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37 records found for Robert Wagner
#13043: NIGHT BEAT WITH MIKE WALLACE
1956-10-31, WABD, 11 min.
October 90, 1956-May 31, 1957 Night beat was an hour-long talk/interview program hosted by Mike Wallace and broadcast on WABD-TV channel 5 in New York City. (Dumont). It was broadcast from 11 PM to 12 AM Tuesday through Friday evenings. Wallace served as host from October 1956 to May 1957. In this episode, Mike interviews Max Lerner of the NY Post who comments on the Middle East crises and makes a prediction that Adlai Stevenson will be elected the next President of the United States and New York City Mayor Robert Wagner will be a United States Senator from New York. He also predicts that John Foster Dulle's days as Secretary of State are over. Mike Wallace reviews current headlines.
#9468: ACADEMY AWARD: 30TH ANNUAL
1958-03-26, NBC, 95 min.
- David Niven ,
- Elsa Lanchester ,
- Arthur Kennedy ,
- Bob Hope ,
- Red Buttons ,
- Sessue Hayakawa ,
- Jack Lemmon ,
- Tony Curtis ,
- Hope Lange ,
- Janet Leigh ,
- Natalie Wood ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Don Murray ,
- Rosalind Russell ,
- Carolyn Jones ,
- Jimmy Stewart ,
- Russ Tamblyn ,
- Donald Duck ,
- Vittorio De Sica ,
- Miyoushi Umeki ,
- Diane Varsi
The 30th annual "Oscar" presentations are telecast, for the first time entirely under the auspices of the movie industry. Emcees: Jimmy Stewart, Rosalind Russell, David Niven, Jack Lemmon, Bob Hope. Donald Duck narrates a cartoon history of the movies. Married couples acting as custodians of the "Oscars" are Hope Lange and Don Murray, Janet Leigh and Tony Curtis, and Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner. Supporting - role nominees are Red Buttons, Vittorio De Sica, Sessue Hayakawa, Arthur Kennedy, Russ Tamblyn, Carolyn Jones, Elsa Lanchester, Hope Lange, Miyoushi Umeki, and Diane Varsi.
#13311: CBS NEWS WITH RON COCHRAN, THE
1958-11-06, CBS, min.
Highlights: the US prepares to fire another rocket to the moon, Rudolf Bing fires singer Maria Callas from the Metropolitan Opera House because of her temperament, Governor Averell Harriman agrees with New York City Mayor Robert Wagner on"bossism" in New York City.
#13365: NBC SPECIAL REPORT ON JUVENILE DELINQUENCY IN NEW YORK CITY
1959-09-03, NBC, 8 min.
Topics: Comment by New York City Mayor Robert Wagner, a recap of latest juvenile delinquent murders in New York City, murders in the park on both the East and West sides. Gabe Pressman is the host.
#6950A: ACADEMY AWARDS: 32ND ANNUAL
1960-04-04, NBC, min.
- Gene Kelly ,
- William Wyler ,
- James Stewart ,
- John Wayne ,
- Bob Hope ,
- Gary Cooper ,
- Ed Wynn ,
- Yves Montand ,
- Rock Hudson ,
- Tony Curtis ,
- Andre Previn ,
- Hope Lange ,
- Joan Crawford ,
- Carl Reiner ,
- Robert Ryan ,
- Shelley Winters ,
- Buster Keaton ,
- Janet Leigh ,
- Natalie Wood ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Sammy Cahn ,
- Yvette Mimieux ,
- Elizabeth Taylor ,
- Ann Blyth ,
- Frankie Laine ,
- Barbara Rush ,
- Fernando Lamas ,
- Joni James ,
- Jack Clayton ,
- Richard Conte ,
- Wendell Corey ,
- Edward Curtiss ,
- BB Kahane ,
- Eric Johnston ,
- Susan Kohner ,
- Diane McBain ,
- Juanita Moore ,
- Edmond OBrien ,
- Simone Signoret ,
- Jimmy Van Heusen ,
- Frankie Vaughan ,
- Robert Vaughan ,
- Mary Zimbalist
Bob Hope is host for the 32nd Annual Academy Awards ceremony, telecast live from the RKO Pantages Theater, in Hollywood, California.
