|
Search Results
16464 Results found for Pages:
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 [27] 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52
|
#5392:
AN OLD-FASHIONED THANKSGIVING
1961-11-21,
WABC,
52 min.
Bob and Ray, Charlton Heston, Gene Barry, Richard Kiley, Eddie Foy Jr., Dick Button, Betty Johnson
Westinghouse presents a special program - "An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving." Americana in music, dance and literature in the festive mood. Gene Barry is host. Charlton Heston, Eddie Foy Jr., Dick Button, Betty Johnson, Richard Kiley, & Bob and Ray.
|
#3932:
MANTOVANI
1961-11-21,
WNTA,
27 min.
Mantovani, John Conte, Joni James
This was the "Tour Of Cities" broadcast. John Conte was host for this half-hour series of 39 easy listening programs, produced in England and syndicated in the U.S. The program featured the Mantovani orchestra, headed by the star of the program, Mantovani, and a guest star each week. Mantovani's U.S. debut aired on WNET Channel 13 in New York on April 15, 1961 with singer Dorothy Collins in a salute to the "Silver Screen."
|
#144:
RED SKELTON SHOW, THE
1961-11-21,
WCBS,
26 min.
Red Skelton, Ed Wynn
Ed Wynn guest stars.
|
#4180:
PERRY COMO SHOW, THE
1961-11-22,
WNBC,
? min.
Gwen Verdon, Perry Como, Dorothy Collins
September 12, 1955-June 12, 1963. In the fall of 1955 Perry Como returned to NBC where he hosted a weekly hour show. From 1955 to 1959 it was seen Saturday evenings and was titled "The Perry Como Show." From 1959 to 1963 it was seen Wednesday evenings and was titled "The Kraft Music Hall." Regulars included Frank Gallop and the Ray Charles Singers. After his final weekly June 12, 1963 broadcast Perry Como appeared in scores of specials, beginning October 3, 1963, airing on NBC, CBS & ABC, and concluding on December 6, 1986.
|
#146:
ART LINKLETTER'S HOUSE PARTY
1961-11-22,
WCBS,
5 min.
Art Linkletter, Jean Garceau, Clark Gable
Guest is Jean Garceau, who was secretary to the late Clark Gable, who died one year earlier on November 17, 1960.
|
#147:
NEW STEVE ALLEN SHOW, THE
1961-11-22,
WABC,
27 min.
Louis Nye, Steve Allen, Bill Dana, The Smothers Brothers
Guests are the Smothers Brothers, who are joined by regulars Louis Nye and Bill Dana.
|
#148:
JOE FRANKLIN SHOW, THE
1961-11-23,
WABC,
7 min.
Gene Autry, Joe Franklin, Johnny Marks
Joe Franklin's guest is Johnny Marks, who wrote "Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer" in 1949.
Gene Autry's original recording of Rudolph The Red Nose Reindeer sold 1.75 million copies its first Christmas season (1949) and 1.5 million the following year. It eventually sold a total of 12.5 million. Cover versions included, sales exceed 150 million copies, second only to Bing Crosby's "White Christmas."
|
#149:
TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JACK PAAR, THE
1961-11-23,
WNBC,
30 min.
Jack Paar, Bob Hope, Johnny Carson
Jack Paar's guest is Bob Hope.
Jack takes "blue cards" from the audience (questions for Jack). One question has to do with who will be replacing Jack when he leaves the show in four months, end of March, 1962. Paar sates that he believes his replacement will be Johnny Carson.
|
#5273:
HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS
1961-11-23,
WNBC,
52 min.
Gordon MacRae, Patrice Munsel, Al Hirt, The Brothers Four, Carol Haney
Special musical variety show starring Gordon MacRae, Patrice Munsel, Carol Haney, Al Hirt and the Brothers Four.
|
#4559:
SING ALONG WITH MITCH
1961-11-23,
WNBC,
52 min.
Mitch Miller, Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Sandy Stewart, Gloria Lambert, Victor Griffin, The Four Seasons
January 27, 1961-April 21, 1961; September 28, 1961-September 21, 1964. Home viewers were able to participate in this hour-long musical series, as the lyrics to the songs were superimposed at the bottom of their screens; viewers were invited to "follow the bouncing ball" as it moved from one lyric to the next. Goateed composer-arranger Mitch Miller led the Sing-Along Gang, and on-stage aggregation of about two dozen. Among the featured vocalists were Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Barbara McNair, and Gloria Lambert. "Sing Along with Mitch" was introduced on "Ford Startime" in 1960 and had a limited run in the spring of 1961, alternating with "The Bell Telephone Hour," before going weekly in the fall of that year. Reruns were exhumed in the spring of 1966 to replace the faltering "Sammy Davis Jr. Show." Bill Hobin produced and directed the series.
|
#150:
DUPONT SHOW OF THE WEEK: CHICAGO AND ALL THAT JAZZ, THE
1961-11-26,
WNBC,
52 min.
