Tiny Tim Movies
With his long, scraggled, and frequently wildly died hair, baggy clothes, high-pitched, quavering singing voice, and trademark ukulele, Tiny Tim was briefly an icon of the late '60s and '70s, one of those celebrities famous for being famous. Though his act was unbelievably goofy, he possessed a flamboyant sweetness and charm that drew audiences to him. Born Herbert Khaury, he became nationally famous when he appeared on the popular Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In in 1968 and daintily (no small feat for Tim was a hefty-sized man) sang his most famous tune, one that had been popular earlier in the century, "Tip-Toe Through the Tulips", while flabbergasted host Dick Martin looked on. The next year, Tiny Tim provided Johnny Carson's Tonight Show with some of its highest ratings ever when the musician married his beloved Miss Vicki (Vicki Buddinger) on the air. Though Tiny Tim faded from public view over the next few years, he continued performing live (often singing the signature songs of other artists, including punk rocker Billy Idol's "Rebel Yell") until he suffered a heart attack during a Massachusetts performance on September 28, 1996. He survived, but was left with only 40 percent of his heart intact. Tiny Tim died on November 30, 1996, following another heart attack. He is survived by his third wife Sue. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie GuideFew television programs have broken as many taboos as Screw publisher Al Goldstein's groundbreaking late-night cable program Midnight Blue, and in this collection of audacious clips, Goldstein takes a look beyond the porn and politics and into the lives of the era's hottest celebrities. From the notorious "Barbra Streisand Porno Movie" to a visit to the 1979 Hooker's Ball where football legend O.J. Simpson offers his candid views on the sexual state of the nation, these are the interviews that would influence and inspire the celebrity gossip programs for decades to come. After witnessing Go-Go's beauty Belinda Carlisle fly solo in a late-night pleasure session, viewers can get a peek at the infamous Rob Lowe sex tape -- footage that nearly brought the handsome Brat Packer's Hollywood career to a screeching halt. Other guests include Arnold Schwarzenegger, R. Crumb, Tiny Tim, Gilbert Gottfried, Larry Flynt, Debbie Harry, Buck Henry, and vintage commercials for some of New York City's hottest adult sweet spots offer an intimate look at a time when the debauchery of the disco era was at an all-time high. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Al Goldstein, Alex Bennett, (more)

- 1996
- Add Message to Love: The Isle of Wight Festival to QueueAdd Message to Love: The Isle of Wight Festival to top of Queue
For about a year after the Woodstock Music and Art Fair in 1969, it seemed as though everyone wanted to stage a rock festival. However, The Rolling Stones' disastrous Altamont free concert (documented in the film Gimme Shelter) forever tarnished the image of the rock festival in the U.S., while in Europe, the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival was fortunately less deadly than Altamont, but nearly as controversial. Staged by two men with greater ambitions than practical experience (not unlike Woodstock), the festival was held on a small island off the British coast, where some of the finest rock talent of the day -- Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, The Who, Miles Davis, Joni Mitchell, Donovan, Jethro Tull, Joan Baez, Leonard Cohen, and Kris Kristofferson, among many others -- were scheduled to play over the course of five days. But while at Woodstock no one had given much thought about keeping gatecrashers out, at the Isle of Wight those without tickets were greeted with corrugated steel fences that sealed off the festival grounds. Huge numbers of visitors simply camped on hills surrounding the grounds, while others broke down the fences by force after refusing to pay the three pounds admission. This led to heated conflicts between the promoters (who railed bitterly against the audience from the stage), the festival's security staff (who had to deal with the many gatecrashers), the concert-goers (who were upset with both the admission price and the site's facilities, one spectator calling it "a psychedelic concentration camp"), and the performers (who had to deal with unruly audiences and the prospect of not being paid). It was estimated that 600,000 people attended the festival, but less than 50,000 actually paid to get in, spelling financial ruin for the promoters. American documentary filmmaker Murray Lerner brought a crew to record the festival on film, but thanks to the festival's bad publicity and uneven reviews, he was not able to obtain completion funds for the project until 1995, hence the presence of many musicians who had since passed away, such as Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison and Miles Davis. Message to Love: The Isle of Wight Festival examines the concert both on-stage and behind-the-scenes, capturing performances from many of the artists who appeared. We see Joni Mitchell and Kris Kristofferson angrily confronting the rowdy crowd, and The Who at the peak of their form (their full set was released as a separate film), alongside the numerous catastrophes and conflicts that dominated the festival's five days. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
