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7 records found for Pat Hingle
#13965: ALUMNI FUN
Order1963-02-03, ABC, 6 min.
January 20th, 1963-April 28th, 1963 (ABC) January 12th, 1964- April 5th, 1965- (CBS) January 10th, 1965- March 28th, 1965- (CBS) January 23rd, 1966- May 7th, 1966 (CBS) A weekly game show featuring two teams composed of famous alumni from the same college or university. The winning team would return the following week to face a new team of challengers. NBC newsman John K.M. McCaffery hosted during the program's first season and Peter Lind Hayes was the host for the other seasons. This episode represents a rare retrospective of this lost series from February 3rd, 1963, hosted by John K.M. McCaffery and features guests Elliott Nugent and Pat Hingle. NOTE: Occasional audio hum.
#404: A 1960'S RADIO BROADCAST ADDITION: RETROSPECT (MEMOIRS OF THE MOVIES): HOLLYWOOD'S YOUNGER GENERATION (ORIGINAL TITLE: THE FILM FACTORIES REVISITED)
Order1963-02-24, WINS, 28 min.
- Robert Franklin
- King Vidor
- Jack Lemmon
- Rod Steiger
- Roddy McDowall
- Paul Lazarus
- Adolph Zukor
- Jeanette MacDonald
- Joanne Woodward
- Pat Hingle
- Teresa Wright
- Paul Newman
- Jean Negulesco
- John Cassavetes
Program number 5 of 18 programs originally broadcast in 1961. The brightest youngsters of today's films gang up on the picture business and give all the paralyzing reasons why they feel like misfits in the the movies. Roddy McDowall hosts this spoken memoir of the movies with personal retrospectives from Jeanette MacDonald, Joanne Woodward, John Cassavetes, Rod Steiger, Pat Hingle, Teresa Wright, Paul Newman, Paul Lazarus, Adolph Zukor, Jean Negulesco, Jack Lemmon, and King Vidor. A feature presentation of the Westinghouse Broadcasting Company in Collaboration with the Oral History Research Project of Columbia University. Produced by Joan Franklin 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.
1963-04-28, WOR, 42 min.
- Van Heflin
- Margaret Leighton
- Diahann Carroll
- Pat Hingle
- Robert Morse
- Martin Gabel
- Abe Burrows
- Orson Bean
- Rosalind Russell
- Anita Gillette
- Alan Arkin
- Phyllis Newman
- Dane Clark
- Sandy Dennis
- Charles Nelson Reilly
- George Abbott
- David Yarnell
- Jean Shepherd
- Harold Prince
- Jean-Pierre Aumont
- Lionel Bart
- Burt Shevelove
- Alan Schneider
- Anna Quayle
- Sam Levene
- Solly Pernick
The 17th Annual Tony Awards for excellence in theatrical performances for 1962 are awarded from the Hotel Americana Imperial Ballroom in New York City. The Master of Ceremonies is Abe Burrows and Robert Morse. Broadcast locally on WOR-TV Channel 9 in New York. WOR radio host Jean Shepherd opens and introduces the show. George Abbott wins the Best Direction of a Musical award for "A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum." Produced by David Yarnell. NOTE: This rare television audio air check broadcast was recognized by The Guinness Book of World Records, June 19, 2002 (Claim #5364), for the most money paid for a television soundtrack, sold to The American Theatre Wing, Inc., by Archival Television Audio, Inc., transacted on June 20, 2001. NOTE: The first 42 minutes of the one hour broadcast.
1966-00-00, CBS, 120 min.
Amanda Wingfield dominates her children with faded gentility and exaggerated tales of her Southern belle past.
1968-09-12, NBC, 90 min.
An epic political drama about the US Congress and Champ Donahue, a Democratic Congressman from New York expertly portrayed by Academy Award winning actor Van Heflin and his former aide, Robbie Conroy, played by Peter Fonda. Donahue is accused of engaging in graft and is exposed by his 28- year-old protege Conroy. A superb cast was rounded up for this TV drama. It includes veteran character actor Pat Hingle who portrays Donahue's attorney, Alexandra Isles, and Will Geer. the production was video taped at NBC's color studio in Brooklyn, NY. This excellent political drama has been missing and considered "lost" for decades. However, It does survive, existing as audio in the archives of Archival Television Audio, Inc. This was the first of five "On Stage" dramas presented by NBC for the 1968-1969 television season. It is also notable as David Wolper Productions' first TV drama presentation. Written by Rod Serling. NOTE: At the beginning this television presentation, the announcer states: " And now from New York, on video tape, Act 1 of "Certain Honorable Men." This video tape appears to have been wiped (erased) as so many television Quad tapes were erased and reused to record other television productions during the 1960's and 1970's. At the time the cost of a 2" Quad Videotape cost on average $600 for a one hour reel which weighed 13 pounds. The one and only time "CERTAIN HONORABLE MEN" aired on TV was on Sept. 12, 1968, on NBC. Subsequently, this production vanished from the cultural landscape. Despite its pedigree, "CERTAIN HONORABLE MEN" has essentially been lost to the sands of time. It was never been released on video, or as a DVD. It is also difficult to even locate more than a single photo or the original artwork advertising this fascinating presentation adaptation to the television screen.
1971-12-01, NBC, 90 min.
A deeply religious expectant woman must come to terms with the unexpected death of her husband a reformed drinker, who was charming and free-spirited.
1975-03-06, WCBS, 78 min.
Carol Burnett stars in portrayals of four female characters in the television adaptation by George Furth of his Broadway play. The first three acts are concerned with three sisters and the fourth with their mother, the roles played by Carol Burnett.