Bix Beiderbecke, Gene Krupa, Garry Moore, Louis Armstrong, Mae Barnes, Johnny St. Cyr, Red Allen, Lil Armstrong, Buster Bailey, Eddie Condon, Bud Freeman, Johnny Guarnieri, Bob Haggart, Milt Hinton, Meade Lux Lewis, Jimmy McPartland, Bessie Smith, Bernard Green, Zutty Singleton, Leon James, Joe Sullivan, William Nichols, Al Minns, Blossom Seeley, James Elson, Kid Ory, Pee Wee Russell, Jack Teagarden
Garry Moore is the host and narrator and introduces many of the original 1920's groups from Chicago where a new brand of jazz was developing. Its history in music and folk lore is recalled by old hands at jazz: Red Allen, Lil Armstrong, Buster Bailey, Mae Barnes, Eddie Condon, Bud Freeman, Johnny Guarnieri, Bob Haggart, Milt Hinton, Gene Krupa, Meade Lux Lewis, Jimmy McPartland, Al Minns and Leon James, Kid Ory, Pee Wee Russell, Blossom Seeley, Johnny St. Cyr, Zutty Singleton, Joe Sullivan and Jack Teagarden. Seen on film: Bix Biederbecke, Bessie Smith and Louis Armstrong. Musical director of the hour-long, filmed and taped show is Bernard Green. Written and produced by William Nichols. Director: James Elson.
|
#7169:
GREAT MUSIC FROM CHICAGO
1961-11-27,
WGN,
00 min.
Arthur Fiedler, Chicago Symphony Orchestra
October 18th, 1959-1966,
A one hour syndicated taped color weekly broadcast, featuring the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The series was awarded a Peabody. Superb music by a 71 piece orchestra in the sumptuous setting of a ballroom. Different guest conductors appear on a weekly basis and take the podium.
Arthur Fiedler Conductor.
|
#3933:
MANTOVANI
1961-11-28,
WNTA,
27 min.
Petula Clark, Mantovani, John Conte
John Conte was host for this half-hour series of 39 easy listening programs, produced in England and syndicated in the U.S. The program featured the Mantovani orchestra, headed by the star of the program, Mantovani, and a guest star each week. Mantovani's U.S. debut aired on WNET Channel 13 in New York on April 15, 1961 with singer Dorothy Collins in a salute to the "Silver Screen."
|
#151:
HOLLYWOOD: THE GOLDEN YEARS
1961-11-29,
WNBC,
50 min.
Gene Kelly, Elmer Bernstein
Gene Kelly narrates the story of how silent pictures transformed a small suburb called Hollywood into the exotic land of the world of dreams. Music composed and conducted by Elmer Bernstein.
|
#5499:
WORLD OF JAZZ, THE
1961-11-29,
WQXR,
54 min.
John Wilson, Fletcher Henderson
A weekly WQXR Radio Series with John Wilson profiling an artist from the past, with musical highlights. Broadcast Wednesday evenings from 10:06 PM - 11:00 PM.
|
#152:
YVES MONTAND ON BROADWAY
1961-11-30,
WABC,
53 min.
Yves Montand, Polly Bergen, John Raitt
Yves Montand sings American show and folk tunes with guests Polly Bergen and John Raitt.
|
#7479:
YOUNG PEOPLE'S CONCERT
1961-12-01,
CBS,
00 min.
Leonard Bernstein
July 18th, 1958- March 26th, 1972
Series of concerts originating from Carnegie Hall in New York City. Beginning in 1962, they were broadcast from Lincoln Center in New York City. Leonard Bernstein conducted fifty three such televised performances until 1972.
|
#4166:
PATTERNS IN MUSIC
1961-12-03,
WNBC,
27 min.
John Doremus, Joseph Gallichio & Orchestra
September 17, 1961-September 16, 1962. This was the "The Weather" broadcast. John Doremus introduced thematic music and songs set to visuals on film. This "filler" Sunday afternoon program was broadcast live for as long a period of time as there remained (5 to 30 minutes) following NBC network sports presentations.
|
#153:
TWENTIETH CENTURY: THE MAN WHO SPIED ON PEARL HARBOR
1961-12-03,
WCBS,
25 min.
Walter Cronkite, Takeo Yoshikawa
Walter Cronkite narrates the story of Takeo Yoshikawa, a Japanese spy, who relayed information from his post in Honolulu to his Navy about Pearl Harbor.
|
#898:
A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES: HOLLYWOOD AT HOME
1961-12-03,
WNYC,
27 min.
Otto Preminger, Sessue Hayakawa, Joan Franklin, Robert Franklin, Ralph Bellamy, Elliot Nugent, Frances Marion, Myrna Loy, Melvyn Douglas, Walter Abel, Dore Schary, Buster Keaton, Albert Hackett, Samuel Spewack, Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Program number 10 of 18 programs.
Myrna Loy introduces this unique series. Buster Keaton leads a tour through the boulevards and back rooms and closets where the skeletons were kept in the grandest, gaudiest days of Hollywood, USA, when the guest lists and salary checks were closely related. The movie industry's catered affairs are recalled by Melvyn Douglas, Ralph Bellamy, Elliot Nugent, Walter Abel, writers Frances Marion, Albert Hackett, Samuel Spewack and Otto Preminger, producers Joseph L. Mankiewicz and Dore Schary and Japanese star Sessue Hayakawa. Most of the interviews were originally recorded in 1959 by producers Joan and Robert Franklin.
NOTE: Robert C. Franklin (1920-1980), inspired by a 1958 newspaper story he read about Columbia University's POPULAR ARTS ORAL HISTORY PROJECT, approached Dr. Louis Starr, then director of the oral-history collection, with a proposal to interview and tape record, on to 1/4" reel to reel audio tapes, movie people as they passed through New York. The objective would be to document, through personal recollections, the era of the silent era in films, the impact of sound, the triumphs and inequities of the major studios, and life in the glittering film capital...a firsthand account revelation of how silent movies were actually made.
