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  • Our Miss Brooks – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Our Miss Brooks

    Our Miss Brooks is an American situation comedy starring Eve Arden as a sardonic high school English teacher.  It began as a radio show broadcast on CBS from 1948 to 1957.  When the show was adapted to television (1952–56), it became one of the medium’s earliest hits.

    Our Miss Brooks was considered groundbreaking for showing a woman who was neither a scatter-brained klutz nor a homebody, but rather a working woman who transcended the actual or assumed limits to women’s working lives of the time.  Connie Brooks was considered a realistic character in an non-glamorized profession (she often joked, for example, about being underpaid, as many teachers were at the time) who showed women could be competent and self-sufficient outside their home lives without losing their femininity or their humanity.  The show  ran for 130 episodes on television and won an Emmy award before it was cancelled in 1956.
  • Appointment With Adventure – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Appointment With Adventure – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Appointment With Adventure

    Appointment with Adventure is a half-hour adventure dramatic anthology television series broadcast live on CBS from 1955-1956.  The program has no host.  It aired at 10 p.m. EST on the Sunday evening schedule between the better known Alfred Hitchcock Presents and What’s My Line?  It ran opposite The Loretta Young Show on NBC and Life Begins at Eighty, a panel discussion series hosted by Jack Barry on ABC.

    The series aired fifty-three episodes, having premiered on April 3rd, 1955, near the end of the regular 1954-1955 television season.  It ran throughout the spring and summer of 1955 and began its fall run on October 2nd, 1955, concluding new segments on April 1st, 1956.  In effect, the series ran for a full year without the summer rebroadcast period standard for most programs.
    Episodes centered upon wars in U.S. history as well as dramatizations from events from many places throughout the world, then and in the past.  In the episode which aired on May 1st, 1955, Polly Bergen, Dane Clark, and Hugh Reilly starred in “Rendezvous in Paris.”  Tony Randall and Jack Klugman, fifteen years prior to their television roles as Felix Unger and Oscar Madison, respectively, in ABC’s The Odd Couple, appeared with Gena Rowlands in the September 4th, 1955, episode entitled “The Pirate’s House.”  Randall also appeared two months earlier in the Appointment with Adventure episode “Caribbean Cruise.”
    John Cassavetes, husband of Gena Rowlands, appeared with Elizabeth Montgomery, later star of ABC’s Bewitched, and Tina Louise, later of CBS’s Gilligan’s Island, in the segment “All Through the Night” on February 5th, 1956.  Montgomery had also appeared in the November 20th, 1955, episode “Relative Stranger.”  John Ericson and Dorothy Malone, later star of Peyton Place, appeared on the New Years Day, 1956, episode “Mutiny.”  Jason Robards appeared with Christopher Plummer and Constance Ford in the March 18th, 1956, episode entitled “A Thief There Was.” 
    The plethora of guests included several other well-known names and some future stars who were beginning their show business, including Philip Abbott, Edie Adams, Gene Barry, Carl Betz, Neville Brand, Patricia Breslin, Geraldine Brooks, Macdonald Carey, Robert Clary, James Daly (“A Touch of Christmas” on December 25th, 1955), Gloria DeHaven (“The Snow People”), Eva Gabor, James Gregory, Pat Hingle, Henry Hull, Kim Hunter, Henry Jones, Louis Jourdan, Don Keefer, Phyllis Kirk, June Lockhart, Jack Lord, Lin McCarthy (four episodes), Peggy McCay, Biff McGuire (episode entitled “Number Seven, Hangman’s Row”), Robert Middleton, Elizabeth Montgomery, Paul Newman, Patrick O’Neal, Patti Page (in “Paris Venture”), Betsy Palmer, Neva Patterson, Mala Powers, Charlotte Rae, Erik Rhodes, and Janice Rule.  Rod Serling, before his The Twilight Zone, wrote the episode “The Faithful Pilgrimage”, which stars Theodore Bikel.  It aired on April 17th, 1955.  Forrest Tucker, later of ABC’s F Troop, appeared in the series finale with the unusually titled episode, “Two Falls for Satan.”
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  • Here Come the Brides – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Here Come the Brides – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Here Come the Brides

    Here Come the Brides is an American comedy Western series from Screen Gems that aired on the ABC television network from September 25th, 1968 to April 3rd, 1970.  

