What�s
the magic word? If your answer is �Twin Pines�, you�ve probably spent
countless Saturday afternoons in front of the family TV enjoying the mystifying
magic of Milky the Clown. Milky is one of the legends of Detroit TV. Clare
Cummings was the man behind the legend.
Clarence R. Cummings Jr. was born in Chicago, Illinois on February 4, 1912. In 1917 Clarence Sr. moved the family to Birmingham, Michigan. At an early age Clare became fascinated with performing, often entertaining the neighborhood children with Punch and Judy shows. At age 12 he received a $1.25 magic set for Christmas. Cummings soon mastered all of the tricks, performing them for friends and classmates. Looking to expand his repertoire, he devoured every magic volume in the local library. Noting his son�s fascination with magic, Clare�s father would take him to see Houdini, Thurston and other popular magicians of the day. In a 1960 Detroit News article, Cummings said, �When Thurston found I was neglecting my studies for my magic, he slapped my face and told me to get busy with my books and forget my magic.�
Cummings�
first professional show was in 1929 at Birmingham�s Baldwin Library. While
still in high school Cummings performed at school assemblies, birthday parties
and banquets in and around town. 1933 found Cummings working with Danny Thomas,
then known as Amos Jacobs, on Chuck Stanley�s �Happy Hour Club� radio
show. They received no pay for their radio appearances, but were paid three
dollars each for outside jobs. In 1941 Cummings got a job at the E.I. DuPont
company as an automotive paint salesman. He would sell paint durin
g
the week, and perform his magic on weekends.
During World War II, he served as Sergeant in the U.S. Army�s Finance
Division in Florida, while entertaining the troops in the Army�s Special
Services Division. While in Florida, he sent for and married his hometown
sweetheart, Peg Haldane. In 1944 their daughter Peggy was born. After the war,
Cummings returned to his DuPont job in Detroit and resumed his magic career. He
was now performing in places like the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club and Detroit
Athletic Club as "Clare Cummings, Delineator of Deceptive Dexterity."
In 1950, while
working a part time job at the Hall Magic Company in Detroit, a WJBK television
producer spotted Cummings. Charmed
by his magic skills, gap-toothed smile and gentle manner, the producer thought
that Cummings would be the perfect host for a new children�s show he had
planned. The show was Peter, Clare and Oscar, a program much like the popular
Kukla, Fran and Ollie. Peter was a live rabbit, Clare was the straight man who
could understand Peter, and Oscar was a marionette, operated by Detroit
policeman Herb German. The fifteen-minute show lasted for thirteen weeks. Later
that year, the Twin Pines Dairy wanted to sponsor a children�s show, which
featured cartoons, movies and a magic clown. The advertising agency handling the
Twin Pines account contacted WJBK, who contacted Cummings. Milky the Clown was
born. Cummings himself created the distinctive Milky makeup. His wife Margaret
created the costume, which was patterned after the clown in the opera Pagliacci.
�Milky�s Movie Party� premiered on December 16; 1950.The two-hour show featured cartoons, Westerns and Milky�s magic tricks. In the beginning there was no live audience, only Milky, the Twin Pines Milkman and the weekly winner of the �Sunshine Smile� photo contest. Peggy Tibbits, Cummings� daughter and an occasional visitor to her father�s set, recalls, �One time the child who was chosen got sick and I was his replacement. I got to help with the tricks, say the magic words, drink lots of milk and juice during the commercials, pet the kittens and puppies that were up for adoption, and generally feel pretty important.� Milky was also assisted by Creamy the white rabbit, a hand puppet who taught the boys and girls traffic safety.
In
1952, a marionette show created by Ed Johnson called "Willie-Do-It" became a part
of the Movie Party. Willie was a mischievous boy who had amazing adventures with
his pal Gee Whizzer, a bizarre looking gremlin with a whizzer on his tail so he
could fly. Applesauce the dragon was also a part of the gang. Sonny Eliot,
another Detroit TV legend, was the voice of Willie-Do-It.
In 1955, Milky�s Movie Party moved to WXYZ, home of Soupy Sales, Ricky the Clown and Wixie Wonderland. The show stayed the same, except for the addition of Little Rascals shorts. The show moved to WWJ in February 1958 with a new format and a new name.
"Milky�s Party Time" featured a live studio audience, the serial �The Adventures of Sir Lancelot�, Bozo and Felix the Cat cartoons, magic, games, prizes and the �Stars of the Future� contest hosted by perky Mary Lou. Pierre the Frenchman, who really was French-Canadian, assisted with the games. The games were a team effort, usually the boys vs. the girls. In the early days at WWJ, the winning team would get to grab two fistfuls of pennies from the big goldfish bowl. The losing team would get one. Peggy Tibbits recalls that the first goldfish bowl had a larger opening in the top. The studio bigwigs thought that the kids were grabbing too many pennies, so they found a goldfish bowl with a smaller opening. That way the kids would scrape their knuckles and drop most of their treasure. In later years, when the show�s budget was bigger, kids would get to pick prizes from the �Twin Pines Toy House.�
Early in the show�s history, Cummings suggested that an announcer, dressed as a Twin Pines milkman, should pitch the commercials. The dairy�s famous phone number, Texas-four-one-one-oh-oh, was repeated by four different spokesmen.
Earl Hayes, the first milkman, died of lung cancer in 1953. Dale Young, a staff photographer at WJBK, replaced Hayes. The third milkman, Bob Leslie, was also Santa Claus in the J.L. Hudson Thanksgiving Parade. Leslie was killed in a tragic home furnace explosion. Bob Allison, a staff announcer at WWJ, was the last person to don the uniform. Allison is now celebrating the 40th anniversary of his "Ask Your Neighbor� radio show, which started on WWJ-AM. It can now be heard on WNZK. Allison also hosted the popular �Bowling For Dollars� show on WWJ in the �70s and �80s.
Milky�s
Party Time was so popular that there was a two-year wait for tickets. Twin Pines
executives loved the show, too. The dairy�s delivery routes had more than
tripled, as Detroit area moms wanted �worry-free home delivery.� Cummings
would do more than 130 school assemblies a year. Detroit mayor Louis C. Miriani
declared December 16, 1960 �Milky the Clown Day�, and presented Cummings
with a key to the city.
Party Time ended for Cummings in 1964, when he needed to devote more time to his full-time paint salesman job at DuPont. Karrell Fox, a talented local magician and emcee, donned the familiar pointed hat and white makeup until the show was cancelled in 1967. Cummings retired from DuPont in 1971, though he still made occasional personal appearances. Cummings farewell performance as Milky was in 1992 at the Oakland Mall.
Clare Cummings died on October 31, 1994 of congestive heart failure, on the anniversary of Houdini�s death. He donated most of his magic tricks and one of his costumes to the American Museum of Magic in Marshall, Michigan, where they are on permanent display.
Milky may be gone, but his memory lives on. Milky
collectibles sell for amazing prices at flea markets and antique shops. A
promotional Milky the Clown clock recently brought over five hundred dollars on
an Internet auction. 8x10
photographs usually sell in the forty-dollar range. Even old Twin Pines milk
bottles bring hefty prices. Perhaps people are trying to buy back a small piece
of their childhood, a time when �Twin Pines� was the magic word and Milky
the Clown�s face was on the side of the milk carton, rather than the face of a
missing child.