Can you translate all this 1950s slang heard in Perry Mason?
Are you a true hepcat, baby?
"The Case of the Jaded Joker" is one of our favorite Perry Mason episodes, perhaps just for the moment alone when Della Street blurts, "Dig the hipster!" To which the aged Lt. Tragg, holding a smoke, says, "Don't bug me, granny."
Yep, this case is about beatniks. But that is not all. The plot centers around a wash-up "chuckleman" named Danny Ross (Frankie Laine), who peppers his lines with Yiddish. His two hangers-on, Freddie (Walter Burke, giving a wonderful Willem Dafoe-esque performance) and Buzzie (Bobby Troupe, the jazz pianist who wrote the song "Route 66") become the main suspects, and stuff each scene with gobs of beatnik and hard-boiled slang.
You get lines like, "The cool ones take the tail out of their faces," "I'm beat, daddy," and "I don't dig slick chicks tryin' to goof me up."
Let's see how well you can understand all the slang in one wonderful Perry Mason episode!
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What's a "square"?
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Della asks Perry, "What's a schnook?" How does Perry define it?
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Throughout the episode they keep talking about how the body was found in a "kneehole." What's a kneehole?
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What are "hot mitts"?
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Is "boffo" good or bad?
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What does it mean to "go for a snort"?
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Buzzie says, "Slobs go for smash." What is smash?
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What is Tragg talking about when he says "tea"?
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What is the "island"?
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What is a "ganef"?
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What is Freddie talking about when he talks about "jostlin'"?
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What best defines a "megillah"?
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Can you translate all this 1950s slang heard in Perry Mason?
Your Result...
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You got 12 out of 12
So, are you a hepcat or a square?
GANEF AND MAGILLA ARE NOT SLANG. THEY ARE ACTUAL YIDDISH WORDS.
Only knew 4, correctly guessed 1.
Never heard of rest.
More into 40s film noire than 50s
Here's a VERY rare clip (introduced by Barbara Hale) of Raymond Burr auditioning (screen testing) for the Hamilton Burger role, opposite another actor playing Perry Mason. You can thank your lucky stars that Mr. Burr failed the screen test. Apparently.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jv22BnAMJUg
He was the inspiration for Fonzie, he became such a rage that at one point he was on the cover of more magazines and the subject of more newspaper stories than any other star in the world!
Every male teen wanted to dress like and be him and repeated whatever beat/slang words he used on the latest episode. 77 Sunset Strip also had without a doubt the greatest collection of guest starlets in the history of TV. Donna Douglas never looked better, in fact she was astoundingly beautiful in her stint on the series. Even Sherry Jackson paled next to Donna. And MeTv blew it big time by NEVER promoting this series, and running it at 4 AM. It had style, great music, the coolest("ginchiest")
patter ever, and Victor Buono as Bongo Benny was the most stylish Beat ever.
If you guys had promoted it properly you might have had a retro hit on your hands. But no, you instead put on cookie cutter crappola like Barnaby Jones(Buddy Ebsen sleep walking thru his part) and Cannon. 77 Sunset Strip even featured on 3 episodes the legendary Beatnik Cafe Chez Paulette and its host Max. Bring back 77 Sunset Strip!