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The archives of The Ed Sullivan Show are a great record of comedians who are mostly forgotten. Not only did Ed secure the services of just about every major comedian then working the hotel and night club circuits, he also booked comedy teams. In light of the monumental success of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, there were an awful lot of them…for a while.

It seemed like every comedian who didn't have enough work was hooking up with some male vocalist who didn't have enough work, thereby creating a duo that didn't have enough work. Many of those pairings literally lasted for one engagement but a few stuck around for a while. The two most successful in the fifties and sixties would probably be Rowan & Martin and then Allen & Rossi.

Rowan & Martin were a rare exception because neither of them were singers and when they hooked up, they tried it with Rowan being the funny one and Martin being the straight man. When they swapped roles, it worked better and they caught the fancy of Walter Winchell, who promoted them in his column. That made all the difference.

In next place might be the team of Pepper Davis and Tony Reese. Davis was the big goofy one whose delivery was sometimes compared to Joe E. Ross. Reese was the little one who sang and played straight. Reportedly, they met when both were booked into a night club in Wildwood, New Jersey. It must have seemed like a natural for them to team-up and have some agent sell them as "The new Martin & Lewis!"

Soon, Davis & Reese were everywhere, including around a dozen appearances on Ed's show and about the same number on Merv Griffin's. They struck me as one of those acts — there were many — that weren't so hot on TV but if you were seeing them in a night club after a few drinks, they were probably hilarious…enough. They even made a record album.

The most interesting thing I recall about them is that around the time the Batman TV show (the one with Adam West) was all the rage, Davis and Reese made a pilot-of-sorts parodying it. This is all from memory and I may be a bit off but I remember it being a five-episode, shot-on-video, low-low budget serial that ran once, Monday-thru-Friday in Los Angeles on Channel 9. I think Davis played the Robin-like character and Reese played the Batman-type guy and that's all I remember about it other than that it wasn't very funny. Does anyone else recall this thing? I don't know if it was local or national or what.

At some point, they split up and did some solo acting jobs. Davis settled in Las Vegas and played a lot of clubs and hotel rooms there. He was on the TV show Vega$ a lot, usually playing one of those dumb-but-dangerous henchmen that the master villains always seemed to employ. He died in 1990 and Reese passed in 2013.

Here's one of their appearances with Ed in their glory days. This one is from March 25, 1956 and it presents a little mystery to me. They close with Davis singing a list of all the states to the tune of the David Rose song, "Holiday for Strings." In 1964 on his album Allan in Wonderland, Allan Sherman had a song called "Holiday for States," sung to the same tune and featuring the same states in roughly the same order. Sherman was credited as its writer and I don't know if he wrote it for Davis & Reese or bought it or stole it or if someone else wrote it and everyone just helped themselves. But it's pretty much the same parody…