Search Results
7 records found for Earl Hines
#13581A: PM EAST - PM WEST
Order1961-11-17, SYN, 45 min.
1961-1962, Syndicated PM East - PM West 17Nov1961 PM East: [rerun 29Jan62] Mike and Joyce spend the evening with the Limeliters, a folk singing group. PM West: PM East - PM West was a late-night talk show hosted by Mike Wallace and Joyce Davidson in New York City (where the PM East portion originated) and San Francisco Chronicle television critic Terrence O'Flaherty in San Francisco (PM West). The program was seen five nights a week from June 12, 1961, to June 22, 1962. 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.
#RT13581A: PM EAST - PM WEST
Order1961-11-17, SYN, 45 min.
1961-1962, Syndicated PM East - PM West 17Nov1961 PM East: [rerun 29Jan62] Mike and Joyce spend the evening with the Limeliters, a folk singing group. PM West: PM East - PM West was a late-night talk show hosted by Mike Wallace and Joyce Davidson in New York City (where the PM East portion originated) and San Francisco Chronicle television critic Terrence O'Flaherty in San Francisco (PM West). The program was seen five nights a week from June 12, 1961, to June 22, 1962. 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.
#4978: WORLD OF JAZZ, THE
Order1970-06-06, WQXR, 60 min.
Hosted by John S. Wilson, "The World of Jazz" aired on WQXR AM & FM Radio on Saturdays at 10:10 PM. Wilson was a fixture on radio playing early jazz recordings on each of his broadcasts, during the 1950's, '60s, and '70s. The records of hundreds of Jazz musicians were profiled, including original Louis Armstrong records, among them Armstrong's first Orpheum 105 record, recorded on March 31, 1923, and aired by Wilson on his program on May 9, 1970.#6447: DANNY STILES SHOW
Order1970-09-15, WNYC, 120 min.
- Helen Kane
- Tommy Dorsey
- Glenn Miller
- Billy Holiday
- Stan Kenton
- Earl Hines
- Danny Stiles
- Erskine Hawkins
- Jimmy Dorsey
- Hal Kemp
- Pee Hunt
Danny Stiles was a radio personality. He worked on the radio for 63 years, playing vinyl.1973-11-05, PBS, 60 min.
- Louis Armstrong
- Ella Fitzgerald
- Dizzy Gillespie
- Joe Williams
- John Mayall
- Helen Humes
- Earl Hines
- The Dave Brubeck Group
- Freddie Hubbard
- Ray Nance
- The Roy Eldridge Quintet
- Al Hibbler
Top names in jazz salute Louis Armstrong in a concert taped on July 4, 1973 in New York City. Included in this PBS Special salute are clips of Armstrong doing "Mack the Knife" and "When It's Sleepy Time Down South." Highlights and Performers: "Kidney Stew Blues"..............................Roy Eldridge Quintet "Basin Street Blues"..............................Dizzy Gillespie "If I Could Be with You One Hour Tonight"........Helen Humes "Circadian".........................................Dave Brubeck Group "Summertime".......................................Freddie Hubbard "Blues on a Summer Afternoon"..............John Mayall, Grover Washington, and Roy Buchanan "Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me," "Swing That Music"...Al Hibler, Joe Williams, and Earl 'Fatha' Hines "The Man I Love"................Ella Fitzgerald "When It's Sleepy Time Down South"................Ray Nance and many other performers playing their JAZZ SALUTE to Satchmo, including short interviews heard of these performers stating why Louis Armstrong was so great and influential to others.
1973-11-05, KQUED, 57 min.
- Louis Armstrong
- Ella Fitzgerald
- Dizzy Gillespie
- Joe Williams
- John Mayall
- Helen Humes
- Earl Hines
- The Dave Brubeck Group
- Freddie Hubbard
- Ray Nance
- The Roy Eldridge Quintet
- Al Hibbler
Top names in jazz salute Louis Armstrong in a concert taped on July 4, 1973 in New York City. Included in this PBS Special salute are clips of Armstrong doing "Mack the Knife" and "When It's Sleepy Time Down South." Highlights and Performers: "Kidney Stew Blues"..............................Roy Eldridge Quintet "Basin Street Blues"..............................Dizzy Gillespie "If I Could Be with You One Hour Tonight"........Helen Humes "Circadian".........................................Dave Brubeck Group "Summertime".......................................Freddie Hubbard "Blues on a Summer Afternoon"..............John Mayall, Grover Washington, and Roy Buchanan "Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me," "Swing That Music"...Al Hibler, Joe Williams, and Earl 'Fatha' Hines "The Man I Love"................Ella Fitzgerald "When It's Sleepy Time Down South"................Ray Nance and many other performers playing their JAZZ SALUTE to Satchmo, including short interviews heard of these performers stating why Louis Armstrong was so great and influential to others. NOTE: Another version of this broadcast originally recorded and archived but with slight variations in sound quality. Complete, very enjoyable and acceptable...slightly discounted.
#5980: STINGIEST MAN IN TOWN
Order1978-12-23, WNBC, 54 min.
- Theodore Bikel
- Robert Morse
- Tom Bosley
- Paul Frees
- Walter Matthau
- Dennis Day
- Earl Hines
- Charles Matthau
- Steffanie Calli
- Darlene Conley
- Debra Clinger
- Robert Rolofson
Animated musical version of the classic Charles Dickens tale "A Christmas Carol," about Scrooge and the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future. Tom Bosley is the narrator.