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- A young Irish ward boss has a chance to be elected mayor, but the disgraced current mayor makes sure the candidate's wife learns about his affair with a just-deceased rich girl.
- Filmed live at the Barbican in London, this major new 5-star production of the classic musical comedy features an all-star cast. When the S.S. American heads out to sea, etiquette and convention head out the portholes as two unlikely pairs set off on the course to true love - proving that sometimes destiny needs a little help from a crew of singing sailors, a comical disguise and some good old-fashioned blackmail. This hilarious musical romp across the Atlantic, directed by the multi-award-winning Broadway director and choreographer Kathleen Marshall, features Cole Porter's joyful score, including "I Get A Kick Out of You", "You're the Top" and the show stopping "Anything Goes".
- Did Bill sleep with Stella? Or was it her husband, James? And where does the much older Harry fit into this triangle (or is it quadrangle?) situation?
- A man remembers his exasperating, unsuccessful, unhappy father.
- King Lear, old and tired, divides his kingdom among his daughters, giving great importance to their protestations of love for him. When Cordelia, youngest and most honest, refuses to idly flatter the old man in return for favor, he banishes her and turns for support to his remaining daughters. But Goneril and Regan have no love for him and instead plot to take all his power from him. In a parallel, Lear's loyal courtier Gloucester favors his illegitimate son Edmund after being told lies about his faithful son Edgar. Madness and tragedy befall both ill-starred fathers.
- A young singer (Sissy Spacek) during World War II, gets a job singing in the USO with the hopes that this "big break" will make her a star. She will stop at nothing to become famous, even the attentions of a young soldier, played by William Hurt, who falls in love with her.
- While at an impromptu reunion lunch, five women reminisce and relive their college days at Mount Holyoke, and weigh their goals and aspirations against their lives.
- Most mid-19th-century Mississippi River boys dreamed of occupying that pinnacle of power and glamour, the pilot house of a riverboat. In a riot of local color, this film tells how, unlike many, Sam's dream comes true. A callow teenager, he talks the tough but consummate Horace Bixby into making him his apprentice on the "Paul Jones," eventually following him to the much finer "Aleck Scott." Meanwhile, he is already spinning fantastic yarns to everyone from awe-struck lads ashore, to fellow "cub pilots", to young lady passengers who catch his eye. Things temporarily take a turn for the worse when Bixby must attend a meeting and leave Sam to work under Brown, a dour tyrant with a grudge against him.
- The story of a seventeen-year-old girl's early disillusionment with life followed by her accommodation to reality.
- From the elaborate Broadway revival of the 1932 Eva Le Gallienne/Florida Friebus production comes a whimsical retelling of the Lewis Carroll classic.
- Two identical twins and their two servants (also identical twins) are separated in a ship-wreck. When, years later, they all show up in the same town, mistaken identities abound.
- A middle-aged journalist has, at last, grown up - only to find he's trapped in a world of emotional infants.
- Re-creation of the Broadway production of George Bernard Shaw's 1920 comedy of manners.The troubles of England are parallel with the domestic troubles of Captain Shotover's household.
- In this modern adaptation of the Don Quixote theme based on a novel by Graham Greene, Quixote is an old Spanish village priest who travels through Spain with his friend, Sancho, the village's mayor and his car called Rocinante. On their way he has to master the same adventures as his ancestor.
- 1971– 1h 51mTV-G8.0 (280)TV EpisodeA retrospective on the life and career of actor James Stewart, with clips from many of his films and interviews with people who have worked with him.
- 1971– 1h 42mTV-G4.8 (283)TV EpisodeA Hollywood actress who worries that the movie world is eroding her grip on reality is drawn into a love affair with an ordinary - and married - guy.
- 1971– 2h 6mTV-G7.8 (121)TV EpisodeRichard Burton: In from the Cold.
- Lauren Bacall tells the story of her late husband Humphrey Bogart, presenting clips from his movies and interview clips with his peers.