Robert and his wife, Joan Franklin went on to record 200 reels of audio tape, recording celebrities mostly in New York City hotel rooms in 1958 and 1959. Transcripts of interviews were made available at the time to students and researchers.
In 1961 excerpts/highlights from these audio tapes were edited into a 16 part radio series titled, MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES. Myrna Loy provided a standard opening. A different celebrity host/hostess was employed to introduce each episode. All of the 90 celebrities interviewed have since passed away with the exception of Joanne Woodward. Two additional episodes were later produced, "Style of the 70's," and "Rush To Reality," both hosted by Ben Gazzara and added, subsequently, to re-issues of the series which were syndicated in the 1960's and 1970's airing in New York (WINS), Boston (WBZ), Philadelphia (KYW), Baltimore (WJZ), Fort Wayne (WOWO), Chicago (WIND), San Francisco (KPIX), and Los Angeles (KFWB).
The original 200 unedited reels of 1/4" audio tape interviews recorded by Joan and Robert Franklin are no longer known to exist. However, audio cassette transfers from these original tapes were donated by Joan Franklin many decades ago to Columbia University's Oral History Research Office where they exist today.
Confirmed during a 2009 phone conversation with Mary Marshal Clark, archivist at Columbia at that time, who stated that the first on file communication from Robert Franklin to Columbia University related to his proposal to do an oral history audio recorded project is dated, July 31, 1958.
|
#5166:
HIGHWAYS OF MELODY
1961-12-03,
WNBC,
52 min.
Gordon MacRae, Dolores Gray, Eddy Arnold, The Brothers Four, The West Point Glee Club, Dorothy Kirsten, Connie Russel
The first of three special programs presenting musical journeys throughout regions of the U.S. with Gordon MacRae as host and star.
|
#4560:
SING ALONG WITH MITCH
1961-12-07,
WNBC,
52 min.
Mitch Miller, Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Sandy Stewart, Gloria Lambert, Jill Corey
January 27, 1961-April 21, 1961; September 28, 1961-September 21, 1964. Home viewers were able to participate in this hour-long musical series, as the lyrics to the songs were superimposed at the bottom of their screens; viewers were invited to "follow the bouncing ball" as it moved from one lyric to the next. Goateed composer-arranger Mitch Miller led the Sing-Along Gang, and on-stage aggregation of about two dozen. Among the featured vocalists were Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Barbara McNair, and Gloria Lambert. "Sing Along with Mitch" was introduced on "Ford Startime" in 1960 and had a limited run in the spring of 1961, alternating with "The Bell Telephone Hour," before going weekly in the fall of that year. Reruns were exhumed in the spring of 1966 to replace the faltering "Sammy Davis Jr. Show." Bill Hobin produced and directed the series.
|
#13581:
P.M. EAST-P.M. WEST WITH MIKE WALLACE
1961-12-07,
SYN,
min.
Mike Wallace, Joyce Davidson, Mitsuo Fuchida
1961-1962, Syndicated
P.M. EAST-P.M.WEST
A ninety-minute nightly syndicated talk show, video taped in New York with Mike Wallace and his co-host Joyce Davidson. Wallace and Davidson hosted the first hour from New York with Terrence O'Flaherty hosting the last half-hour from San Francisco. It was created to compete with the Jack Paar Show on NBC.
Host Mike Wallace interviews Captain Mitsuo Fuchida who led the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and also a Navy survivor of that attack.
|
#1337:
BELL TELEPHONE HOUR: DESIGNS IN MUSIC, THE
1961-12-08,
WNBC,
52 min.
Donald Voorhees, Joan Sutherland, Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Dorothy Collins, The Raymond Scott Quintet, Margot Fonteyn, Michael Somes, Luboshutz and Nemenoff
January 12, 1959-April 26, 1968. This musical series ran semiregularly for almost ten seasons-sometimes weekly, sometimes biweekly, and sometimes as irregularly scheduled specials. All types of music were presented on the hour series; Donald Voorhees conducted the Bell Telephone Orchestra.
|
#888:
12 STAR SALUTE
1961-12-09,
WABC,
59 min.
Jack Benny, Mitch Miller, Edward G. Robinson, Charlton Heston, Benny Goodman, Eartha Kitt, Morton Gould, Jan Peerce, Tony Martin, Lucille Ball, Anna Maria Alberghetti
Danny Kaye is host for a variety program saluting the work of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies. Guest performers are Eartha Kitt, Jack Benny, Anna Maria Alberghetti, Benny Goodman, Tony Martin, Mitch Miller, Jan Peerce, Charlton Heston, Lucille Ball, Edward G. Robinson and Morton Gould.
|
#900:
A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES: ART OR INDUSTRY
1961-12-10,
WNYC,
27 min.
Joan Franklin, Robert Franklin, King Vidor, Myrna Loy, Henry Fonda, Leo Rosten, Rouben Mamoulian, Edward Dmytryk, Jean Negulesco, Arthur Mayer, Ben Hecht, Samuel Spewack, Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Program number 14 of 18 programs.
Myrna Loy introduces this unique series. Under the wise and tolerant guidance of movie historian Arthur Mayer, the industry's most imaginative film makers are induced to recall the essential ingredients that either make or break a picture. Discussing their cinematic art are directors Rouben Mamoulian, King Vidor, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Edward Dmytryk and Jean Negulesco, stars Myrna Loy and Henry Fonda, and writers Ben Hecht, Samuel Spewack and Leo Rosten.