#13424: CBS NEWS WITH RON COCHRAN, THE
1960-05-16, CBS, min.
Highlights: Summit crisis, Eisenhower accuses Khrushchev of deliberately trying to wreck it, Senator Lyndon Johnson comments on the crisis. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt with comments on New York City Mayor Robert Wagner.
#13427: CBS NEWS WITH RON COCHRAN, THE
1960-05-17, CBS, min.
- Nikita Khrushchev ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Ron Cochran ,
- John F. Kennedy ,
- Richard Nixon ,
- Dwight Eisenhower ,
- Wayne Morse
Highlights: The summit meeting is shattered, Khrushchev hints at signing a separate peace treaty with East Germany, Vice President Nixon comments on summit fiasco, Khrushchev will boycott all summit talks until Eisenhower apologizes, in the Maryland primary, Senator Kennedy leads over Senator Morse, Mayor Wagner says Kennedy could win New York delegates.
#13480: NEWS, THE
1960-09-19, , min.
More on Castro hotel problems, Hungarian refugees riot against Khrushchev, Eisenhower says troublemakers coming to the US, Russians protest wording on anti-Castro signs, political chaos in the Congo, Mayor Wagner summons NYC police commissioner Stephen Kennedy about anti-Jewish remarks, Laos reports under rebel attack by the communists.
#13484: NEWS FROM 1010 WINS RADIO
1960-09-22, WINS, min.
Highlights: 10,000 mass near Castro hotel, brawl results, nine-year-old girl accidentally shot by Castro fanatic, Mayor Wagner will see to it that police commissioner Kennedy apologizes for slur on Jews.
#13503: CBS NEWS: ELECTION TOMORROW
1960-11-07, CBS, min.
Highlights: Richard Nixon returns to California, Kennedy speaks from Springfield, Massachusetts, Mayor Robert Wagner says New York City is flooded with scare and hate literature suspects they are from Republican headquarters, New York City school teachers on strike, teachers comment on the strike.
#13512: SPECIAL REPORT AIR DISASTER FROM 1010 WINS RADIO
1960-12-16, WINS, 23 min.
WINS newsman Brad Phillips reports of a collision between two airliners (TWA and United) over Staten Island. News of plane disaster that killed 136 people. On-the-spot accounts given by eyewitnesses. Fires commissioner Edward Cavanagh Jr. states that today's air disaster is the greatest tragedy in American Aviation History. Comments from New York City Mayor Robert Wagner. On Friday, December 16, 1960 at 10:36 am a plane collided with another plane a mile high in the New York sky. It was the first commercial air disaster o the jet age, killing all 127 passengers, and crew members and five more people on the ground, when one of the airliners crashed in Brooklyn, setting off a seven-alarm fire. It was the worst aviation disaster in American history. The TWA constellation out of Dayton, Ohio, and bound for La Guardia Airport, broke apart in midair and plummeted into an open field in Staten Island. A United Airlines DC-8 jet out of Chicago, bound for Idlewild Airport, now Kennedy Airport, caught fire and hurtled into Brooklyn at an initial rate of 733 feet per second. The plane sliced through a church, an funeral home and 10 brownstones before sliding to a stop on Seventh Avenue and Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn. Investigators ultimately determined United 826 had gone too late into its holding pattern and neither its crew or air traffic control knew exactly where it was. The only survivor was an 11-year old boy on the United jet who was thrown clear of the wreck and landed in a snowbank. The TWA jet crashed 11 miles to the southeast, on Staten Island. It missed several houses by a few hundred feet. A brief summary of today's crash follows with a report from radio station WMGM. Aircraft and crews1960 New York mid-air collision: United Airlines Flight 826 · Trans World Airlines Flight 266 Date December 16, 1960 Summary Mid-air collision Site About a mile west of Miller Field 40°34′07″N 74°07′19″W Total fatalities 134 Total injuries 0 Total survivors 0 First aircraft A jetliner on the apron The tail assembly of N8013U, the Douglas DC-8-11 involved in the collision Type Douglas DC-8-11 Name Mainliner Will Rogers Operator United Airlines IATA