Is a deranged clown who likes to sing "Goodnight Ladies" responsible for a string of grisly murders? Jill (Cari Salochek) comes back to her rural hometown after her first year at college to discover she's not especially popular anymore -- her father runs the local bank and has been forced to foreclose on a number of farms after a year of bad crops. Jill also learns that her parents have mysteriously disappeared, though her former boyfriend Gary (Ed Bevin) is still living in town and goes out of his way to make her feel welcome. Jill is happy to see Gary, though his mood dims a bit when he finds she has a new beau, wealthy BMOC Scott (Peter Krause). Jill's biggest worry beyond finding her parents is Gary's eccentric older brother, a would-be circus clown who calls himself Marvelous Mervo (Tiny Tim) and wanders about in makeup carrying a ukulele and singing Tin Pan Alley songs when he isn't barging in on Jill. When dead bodies begin turning up around town, the police are convinced they have a serial killer on their hands, and Jill has reason to believe she'll be one of his next victims. Can Gary protect her from the menace, and does Mervo know something about the crimes? Shot under the title Nightmare by the auteur who gave us Monster A Go-Go and The Giant Spider Invasion, Blood Harvest featured famed one-hit-wonder Tiny Tim in his only dramatic role, as well as the first screen appearance from character actor Peter Krause. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tiny Tim, Cari Salochek, (more)
Jack Smith combined footage from various phases of his career for Respectable Creatures. There's additional material from "The Yellow Sequence" phase of Normal Love, featuring Tiny Tim and David Sachs, shot around 1963-1964. (Glimpses of Francis Francine swinging in a hammock evoke Ron Rice's Chumlum [1964].) Later in the '60s, Smith filmed some of Carnival when he was in Rio de Janeiro. He uses that footage here to frame Buzzards Over Bagdad, a movie he'd made in the 1950s -- a Maria Montez-style yarn in which the girl who is promised to the Caliph tries to keep a lover. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tiny Tim, David Sachs, (more)
The struggle of a has-been singer to work his way back up the charts is the focus of this drama by Robert M. Young with screenplay and music by Paul Simon. Simon plays Jonah, a once-popular singer who now opens for punk rock bands. In the ten years since he had a hit song, Jonah's wife has divorced him, but he still sees his young son as often as he can. With his record company on his back to come up with something that sells, Jonah begins to compromise his own talent when he listens to the advice of a trendy producer. Whether or not he can straighten out his personal life and steer his own ship may depend on his ability to trust his own judgment and adjust to the changing times. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Paul Simon, Blair Brown, (more)
Still nostalgic for the 1960s? Then You Are What You Eat should satisfy your hunger. Assembled in the crazy-quilt "psychedlic" style so beloved of the era, the film offers McLuhanesque images of such sixties icons as Tiny Tim, Father Malcolm Boyd, Peter Yarrow and Harper's Bizarre. Made too close to the era it depicts for any sort of objectivity, You Are What You Eat is a prime example of the "we're too groovy for words" mindset of the times. On this level, it is highly recommended; as an example of documentary filmmaking at its best, it lays an egg. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tiny Tim, Peter Yarrow, (more)
In this 2-hour "NBC World Premiere" pilot film for the TV series Ironside, we learn how San Francisco chief-of-detectives Robert Ironside (Raymond Burr) came to be confined to a wheelchair. Felled by a sniper's bullet, Ironside is retained by the force as a special officer for the Frisco police force. With the help of Sgt. Ed Brown (Don Galloway) and officer Eve Whitfield (Barbara Anderson), the irascible Ironside is assigned to find out who his assailant was. Appearing in cameo roles are Wally Cox, Lilla Skala, and an unbilled, pre-Laugh In Tiny Tim.The Ironside pilot premiered on March 28, 1967; the series itself ran from 1967 through 1975. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
By 1965, Jack Smith was exhibiting versions of Normal Love, mixing his soundtracks live and often re-editing the film as it was being shown. After Smith's death, Jerry Tartaglia prepared this restored 105-minute version, which premiered in 1997. Although shot on backdated color-film stock and paced more languidly than Flaming Creatures, Normal Love again features women and cross-dressed men in an idyll of sexual anarchy. Smith filmed almost entirely outdoors, emphasizing pinks and greens in the scenery, costumes, and props, and combining textural passages with allusions to film icons such as the Mummy and the Werewolf, Maria Montez, and Busby Berkeley. The inspired finale is set atop a massive pink cake (where the dancing Cake Cuties include Andy Warhol). The Yellow Sequence, an additional 20 minutes of footage -- in which gold tones predominate and the players include Tiny Tim -- was also restored by Tartaglia as an addendum to Normal Love, and the two films are inevitably shown together under the single title. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mario Montez, Diana Baccus, (more)
Ron Rice's only color film, Chumlum depicts Jack Smith and some of his cast during the making of Normal Love, which includes Beverly Grant, Mario Montez, Francis Francine, and Tiny Tim. Rice offers glimpses of them in between set-ups at Normal Love's locations, as well as shots of the players lying in hammocks and rocking lazily after they were back in Rice's New York City loft. Throughout Chumlum, he utilizes superimpositions to turn his subjects into fields of texture, rhythm, and color. The title is derived from the score by composer/musician Angus MacLise, which he played on cembalo. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jack Smith, Beverly Grant, (more)