    The series was loosely based upon the Mercer GirlsAsa Mercer‘s efforts to bring civilization to old Seattle by importing marriageable women from the east coast of the United States in the 1860s, where the ravages of the American Civil War left towns short of men.
    The producers said the show was inspired by the movie Seven Brides for Seven Brothers in an interview with LA Times TV critic Cecil Smith.
    As a television western, the series rarely featured any form of gunplay, and violence was generally limited to comical fistfights.  This was in keeping with the restrictions on television violence at the time.  Stories highlighted the importance of cooperation, racial harmony, and peaceful resolution of conflict.  Plots were usually a mix of drama and humor.  Being one of the first shows targeted at young women, most of the humor was at the expense of the men, but not particularly bitingly so.
    In the pilot episode, fast-talking logging company boss Jason Bolt (Robert Brown) is faced with a shutdown of his operation as lonely lumberjacks are ready to leave Seattle due to the lack of female companionship.  He promises to find 100 marriageable ladies willing to come to the frontier town (population 152) and stay for a full year.  Sawmill owner Aaron Stempel (Mark Lenard) puts up much of the expense money as a wager that Bolt won’t succeed, with the three Bolt brothers betting their mountain (home to their logging company).
    The Bolts travel to New Bedford, Massachusetts, recruit the women, then charter a mule-ship to take them to Seattle.  The local saloon owner, Lottie (Joan Blondell) takes the women under her wing and becomes a mother figure to them, while Bolt desperately works to keep the women from leaving at the next high tide.  Eventually, the women decide to give Seattle and the loggers a chance.  The ship’s captain, Clancy (Henry Beckman), develops a relationship with Lottie and becomes a regular character in the series.
    Much of the dramatic and comic tension in the first season revolved around Stempel’s efforts to sabotage the deal and take over the Bolts’ holdings.  Stempel became more friendly in the second and final season, which focused more on the development of individual characters and the conflicts associated with newcomers and with people just passing through.  Bobby Sherman and David Soul were propelled to pop stardom as Jason’s brothers, Jeremy and Joshua.  Jeremy took a prominent role, not only as the boyfriend of Candy Pruitt (Bridget Hanley), the beautiful leader of the brides, but also as a young man struggling with a conversation-stopping stammer. In one episode, he is temporarily cured of his impediment, following coaching by a traveler who has come to Seattle.  Upon discovering that his benefactor is actually a con artist, his faith is shaken so deeply that the stammer returns.
  • animated Archives – ThrowbackMachine.com

    The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

    The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

    The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is an American children’s television series that originally aired on NBC from September 15th, 1968 through February 23rd, 1969. Produced by Hanna-Barbera and based on the classic Mark Twain characters, the program starred its three live-action heroes, Huck Finn (Michael Shea), Becky Thatcher (LuAnn Haslam), and Tom Sawyer (Kevin […]

    The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo

    famous adventures of mr magoo

    The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo is an animated television series, produced by United Productions of America, which aired on NBC for one season (1964 –1965) of 24 episodes.  The television series was based on the original cartoon of the same name, with Jim Backus reprising the voice over of the role he did on […]

    Jonny Quest

    Jonny Quest

    Jonny Quest debuted on ABC at 7:30PM EDT on Friday, September 18th, 1964.  This prime time animated TV series is an American science fiction adventure television series about a boy who accompanies his scientist father on extraordinary adventures.  It was produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions for Screen Gems, and created and designed by comic book artist […]

  • The Mod Squad – ThrowbackMachine.com

    The Mod Squad – ThrowbackMachine.com

    The Mod Squad

    “hippie” undercover cop show that ran on ABC from September 24th, 1968, until August 23rd, 1973.   It starred Michael Cole as Pete Cochran, Peggy Lipton as Julie Barnes, Clarence Williams III as Linc Hayes, and Tige Andrews as Captain Adam Greer.  The executive producers of the series were Aaron Spelling and Danny Thomas.

    They were The Mod Squad (“One black, one white, one blond”), the hippest and first young undercover cops on TV.  Each of these characters represented mainstream culture’s principal fears regarding youth in the era: Long-haired rebel Pete Cochran was kicked out of his parents’ Beverly Hills home, then arrested and put on probation after he stole a car; Linc Hayes was from a family of 13 children and was arrested in the Watts riots, one of the longest and most violent actual riots in Los Angeles history; beautiful flower child Julie Barnes, the “canary with a broken wing”, was arrested for vagrancy after running away from her prostitute mother’s San Francisco home; and Captain Adam Greer was a tough but sympathetic mentor and father figure who convinced them to form the squad.