flight No. UA826 ICAO flight No. UAL826 Call sign UNITED 826 Registration N8013U Flight origin Chicago-O'Hare International Airport (ORD/KORD), IL Destination Idlewild Airport (IDL/KIDL)(Now John F. Kennedy International Airport), New York City Occupants 84 Passengers 77 Crew 7 Fatalities 84 (83 initially) Injuries 0 (1 initially) Survivors 0 (1 initially) Second aircraft A large piston engined airliner taxiing past some large bomber aircraft N6907C, the Lockheed L-1049A Super Constellation involved. Type Lockheed L-1049A Super Constellation Name Star of Sicily Operator Trans World Airlines IATA flight No. TW266 ICAO flight No. TWA266 Call sign TWA 266 Registration N6907C Flight origin Dayton International Airport (DAY/KDAY), Dayton, Ohio Stopover Port Columbus International Airport (CMH/KCMH), Ohio Destination LaGuardia Airport KLGA New York Occupants 44 Passengers 39 Crew 5 Fatalities 44 Survivors 0 Ground casualties Ground fatalities 6 On December 16, 1960, a United Airlines Douglas DC-8 bound for Idlewild Airport (now John F. Kennedy International Airport) in New York City collided in midair with a TWA Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation descending toward LaGuardia Airport.[1] The Constellation crashed on Miller Field in Staten Island and the DC-8 in Park Slope, Brooklyn, killing all 128 aboard the two aircraft and six people on the ground. The accident was the world's deadliest aviation disaster at the time, and remains the deadliest accident in the history of United Airlines. The accident became known as the Park Slope plane crash or the Miller Field crash after the two crash sites. The accident was also the first hull loss and first fatal accident involving a Douglas DC-8. United Airlines Flight 826, Mainliner Will Rogers, registration N8013U, was a DC-8-11 carrying 77 passengers and seven crewmembers from O'Hare International Airport in Chicago to Idlewild Airport (now John F. Kennedy International Airport) in Queens. The crew consisted of Captain Robert Sawyer (age 46), First Officer Robert Fiebing (40), Flight Engineer Richard Pruitt (30) and four stewardesses: Mary Mahoney, Augustine Ferrar, Anne Bouthen, and Patricia Keller. Captain Sawyer was a highly experienced pilot, having accumulated 19,100 flight hours, of which 344 were in the DC-8. First Officer Fiebing had accumulated 8,400 flight hours, of which 416 were in the DC-8. Flight Engineer Pruitt had accumulated 8,500 flight hours, of which 379 were in the DC-8. Trans World Airlines Flight 266, Star of Sicily, registration N6907C,[7] was a Super Constellation carrying 39 passengers and five crew members from Dayton and Columbus, Ohio, to LaGuardia Airport in Queens. The crew consisted of Captain David Wollam (age 39), First Officer Dean Bowen (32), Flight Engineer LeRoy "Lee" Rosenthal (30) and two stewardesses, Margaret Gernat and Patricia Post. Captain Wollam had accumulated 14,583 flight hours, 267 of which were in the Constellation. First Officer Bowen had accumulated 6,411 flight hours, of which 268 were on the Constellation. Flight Engineer Rosenthal had accumulated 3,561 flight hours, of which 204 were in the Constellation. Star of Sicily's sister ship N6902C, Star of the Seine, was destroyed in another mid-air collision with a United Airlines flight in 1956. Background Flight paths of the two aircraft At 10:21 a.m. Eastern Time, United 826 advised ARINC radio that one of its VOR receivers was inoperative, and the message was relayed to United Airlines maintenance. However, air-traffic control (ATC) was not informed that the aircraft had only one operational receiver, which presented difficulty for the pilots of flight 826 to identify the Preston intersection, beyond which it had not received clearance. At 10:25 a.m., ATC issued a revised clearance for the flight to shorten its route to the Preston holding point (near Laurence Harbor, New Jersey) by 12 miles (19 km). That clearance included holding instructions (a standard "racetrack" holding pattern) for Flight 826 when it arrived at the Preston intersection. Flight 826 was expected to reduce its speed before reaching Preston to a