- This classic American play, performed on an almost-bare stage, is about the mundane but rather pleasant lives of the Gibbs family, the Webb family, and their neighbors in Grover's Corners, New Hampshire, early in the 20th century. Act 1 presents an ordinary day in the life of the town. Act 2 carries the story forward with the courtship and marriage of George Gibbs and Emily Webb. Act 3 makes everything that has gone before seem pointless, but at the same time, ironically, it validates the earlier scenes. Emily has died while giving birth to her second child. During and after her funeral, she converses with other dead persons in the cemetery. She then gets permission to return briefly to life but finds it's not what she thought it would be. It goes too fast, and people don't have time to look at one another. "This is the way we were: in our growing up and in our marrying and in our living and in our dying." That's how the Stage Manager, an all-knowing character who serves as the narrator, sums up the play at one point. The Stage Manager knows that Our Town is about a lot more than one particular place at one particular time, and the audience soon begins to sense the mythological dimensions of Our Town.
- A Danish prince and university student avenges his father's murder by his uncle, who stole the crown and married his mother.
- When a young gay man comes out of the closet. His friends support him, but when he comes out to his parents, he stirs up a wealth of hidden feelings and secrets in their relationship.
- It is the day before Christmas. Gila Diaz is a young adolescent girl, the oldest child in a large rural Tex-Mex family. She is frustrated with her family's poverty and the drudgery of her life in caring for her many younger siblings. Gila's parents drag her and the family to midnight Mass. They go to hear the Pastorela, a traditional play about the shepherds who are told of the the birth of Christ and the triumph of the God's angels over Satan's diablos. Gila is knocked unconscious by a prop and suddenly she is transported into the real story of the Pastorela and begins a frightening fantastic quest to Bethlehem to find the Christ Child's manger.
- The only son of wealthy widow Violet Venable dies while on vacation with his cousin Catherine. What the girl saw was so horrible that she went insane; now Mrs. Venable wants Catherine lobotomized to cover up the truth.
- The story of the fall and redemption of Jean Valjean, arrested for stealing some bread for his starving family. In prison he's constantly bothered by the hard-nosed lawman Javert. Valjean is paroled, but runs away and becomes the mayor of a small town. He meets a dying woman named Fantine and swears to raise her daughter. Javert catches up to him, but Valjean escapes. The daughter, Cosette, grows up and falls in love with Marius, a student. An ill-fated, student-led revolution makes the mother of all climaxes for this beauty of a production. And the end with the 50 or so Valjeans is pretty impressive!
- 1971– 1h 25mTV-G8.5 (71)TV EpisodeHost/conductor Mauceri replicates a symphony orchestra playing to film images to produce the film's score, and talks with historians, technicians and David Raksin about the process during the 30's and 40's.
- 1971– 1h 31mTV-G8.6 (187)TV Episode
- Musicians remember the Kansas City jazz scene, paying homage to the legends of the genre.
- 1971– 2h 53mTV-G8.8 (133)TV EpisodeThe Great American Family at its worst. James Tyrone is an aging actor and skinflint whose miserliness has been the ruin of his family. His wife, Mary, has been a morphine addict since the birth of their youngest son, Edmund. Their eldest son, Jamie is an alcoholic, unable an unwilling to find work on his own, he has been 'forced' to take up his father's profession. Edmund, who has been away as a sailor has returned home sick and awaits the doctor's diagnosis of consumption. Each of them is so self-centered, and self-pitying, that they cannot help one-another. None of them even know what they want and they can't bear it.
- Fictionalized biography of Sarah Bernhard.
- This appearance includes a performance of Psychoderelict. In this composition a reclusive rock musician preparing a work on virtual reality is forced from retirement by means of a plot carried out by his manager and a well-known music critic.
- In this rousing satire a native upstate New York clerk comes to 1920s Manhattan with dreams of making in big on Tin Pan Alley.
- The famous rhythm and blues revue featuring such standards as the title song, "After You've Gone" and "In a Sentimental Mood," to name just a few, and sung by R&B legends Ruth Brown, Linda Hopkins and Carrie Smith.