  • Grand Ole Opry – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Grand Ole Opry

    The Grand Ole Opry started as the WSM Barn Dance in the new fifth-floor radio studio of the National Life & Accident Insurance Company in downtown Nashville on November 28th, 1925.  On October 18th, 1925, management began a program featuring “Dr. Humphrey Bate and his string quartet of old-time musicians.”  On November 2nd, WSM hired long-time announcer and program director George D. “Judge” Hay, an enterprising pioneer from the National Barn Dance program at WLS in Chicago, who was also named the most popular radio announcer in America as a result of his radio work with both WLS and WMC in Memphis, Tennessee.  Hay launched the WSM Barn Dance with 77-year-old fiddler Uncle Jimmy Thompson on November 28th, 1925, which is celebrated as the birth date of the Grand Ole Opry.

    One hour of the Opry was nationally-broadcast by the NBC Red Network from 1939 to 1956; for much of its run, it aired one hour after the program that had inspired it, National Barn Dance. The NBC segment, originally known by the name of its sponsor, The Prince Albert Show, was first hosted by Acuff, who was succeeded by Red Foley from 1946 to 1954.
    From October 15th, 1955 to September 1956, ABC-TV aired a live, hour-long television version once a month on Saturday nights (sponsored by Ralston-Purina), pre-empting one hour of the then-90-minute Ozark Jubilee.  From 1955–57, Al Gannaway owned and produced both The Country Show and Stars of the Grand Ole Opry, filmed programs syndicated by Flamingo Films.
    Top-charting country music acts performed during the Ryman years, including Roy Acuff, called the King of Country Music, Hank Williams, Webb Pierce, Faron Young, Martha Carson, Lefty Frizzell, and many others.

     

  • Circus Boy – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Circus Boy – ThrowbackMachine.com

    Circus Boy

    Circus Boy is an American action/adventure/drama series that aired in prime time on NBC, and then on ABC, from 1956 to 1958.  It was then rerun by NBC on Saturday mornings, from 1958 to 1960.

    Set in the late 1890s, the title of the series refers to a boy named Corky.  After his parents, “The Flying Falcons,” were killed in a trapeze accident, young Corky (Micky Dolenz – billed at the time as Mickey Braddock) was adopted by Joey the Clown (Noah Beery, Jr.), and the whole Burke and Walsh Circus family.
    The young boy quickly found a role with the circus as water boy to Bimbo, a baby elephant whom Corky would come to consider his pet.  Riding Bimbo’s back, Corky dealt with adolescent problems, and helped the show’s adults including Joey, owner/promoter Big Tim Champion (Robert Lowery), and head canvasman Pete (Guinn Williams), keep the circus successful as the traveling show moved from town to town each week.
  • 1950s – ThrowbackMachine.com

    1950s

     

    The Niteteen Fifties
     The 1950s were about more than just poodle skirts and rock and roll.
    “America at this moment,” said the former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1945, “stands at the summit of the world.”
    During the 1950s, it was easy to see what Churchill meant.  The United States was the world’s strongest military power.  Its economy was booming, and the fruits of this prosperity – new cars, suburban houses and other consumer goods were available to more people than ever before.
    The booming prosperity of the 1950s helped to create a widespread sense of stability, contentment and consensus in the United States.