standard holding speed of 210 knots (240 mph; 390 km/h) or lower. However, the aircraft was estimated to be traveling at 301 knots (346 mph; 557 km/h) when it collided with the TWA plane, several miles beyond the Preston clearance limit. During the investigation, United Airlines claimed that the Colts Neck VOR was unreliable. Preston was the point where airway V123—the 050-radial off the Robbinsville VOR—crossed the Solberg 120-degree radial and the Colts Neck 346-degree radial. However, the Civil Aeronautics Board's final report found no problem with the Colts Neck VOR. The prevailing conditions were light rain and fog, which had been preceded by snowfall. The crash site of the United Airlines DC-8, United 826, in Park Slope, Brooklyn. The crash site of the TWA Super Constellation, TWA 266, in Miller Field, Staten Island. According to the DC-8's flight data recorder, the aircraft was 12 miles (19 km) off course, and for 81 seconds it descended at 3,600 feet per minute (18 m/s) while slowing from more than 400 knots (460 mph; 740 km/h) to 301 knots (346 mph; 557 km/h) at the time of the collision. One of the DC-8's starboard engines struck the Constellation just ahead of its wings, tearing apart a portion of the fuselage. The Constellation entered a dive, with debris continuing to fall as it disintegrated during its spiral to the ground. The initial impact tore the DC-8's engine from its pylon. Having lost one engine and a large part of the right wing, the DC-8 remained airborne for another 90 seconds. The DC-8 crashed into the Park Slope section of Brooklyn at the intersection of Seventh Avenue and Sterling Place (40°40′38″N 73°58′25″W), scattering wreckage and setting fire to ten brownstone apartment buildings, the Pillar of Fire Church, the McCaddin Funeral Home, a Chinese laundry and a delicatessen. Six people on the ground were killed.[12][1] The crash left the remains of the DC-8 pointing southeast toward a large open field at Prospect Park, blocks from its crash site. An occupant in one of the affected apartment buildings said that his family survived because they were in the only room of their apartment that was not destroyed. The crash left a trench covering most of the length of the middle of Sterling Place. Witnesses thought that a bomb had detonated or that a building's boiler had exploded. The TWA plane crashed onto the northwest corner of Miller Field at 40.57°N 74.103°W, with some sections of the aircraft landing in New York Harbor. At least one passenger fell into a tree before the wreckage hit the ground. There was no radio contact with traffic controllers from either plane after the collision, although LaGuardia had begun tracking an incoming, fast-moving, unidentified plane from Preston toward the LaGuardia "Flatbush" outer marker. Investigation Front page of Syracuse Post-Standard on 17 December 1960. The likely cause of the accident was identified in a report by the US Civil Aeronautics Board: United Flight 826 proceeded beyond its clearance limit and the confines of the airspace allocated to the flight by Air Traffic Control. A contributing factor was the high speed of the United DC-8 as it approached the Preston intersection, coupled with the change of clearance which reduced the en-route distance along Victor 123 by approximately 11 miles (9.6 nmi; 18 km) Initial survivor The only person to initially survive the crash was Stephen Baltz, an 11-year-old boy from Wilmette, Illinois. He was traveling unaccompanied on Flight 826 to spend Christmas in Yonkers with relatives. He was thrown from the plane into a snowbank, where his burning clothing was extinguished. Although alive and conscious, he was severely burned and had inhaled burning fuel. Baltz died of pneumonia the next day. NOTE: A RARE EXTANT 1960 WINS 1010 RADIO AIR CHECK.
#13567: CBS NEWS WITH PRESCOTT ROBINSON, THE
1961-05-05, CBS, min.
Highlights: The Shepard space flight, New York City Mayor Robert Wagner suggests a ticker-tape parade, Russians claim the space flight is inferior to theirs, street interviews with the public regarding space flight.
#13621: JOHN GLENN IN NEW YORK CITY
1962-03-01, , min.