- The unhappy and unloved Prince is mocked, betrayed and rejected by everyone around him. When he decides to commit suicide by throwing himself in a lake at a city park, a beautiful Swan emerges from the water. The Prince and The Swan become close friends, but their friendship is destined to end in tragedy.
- The life and work of the great composer Irving Berlin, tracking his work against the history of 20th century America, its ups and downs, in war and peace, progress and sentiments. Interviews with many of the people who worked with him and knew him best. And appearances in many film and television excerpts of the leading performance artists of our time, including Fanny Brice, Eddie Cantor, Al Jolson, Harry Richman, Rudy Vallee, Fred Astaire, Kate Smith, Jack Benny, John Raitt, Betty Hutton, Ethel Merman, Willie Nelson, Diana Ross, Linda Ronstadt and many others.
- 1971– 2h 7mTV-G8.4 (481)TV EpisodeA tribute to Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber for his 50th birthday. Features selections from his most popular plays, such as CATS, Phantom of the Opera, Jesus Christ Superstar, and Sunset Boulevard. It also has an appearence by his brother a world famous cellist playing a piece composed by LLoyd Webber.
- In the midst of the Hundred Years' War, the young King Henry V of England embarks on the conquest of France in 1415.
- Long-nosed Cyrano de Begerac helps an army officer woo Roxanne, the woman he loves.
- 1971– 1h 54mTV-G8.6 (84)TV EpisodeIn 1890s London, two friends use the same pseudonym ("Ernest") for their on-the-sly activities. Hilarity ensues.
- 1971– TV-G7.5 (86)TV Episode
- A writer (made to resemble Russian playwright Anton Chekhov) narrates a collection of his stories, all of which are written in the style of Chekhov.
- Noted American author Edith Wharton, in her later years, returns home and reminisces about her life. This was part of a PBS Great Performances trilogy, which also included dramatizations of her novels "Summer" (starring Diane Lane and John Cullum) and "The House of Mirth" (starring Geraldine Chaplin).
- 1971– 1h 56mNot Rated8.1 (144)TV EpisodeA man from a family of rich snobs becomes engaged to a woman from a good-natured but decidedly eccentric family.
- With fierce originality, this powerful adaptation of the Sophocles tragedy presents a world of honor, treachery and fateful consequences. Acclaimed actress Genevieve Bujold skillfully combines elements of zealotry and idealism in her affecting portrait of Antigone. Jean Anouilh's retelling of "Antigone" stages the inescapably wrenching central confrontation between Antigone and Creon by presenting Bujold and Fritz Weaver seated at a long, executive-suite table--a hallmark of Anouilh's play. The New York Times critic, John J. O'Connor, lauded this "Antigone" as "well acted, well directed and beautifully staged."
- A documentary detailing the history of Gershwin's opera and DuBose Heyward's original novel "Porgy", and the impact it has had on its casts and audiences as well as U.S. black culture in general, with rare archival footage of the 1952 world tour, and clips from the 1993 television production.
- A stage production of the classic musical, videotaped in front of a live audience at the Paper Mill Playhouse, New Jersey.
- On the Fourth of July holiday in 1906, the Miller family prepares to celebrate in their New England home. Young Richard, 16, is a thoughtful and poetic youth in love with a neighbor girl, Muriel. When Richard's messages of poetry to Muriel upset her prudish father, Muriel is forbidden to see him and forced to write a letter saying she wishes no more to do with him. Richard, devastated, sets out to learn the evil ways of the world and put his broken heart behind him.
- On a Connecticut farm, James Mayo's two sons both love Ruth Atkins. Robert, the younger son, is sickly and dreams of escaping to a romantic life somewhere "beyond the horizon." Andy is hard-working and steadfast and loves his brother deeply. When Ruth reveals that she loves Robert and not, as everyone believed, Andy, Robert's plans to go to sea with his uncle are disrupted. He decides to stay at home and marry Ruth, while Andy, unwilling to remain close at hand as his brother marries the girl he loves, takes Robert's place on the voyage. This turn of events leads to heartache and tragedy for everyone involved.
- 1971– 2h 9mTV-G8.1 (153)TV EpisodeTurandot at the Forbidden City is a 1998 live production of Puccini's opera Turandot directed by Zhang Yimou, with Zubin Mehta conducting the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino.
