Eduardo Ciannelli, sometimes credited as Edward Ciannelli, was an Italian baritone and character actor with a long career in American films, mostly playing gangsters and criminals.
Last night/early morning on MeTV, produced consecutive “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” episodes with Mr. Ciannelli.
First shown, he played a priest in “A Special Miracle.”
After that aired, Ciannelli gave an intense performance as the father of a son on trial for murder, defended by Mr. Wedge (love the name) played by Brian Keith. The episode was “The Test” and on the phone tests were referenced twice as I typed.
The post verdict, in Wedge’s office scene, highlighted by Ciannelli is epic.

Eduardo Ciannelli, pictured above.
Abner Haynes, a truly superb running back, the first AFL most valuable player and a member of the Dallas Texans’ 1962 AFL title team, died yesterday at age 86.
Two notes, yes that one, regarding that season and a post from February 2023 in which Mr. Haynes talks about the boycott of an AFL All-Star game held in New Orleans as the Black players were denied equal treatment and access.
That ’62 season was the Texans’ last as they became the Kansas City Chiefs a year later.
Haynes famously said “we will kick to the clock before the first overtime, costing Dallas possession and the benefit of a prevailing win, in the eventual 6 quarter win for his team, decided by Tommy Brooker’s field goal.
He was quite a player and “stand up” man. I regret never meeting him but that is the way it “go.”
Click below for the previous post that ends with reflections of Abner Haynes.
- K.C./Houston Notes on February 26, 2023

The (5-3) win by the American League All-Stars made the A.L. record in such games, hosted by the defending world champion, (3-0).
One such was held 90 years earlier, at the fabled Polo Grounds, the home of the 1933 champion New York Giants.
Five years later, the A.L. again prevailed in the ’39 game at Yankee Stadium, the home of the then 3 time champion, Yankees, who would make it 4 straight crowns under “Marse” Joe McCarthy that season.
While the American League did win the ’34 All-Star tilt, the game will always be remembered for the great Giants’ pitcher, Carl Hubbell striking out 5 greats, in succession, in innings one and two.
Those greats were/are Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jimmy Foxx, Al Simmons and Joe Cronin.
The ’39 Yankees were the first of 3 teams in the 94 previous years of All-Star tilts to host that game and win that year’s World Series.
The L.A. Dodgers did so twenty years later in 1959 and the Yankees did so in 1977.


The New York Mets will play the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday, July 23 and Wednesday, July 24. Vivid Cabaret New York, the high-energy adult club known for its beautiful dancers and party atmosphere, will host baseball viewing (and post-game) parties on those days/nights.

“We really know how to throw a party,” said Vivid girl Carly. “No matter what the score of the games, it’s sure to be exciting at Vivid, and there will be drink specials all night.”

Providing warm hospitality and the best in VIP treatment, Vivid Cabaret New York’s vibrancy is enhanced by cutting edge decor and the latest in high-tech sound and lighting. Vivid Cabaret is the sister club to the world famous Rick’s Cabaret NYC.

61 West 37 Street
VIP Ultra Lounge
Roof Deck Cigar Lounge
Slight favorites Barbora Krejcikova and Carlos Alcaraz, the latter easily, won Wimbledon crowns, vs Jasmine Paolini and Novak Djokovic respectively.
It was shameful, that when Djokovic, again denied by Alcaraz, fought off numerous break points and went up (2-1) third set, however, down 2 sets, and “showed emotion,” the 4 letter word crew implied it might be a match.
No, as Alcaraz eased.
Yesterday Krejcikova over Jasmine Paolini went the maximum 3 sets.

Barbora Krejcikova, pictured above.
It shapes up as quite a final on the men’s side as 2 days hence, Novak Djokovic bidding to add to his record 24 major crowns, is a slight underdog vs Carlos Alcaraz, in a redux of last year’s final won by Alcaraz.
Today, Alcaraz prevailed in 4 sets vs Daniil Medvedev, which was followed by Djokovic’s straight sets, but no cover, semis win vs Lorenzo Musetti.
Alcaraz is about a 3 to 2 fave.
I will go with Djokovic, vs Alcaraz, who won the French Open not long ago, in 4 sets.

In listening to part of the 1942 All-Star baseball game as broadcast by Mutual, with “The Commander,” Bob Elson, Mel Allen and Jim Britt, I realized a “history repeats” note had manifested.
Spurgeon “Spud” Chandler, one of the great Yankees’ pitchers, is Joe McCarthy’s choice to start the tilt, apparently on 2 days rest, but with a maximum 3 innings pitched allowed.
Broadcaster Elson, who 10 months before and 2 months before events at Hawaii’s Pearl Harbor, had been behind the microphone for the Yankees great game 4/1941 World Series win, that was the key to their 5 game triumph vs Leo Durocher’s Brooklyn Dodgers, informed that in a Friday night Yankees/Red Sox game on July 3, 1942, Chandler had emerged victorious by a (5-3) score.
Though I follow baseball nowhere near as I once did, somehow I knew that last Friday in another Red Sox/Yankees game, a (5-3) score manifested, this time in favor of the Red Sox.

From Wikipedia, more below. I add Spud Chandler, pictured above had a great career, spending all 11 of his seasons with the vaunted Yankees who won the title 6 times and did not only 5 times, as part of their great era of baseball that manifested in crowns in half their 40 seasons from 1923-1962.
He was named the American League‘s Most Valuable Player in 1943 after anchoring the team’s pitching staff with 20 wins and only 4 losses as New York won its third consecutive pennant; his 1.64 earned run average in that season was the lowest by any major league pitcher between 1920 and 1967, and remains a Yankees team record. In eleven seasons, he never suffered a losing record; with a total of 109 wins and 43 losses, his career winning percentage of .717 is the highest of any pitcher with at least 100 victories since 1876.