Colonel John Glenn reception in New York City. Receives a gold medal from New York City Mayor Robert Wagner.
#13824: CBS NEWS WITH DOUGLAS EDWARDS, THE
1962-10-16, CBS, min.
- Walter Schirra ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Douglas Edwards ,
- John F. Kennedy ,
- Andrei Gromyko ,
- Ahmed Ben Bella ,
- Henry Morganthau
A storm threatens the moon-shot from Cape Canaveral, three more US personnel die in South Vietnam, President Kennedy to meet Andrei Gromyko in Washington to discuss problems, Wally Schirra receives astronaut wings, the US to test a nuclear bomb, Ahmed Ben Bella is greeted in Cuba, Mayor Wagner greets Peace Corp trainees, an interview with Henry Morganthau (candidate for governor of New York State), the New York Yankees defeat the San Francisco Giants in game 7 of the 1962 World Series.
#14020: GREAT NEWSPAPER STRIKE, THE
1963-03-31, WCBS, 52 min.
A WABC TV SPECIAL REPORT. The 114 day New York City newspaper strike has finally come to an end. Comments by New York City Mayor Robert Wagner. The New York Daily News writes on their front page, "Hello There, We Have News For You." Narrator: Robert Trout
#14021: GREAT NEWSPAPER STRIKE, THE
1963-03-31, WCBS, min.
A WABC TV SPECIAL REPORT. The 114 day New York City newspaper strike has finally come to an end. Comments by New York City Mayor Robert Wagner. The New York Daily News writes on their front page, "Hello There, We Have News For You." Narrator: Robert Trout
#14163: NEWS, THE
1963-06-14, , min.
Topics: The Russians launch a spaceman into orbit, negroes plan a protest march on Washington, DC, funeral services for Medgar Evers to be held tomorrow, Gallo gang items, New York City Mayor Wagner is in Tokoyo, John Profumo sex scandal threatens the government of British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, 88th American GI killed in Vietnam
#14329: TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JOHNNY CARSON, THE
1963-10-01, NBC, 22 min.
October 1, 1962-May 22, 1992. FIRST ANNIVERSARY BROADCAST Johnny Carson, host of NBC's network late-night "Tonight Show" reigned for 30 unprecedented years...five times the combined tenure of Steve Allen, and Jack Paar. Carson was impervious to competition, including efforts to dethrone him by Les Crane, Joey Bishop, Merv Griffin, Dick Cavett, Jack Paar, Pat Sajak, Joan Rivers, and Arsenio Hall. Sadly, very few complete "Tonight Show" broadcasts survive during Johnny Carson's first ten years of broadcasting. Around 1965, through the early 1970's, oldest tapes were first erased systematically by orders from myopic NBC executives, to be recycled for purposes of saving money. Ironically, in many cases, these older master tapes were too brittle, and portended probable drop-outs for re-use after being erased. Subsequently blank after being erased, these older questionable master 2" Quad tapes were either sparingly used or never used again for recording new programming and eventually were discarded. Saving thousands of dollars at the time (wiping master tapes for potential re-use) resulted in losing millions of dollars by NBC in today's marketplace, and more importantly wiping thousands of historic TONIGHT SHOW broadcasts, which contain precious personal anecdotes from political, show business, and sports icons of the past. Guests Abbe Lane, Henny Youngman, and New York City Mayor Robert Wagner help Johnny celebrate his first anniversary as host of the Tonight Show. This broadcast opens with Ed McMahon announcing the guests on this show, the First Anniversary broadcast. Johnny Carson related to this special telecast night. Mayor of New York City Robert Wagner is introduced. Carson quips that during his own first two years living in NYC he thought newsman Gabe Pressman was the Mayor. Carson takes advantage of the moment asking Wagner if he can be instrumental in bringing back New York City's 11:15pm to 11:30pm segment which was replaced because of a newspaper strike by adding an additional 15 minute of local news after only 10 weeks of TTS broadcasting a full 105 minutes in NYC...on the air for the last time a full one hour forty five minutes, December 14, 1962. Johnny praises the Mayor for the great job he is doing. He and Mayor Robert Wagner discuss the forthcoming NY World's Fair, anticipating 70 million visitors, taxes, and the challenges dealing with the second largest budget in the USA. Abbe Lane already on the panel as Johnny Carson welcomes comedienne Henny Youngman, who praises Carson for the job he is doing...making guests feel comfortable when on the show. Henny jokes with Abbe Lane stating that he use to work with her husband Xavier Cugat. Hew tells Carson about his early career and how he use to deal with hecklers...some how use to wait outside after hours after him for cracks made during the show. Henny Youngman does his stand-up routine, after which the tape ends.