- Disturbed Blanche DuBois moves in with her sister in New Orleans and is tormented by her brutish brother-in-law while her reality crumbles around her.
- In 1905 Russia, factory tensions rise as workers demand justice against a cruel manager.
- Oscar Wilde's five years at hard labor in Reading Gaol where he was imprisoned for being a sodomite.
- Film of the legendary 1985 concert performance presented by the New York Philharmonic of Stephen Sondheim's classic musical at Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center. The plot of the musical centers around a reunion of showgirls who appeared in an annual Follies extravaganza when it was staged between the wars. Sally and Phyllis are two of these former showgirls, now middle-aged. Sally is married to Buddy, and Phyllis is married to Ben. Sally is unhappy with Buddy, and still is madly in love with Ben after a brief affair they had when they were younger. Phyllis is going to divorce Ben, so all seems right. But the reason Phyllis is divorcing Ben is because he is incapable of showing real, genuine love. Will Sally truly be happy if she leaves Buddy and marries Ben? Okay, the plot isn't much, but the songs are wonderful. The show features frequent "pastiche numbers" in which other former showgirls perform numbers in the style of the period in which this Follies was staged. These numbers, juxtaposed against the moving "book songs," make for a truly brilliant score.
- 1971– 1h 30mTV-G6.7 (40)TV EpisodeThree Irwin Shaw short stories are dramatized. In "The Girls in Their Summer Dresses" a young married couple stop for a drink on a Sunday morning in Manhattan, and the conversation turns to the husband's fidelity. "The Monument" centers on the conflict between a popular bartender with a following in an upscale Irish bar in 1938 Manhattan and its owner, who is determined to introduce a more economical whiskey in the establishment over the barkeep's objections. In "The Man Who Married a French Wife" the influential American husband of a French woman is asked by her former lover, a former resistance fighter, to help him escape the country.
- A group of workers earn their livings in a Brooklyn automobile parts warehouse during the Great Depression. Most are filled with hopelessness; some are alcoholics. Kenneth, however, is a young man yearning for a college education.
- 1971– 1h 29mTV-G6.3 (18)TV Episode
- A backwater Iowa town is in ethical turmoil after the sexual assult of a teenage girl and murder trial.
- This quintessential Chekhov drama--his first success--is both comic and tragic. A group of friends and relations gather at a country estate to see the first performance of an experimental play written and staged by the young man of the house, Konstantin (Frank Langella), an aspiring writer who dreams of bringing new forms to the theatre.
- Set in Richmond, Virginia in October 1864, tells the story of a Union spy working to seize control of the telegraph office.
- A multi-award winning biography covering the life and career of actor/director Laurence Olivier.
- Mr. Holroyd is an alcoholic, abusive miner in pre-WWI England who terrorizes his family. Mrs. Holroyd plans to run away with her would-be lover when Mr. Holroyd dies in a mining accident, leaving the family torn with guilt over their hatred of the dead man. Geraldine Page and Rex Robins star.
- Bobby Child, scion of a New York banking family (and also a talented song-and-dance man), is sent by his mother to foreclose the Gaiety Theatre in Deadrock, Nevada. Once there, however, he falls in love with the daughter of the theatre's owner, and becomes involved in a scheme to save the day by putting on a magnificent show.
- Julie Andrews reflects on her career, tells anecdotes about her British upbringing, and performs songs from her stage or screen roles in "My Fair Lady," "Camelot," "The Sound of Music" "Victor/Victoria," "Thoroughly Modern Millie," and "Mary Poppins."
- The Prince changes places with his valet - and meets the girl of his dreams!
- While her stepsisters are trying to gain the attention of the fake prince, Cenerentola and the Prince fall in love with each other.
- 1971– 2h 23mTV-G8.4 (16)TV Episode
- 1971– 2h 44mTV-G9.1 (71)TV EpisodeThe Art of Conducting: Great Conductors of the Past.
