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"Breakin' in a Brand New Broken Heart / Someone Else's Boy" Released: April 1961 "Together / Too Many Rules" Released: June 1961 "(He's My) Dreamboat" Released: September 1961 "When the Boy in Your Arms (Is the Boy in Your Heart) / Baby's First Christmas" Released: November 1961 "Don't Break the Heart That Loves You" Released: January 1962 ...
The Internet sensation Grumpy Cat comes to life in her very first movie. Hank Zipzer's Christmas Catastrophe: 2016: It is Christmas and the Zipzer family are preparing for a new baby. Meanwhile, Mr. Rock's Rudolph the Red Nose Rock 'n' Roll Reindeer, is soon turned into a one-woman Christmas Carol by Miss Adolf. Mr.
Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town is a 1970 American stop-motion Christmas television special produced by Rankin/Bass Productions in New York. The film is narrated by Fred Astaire and stars the voices of Mickey Rooney, Keenan Wynn, Robie Lester, Joan Gardner and Paul Frees, as well as an assistant song performance by the Westminster Children's Choir.
The Little Drummer Boy (NBC, 1968) Directed by Jules Bass, Arthur Rankin, Jr. and others. Written by Romeo Muller. Two years after CBS got heavy with A Charlie Brown Christmas, the Peacock network ...
Darlene Love’s annual television performance of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” was essentially orphaned after “Late Show With David Letterman” went off the air in 2015, putting an ...
The album charted for 3 weeks peaking at #19 on Billboard's Christmas Records album chart on December 21, 1963. [5] Another repackaging and re-release followed in November 1966; this time the album was also retitled Connie's Christmas and received a new catalogue number: E-4399 for mono pressings and SE-4399 for stereo pressings. [6]
Here are Yahoo Entertaiment's picks for the best holiday movies of the 2000s, including Elf, Love Actually and The Holiday. (Photo illustration: Maayan Pearl/Yahoo News; photos: Getty Images ...
Santa Claus. Santa Claus is an 1898 British silent trick film directed by George Albert Smith, which features Santa Claus visiting a house on Christmas Eve. The film, according to Michael Brooke of BFI Screenonline, "is believed to be the cinema's earliest known example of parallel action and, when coupled with double-exposure techniques that Smith had already demonstrated in the same year's ...