NOTE: Robert C. Franklin (1920-1980), inspired by a 1958 newspaper story he read about Columbia University's POPULAR ARTS ORAL HISTORY PROJECT, approached Dr. Louis Starr, then director of the oral-history collection, with a proposal to interview and tape record, on to 1/4" reel to reel audio tapes, movie people as they passed through New York. The objective would be to document, through personal recollections, the era of the silent era in films, the impact of sound, the triumphs and inequities of the major studios, and life in the glittering film capital...a firsthand account revelation of how silent movies were actually made.
Robert and his wife, Joan Franklin went on to record 200 reels of audio tape, recording celebrities mostly in New York City hotel rooms in 1958 and 1959. Transcripts of interviews were made available at the time to students and researchers.
In 1961 excerpts/highlights from these audio tapes were edited into a 16 part radio series titled, MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES. Myrna Loy provided a standard opening. A different celebrity host/hostess was employed to introduce each episode. All of the 90 celebrities interviewed have since passed away with the exception of Joanne Woodward. Two additional episodes were later produced, "Style of the 70's," and "Rush To Reality," both hosted by Ben Gazzara and added, subsequently, to re-issues of the series which were syndicated in the 1960's and 1970's airing in New York (WINS), Boston (WBZ), Philadelphia (KYW), Baltimore (WJZ), Fort Wayne (WOWO), Chicago (WIND), San Francisco (KPIX), and Los Angeles (KFWB).
The original 200 unedited reels of 1/4" audio tape interviews recorded by Joan and Robert Franklin are no longer known to exist. However, audio cassette transfers from these original tapes were donated by Joan Franklin many decades ago to Columbia University's Oral History Research Office where they exist today.
Confirmed during a 2009 phone conversation with Mary Marshal Clark, archivist at Columbia at that time, who stated that the first on file communication from Robert Franklin to Columbia University related to his proposal to do an oral history audio recorded project is dated, July 31, 1958.
|
#5061:
BING CROSBY SHOW FROM LONDON, THE
1961-12-11,
WABC,
52 min.
N/A
See program #889.
|
#889:
BING CROSBY SHOW FROM LONDON, THE
1961-12-11,
WABC,
54 min.
Bob Hope, Sean Glenville, Mike Malleson, Dave King, Marion Ryan, Julia Meade, Mirium Karlin, Bing Crosby, Shirley Bassey, Terry-Thomas
Bing Crosby saunters through London in this special. Guests include Dave King, Terry-Thomas, singers Shirley Bassie and Marion Ryan, actor Mike Malleson, comedienne Mirium Karlin and singer Sean Glenville. Bob Hope makes a surprise appearance. There is a Julia Meade Timex commercial as well as a Motorola television commercial highlighting its new remote control features.
|
#7293:
MANTOVANI
1961-12-13,
PBS,
00 min.
John Conte, Annunzio Mantovani
John Conte was host for this half hour series of thirty nine easy listening programs, featuring Annunzio Mantovani and his orchestra. This series was produced in England and syndicated in the United States. The program featured a guest star each week. This program debuted in the United States on WNET channel 13 in New York on April 15th, 1961 with singer Dorothy Collins in a salute to the silver screen.
|
#890:
BOB HOPE REVLON SHOW, THE
1961-12-13,
WNBC,
57 min.
Danny Thomas, Bob Hope, James Garner, Nancy Kwan
Bob Hope's guests are Danny Thomas, James Garner and Nancy Kwan on this Christmas special.
|
#4547:
SING ALONG WITH MITCH
1961-12-14,
WNBC,
52 min.
Mitch Miller, Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Sandy Stewart, Gloria Lambert
January 27, 1961-April 21, 1961; September 28, 1961-September 21, 1964. This was "The Employment Office" broadcast. Home viewers were able to participate in this hour-long musical series, as the lyrics to the songs were superimposed at the bottom of their screens; viewers were invited to "follow the bouncing ball" as it moved from one lyric to the next. Goateed composer-arranger Mitch Miller led the Sing-Along Gang, and on-stage aggregation of about two dozen. Among the featured vocalists were Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Barbara McNair, and Gloria Lambert. "Sing Along with Mitch" was introduced on "Ford Startime" in 1960 and had a limited run in the spring of 1961, alternating with "The Bell Telephone Hour," before going weekly in the fall of that year. Reruns were exhumed in the spring of 1966 to replace the faltering "Sammy Davis Jr. Show." Bill Hobin produced and directed the series.
|
#7480:
YOUNG PEOPLE'S CONCERT
1961-12-14,
CBS,
00 min.
Leonard Bernstein
July 18th, 1958- March 26th, 1972
Series of concerts originating from Carnegie Hall in New York City. Beginning in 1962, they were broadcast from Lincoln Center in New York City. Leonard Bernstein conducted fifty three such televised performances until 1972.
|
#7400:
SING ALONG WITH MITCH
1961-12-21,
NBC,
00 min.
Mitch Miller, Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Sandy Stewart, Gloria Lambert, Singalongers
January 27, 1961-April 21, 1961; September 28, 1961-September 21, 1964. This was the first broadcast of the series. Home viewers were able to participate in this hour-long musical series, as the lyrics to the songs were superimposed at the bottom of their screens; viewers were invited to "follow the bouncing ball" as it moved from one lyric to the next. Goateed composer-arranger Mitch Miller led the Sing-Along Gang, and on-stage aggregation of about two dozen. Among the featured vocalists were Leslie Uggams, Diana Trask, Barbara McNair, and Gloria Lambert. "Sing Along with Mitch" was introduced on "Ford Startime" in 1960 and had a limited run in the spring of 1961, alternating with "The Bell Telephone Hour," before going weekly in the fall of that year. Reruns were exhumed in the spring of 1966 to replace the faltering "Sammy Davis Jr. Show." Bill Hobin produced and directed the series.