    Popular Culture

    Music

    Popular music in the early 1950s was essentially a continuation of the crooner sound of the previous decade.  Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Frankie Laine, Patti Page, Judy Garland, Johnnie Ray, Kay Starr, Perry Como, Bing Crosby, Rosemary Clooney, Dean Martin, Georgia Gibbs, Eddie Fisher, Teresa Brewer, Dinah Shore, Kitty Kallen, Joni James, Peggy Lee, Julie London, Toni Arden, June Valli, Doris Day, Arthur Godfrey, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Guy Mitchell, Nat King Cole, and vocal groups like The Mills Brothers, The Ink Spots, The Four Lads, The Four Aces, The Chordettes, Fontane Sisters, The Hilltoppers and The Ames Brothers.  Jo Stafford’s You Belong To Me was the #1 song of 1952 on the Billboard Top 100 chart.
    The middle of the decade saw a sudden, volcanic change in the popular music landscape as classic pop was swept off the charts by rock-and-roll.  Crooners such as Eddie Fisher, Perry Como and Patti Page, who had dominated the first half of the decade, found their access to the pop charts significantly curtailed by the decade’s end.  Doo Wop entered the pop charts in the 1950s.  Its popularity soon spawns the parody “Who Put the Bomp.”  Novelty songs come into popularity, such as “Beep Beep.”
    In the mid-1950s Elvis Presley became the leading figure of the newly popular sound of Rock-n-Roll.
    Rock-n-Roll emerged in the mid-50s with Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, Gene Vincent, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, Little Richard, James Brown, Bo Diddley, Buddy Holly, Bobby Darin, Ritchie Valens, Duane Eddy, Eddie Cochran, Brenda Lee, Bobby Vee, Connie Frances, Johnny Mathis, Neil Sedaka, Pat Boone and Ricky Nelson being notable exponents. In the mid-1950s, Elvis Presley became the leading figure of the newly popular sound of Rock-n-Roll with a series of network television appearances and chart-topping records.  Chuck Berry, with “Maybellene” (1955), “Roll over Beethoven” (1956), “Rock and Roll Music” (1957) and “Johnny B. Goode” (1958), refined and developed the major elements that made Rock-n-Roll distinctive, focusing on teen life and introducing guitar solos and showmanship that would be a major influence on subsequent rock music.  Bill Haley, Jerry Lee Lewis, the Everly Brothers, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Conway Twitty, Johnny Horton, and Marty Robbins were Rockabilly musicians.  Doo Wop was another popular genre at the time.  Popular Doo Wop and Rock-n-Roll bands of the mid to late 1950s include The Platters, The Flamingos, The Dells, The Silhouettes, Frankie Lymon and The Teenagers, Little Anthony & The Imperials, Danny and the Juniors, The Coasters, The Drifters, The Del-Vikings and Dion and the Belmonts to name a few.
    The new music differed from previous styles in that it was primarily targeted at the teenager market, which became a distinct entity for the first time in the 1950s as growing prosperity meant that young people did not have to grow up as quickly or be expected to support a family.  Rock-n-Roll proved to be a difficult phenomenon for older Americans to accept and there were widespread accusations of it being a communist-orchestrated scheme to corrupt the youth.
    Jazz stars in the 1950s who came into prominence in their genres called Bebop, Hard Bop, Cool Jazz and the Blues, at this time included Lester Young, Ben Webster, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk, Charles Mingus, Art Tatum, Bill Evans, Ahmad Jamal, Oscar Peterson, Gil Evans, Jerry Mulligan, Cannonball Adderley, Stan Getz, Chet Baker, Dave Brubeck, Art Blakey, Max Roach, the Miles Davis Quintet, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Ella Fitzgerald, Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughn, Dinah Washington, Nina Simone, and Billie Holiday.
    The American folk music revival became a phenomenon in the United States in the 1950s to mid-1960s with the initial success of the Weavers who popularized the genre. Their sound, and their broad repertoire of traditional folk material and topical songs inspired other groups such as the Kingston Trio, the Chad Mitchell Trio, The New Christy Minstrels, and the “collegiate folk” groups such as The Brothers Four, The Four Freshmen, The Four Preps, and The Highwaymen.  All featured tight vocal harmonies and a repertoire at least initially rooted in folk music and topical songs.
    Mason City Globe-Gazette headline
    On February 3rd, 1959, a chartered airplane transporting three rock’n’roll musicians, Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J. P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson goes down in foggy conditions near Clear Lake, Iowa, killing all four occupants on board, including pilot Roger Peterson.  The tragedy is later termed “The Day the Music Died”, popularized in Don McLean’s 1972 song “American Pie”.  This event, combined with the conscription of Elvis into the US Army, is often taken to mark the point where the era of 50s Rock’n’Roll ended.

    Film

    Cary Grant as Roger O. Thornhill in North by Northwest (1959)

