Monday, October 9, 2023

Sir Graves Ghastly's Rise and Fall

Lawson Deming was a graduate of Western Reserve University who studied speech, drama, and math. "Deming began performing professionally when he worked in vaudeville," said Sonny Eliot, Lawson's longtime friend.

A lifelong Cleveland, Ohio resident, Deming landed a radio job at WHK in 1932 where he met his wife Rita, who was a hostess of a women's talk show. "The greatest fun was radio," Deming said in a 1982 Detroit Free Press interview, "because we were creating something in somebody's mind with voices, dialogue, music, and sound effects. We created a whole world."

In 1949, Deming switched over to Cleveland television station WTAM where he met co-worker Bill Kennedy early in their television careers. They became good friends. Deming hosted a movie show called One O'Clock Playhouse. He also worked as a puppeteer on a program entitled Woodrow the Woodsman. Although his face never appeared on-screen, he supplied the voices for characters named Freddy Gezundheit, the alley crock; Tarkington Whom II, the owl; and Voracious, the elephant. His work on Woodrow the Woodman brought Deming to Detroit in 1966 when the show was moved to WJBK for taping.

Soon after arriving at WJBK, Deming was approached by program producer and director Jay Frommert about playing the character Ghoulardi and showing horror movies. But Ghoulardi was already being done in Cleveland by Ernie Anderson. Deming suggested he be allowed to create his own character. On Saturday, January 22, 1967, Sir Graves Ghastly rose from the grave on the premise that "Sir Graves was hanged 400 years ago by Queen Elizabeth, but like a bad vaccination, it didn't take."

The shadow-eyed, hair plastered down, goateed Sir Graves began his show by opening a creaky casket from within which was located on a graveyeard set. For the next two hours, the red-gloved, black-capped, comic vampire cracked bad jokes while riffing on the B-grade horror movies he showed between commercial breaks. To complete his Dracula parody, Sir Graves had an infectious laugh, "Nyeeea aaaa haa haaaaa" and he was prone to "hippyisms" in his speech.

Sir Graves and his alter-ego Lawson Deming

Weekly segments on Sir Graves program were the scrolling of children's names celebrating their birthdays, and the "Art Ghoulery" where kids sent in their drawings of Sir Graves, vampires, and werewolves, hoping Sir Graves would feature them on his show.

Deming created a cast of characters all portrayed by him and edited onto the master tape so Sir Graves could interact with them on camera. The cast included Reel McCoy, a character who digs up old B-movie horror films; Tilly Trollhouse, wildly off-key, blonde singer; the Glob, an extreme closeup of Deming's mouth videoed upside down, lip-syncing songs; Cool Ghoul, an over-the-hill motorcycle freak; and Walter, Sir Grave's prissy alter ego who keeps telling him, "You're sick, sick, sick!"

Unlike earlier WXYZ horror movie host Mr. X on Shock Theater, Sir Graves wasn't meant to scare anybody. Deming worked from a rough outline and adlibbed his way through the show, often spouting bad jokes sent in by viewers. The show was a mixture of cheesy horror movies and corny humor.

Viewers, half of whom were males over eighteen-years-old, were almost afraid to laugh at some of Sir Graves' groaners but couldn't help themselves like: "What did the Frankenstein monster say after he ate a six-cylinder engine?" What? "I could've had a V8."

Deming continued to live in Cleveland and took charter flights to Detroit twice a month on Wednesdays until January 1970. He missed his flight and the plane crashed through the Lake Erie ice killing all aboard. After that, Deming and his wife agreed that taking the three-hour, midnight bus ride was a safer option.

In true vampire fashion, he arrived at WJBK before the break of dawn and read fan mail before preparing for taping from 9 am until 11 am for the Saturday show. Then, he taped nine additional segments to be fitted into two movies between commercial breaks, before he took the 4:00 pm bus back to Cleveland. Deming worked two twelve hour days a month producing four programs.

The high point of Sir Graves' career may have been when he emceed Detroit's American Cancer Society benefit called "Black Cat Caper," a pre-halloween costume ball at Cobo Hall on Friday, October 13, 1972. Sir Graves made a grand entrance at 9:15 pm in a coffin carried by Detroit media pallbearers Bob Allison, J.P. McCarthy, Dick Purtan, Bob Talbert, Jac Le Goff, and John Kelly. Tickets cost $13.13. The grand prize for best costume was an eight-day trip to London for two, with a three-day stay at a 500-year-old, haunted abode in a village named Pluckley.

In April of 1983 after sixteen years of faithful service, Lawson Deming was handed his walking papers by WJBK's general manager Bill Flynn. "I never could figure out why he dumped me. We had the highest-rated Saturday show in our market, and it was a money-maker for them." But it was too late for Sir Graves. By this time, Elvira, Mistress of the Dark, had run off with his male audience.

Deming retired in Cleveland and lived for another twenty-four years before he left this vale of tears on April 27, 2007, at the age of ninety-four. His spirit can rest easy knowing the joy he gave to his television audience. Many a Detroit Baby Boomer will shed a tear in memory of Lawson Deming's Sir Graves Ghastly character. David Deming's eulogy at his father's funeral service attributed the longevity of his father's career to "his warm spirit and genuine love of kids."

Sir Graves show intro 

Sir Graves characters 

Shock Theater WXYZ

16 comments:

  1. Excellent; remember that show very well. Woodrow the Woodsman, too( that was kind of lame; sorry). I do remember Sir Graves's bad jokes. So bad they were good. It was all in the delivery. I have wondered whether Count Floyd, a similar cornball cornball vampire movie host portrayed by Joe Flaherty on SCTV, as SCTV is Canadian and Canadians looked at our Channel 2 just as we looked at their Channel 9.

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  2. Wondered whether Count Floyd was inspired by Sir Graves, that is. I forgot to finish my sentence !

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  3. I looked forward to his show every Saturday afternoon when I was a kid.

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  4. Great read Greg. I remember the show well and you captured the essence of it here.

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  5. Interesting. I remember being at a long-gone mall in Wayne, Michigan where Sir Graves was making an appearance. He walked through the hair salon, saw all the shampoo sinks lined up along the wall and commented,"Look at all those funny-looking toilets there!" Good times in Michigan.

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  6. Hope it’s not out-of-line to mention Sir Graves’ predecessor on 60s Detroit TV, Morgus the Magnificent, whose program Morgus Presents appeared on WJBK and WXYZ from late 1963 to early 1965. Being a little older, it was great fun staying up on Friday nights to watch Morgus experiments blow up in his face!

    I was in high school when Sir Graves appeared on his Saturday afternoon programs, and I watched & enjoyed it, but it seemed targeted to a younger age group than my own. Still, I do have a lot of great memories and glad I was around. R.I.P. Sir Graves/Lawson Deming!

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  7. Loved his show, turned me into a horror buff 👍

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  8. I have an autographed picture of him from the Autorama!

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  9. I remember him very well. I lived in Maryland and his show played on a D.C. station WTTG? airing Friday nights and Saturday mornings. I had some of my artwork on one show, a monster I created called “OG”. Sir Graves was a trip and every kid I knew watched and loved his show. He had several alter egos and goofy scripts for them. I remember one thing was a floating head, bobbing around singing, “I ain’t got nobody.” Cheesy but entertaining nonetheless. Thank you for the nostalgia rush here. Showed it to my wife — she loved it.

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  10. He showed my drawing :} Wish i could watch that again all these years later,

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    1. Mine too! It was a Godzilla drawing

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