Christmas Program With Traditional Melodies And Carols.
|
#7294:
MANTOVANI
1961-12-22,
PBS,
00 min.
John Conte, Annunzio Mantovani
John Conte was host for this half hour series of thirty nine easy listening programs, featuring Annunzio Mantovani and his orchestra. This series was produced in England and syndicated in the United States. The program featured a guest star each week. This program debuted in the United States on WNET channel 13 in New York on April 15th, 1961 with singer Dorothy Collins in a salute to the silver screen.
|
#895:
A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES: THE MEGAPHONE MEN
1961-12-24,
WNYC,
27 min.
Chester Morris, William Wyler, Alfred Hitchcock, John Ford, Otto Preminger, George Seaton, Joan Franklin, Robert Franklin, King Vidor, Janet Gaynor, Jack Lemmon, Myrna Loy, Rouben Mamoulian, Edward Dmytryk, Teresa Wright, Samson Raphaelson, Ernst Lubitsch, F.W. Murnau, Dana Andrews
Program number 7 of 18 programs.
Myrna Loy introduces this unique series. A distinguished company of Hollywood's greatest directors...recalled by their disciples and their actors who dissect their varied ways of working. Chester Morris is host to directors George Seaton, Otto Preminger, King Vidor, Rouben Mamoulian and Edward Dmytryk. Janet Gaynor recalls F.W. Murnau. Dana Andrews talks about William Wyler, Teresa Wright speaks about Alfred Hitchcock. Jack Lemmon talks about John Ford, and Samson Raphaelson recalls the great Ernst Lubitsch. Most of the interviews were originally recorded in 1959 by producers Joan and Robert Franklin.
NOTE: Robert C. Franklin (1920-1980), inspired by a 1958 newspaper story he read about Columbia University's POPULAR ARTS ORAL HISTORY PROJECT, approached Dr. Louis Starr, then director of the oral-history collection, with a proposal to interview and tape record, on to 1/4" reel to reel audio tapes, movie people as they passed through New York. The objective would be to document, through personal recollections, the era of the silent era in films, the impact of sound, the triumphs and inequities of the major studios, and life in the glittering film capital...a firsthand account revelation of how silent movies were actually made.
Robert and his wife, Joan Franklin went on to record 200 reels of audio tape, recording celebrities mostly in New York City hotel rooms in 1958 and 1959. Transcripts of interviews were made available at the time to students and researchers.
In 1961 excerpts/highlights from these audio tapes were edited into a 16 part radio series titled, MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES. Myrna Loy provided a standard opening. A different celebrity host/hostess was employed to introduce each episode. All of the 90 celebrities interviewed have since passed away with the exception of Joanne Woodward. Two additional episodes were later produced, "Style of the 70's," and "Rush To Reality," both hosted by Ben Gazzara and added, subsequently, to re-issues of the series which were syndicated in the 1960's and 1970's airing in New York (WINS), Boston (WBZ), Philadelphia (KYW), Baltimore (WJZ), Fort Wayne (WOWO), Chicago (WIND), San Francisco (KPIX), and Los Angeles (KFWB).
The original 200 unedited reels of 1/4" audio tape interviews recorded by Joan and Robert Franklin are no longer known to exist. However, audio cassette transfers from these original tapes were donated by Joan Franklin many decades ago to Columbia University's Oral History Research Office where they exist today.
Confirmed during a 2009 phone conversation with Mary Marshal Clark, archivist at Columbia at that time, who stated that the first on file communication from Robert Franklin to Columbia University related to his proposal to do an oral history audio recorded project is dated, July 31, 1958.
|
#154:
LIGHT FROM LAMBARENE
1961-12-24,
WNBC,
56 min.
Mark Evans, Albert Schweitzer
Mark Evans narrates this personal documentary on the life and times of Albert Schweitzer.
|
#155:
OPEN END WITH DAVID SUSSKIND:"THE ART OF COMEDY"
1961-12-24,
WNEW,
96 min.
David Susskind, Johnny Carson, Woody Allen, Dave Astor, Jack Carter, Mickey Rooney
Guests Johnny Carson, Woody Allen, Dave Astor, Jack Carter and Mickey Rooney discuss the world of comedy with David Susskind. This very rare "lost TV broadcast" was Woody Allen's first notable television appearance and was telecast nine months before Johnny Carson would become host of "The Tonight Show."
NOTE: Originally recorded off the air by Phil Gries. Woody Allen who had been looking to obtain this "lost" broadcast for years was given a personal copy by Gries in January 1997 and soon after donated a copy to The Paley Center for Media (at that time named The Museum of Television and Radio).
Jack Carter also received a copy of this broadcast from Gries who discussed in a letter his near fisticuff moments with Woody Allen during commercial breaks.
|
#891:
DUPONT SHOW OF THE WEEK: FRED WARING'S UNFORGETTABLES, THE
1961-12-24,
WNBC,
52 min.
