The Monkees: Don't Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth


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About this Broadcast
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Don't Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth

Season 1, Episode 8

The boys turn to farming in order to help a boy keep his horse. Mike Nesmith, Peter Tork, Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz. Dr. Mann: Jerry Colonna. Babitt: Henry Corden. Fisher: Jim Boles.

repeat 1966 English
Comedy Sitcom Family Music

Cast & Crew
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Davy Jones (Actor) .. Davy
Micky Dolenz (Actor) .. Micky
Mike Nesmith (Actor) .. Mike
Michael Nesmith (Actor) .. Mike
Peter Tork (Actor) .. Peter
Jerry Colonna (Actor) .. Dr. Mann
Henry Corden (Actor) .. Babitt
Jim Boles (Actor) .. Fisher

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Davy Jones (Actor) .. Davy
Born: December 30, 1945
Died: February 29, 2012
Birthplace: Manchester, England
Trivia: Jockey turned singer/actor, Davy Jones played the adorable mop-top Davy on the mid-to-late '60s phenom television series, The Monkees. He and his fellow manufactured bandmates Peter Tork, Mickey Dolenz, and Michael Nesmith made one film together -- Head (1968). After the group's demise, Jones occasionally played himself as a guest star on television (Brady Bunch) and in commercials. In 1995, he again played himself in The Brady Bunch Movie. Jones and all the other Monkees, except Nesmith, periodically got back together for tours and reunion concerts.
Micky Dolenz (Actor) .. Micky
Born: March 08, 1945
Birthplace: Tarzana, California, United States
Trivia: Starred in the 1950s series Circus Boy. Learned to play the drums after being cast as the Monkees' drummer. Played the first synthesizer on a rock recording (the Monkees' "Daily Nightly" from the 1967 album Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd.). Cowrote and directed the final episode of The Monkees. Voiced various characters on Saturday-morning cartoons during the 1970s, including The Funky Phantom and The Scooby-Doo Show. Auditioned for the role of Fonzie on Happy Days. Moved to London in 1977 to costar in Harry Nilsson's musical The Point! with fellow Monkee Davy Jones. Worked as a director-producer in England during the late 1970s and early '80s. His credits include a stage version of Bugsy Malone that starred a 14-year-old Catherine Zeta-Jones. Created-produced the early 1980s British children's show Luna. Studied physics during the 1970s and '80s at the Open University, a UK correspondence college.
Mike Nesmith (Actor) .. Mike
Michael Nesmith (Actor) .. Mike
Born: December 30, 1942
Died: December 10, 2021
Birthplace: Houston, Texas, United States
Trivia: Multi-talented Michael Nesmith has come a long way from playing the quiet Monkee in the little wool cap on the popular 1960s sitcom The Monkees. Since then he has proven himself an innovator in musical genres and music videos -- his work in the latter area led to the creation of the MTV network. Nesmith is also a movie and television producer. Born in Houston, TX, Nesmith is the son of Bette Nesmith Graham, the woman who invented Liquid Paper correction fluid. Before auditioning for The Monkees in 1965, Nesmith had served a two-year stint in the Air Force, worked as a backup musician in Nashville, performed in a Los Angeles-based folk-rock duo with his friend John London, composed songs, including "Mary, Mary" and "Different Drum," and recorded a few singles. While with the Monkees, Nesmith wrote several of their hits and helped persuade the Monkees' "handlers" to allow them to produce their own records. He left the television group after completing their only feature film, Head (1968), to form his own band and then launched his solo career. In 1977, he designed a new television show called Popclips, in which he utilized live music clips while counting down the week's chart-toppers. The show is credited for inspiring the genesis of MTV. Nesmith's mother died in 1980 and left him half of her Liquid Paper fortune (worth over 20 million dollars). Nesmith then launched his own record and film production company, Pacific Arts, which became the number one source of American music videos in the '80s, and won the first Video Grammy for it in 1981. In the late '80s, Nesmith made his own filmmaking debut with the inventive music video "Elephant Parts." He reunited with the Monkees and continued to occasionally perform with them. In 1997, he and the group appeared in an hour-long television special and also released a new album, Justus.
Peter Tork (Actor) .. Peter
Born: February 13, 1942
Died: February 21, 2019
Birthplace: Washington, District of Columbia, United States
Trivia: Learned to play piano at the age of 9. Was part of Edwin O. Smith High School's first graduating class. Landed his spot in the Monkees thanks to a recommendation from friend and fellow musician Stephen Stills. In 1972, he spent three months in jail for hashish possession. Portrayed Topanga Lawrence's father in episodes of the TV series Boy Meets World. Battled a rare form of cancer known as adenoid cystic carcinoma in 2009.
Jerry Colonna (Actor) .. Dr. Mann
Born: September 17, 1904
Died: November 21, 1986
Trivia: In his youth, Jerry Colonna worked as a longshoreman by day to finance his music studies by night. He became a star trombonist in several major bands, fronting his own jazz aggregation for a time. Not willing to become just one more sideliner, Colonna decided to develop a wacky comic persona, growing a huge handlebar mustache for that purpose. He skyrocketed to popularity as a combination stooge/heckler for radio comedian Bob Hope, coining such catch phrases as "Who's Yehudi?" and "Ah, yes...exciting, isn't it?" On his own, Colonna recorded several best-selling records, offering ear-piercing renditions of such songs as "On the Road to Mandalay" (he could hold a high note longer--and to better effect--than any "serious" opera diva). After his film debut in 52nd Street (1937), Colonna played several hilarious supporting roles, and also starred in a few lively "B"-movies like Priorities on Parade (1944) and Kentucky Jamboree (1950); he was also seen in an ersatz version in dozens of Warner Bros. cartoons of the 1940s. During the 1950s and 1960s, Colonna continued making USO tours with Bob Hope (as he'd done during the war), headlined a nightclub act, and showed up with great frequency as a TV guest star on such series as The Monkees and McHale's Navy. After Colonna fell victim to a stroke in the late 1960s, his old boss Hope saw to it that Jerry and his family were well-provided for. In addition to his performing credits, Jerry Colonna also penned a novel, The Loves of Tullio (1970).
Henry Corden (Actor) .. Babitt
Born: January 06, 1920
Died: May 19, 2005
Birthplace: Montréal, Québec, Canada
Trivia: Canadian actor Henry Corden played numerous character roles in U.S. films, on stage and on television. He was typically cast as a comical, avaricious Arab. Corden had a distinctive voice and frequently voiced children's cartoons.
Jim Boles (Actor) .. Fisher
Born: January 01, 1913
Died: January 01, 1977
Trivia: American character actor Jim Boles has also worked as a voice artist and is known for his impersonations of Abraham Lincoln.
Kerry Maclane (Actor)
Born: April 18, 1958
Trivia: American actor Kerry MacLane was still in his early teens when he began playing leads on stage, television, commercials, and in feature films. In addition to acting, he was also a commercial hand model and did voice-overs.

Before / After
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The Monkees
05:00 am