- 1971– 1h 39mTV-G8.1 (211)TV EpisodeThis film presents highlights of a concert given on 28 September 1998 at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Some of the ladies offer songs with which they have been closely associated over the years, while others explore the road not taken. There are also a couple of stunts: Rosie O'Donnell sneaks onto the stage and begins singing "Liza With a Z," only to be interrupted by Liza Minnelli, for whom the song was written. Later, the child actress Anna Kendrick sings "Life Upon the Wicked Stage," backed up by a chorus of cynical, strung-out Kit-Kat Girls from the 1990's revival of "Cabaret." Their fate, apparently, is what young Miss Kendrick can look forward to should she remain in her chosen profession!
- 1971– TV-G8.6 (25)TV Episode
- Videotaped before a live audience, this is the New York City Opera's production of the operetta, with, unlike the film versions, its original plot and characters.
- 1971– TV-G9.2 (28)TV Episode
- In the 50's, in Paris, the neighbors Rodolfo and Mimi meet each other when Mimi's candle blows out in a cold and dark night. They immediately fall in love for each other, in times of financial difficulties in the post-war. Rodolfo introduces Mimi to his close friends Marcello and his beloved Musetta; Colline; and Schaunard and together they have a good-time in Café Momus. Some time later, Mimi tells Marcello that she can not support the jealousy of Rodolfo any longer and when Marcello discuss with Rodolfo, Mimi overhears the real reason for the behavior of her beloved Rodolfo.
- 1971– 1hTV-G6.4 (29)TV Episode
- A musical adaptation of William Shakespeare's comedy, "Twelfth Night," was performed on stage with a new adaptation and twist on the play itself.
- The Prince of Homburg, a general in the army of the Brandenburg Elector, sometimes has difficulty separating his dreams from reality. He falls in love with the Princess Natalia, ward of the Elector, and as a result of his infatuation does not pay close attention to the orders for the next day's battle. As a result, he precipitously engages the enemy before being ordered to do so, and thus both helps win the battle but also brings down on his own head the charge of disobedience to orders. When a court-martial orders his death, everyone involved, including the Prince himself, comes to mixed opinion about whether the sentence should be carried out.
- 1971– 2h 40mNot Rated8.5 (56)TV Episode
- 1971– 1h 30mTV-G7.7 (295)TV EpisodeThe life and works of a legendary animator.
- A son is born to a young couple. The father, motivated by jealousy, takes the baby into the desert to be abandoned. The child is rescued, named Oedipus by King Polybus and Queen Merope of Corinth and raised as their own son. When Oedipus learns of a prophecy foretelling that he will kill his father and marry his mother, he leaves Corinth believing that Polybus and Merope are his true parents.
- A concert version of the 1944 Broadway musical with librettist and lyricist Betty Comden and Adolph Green narrating on stage. Story concerns three American sailors on a 24-hour shore leave in New York City during World War II.
- 1971– 1hTV-G7.2 (21)TV Episode
- The complete title of this film is "Ellington-The Music Lives On." This was produced by WNET/Thirteen/Freemantel International, Inc. Director: Jerome Schnur; Executive Producer: Jac Venza; Producers: Bob Bac, Bill W. Chastain, Jr.; Associate Producer: Yvonne Smith; Writer: David Axelrod. It was originally telecast on PBS, February 27, 1984. This wonderful 90 minute film is a tribute to Duke Ellington interpreted by modern performers. Some of the highlights are Ben Harney's "Something to Live For," a couple of songs/scenes from Ellington's opera, "Queenie Pie," with Patti LaBelle and Andre De Shields, a terrific version of "Satin Doll" by Treat Williams, and Carly Simon's "I've Got it Bad and That Ain't Good." There are so many wonderful performances, Tammy Grimes, Kathleen Battle, Esther Marrow, the Boys Choir of Harlem and many more. There is documentary footage and interviews with the Duke's family, friends and fellow artists. This isn't available anywhere that I can find and it would be a blessing if anyone would make it available for purchase.
- 1971– 1h 25mTV-G8.7 (122)TV Episode
- 1971– 55mTV-G8.0 (21)TV Episode
- Nostalgic concert of their signature songs dating back to the group's early days in Greenwich Village.
