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"Hail to the Chief" (Season 2, episode 8) "Big Deal on Kaloa Street" (Season 2, episode 9) "Matters of Honor(Season 2, episode 10) Detective School: Eddie Dawkins 11 episodes of television series: "A Bier on the House" (Season 1, episode 1) "Oh, How We Danced" (Season 1, episode 2) "Lucy in the Sky with Pizza" (Season 1, episode 3)
Damon Runyon Theatre was broadcast on radio in the late 1940s. Actor John Brown had the role of Broadway, the narrator who often participated in the stories. Russell Hughes adapted Runyon's stories, including characters such as Harrigan, the Cop, Harry the Horse, Little Miss Marker, and Milk-Ear Willie. [2]
Celebrating 50 Years of Broadway's Best (May 12, 2023) Richard III (May 19, 2023; recorded in July 2022 in Central Park) Great Performances at the Met: Medea (June 16, 2023) Great Performances at the Met: Lohengrin (July 9, 2023) Great Performances at the Met: Falstaff (August 6, 2023) Leonard Bernstein's Kaddish Symphony (August 21, 2023)
In this exciting first episode of Season 8, a fight starts when Stephen calls James by the wrong name, we meet a British stage actor playing Jeremy, and a crosswalk desperately wants some company. Note: This is the first episode to introduce Aaron Fielding, Dalton Johnson, and Tori Pence as the show's new feature cast members.
The Best of Broadway is a 60-minute live television anthology series that aired on CBS Television on Wednesdays at 10 p.m. Eastern Standard Time from September 15, 1954, to May 4, 1955, for a total of nine episodes. Each show was broadcast live in color from New York City, was an adaptation of a famous Broadway play, and included commercials ...
CBS ended production of the show after 13 episodes had been completed. It concluded with the December 26, 1964, broadcast. [5] A representative of CBS said that filming of two more episodes was proposed, but Stevens rejected the idea. [7] Mr. Broadway was filmed at the Biograph studio in the Bronx. Locations used in filming included El Morocco ...
Jack Gould's review in The New York Times called the network debut of Tonight on Broadway "a decided disappointment for a premiere which had been heralded as a 'milestone' in television.'" [10] The review summed up the episode as essentially an advertising vehicle for Mr. Roberts (the featured play) and said, "certainly television merits a better fate than being used merely as an animated ...
The Jane Wyman Show, is an American anthology drama series that ran on NBC from 1949 to 1958, and was the first successful filmed series on American television. Early seasons (1-7) featured low budget productions and were often based on public domain stories.