    European cinema experienced a renaissance in the ’50s following the deprivations of World War II.  Italian director Federico Fellini won the first foreign language film Academy Award with La strada and garnered another Academy Award with Nights of Cabiria.  In 1955, Swedish director Ingmar Bergman earned a Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival with Smiles of a Summer Night and followed the film with masterpieces The Seventh Seal and Wild Strawberries.  Jean Cocteau’s Orphée, a film central to his Orphic Trilogy, starred Jean Marais and was released in 1950.  French director Claude Chabrol’s Le Beau Serge is now widely considered the first film of the French New Wave.  Notable European film stars of the period include Brigitte Bardot, Sophia Loren, Marcello Mastroianni, Max von Sydow, and Jean-Paul Belmondo.
    Japanese cinema reached its zenith with films from director Akira Kurosawa including Rashomon, Ikiru, Seven Samurai, Throne of Blood, and The Hidden Fortress.  Other distinguished Japanese directors of the period were Yasujiro Ozu and Kenji Mizoguchi.  Russian fantasy director Aleksandr Ptushko’s mythological epics Sadko, Ilya Muromets, and Sampo were internationally acclaimed as was Ballad of a Soldier, a 1959 Soviet film directed by Grigori Chukhrai.
    In Hollywood, the epic Ben-Hur grabbed a record eleven Academy Awards in 1959 and its success gave a new lease of life to Hollywood Studio MGM.
    The “Golden Era” of 3-D cinematography transpired during the 1950s.

     

    Television

    The 1950s are known as The Golden Age of Television by some people.  Sales of  TV sets rose tremendously in the 1950s and by 1950 4.4 million families in America had a television set.  Americans devoted most of their free time to watching television broadcasts.  People spent so much time watching TV, that movie attendance dropped and so did the number of radio listeners.  Television revolutionized the way Americans see themselves and the world around them.  TV affects all aspects of American culture.  “Television affects what we wear, the music we listen to, what we eat, and the news we receive.”

     

    Art Movements

    In the early 1950s Abstract expressionism and artists Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning were enormously influential.  However by the late 1950s Color Field painting and Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko’s paintings became more in focus to the next generation.
    Pop Art used the iconography of television, photography, comics, cinema and advertising.  With its roots in dadaism, it started to take form towards the end of the 1950s when some European artists started to make the symbols and products of the world of advertising and propaganda the main subject of their artistic work.  This return of figurative art, in opposition to the abstract expressionism that dominated the aesthetic scene since the end of World War II was dominated by Great Britain until the early 1960s when Andy Warhol, the most known artist of this movement began to show Pop Art in galleries in the United States.

     

    Technology

    Operation Castle became the highest-yield nuclear test series ever conducted by the United States.
    • Charles H. Townes builds the Maser in 1953 at the Columbia University.
    • The Soviet Union launches Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite to orbit the earth on October 4, 1957.
    • The United States conducts its first hydrogen bomb explosion test.
    • The invention of the modern Solar cell.
    • Passenger jets enter service.
    • The U.S uses Federal prisons, mental institutions and pharmalogical testing volunteers to test drugs like LSD and chlorpromazine. Also started experimenting with the transorbital lobotomy.

    Science

    • Francis Crick and James Watson discover the double-helix structure of DNA. Rosalind Franklin contributed to the discovery of the double helix structure.
    • An immunization vaccine is produced for polio.
    • The first successful ultrasound test of the heart activity.
    • The CERN is established.
    • The world’s first nuclear power plant is opened in Obninsk near Moscow.
    • NASA is organized.
    • President Harry S. Truman inaugurated transcontinental television service on September 4, 1951 when he made a speech to the nation. AT&T carried his address from San Francisco and it was viewed from the west coast to the east coast at the same time.
    • The first human cancer cells were cultured outside of a body in 1951, From Henrietta Lacks, the cells are known as the immortal cells.
  • MGM Parade – ThrowbackMachine.com

    MGM Parade

    MGM Parade is the title of a documentary television series produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and broadcast by the ABC network during the 1955-56 season on Wednesdays at 8:30pm (E.S.T.), under the alternate sponsorship of American Tobacco (Pall Mall), and General Foods (Instant Maxwell House).

    Hosted by George Murphy (September 14th, 1955 – March 7th, 1956), Walter Pidgeon (March 14th – May 2nd, 1956) and other MGM stars, the series went into the MGM vaults to offer segments extracted from such past productions as Good News (1947) and The Pirate (1948); in December, a condensed edition of the 1938 version of A Christmas Carol was presented for the first time on television.  Exploring the inner workings of the MGM studios, it featured interviews with prominent MGM actresses and actors to promote current and upcoming releases.  The program also presented edited “selected short subjects” from the studio’s library (Carey Wilson’s Miniatures, John Nesbitt’s Passing Parade, Pete Smith’s Specialties, Robert Benchley, Tex Avery’s cartoons, et al.).  After Walter Pidgeon became the host, the format was slightly altered to include edited multi-part versions of “classic” MGM feature films, including Captains Courageous and The Pirate, as well as a biography of Greta Garbo.