#19349: CBS EVENING NEWS WITH ROBERT TROUT
1963-12-13, CBS, min.
An attempt on the life of New York City Mayor Robert Wagner, maximum police protection given President Johnson. Robert Trout hosts.
#19372: TRIBUTE TO PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY
1963-12-22, , min.
New York City Mayor Robert Wagner pays tribute to President John F. Kennedy, who was assassinated on November 22nd, 1963, in this, the official end of mourning for the President.
#14460: CBS NEWS, THE
1964-03-02, CBS, min.
Jack Ruby trial in furor, New York City Mayor Robert Wagner's wife dies, General Douglas MacArthur enters the hospital. Eric Sevareid comments on the New Hampshire primary,
#14618: ROBERT KENNEDY POLITICAL RALLY, THE
1964-10-09, , 22 min.
Political rally for Attorney General Robert Kennedy who is a candidate for a United States Senate seat. On hand at the rally New York City Mayor Robert Wagner.
#14845: BILL BEUTEL WITH THE BIG NEWS
1965-05-12, WABC, 6 min.
Former New York City Mayor Robert Wagner predicts Mayor John Lindsay will seek a second term in office as New York City Mayor.
#14864: NBC NEWS
1965-06-10, NBC, min.
After twelve years as the Mayor of New York City, Robert Wagner announces he will not run again. Comment by Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Senator Robert Kennedy. A special report from Gabe Pressman and Lou Boda with sports. Also includes CBS coverage with comment from Robert Kennedy. Includes commercials.
#14865: ABC EVENING NEWS WITH PETER JENNINGS
1965-06-10, ABC, 14 min.
A report on the church and birth control, New York City Mayor Robert Wagner announces he will not seek another term after 12 years in office.
#14880: CBS NEWS WITH HARRY REASONER, THE
1965-06-10, CBS, min.
New York City Mayor Robert Wagner will not seek reelection.
#14926B: ABC NEWS
1965-07-22, ABC, 13 min.
Casey Stengel receives honor from New York City Mayor Robert Wagner on his 75th birthday. Comment by Howard Cosell.
#15229G: HAWAII PRMIERE
1966-10-16, WPIX, 27 min.
- George Jessel ,
- Jonathan Winters ,
- Rock Hudson ,
- Charlton Heston ,
- Bert Parks ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Gregory Peck ,
- Barbara Rush ,
- Richard Crenna ,
- Nancy Sinatra ,
- Julie Andrews ,
- Adam West ,
- Bob Crane ,
- James Michener ,
- Jill St. John
Highlights of the opening-night ceremonies of the motion picture, HAWAII, at the DeMille Egyptian theaters in New York and Hollywood. Bert Parks interviews arriving celebrities including Julie Andrews, Bob Crane, Robert Wagner, Nancy Sinatra, George Jessel, Richard Crenna, Adam West, Jonathan Winters, Gregory Peck, Jill St. John, Rock Hudson, Barbara Rush, Charlton Heston.
#TW23: MERV GRIFFIN SHOW, THE
1970-02-11, WNEW, 40 min.
August 18, 1969-February 11, 1972. Joined in progress. Merv Griffin introduces Jane Wyman.who remembers first meeting Arthur Treacher in 1939 During Busby Berkeley's appearance Arthur Treacher comments on the clips being shown. CBS signed Merv Griffin to a ninety-minute late night talk show in 1969. On hand were announcer Arthur Treacher and the Mort Lindsay Orchestra, both of whom had been with Griffin on his Westinghouse show. In September 1970 the show moved from New York to Los Angeles but to no avail, playing second best to "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson." Most of these shows were erased by CBS and did not survive. Jayne Wyman, Robert Wagner, Busby Berkeley, Della Reese
#16388: EMMY AWARDS 22ND ANNUAL,THE
1970-07-07, ABC, 132 min.