- An explosive journey through dance featuring some of the world's champion ballroom and Latin dancers.
- 1971– 1h 56mTV-G9.1 (52)TV EpisodeThe Art of Singing: Golden Voices of the Century.
- The central plot deals with the rivalry of two brothers for a beautiful woman who happens to be their rich uncle's much younger wife.
- A rock musical version of the Passion Play seen from the point of view of Judas.
- 1971– TV-G7.5 (67)TV EpisodeThis production is a filmed record of a concert given on 16 October 2000 at the City Center for Music and Dance, New York City, to raise funds for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids. The occasion was particularly notable in that it marked Julie Andrews' (brief) return to singing in public after a four-year hiatus.
- Norma, a Druid priestess, has broken her vow of chastity with an enemy of her people, the Roman Proconsul Pollione, who has now turned to another lover. Norma must choose between taking vengeance against her lover or atoning for her sins.
- Louisa May Alcott's autobiographical account of her life with her three sisters in Concord, Massachusetts in the 1860s. With their father fighting in the American Civil War, sisters Jo, Meg, Amy and Beth are at home with their mother, a very outspoken women for her time. The story tells of how the sisters grow up, find love and find their place in the world.
- The story of opera singer Nellie Mitchell Armstrong 'Melba'.
- 1971– 2hTV-GTV Episode
- 1971– 1h 46mTV-G6.6 (84)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-G8.8 (23)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-G7.9 (24)TV EpisodeNatalie Cole's Emmy-winning concert of her GRAMMY-winning album featuring classics such as "Mona Lisa," "The Very Thought of You" and "For Sentimental Reasons". The concert also features a special performance of Nat King Cole's signature song "Unforgettable" sung as a duet by Natalie Cole and her father.
- A re-staging of the Royal Ballet's 1985 production, with Anthony Dowell - this time as Drosselmeyer - and a new supporting cast.
- 1971– 1h 30mTV-G7.8 (127)TV Episode
- Adam Low's Kurosawa is a 90-minute documentary that looks at Kurosawa's life and works. Originally broadcast on PBS in the US, the film follows a fairly conventional approach as it chronicles Kurosawa's career. The film includes many interviews, more of which are provided on the documentary's home video releases. The film is narrated by Sam Shepard, with sections of Kurosawa's autobiography read by Paul Scofeld. It is a tribute, a celebration and an hommage. A DVD, which comes with almost two hours of extra interviews, has been released as a region free disc by the Australian Madman Entertainment.
- 1971– TV-G8.4 (51)TV Episode
- Modern choreographers are brought out from behind the scenes to discuss their work and provide insight into an often overlooked creative force-the heart and soul of most music videos.
- A behind-the-scenes look at the cast-album recording session of the 1992 Tony-winning Broadway revival of the Frank Loesser musical.
- 1971– 1hTV-G7.3 (41)TV Episode
- The juggler-dancer manipulates objects such as rings, balls and torches. He is seen in rehearsal, discussing his props, and at home.
- The jazz great is remembered with a documentary that includes concert footage.
- 1971– 1h 25mTV-G8.7 (75)TV Episode
- Milan Records is excited to announce its release of the Lean by Jarre Director Series record, brought to you on a DualDisc. Lean By Jarre is a live performance by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra performing music from some of Sir David Lean's most acclaimed films (Doctor Zhivago, Lawrence of Arabia, Ryan's Daughter, A Passage to India), conducted by the music's composer, Maurice Jarre, The concert was recorded live at the Barbican Center in London, 1992. The DualDisc features live audio recording, the video recording of this legendary performance, as well as bonus material. This bonus material includes a Maurice Jarre interview with Christian Lauliac, audio commentary by the composer and his discography, biography and filmography.
