Podcast Cover

Tommy Smothers - Audio Biography

Katie Brown

    Tommy Smothers: Rebellious Half of Legendary Comedy Duo As one-half of counterculture icons the Smothers Brothers comedy team, Tommy Smothers brought subversive left-wing politics to mainstream audiences through disarmingly innocent...

    show more
    Tommy Smothers: Rebellious Half of Legendary Comedy Duo
    As one-half of counterculture icons the Smothers Brothers comedy team, Tommy Smothers brought subversive left-wing politics to mainstream audiences through disarmingly innocent humor on hit 1960s variety show The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. His clueless onstage persona sharply contrasted social consciousness off-camera as a showrunner fighting CBS censors to advance civil rights messaging and anti-establishment sentiment during the Age of Aquarius. Though short-lived, the Brothers’ taboo-busting irreverence profoundly influenced topical satire for successors like Saturday Night Live launching riotous political commentary into living rooms nationwide.
    Early Years Born Thomas Bolyn Smothers III in 1939 to a career army officer, he and his younger brother Dickie bounced around military bases before eventually settling in California where teacher mother introduced them to folk music sparking lifelong performance passion. Tommy mastered dexterous yo-yo tricks and throwing skills as pastimes on remote bases.
    After studying theater at San Jose State College, Tommy toured as solo musical comedian caricaturing familiar folk genres. Closing shows his mischievous brother Dick would emerge to playfully upstage Tommy’s earnest singing with off-key joking parody. The audience was delighted in witnessing their spontaneous onstage clashing birthed lightbulb idea trying combined shtick as a duo. Billing themselves the Smothers Brothers, their act synthesized seemingly wholesome all-American brotherly harmony with subtly subversive themes. Underdog younger Dick continually outwitted supposedly smarter Tommy via interrupting questions needling holes in big brother’s clueless authority. This cheekily irreverent dynamic played ingeniously off 1960s protests questioning institutional power and credibility.
    Rising Fame Signed to major comedy tours and television variety showcases like Jack Paar, adrenaline rush performing won over initially reluctant Tommy who abandoned solo singing ambitions. Their perfectly calibrated comedic personality differences proved irresistible, catapulting the Smothers Brothers to national fame practically overnight. Following standout sets on shows starring Judy Garland and Steve Allen plus quickfire comedy cameos in Hollywood films like Beach Ball and C'mon, Let's Live a Little, the Brothers landed their own sitcom on CBS. Though short-lived, The Smothers Brothers Show earned an Emmy award and cemented popularity locking cross-generational appeal.
    In 1967 the duo returned to CBS starring The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour - an irreverent variety show slotted daringly at 9 PM Sundays when families and kids gathered around sets. While other hosts mostly played nice avoiding controversy, the brothers brought edgy counterculture humor addressing Vietnam, drugs, racism and religion amidst music acts like Jefferson Airplane or the Who. Catapulting youth antiwar sentiment into American households, their cheeky liberal potshots racked network alarm through sly Civil Rights shoutouts and anti-establishment swipes. The brothers’ radical reach horrified traditional viewers expecting safe superficial farce from primetime - sparking divisively soaring ratings while reactionary furor built.
    Rebellious Provocateurs While onscreen Tommy played the obtuse milquetoast opposite Dick’s pesky upstart, off-camera his steely leadership battled executives as the show's key writer and creative director shielding the cast from backlash amidst risky satire attuned to their college fanbase hungry for skewering hypocrisy. Sketches tackling taboo social issues brought national debates to the fore even though tension backstage boiled. Each broadcast ignited standoffs with network Standards and Practices department heads wary of alienating sponsors and Southern affiliates. The Brothers fought for every provocative joke and lyric earning exasperated rebukes or threats from the old guard. Tommy marshaled support shielding skittish staff from blowback so political potshots continued for a time letting America know where the counterculture generation stood. ‘
    Alas, tensions climaxed when censors cut a comedic musical takedown of cigarette marketing evils from air reportedly under tobacco company pressure. Incensed at compromising creative control then denied the opportunity to explain the sudden omission on-air, Tommy and Dick openly revolted reading the corporation's statement of rebuttal next episode in protest. A die now cast irreconcilably, CBS canceled the hugely popular Comedy Hour mid-season after just 2 years bucking the brothers’ lockstep defiance. Their gutsy primetime rebellion breaching establishment barriers suffered martyrdom but sparked a nervous cultural awakening. America increasingly accepted dissenting views through mass media influencing election outcomes and policy shifts that decade.
    Later Careers Blacklisted after cancellation kept the duo off-air for three years but vivacious Tommy pivoted consulting the rising Vancouver stand-up scene while searching independent film and stage options. In 1973, the Brothers finally returned launching a self-titled NBC summer series but creative disputes prematurely scuttled potential comeback. Tommy retreated from Hollywood disenchanted for a decade nurturing a straight acting career, while slowly rebuilding rapport with estranged former partner Dick through annual concert tours capitalizing on 1960s nostalgia.
    Like a phoenix from ashes, Tommy Sparked unexpected third-act punchline success by directing comedian David Strathairn’s one man “Call Me Twice” show, launching an explosive career that Smothers helped shape through directing several specials and coaching complex onstage monologues channeling multiple personas. This full-circle mentorship role rejuvenated Tommy’s creative leadership itch so long smothered since his revolutionary small-screen skirmish.
    Reviving public performance alongside Brother Dick, the two finally mended fences for good by the late 1980s recapturing chemistry that made the Smothers Brothers legendary. Warm tributes followed in the new millennium for groundbreaking legacy advancing social commentary boundaries on network TV through cunning laughter. Though never reluctant rebels, their comedic camouflage Trojan Horse subtly brought down barriers so successors like Saturday Night Live could drive progressive discourse deeper into the American psyche. Tommy Smothers' youthful crusade blazing trail from censorship to consciousness endures decades on as triumph. Thanks for listening to Quiet Please. Remember to like and share wherever you get your podcasts.
    show less
    Contacts
    Information

    Looks like you don't have any active episode

    Browse Spreaker Catalogue to discover great new content

    Current

    Podcast Cover

    Looks like you don't have any episodes in your queue

    Browse Spreaker Catalogue to discover great new content

    Next Up

    Episode Cover Episode Cover

    It's so quiet here...

    Time to discover new episodes!

    Discover
    Your Library
    Search