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1-9 of 9
- After Hours, singin' swingin' and all that jazz, that's how this variety special was advertised. CBS daytime stars from As the World Turns and The Young and the Restless perform songs and dance. Keith performs Razzle-Dazzle, Don sings Remember and Beau performs, Brother Love's Travelling Salvation Show. Fun!
- A celebration including drama, comedy and music highlights included, Pat Boone singing "Where Are You?" in a skit called the Sad Lover in a Mardi Gras scene. A comedy sketch with Eddie Bracken and Hans Conried called "Poor Charlie: the Book Store". Including Alice Ghostley and Dennis Joel as Ethel and Andy. Dan Dailey, Carol Burnett, Steve Lawrence and Chita Rivera in a comedy song and dance titled, "Past and Future". "Mr. Boland's Afternoon", a dramatic sketch with Don Ameche and Peg Lynch. "Firsts" a comedy sketch with Claudette Colbert and Kent Smith. "The Bridge" a dramatic endeavor with Cyril Ritchard and Claudia Crawford. Dean Martin, Howard Keed, Doretta Morrow and Bambi Linn in a potpourri of songs about Love.
- This production was put on by the Actors Company with Barry Boys, former director of Shakespeare Studies of the London Academy of Musical and Dramatic Arts. This 5-hour production not only encompassed the rehearsals but also the characterization of the Macduff, Malcolm, Lady Macduff, and Ross, with the final outcome of one of Shakespeare's finest productions.
- At age 63, Ulysses S. Grant learns he is dying of cancer. Mark Twain, his friend, remarked, "He was groping in the past to find himself, to salvage from the wreckage of his life some remnants of his self-esteem." The story unfolds in flashbacks through his illustrious life.
- Presented by The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, this progam pays homage the history of Washington's steadfastness against all odds. In December of 1776 with no victories and sagging morale, things looked bleak for Washington and his men. But the capture of suspected Tory spy John Honeyman provided the edge that was needed to change the course of the war. This taped special bore the advertisement "It was tar and feathers for the "traitor" who claimed to know George Washington!"
- Rich Meridan is white, well-to-do and off to law school so he can make more money. Macy Stander is black, a cut above poverty and young enough to dream and hope for a better life. Both youths are stifled one has too much and the other has too little.
- A bachelor account executive with an advertising agency, thinks he has the perfect set-up with three girlfriends. And then there is Marion his devoted secretary who worships him and will do anything for him. Steve Allen wrote the music and lyrics to the songs which are, "This Could Be the Start of Something", "Slave Girl", "The Girl in the Grey Flannel Suit", "I'm Simply Starved", "Rogue Male", "Three Cheers and a Tiger", "One Man Woman", "Impossible", and "Little Black Book". A very entertaining musical comedy.
- Presented by The Breck Shampoo Company, this Rudyard Kipling classic takes place in 1880, the changes that take place, some good, some bad in the life of Dick Heldar. A struggling artist doing battle sketches, then becoming successful and finding out that he is losing his sight, he struggles with his compulsion to be an artist and as a man he struggles to find his one true love.
- A wonderful musical set in the mind of a boy's imagination brought to life by the talents of Karloff, Gleason, O'Brian, Paige, Lahr, and Hamilton. Great song and dance routines. The theme music for this taped telecast was composed by Jackie Gleason himself.