozo Timeline-1960s". WGN-TV. Archived from the original on 9 July 2001. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  18. Johnson, Allan (3 April 1988). "At 50, WGN Finds The TV Picture and Audiences Have Changed". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 17 February 2011.
  19. "Bozo Timeline-1970s". WGN-TV. Archived from the original on 18 December 2000. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  20. "Ray Rayner in a syndication pilot". Chicago Tribune. p. 10. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
  21. Hollis 2001, pp. 97-99.
  22. Ellin, Harlene (8 November 1991). "Rayner's Pecking Pal In Duck Heaven". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
  23. "Roy Brown Our Kooky Cooky". FamousClowns. Archived from the original on 16 November 2013. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  24. "Roy Brown". Chicago Television. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  25. Hollis 2001, pp. 98-99.
  26. Dale, Steve (28 June 2010). "Ark in the Park With Ray Rayner and Dr. Lester Fisher". ChicagoNow. Archived from the original on 27 February 2011. Retrieved 20 February 2011.
  27. Mueller, Jim (20 September 1998). "If the face looks familiar, think back 25 years to..." Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 18 February 2011.
  28. "Ray Rayner-Silver Circle Award". Chicago Chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 2000. Retrieved 10 February 2011.
  29. "Chicago Emmy Awards" (PDF). Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 1963–1964. Retrieved 13 February 2011.(PDF)
  30. "Chicago Emmy Awards" (PDF). Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 1960–1961. Retrieved 13 February 2011.(PDF)
  31. "Chicago Emmy Awards" (PDF). Chicago chapter-National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. 1962–1963. Retrieved 13 February 2011.(PDF)
  32. Rayner, Ray; Ruhlin, Roger, eds. (1972). The Story of Television: (Inside Creative Careers). Hubbard Press. ASIN B0006CUZO8. (out of print)
  33. "Bozo Timeline-1980s". WGN-TV. Archived from the original on 9 July 2001. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  34. "Bozo Timeline-1990s". WGN-TV. Archived from the original on 8 August 2001. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  35. Nidetz, Steve (7 May 1995). "Channel 7 Still Rules The Roost With Late News". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
  36. "Ray Rayner and Friends". Roger's Basement. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  37. "WGN-TV Studio 1 Plaque Photo". Mark DeCarlo. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  38. "WGN-TV Studio 1 To Be Honored For Its Historic Role In Children's Television". Museum of Broadcast Communications. 5 December 2005. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved 10 February 2011.
  39. Okuda and Mulqueen 2004, p. 74, 211.
  40. "Bozo Timeline-2000". WGN-TV. Archived from the original on 8 August 2001. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
  41. Okuda and Mulqueen 2004, p. 81.
  42. Hageman, William (18 February 2009). "In search of Bozo". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 21 February 2011.
  43. Berger, Daniel; Jajkowski, Steve; Sirott, Bob; Museum of Broadcast Communications, eds. (2010). Chicago Television. Arcadia Publishing. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-7385-7713-5. Retrieved 18 February 2011.

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