- Adapted from the group of stage monologues by the pseudononymous "Jane Martin," this is a series of characters snake handler, daughter, baton twirler, washed-up rodeo cowgirl, tattoed woman, and older woman in the twilight of her years talking with us about their experiences, in the poetic language that Jane Martin is known for bringing to all her stage characters. Kathy Bates does a wonderful job of translating these dead-on characters (talking directly to camera) from stage to television screen, and television turns out to be the perfect medium for these challenging figures. "Jane Martin" first came to prominence at the prestigious Louisville-based Humana Theatre Festival it was recently revealed that "she" is none other than the Festival's artistic director, Jon Jory.
- The life and work of the great American puppeteer and producer.
- Documentary explores the creation of the musical play Ragtime, based on the novel by E.L. Doctorow.
- 1971– 46mTV-PG7.7 (28)TV EpisodeFrank Sinatra's beginnings in Hoboken New Jersey, and how he discovers his passion for singing. We see as Sinatra performs with various groups and bands, eventually working toward performing solo. These are also the years Sinatra develops his unique vocal style and works his way into the hearts of the girls in bobby socks and socialites alike.
- 1971– TV-G7.6 (39)TV Episode
- 1971– 1h 26mTV-G7.6 (177)TV EpisodeDocumentary chronicling Arthur Freed and his unit's contribution to some of Hollywood's most memorable musicals.
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- William Shakespeare's classic tale of passion, rage and the corruption of youth retold on the mean streets of Providence, Rhode Island.
- A behind the scenes and in-depth look at the making of John Huston's the Misfits
- 1971– 1h 6mTV-G7.8 (50)TV EpisodeFilmed over two years, this new documentary takes an exclusive inside look at Tony-winning director Marianne Elliott's creative process of bringing a reimagined gender-swapped production of Stephen Sondheim and George Furth's musical "Company" to Broadway during the COVID-19 pandemic. Featuring rehearsal and performance footage, plus new interviews with Elliott, Sondheim, Katrina Lenk, Patti LuPone and members of the original 1970 cast, the broadcast tells the story of the show's Broadway debut in a city on the verge of bankruptcy to its reimagination 50 years later as both Broadway and New York City emerge from one of the greatest crises in contemporary history.
- Documentary assembling film clips of musical numbers from songwriters considered significant contributors to pop culture before the advent of rock and roll.
- A live performance of the 1999 revival, taped in London in the theatre in which it was staged, and in front of a live audience.
- 1971– TV-G8.8 (37)TV Episode
- The golden age of the annual Tony Awards ceremony lasted from 1967 to 1986 -- the period during which Alexander H. Cohen and his wife, Hildy Parks, were the producers of the show. This film offers a compilation of performances from Tony Award broadcasts during those years. They are presented with color-corrected footage and digitally re-mastered sound.
- A thorough look at the lifework of composer Burt Bacharach, complete with a great number of archive clips and new interviews.
- 1971– 1h 30mTV-GTV EpisodeHighlights of the three opening performances of Esa Pekka Salonen conducting The Los Angeles Philharmonic at Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, designed by architect Frank Gehry. Hosted by Jodie Foster, featuring guest appearances by Yo Yo Ma, Audra Macdonald, John Williams, Josh Groban, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks and Catherine Zeta-Jones. Recorded and telecast in October 2003.
- General Radames doubts between his love for slave Aida and loyalty to Pharaoh.
- 1971– 2h 15mTV-G7.4 (15)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– 1h 30mTV-G8.1 (68)TV EpisodeA second collection of great performances from the Tony Awards. Some of the classics of the Broadway stage have been lost to history - except for the archives of the American Theatre Wing and its collection of films of the Tony Awards ceremonies. Performances in the on-air version included "Anything Goes" from the 1987 revival of _Anything Goes_, "Bosom Buddies" from _Mame_, "I Believe in You" from the original production of _How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying_, "La Vie En Rose" from _Piaf_, "The Impossible Dream" from the original production of _Man of La Mancha_, "Take A Glass Together" from _Grand Hotel_, "That's How You Jazz" from _Jelly's Last Jam_, "Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat" from the 1992 revival of _Guys and Dolls_, "We Are What We Are/I Am What I Am" from _La Cage Aux Folles_, "Les Miserables Medley", "You'll Never Walk Alone" from the 1994 revival of _Carousel_ and "All I Care About" from the original production of _Chicago_.