Fred Waring
Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians instrumental group perform favorites of the past 45 years. Fred sings "Big John" and reminisces about his group's early days.
|
#6329:
AMOS 'N' ANDY: RESTITUTION
1961-12-28,
CBS,
6 min.
Ernestine Wade, Amanda Randolph, Alvin Childress, Spencer Williams, Tim Moore, Horace Stewart, Johnny Lee
January 12, 1926-November 25, 1960 (radio); June 28, 1951-June 11, 1953 (television). "Amos 'n' Andy," one of the most popular and long-running radio programs of all time, was brought to television in the summer of 1951 by Freeman Gosden & Charles Correll. When the show was cancelled, 65 episodes had been produced. An additional 13 episodes were then filmed to be added to the syndicated re-run package. These 13 episodes first aired on CBS television beginning on January 4, 1955. Note: "Amos 'n' Andy" used three 35mm cameras to film each episode prior to "I Love Lucy," most often given credit for first using this TV revolutionary three camera approach. "I Love Lucy" premiered on October 15, 1951. Today, 74 of the 78 "Amos 'n' Andy" episodes are available & sold on DVD. However, four episodes remain mysteriously absent: "Andy Goes In Business," "Race Horse," "Sapphire's Mysterious Admirer," and "Restitution." Archival Television Audio recorded one of these missing episodes off the air Dec. 28, 1961 - "Restitution."
While trying to do a good deed, Kingfish ends up becoming a fugitive from justice. Joined in progress. Only a 6:10-minute excerpt was recorded off the air, but inaccessible to the public for over half a century.
|
#9470:
PM EAST...PM WEST
1961-12-28,
WNEW,
5 min.
Judy Garland, Mike Wallace
Mike Wallace interviews Judy Garland at the premiere of the motion picture, Judgement at Neurenberg.
|
#3636:
LAWRENCE WELK SHOW, THE
1961-12-30,
WABC,
52 min.
Lawrence Welk
July 2, 1955-September 4, 1971; 1971-1982 (Syndicated). This was the "New Year's Party" broadcast. "The Lawrence Welk Show" presented middle-of-the-road music for almost three decades. Numbers were performed by the members of Welk's television family. That large group included the Lennon Sisters (Dianne, Peggy, Kathy and Janet), Alice Lon, Norma Zimmer, Tanya Falan, Arthur Duncan, Joe Feeney, Guy Hovis, Jim Roberts, Ralna English, Larry Hooper, Jerry Burke and former Mouseketeer Bobby Burgess.
|
#5167:
HIGHWAYS OF MELODY
1961-12-31,
WNBC,
52 min.
Gordon MacRae, George Chakiris, Jack Jones, Sheila MacRae, Buddy Ebsen, Rita Moreno, Kathryn Grayson
The second of three special programs presenting musical journeys throughout regions of the U.S. with Gordon MacRae and his wife Sheila MacRae hosting.
|
#896:
A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES: THE TYCOONS
1961-12-31,
WNYC,
27 min.
Joan Franklin, Robert Franklin, Richard Barthelmess, Jack Lemmon, Myrna Loy, David Wark Griffith, Jerry Wald, Dore Schary, Zachary Scott, Samuel Goldwyn, Louis B. Mayer, Basil Rathbone, Ben Hecht, Alexander Korda, Harry Cohen, Reginald Denham, Irving Thalberg
Program number 8 of 18 programs.
Myrna Loy introduces this unique series. Zachary Scott as host, assembles a composite portrait of the men who produce and direct the great motion picture studios. Some bouquets and a handful of knocks are handed to D.W. Griffith, Samuel Goldwyn, Alexander Korda, Harry Cohen, Irving Thalberg and Louis B. Mayer by Richard Barthlemess, Basil Rathbone, Jerry Wald, director Reginald Denham, Jack Lemmon, Ben Hecht, Dore Schary and Myrna Loy.
NOTE: Robert C. Franklin (1920-1980), inspired by a 1958 newspaper story he read about Columbia University's POPULAR ARTS ORAL HISTORY PROJECT, approached Dr. Louis Starr, then director of the oral-history collection, with a proposal to interview and tape record, on to 1/4" reel to reel audio tapes, movie people as they passed through New York. The objective would be to document, through personal recollections, the era of the silent era in films, the impact of sound, the triumphs and inequities of the major studios, and life in the glittering film capital...a firsthand account revelation of how silent movies were actually made.
Robert and his wife, Joan Franklin went on to record 200 reels of audio tape, recording celebrities mostly in New York City hotel rooms in 1958 and 1959. Transcripts of interviews were made available at the time to students and researchers.
In 1961 excerpts/highlights from these audio tapes were edited into a 16 part radio series titled, MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES. Myrna Loy provided a standard opening. A different celebrity host/hostess was employed to introduce each episode. All of the 90 celebrities interviewed have since passed away with the exception of Joanne Woodward. Two additional episodes were later produced, "Style of the 70's," and "Rush To Reality," both hosted by Ben Gazzara and added, subsequently, to re-issues of the series which were syndicated in the 1960's and 1970's airing in New York (WINS), Boston (WBZ), Philadelphia (KYW), Baltimore (WJZ), Fort Wayne (WOWO), Chicago (WIND), San Francisco (KPIX), and Los Angeles (KFWB).
The original 200 unedited reels of 1/4" audio tape interviews recorded by Joan and Robert Franklin are no longer known to exist. However, audio cassette transfers from these original tapes were donated by Joan Franklin many decades ago to Columbia University's Oral History Research Office where they exist today.