- Peter Ustinov ,
- Bill Cosby ,
- Carol Burnett ,
- Dick Martin ,
- Dan Rowan ,
- Marlo Thomas ,
- Robert Young ,
- Dick Cavett ,
- William Windom ,
- Hope Lange ,
- Elizabeth Montgomery ,
- Lloyd Hanes ,
- Susan Hampshire ,
- Mike Connors ,
- Raymond Burr ,
- Michael Constantine ,
- Karen Valentine ,
- Charles Nelson Reilly ,
- Gail Fisher ,
- James Brolin ,
- Patty Duke ,
- Edith Evans ,
- Shirley Jones ,
- Laurence Olivier ,
- Al Freeman, Jr. ,
- Robert Wagner
The 22nd Annual Emmy Awards are telecast from the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles, California. Hosts are David Frost and Danny Thomas.With commercials. Outstanding variety or musical series:The David Frost Show Outstanding dramatic program: Hallmark Hall Of Fame: "A Storm in Summer." Outstanding dramatic series: Marcus Welby, MD. Outstanding comedy series:"My World And Welcome To It." Co-Hosts:David Frost and Danny Thomas.
#4349: RED
1970-09-28, WNBC, 27 min.
September 14, 1970-August 29, 1971. After a seventeen year run on CBS, Red Skelton returned to the NBC network where he began, in 1951, with a half-hour taped program. The first four broadcasts included introductions by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, Dean Martin, Jack Benny, and Johnny Carson, who received his big break writing for Skelton in the early 1950's. This would be Skelton's final year hosting a variety series. Red Skelton holds the all-time record for hosting a television variety series for twenty consecutive years (1951-1971).#17976: PEOPLE'S CHOICE AWARDS, THE
1975-03-04, CBS, min.
- Ann-Margret ,
- Cher ,
- Bob Hope ,
- Army Archerd ,
- Natalie Wood ,
- Carol Burnett ,
- Michael Landon ,
- Barbra Streisand ,
- Faye Dunaway ,
- Richard Crenna ,
- Sammy Davis Jr. ,
- Shirley Jones ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Danny Thomas ,
- Ted Knight ,
- Racquel Welch ,
- Lynn Anderson ,
- George Segal ,
- Alan Alda ,
- Jimmy Cohn ,
- Jacqueline Bisset ,
- Brenda Vacarro ,
- Wayne Rogers ,
- Dyan Cannon ,
- Valerie Braun
The first People's Choice Awards are telecast. Host: Richard Crenna. Award Winners: Movies Favorite Actor: John Wayne Favorite Actress: Barbra Streisand Favorite Picture: The Sting Television: Favorite Comedy: All In The Family Favorite Drama: The Waltons Favorite Female Performer: Mary Tyler Moore Favorite Male Performer: Alan Alda Favorite All-Around Female Performer: Carol Burnett Favorite All-Around Male Performer: Bob Hope Favorite Television Variety Show: Carol Burnett
#10015A: GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS, 34TH ANNUAL, THE
1977-01-29, NBC, 90 min.
- Carol Burnett ,
- Sophia Loren ,
- Jack Jones ,
- Tom Bosley ,
- Henry Winkler ,
- Shelley Winters ,
- Paul Williams ,
- Natalie Wood ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Raquel Welch ,
- Mary Tyler Moore ,
- Harry Belafonte ,
- Mel Brooks ,
- Dustin Hoffman ,
- Barbra Streisand ,
- Charo ,
- Lee Majors ,
- Rita Moreno ,
- Penny Marshall ,
- Anson Williams ,
- Darleen Carr ,
- Cindy Williams ,
- Gavin MacLeod ,
- Karen Valentine ,
- Paul Michael Glaser ,
- Arnold Schwarzenegger ,
- Lynda Carter ,
- Kate Jackson ,
- Edward Asner ,
- Roy Scheider ,
- Michael Douglas ,
- Piper Laurie ,
- Faye Dunaway ,
- Maureen OHara ,
- Peter Finch ,
- Slyvester Stallone ,
- Jodie Foster ,
- Katherine Ross ,
- Farrah Fawcett ,
- Nick Nolte ,
- Peter Strauss ,
- Jill Ireland ,
- John Cassavetes ,
- Jessica Lange ,
- Al Molinaro ,
- Gena Rowlands ,
- Cybil Sheperd ,
- Jan-Michael Vincent ,
- Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. ,
- Stephanie Zimbalist
The 34th Annual Golden Globe Awards for 1976 are presented. Host: Harry Belafonte.