- In an opera version of the famous literature classic, during World War I, an airplane pilot crashes his plane in the Sahara Desert, where he has a very unusual near-death experience.
- 1971– 2h 30mTV-G8.0 (178)TV EpisodeA concert performance of Bernstein's famous musical.
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– 1h 50mTV-G9.0 (78)TV EpisodeWidely-acclaimed contemporary classical singer Josh Groban performs for a full house at Los Angeles' Greek Theatre.
- After nearly four decades of not playing together, Cream reunited in May 2005 in London to play at Royal Albert Hall. This DVD highlights the four nights Cream mesmerized audiences at that venue. Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce perform the classics - I'm So Glad, Spoonful, Outside Woman Blues, Badge, Sweet Wine, Rollin' and Tumblin', Born Under a Bad Sign, We're Going Wrong, White Room, Toad, Sunshine of Your Love, Crossroads and others. Includes interviews with the three legendary rockers.
- 1971– TV-G7.7 (18)TV Episode
- Musical celebration of the songs of lyricist Alan Jay Lerner.
- 1971– 1h 9mTV-G8.1 (25)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– 1h 28mNot Rated9.0 (15)TV EpisodeAn American documentary that provides a thorough history of gospel music through archival footage of legendary gospel singers, from soulful concerts to the spiritual musicals.
- BILL IRWIN, CLOWN PRINCE is part of the Great Performances series which invites the audience into actor, director, choreographer, playwright, and clown Bill Irwin's world while he creates his very unique style of theatre. Included are many excerpts from some of his most innovative, hilarious, and thought provoking work. Heavily featured are excerpts from his season in residence at The Signature Theatre in New York City: "The Regard Evening," "The Harlequin Studies," and "Mr. Fox: A Rumination."
- 1971– 1h 25mTV-G7.6 (23)TV EpisodeWanda Horowitz reminisces about her husband, the great pianist Vladimir Horowitz, with clips from his television appearances.
- 1971– 1h 30mTV-G7.4 (25)TV Episode
- 1971– 1h 35mTV-G7.8 (41)TV Episode
- 1971– Not Rated8.6 (80)TV Episode
- 1971– 2hTV-G8.2 (170)TV EpisodeA concert performance of the famous Rodgers and Hammerstein musical play.
- 1971– 1hTV-G8.2 (53)TV EpisodePaul McCartney plays some songs off the album "Chaos & Creation in the Backyard" and some Beatles' songs in the famous Abbey Road Studio, at the same time demonstrating some recording techniques.
- 1971– TV-G8.3 (15)TV EpisodeMozart at 250: The Salzburg Festival Celebration.
- Musical salute to composer Jule Styne.
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-G8.5 (29)TV Episode
- The Musicares Foundation is proud to honour James Taylor as their person of the year, 2006. Best known as the quintessential singer-song writer, James has maintained an unparalleled commitment to music and various philanthropic efforts.
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-G9.2 (14)TV EpisodeRenée Fleming: Sacred Songs and Carols.
- 1971– TV-G7.0 (13)TV Episode
- Opening night of the 114th season with The Philadelphia Orchestra featuring works by Richard Strauss.
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- Opening night of the 112th season with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, featuring works by de Falla and Ravel.
- 1971– TV-G8.0 (16)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-G9.4 (19)TV EpisodeA concert version of the popular radio program.
- 1971– TV-G8.6 (17)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-G8.5 (24)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV EpisodeAnnual New Year's concert.
- 1971– TV-G8.8 (18)TV EpisodeHayley Westenra: Live from New Zealand.
- The first presentation of Rod Stewart at the Royal Albert Hall, with many guests. Rod Stewart is accompanied by magnificent musicians and also by the 60-piece BBC Concert Orchestra.
- 1971– TV-G8.2 (14)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-GTV Episode
- 1971– 54mTV-G8.2 (22)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-G8.0 (29)TV Episode
- 1971– 1h 39mTV-G8.5 (104)TV EpisodeRecorded and filmed at the Alhambra Palace in Granada, Spain, September 2006.