Confirmed during a 2009 phone conversation with Mary Marshal Clark, archivist at Columbia at that time, who stated that the first on file communication from Robert Franklin to Columbia University related to his proposal to do an oral history audio recorded project is dated, July 31, 1958.
|
#5312:
LET FREEDOM RING
1961-12-31,
WCBS,
52 min.
Richard Boone, Dan O'Herlihy, Howard Keel, Laraine Day
Tape recorded in Salt Lake City. A reaffirmation of our faith in the U.S. and its future through music and spoken words of great figures of American past.
|
#13582:
GUY LOMBARDO'S NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY
1961-12-31,
CBS,
min.
Guy Lombardo, Royal Canadians
Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians usher in 1962.
|
#921:
A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: MUSIC FROM THE MOVIES
1962-00-00,
WQXR,
97 min.
Dimitri Tiomkin, Bosley Crowther, Alex North, Arthur Kleiner
Host Bosley Crowther, NY Times Movie Critic, chats with composers Dimitri Tiomkin, Alex North and Arthur Kleiner. Samples of their work are heard.
|
#922:
A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: AN EVENING WITH MAURICE CHEVALIER
1962-00-00,
WABC,
58 min.
Maurice Chevalier, Don Lowe
Don Lowe presents this live broadcast from Paris with Maurice Chevalier.
|
#904:
NEW MARCH OF THE DIMES: THE SCENE STEALERS, THE
1962-01-02,
WPIX,
49 min.
Ralph Edwards, James Garner, Jack Lemmon, Lorne Greene, Limeliters, Jackie Cooper, Fabian, Dr. Frank Baxter, Buster Keaton, Rosemary Clooney, Eartha Kitt, Abby Dalton, Fritz Feld, Dorothy Provine, Roger Williams, David Janssen, Nanette Fabray, Dan Blocker
Starring in this special program are
Jimmy Durante, Buster Keaton, Dan Blocker, Rosemary Clooney, Jackie Cooper, Abby Dalton, Ralph Edwards, Fabian, Nanette Fabray, Fritz Feld, James Garner, Lorne Greene, David Janssen, Eartha Kitt, Jack Lemmon, The Limeliters, Dorothy Provine, Roger Williams and Dr. Frank Baxter. This film and its stars signal the opening of the 1962 March of Dimes Campaign.
|
#129A:
HERE'S HOLLYWOOD
1962-01-02,
WNBC,
20 min.
Art Linkletter, Jack Linkletter, Diane Linkletter, Lois Linkletter, Barbara Linkletter, Robert Linkletter
September 26, 1960 - December 28, 1962
Jack Linkletter interviews his father Art Linkletter from the home Jack grew up. Also on hand are his brother, Robert, and sister Diane, along with Jack's wife Barbara and his mom, Lois. Art replays a 1953 audio tape he recorded of Jack auditioning as an announcer, prior to his first TV appearance at the age of 16. Many personal anecdotes are exchanged.
Note: The audio quality has variations in quality. However, very discernible and a valued addition to the Here's Hollywood surviving broadcasts in the ATA archive.
Here's Hollywood aired as a half-hour interview program, weekday afternoons on NBC at 4:30pm. On October 2, 1961 the show was reduced five minutes giving way to a live news broadcast with Sander Vanocur which aired at 4:55pm.
Here's Hollywood was the leading daytime show for two years. It was the first TV broadcast of its kind, using two mobile vans equipped with 2" video tape equipment which traveled to the homes of celebrities...two locations each day, one star in the morning and one in the afternoon. Most of the interviews aired were ten minutes in length. Two different interviews comprised the full length of the half hour program. Occasionally, one subject would be interviewed for the complete program. Occasionally programs were produced outside of the United States...Hawaii, Germany, France. Five color broadcasts were attempted and then the concept abandoned, due to the complexity of 2" quadruplex video tape at the time.
Dean Miller conducted interviews from September 26, 1960 to September 29, 1961. He was replaced by Jack Linkletter who conducted interviews from October 2, 1961 to December 28, 1962. Joanne Jordan conducted interviews from September 26, 1960 to June 9, 1961. She was replaced by Helen O'Oconnell who conducted interviews from June 13, 1961 to December 28, 1962.
Note: Only a handful of the 1,100 different interviews survive. Most were erased, discarded, misplaced. NBC Archives have only two surviving kinescopes, one with Joe E. Brown (12-2-61), and one with Linda Darnell (12-4-61). UCLA Film & TV Archive has 46 different subject interview kinescopes on separate negative film and separate optical film tracks.
Archival Television Audio has 74 broadcasts on audio tape, originally recorded by Phil Gries at the time the broadcasts first aired.
|
#894:
A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES: THE FILM FACTORIES
1962-01-04,
WNYC,
27 min.
Otto Preminger, George Seaton, Joan Franklin, Robert Franklin, Myrna Loy, Henry Fonda, Roddy McDowall, Leo Rosten, Marc Connelly, Jerry Wald, Franchot Tone, Basil Rathbone, Bonita Granville, Aline MacMahon, Anita Loos, Ben Hecht, Henry Myers, Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Program number 5 of 18 programs.
Myrna Loy introduces this unique series. Franchot Tone conducts a guided tour through the great Hollywood studios at their luxurious peak- the sound stage, story conferences, star dressing rooms and even the company dining rooms. Among the inmates of the stables are Henry Fonda, Basil Rathbone, Bonita Granville, Jerry Wald, Aline MacMahon, Roddy McDowall, Otto Preminger, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, George Seaton and writers, Marc Connelly, Anita Loos, Ben Hecht, Leo Rosten and Henry Myers. Most of the interviews were originally recorded in 1959 by producers Joan and Robert Franklin.
