“Not Too Good”

1957_0422a

April
22, 1957

Las Vegas

Ntg
Nils
  T. Granlund, 1950s TV personality and master of ceremonies at Hollywood’s
Florentine Gardens through most of the 1940s, was killed in a car accident on
  the Las Vegas Strip, ending a flamboyant career described in the 1957 book
  "Blondes, Brunettes and Bullets."

The man nicknamed "Granny" and
"N.T.G." was taking a cab from the Riviera Hotel and died after the taxi was
  hit by a driver who refused a blood-alcohol test, The Times said. Granlund was 57.

His casket was covered with flowers and a ribbon that said "To Granny From the Girls," a tribute to a man responsible for the careers of Jean Wallace, Lili St. Cyr and especially Yvonne De Carlo, who claimed his body and arranged
the funeral at Forest Lawn Memorial-Park in the Hollywood Hills
 


Here’s an interview I did years ago with the late studio publicist Bob Rains
  about N.T.G.

In 1946, International Pictures, that I had started with, released a movie called “Tomorrow Is Forever,” which starred Orson Welles, George Brent, Claudette
  Colbert, Natalie Wood, and a young kid called Richard
  Long
.
 

NTG in those days had a radio show on the Mutual Network, KHJ, and somebody called the studio and said they’d love to do an interview with him because he had a great story about the way he was
  discovered.

1957_granlund_book

He lived in the Valley and was  a student at Hollywood High School, and he was hitchhiking from the Valley to
  Hollywood High.

And one day he was picked up by a man by the name of Jack
  Merton, who was a casting director for International Pictures. And they got to
  talking. He says, “What are you doing?” and he says “I want to be an actor.” He
  says “Great, call me some day, we may have something for you.”

Richard never called. About
  three or four months later, it was pouring rain, Merton picks up the same kid,
  it’s Richard Long. He says, “Call me!” He called him and that’s how Dick Long
  got started with International Pictures when I was there. This was in 1946.

 

Anyway, the picture’s coming out and NTG heard about it. He called the studio, and wanted to interview Dick on his radio show on KHJ. I think it was the whole  network then.
 

We said fine. I was then
  involved in that. And he said well I’d like to meet him beforehand. In those days, 1946, it was live. I said fine, so we set up a meeting at NTG’s house on
  Fountain Avenue [Note: It was really Franklin–lrh]. It was east of Vine Street, a great big place. And we were
  supposed to be there at a certain
  time.
 

We got there a few minutes early and rang the door bell, and a very  voluptuous, beautiful young
  lady opened the door. We introduced ourselves and she said “NTG isn’t here
  right now; come in and
  wait.”
 

So
  we went in. And I don’t remember—we didn’t drink; we had some soft drinks or
  something—and we waited for about half an hour.

1957_0422b

During this time, one after
  another after another of the most beautiful young ladies walked through the
  room we were waiting in. All introduced themselves, all said they were his
  secretary.
 

Finally NTG comes and we do a
  nice interview, preliminary and all that. Somehow he says, “Do you want to see
  the house?

 

I said yes, so we have a tour
  of the house. And we walk in one room, there is this immense bed. I don’t
  recall the size, maybe 10 by 20, it was the biggest bed I’ve ever seen, twice
  the size of a king size.
 

And I said to him, “How come
  you got this big bed?”

 

He said, “Well we all live
  here.”

 

I said,
  “who?”

 

He said, “My secretaries; we
  all live here.”

 

I says, “Well do you all sleep
  together?”

And
  he says yes!

 

And we went on a few days
  later on KHJ, which used to be on Melrose, and Dick did the
  interview.

 

It was an amazing… man with a
  great appetite. But imagine … four, five, six of them of the most beautiful
  broads you’ve ever seen … sleeping in the one bed. And every time they came
  through the room, … I’m so and so, glad you’re here. Period. It was quite the
  experience
.
 
Note: Muzzy
  Marcellino,  former bandleader at the Florentine Gardens, used to joke
  that N.T.G.  stood for "Not Too Good."
 

 
 
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  me

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About lmharnisch

I am retired from the Los Angeles Times
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1 Response to “Not Too Good”

  1. Ray Faiola's avatar Ray Faiola says:

    I recently picked up a 16mm print of RHYTHM PARADE starring N.T.G. Of course, it offered only a hint of the guy’s personality but still nice to have a filmed record of this show business legend. A legend now almost completely forgotten by show business. Thanks for a very interesting article, including the decidedly sad obit. I wonder if NTG was one of Hef’s idols!?!
    RPF…..oops, make that R.P.F.!

    Like

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