#845: AFI SALUTE TO BETTE DAVIS
1977-03-21, WBAY, 77 min.
- William Wyler ,
- Peter Falk ,
- Paul Henreid ,
- Henry Fonda ,
- Olivia De Havilland ,
- Celeste Holm ,
- Cicely Tyson ,
- Natalie Wood ,
- Bette Davis ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Geraldine Fitzgerald ,
- Lee Grant ,
- Martin Manulis ,
- George Stevens Jr. ,
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz ,
- Liza Minnelli
Taped in Green Bay Wisconsin CBS affiliate station. The American Film Institute Life Achievement Award is presented to Bette Davis. Paying tribute to Davis are hostess Jane Fonda, Henry Fonda, Olivia de Havilland, William Wyler, Liza Minnelli, Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, Peter Falk, Paul Henreid, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Lee Grant, Celeste Holm, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Martin Manulis, George Stevens Jr. and Cicely Tyson.
#18167: AFI SALUTE TO BETTE DAVIS
1977-03-21, CBS, min.
- William Wyler ,
- Peter Falk ,
- Paul Henreid ,
- Henry Fonda ,
- Olivia De Havilland ,
- Celeste Holm ,
- Cicely Tyson ,
- Natalie Wood ,
- Bette Davis ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Geraldine Fitzgerald ,
- Lee Grant ,
- Martin Manulis ,
- George Stevens Jr. ,
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz ,
- Liza Minnelli
Taped in Green Bay Wisconsin CBS affiliate station. The American Film Institute Life Achievement Award is presented to Bette Davis. Paying tribute to Davis are hostess Jane Fonda, Henry Fonda, Olivia de Havilland, William Wyler, Liza Minnelli, Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, Peter Falk, Paul Henreid, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Lee Grant, Celeste Holm, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Martin Manulis, George Stevens Jr. and Cicely Tyson. Duplicate of #845.
#7522: AFI SALUTE TO BETTE DAVIS
1977-03-21, WBAY, 77 min.
- William Wyler ,
- Peter Falk ,
- Paul Henreid ,
- Henry Fonda ,
- Olivia De Havilland ,
- Celeste Holm ,
- Cicely Tyson ,
- Natalie Wood ,
- Bette Davis ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Geraldine Fitzgerald ,
- Lee Grant ,
- Martin Manulis ,
- George Stevens Jr. ,
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz ,
- Liza Minnelli
Audio Air Check recorded on WBAY Green Bay Wisconsin CBS affiliate station. The American Film Institute Life Achievement Award is presented to Bette Davis. Paying tribute to Davis are hostess Jane Fonda, Henry Fonda, Olivia de Havilland, William Wyler, Liza Minnelli, Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, Peter Falk, Paul Henreid, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Lee Grant, Celeste Holm, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Martin Manulis, George Stevens Jr. and Cicely Tyson. Dupe Of # 845
#9355: "SUPER STUNT."
1977-11-17, NBC, 120 min.
- Lee Marvin ,
- James Garner ,
- Ernest Borgnine ,
- Jane Fonda ,
- Buddy Hackett ,
- Angie Dickinson ,
- Robert Wagner ,
- Burt Reynolds ,
- Dom DeLuise ,
- Lee Majors ,
- James Caan ,
- Robert Conrad ,
- James Coburn
A salute to Hollywood stuntmen and women. Host: Lee Marvin