NOTE: Robert C. Franklin (1920-1980), inspired by a 1958 newspaper story he read about Columbia University's POPULAR ARTS ORAL HISTORY PROJECT, approached Dr. Louis Starr, then director of the oral-history collection, with a proposal to interview and tape record, on to 1/4" reel to reel audio tapes, movie people as they passed through New York. The objective would be to document, through personal recollections, the era of the silent era in films, the impact of sound, the triumphs and inequities of the major studios, and life in the glittering film capital...a firsthand account revelation of how silent movies were actually made.
Robert and his wife, Joan Franklin went on to record 200 reels of audio tape, recording celebrities mostly in New York City hotel rooms in 1958 and 1959. Transcripts of interviews were made available at the time to students and researchers.
In 1961 excerpts/highlights from these audio tapes were edited into a 16 part radio series titled, MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES. Myrna Loy provided a standard opening. A different celebrity host/hostess was employed to introduce each episode. All of the 90 celebrities interviewed have since passed away with the exception of Joanne Woodward. Two additional episodes were later produced, "Style of the 70's," and "Rush To Reality," both hosted by Ben Gazzara and added, subsequently, to re-issues of the series which were syndicated in the 1960's and 1970's airing in New York (WINS), Boston (WBZ), Philadelphia (KYW), Baltimore (WJZ), Fort Wayne (WOWO), Chicago (WIND), San Francisco (KPIX), and Los Angeles (KFWB).
The original 200 unedited reels of 1/4" audio tape interviews recorded by Joan and Robert Franklin are no longer known to exist. However, audio cassette transfers from these original tapes were donated by Joan Franklin many decades ago to Columbia University's Oral History Research Office where they exist today.
Confirmed during a 2009 phone conversation with Mary Marshal Clark, archivist at Columbia at that time, who stated that the first on file communication from Robert Franklin to Columbia University related to his proposal to do an oral history audio recorded project is dated, July 31, 1958.
|
16464 Results found for Pages:
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 [27] 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52
|
|
Top

To search for a broadcast, please enter a
Show Title, Personality, Airdate, Archive ID, Keyword or Phrase
into the Search textboxes at the top of the page:
PRESERVING & ARCHIVING THE SOUND OF LOST & UNOBTAINABLE ORIGINAL TV (1946 - 1982)
ACCREDITED BY GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS

Vintage Television Audio Broadcasts 22,000 Titles - 20,000 Hours
Home |
About us |
Order Inquiry |
TV Categories |
Personality Index |
Title Index

Archival Television Audio, Inc.
www.atvaudio.com
209 Sea Cliff Avenue
Sea Cliff, New York 11579
Attention: Phil Gries
"Any Inquiries"
Phone/Fax: (516) 656-5677
Email Us: gries@atvaudio.com

© 2002-2022 Collector's Choice Archival Television Audio, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Unique Visitors:
Visitor Counter
|
|
RETRIEVABLE LOST MEMORIES
ORDER Vintage Television Audio Broadcasts 22,000 Titles 20,000 Hours
Testimonials
Phil Gries' recordings of vintage sounds never grow old.
Newsday feature June 22, 2016
Hear Phil Gries on
Hear Phil Gries and Joe Franklin on Bloomberg Radio (April 28, 2012)
Home
Contact Us
ORDER INQUIRY
Hear Phil Gries on National Public Radio Archive Profile
ALL THINGS CONSIDERED "Raising Ali" (May 22, 2015)
Hear Phil Gries on Sports Talk: August 25, 2019 June 26, 2016 August 9, 2015
Archive
Search Library
TV Categories
Personality Index
Title Index
ARSC Journal Article Publication: Lost TV Programs (1946-1972)
 Hear Phil Gries presentations at ARSC (Association for Recorded Sound Collections) 2001, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2014.
Audio Samples
(Audio files may take 20 seconds or more to load)
1960's TV Audio Player 103 Broadcast Samplers
AudioAndText Content (Browser needs to allow Flash content)
Content Collections
JFK Assassination Coverage
NPR Walter Cronkite Essays
Civil Rights Movement (1956-1968)
Space Exploration (1956-1972)
Vietnam War (1961-1975) [854 Entries]
Company Information
About Us
Descriptions
Access
Fees
Archive TIME-LINE
Accreditation
Master Materials
Research
Copyrights
Restricted Archive Titles
Catalogs
Related Materials
TV History
Lost Television
 Jose Feliciano, at 70, listening to his FIRST TV variety show appearance (Al Hirt: FANFARE), telecast on July 17, 1965, when he was 19 years old.
TV Audio: Rare & Valued
When TV Variety Was King
This Anniversary Day In Television History
ARSC/IASA London Conference: Why Collect?
 News 12 Long Island Live Television Profile: Archival Television Audio, Inc
CAPTURED LIVE: CULTURES OF TELEVISION RECORDING AND STORAGE, 1945-1975
NBC MATINEE THEATER FRANKENSTEIN NBC TV - Feb. 5, 1957 8:23 min. excerpt
Phil Gries TV Audio Archive Profile Segment
 Harry Belafonte Hosts The Tonight Show 5:21 min. excerpt Password: Phil (Case Sensitive)
|