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The film was a box-office hit, repeating the success of Cliff Richard's previous film The Young Ones (1961). Cliff Richard and the Shadows, April 1962. Summer Holiday was the second most popular movie at the British box office in 1963, after the James Bond feature From Russia with Love, with comedy film Tom Jones coming third.
Summer Holiday (1963 film) Summer Magic (film) T. Tees Maar Khan (1963 film) Tomy's Secret; The Troublemaker (1963 film) W. What a Crazy World
Summer Holiday, a British musical starring Cliff Richard, and later stage adaptations; Summer Holiday (Ha yat dik mo mo cha), a Hong Kong romance film starring Sammi Cheng "Summer Holiday" (The Young Ones), an episode of the TV series The Young Ones "Summer Holiday", an episode of the TV series On the Yorkshire Buses
Title Director Cast Genre Notes 1963: 80,000 Suspects: Val Guest: Claire Bloom, Richard Johnson: Drama: The Bay of St Michel: John Ainsworth: Keenan Wynn, Mai Zetterling: Adventure [1]Billy Liar
"The Next Time" backed with "Bachelor Boy" was the first of three number one hit singles from the Cliff Richard musical, Summer Holiday. [1] Both sides were marketed as songs with chart potential, and the release is viewed retroactively as a double A-side single.
Summer Holiday is a soundtrack album by Cliff Richard and The Shadows to the film of the same name. It is their second film soundtrack album and Richard's eighth album overall. The album topped the UK Albums Chart for 14 weeks. Three singles from the album were released.
This category is for films released in the year 1963 which were a film director's debut film. It does not include unreleased films. It does not include unreleased films. 1958
The film's terrible reception harmed the reputation of director Joseph L. Mankiewicz, who had an esteemed career for directing classics like A Letter to Three Wives, All About Eve, Julius Caesar, The Barefoot Contessa, Guys and Dolls, and Suddenly Last Summer.