Great as he supposedly was, Toscanini is rushing the orchestra. Uneven tempos, and too fast, like the over-rated Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic. The music has no time to breathe. Not my favorite.
@danielguimaraes165313 күн бұрын
Grande! Maravilhosa!
@LandondeeL15 күн бұрын
"Tonight, I'm gonna stay home, and I'm gonna watch the Hit Parade". -Marty Piletti, 1955.
@jtstout715316 күн бұрын
I remember the opening of NBC evening news with Chet Huntley and David Brinkley. It was the 2nd movement. I’ve loved it ever since!
@Landrew198016 күн бұрын
Nancy Walker as a young brute.
@owenhanna120 күн бұрын
the Modernaires at 3:40
@awaxx786320 күн бұрын
Why do I have to watch commercials to watch commercials?
@AnnaPace-t5v21 күн бұрын
Mother of Lorenzo Lamas
@fromthesidelines22 күн бұрын
22:30- Originally seen in 1967.
@theronfarrell147124 күн бұрын
Life has changed since those days....maybe we are in better health, yet I wonder if we (humans) are any smarter?😂😢
@JAMESPATTERSON-mk9sr24 күн бұрын
Playhouse 90 was an attempt to do serious TV drama in a 90 min. format instead of the usual 60 min. format and it lasted from 1956 to 1961 almost the last leg of such TV dramas . The last being US Steel Hour/ Armstrong Circle Theater which lasted until 1963 on the same CBS -TV network . That ended the so called " Golden Age of serious TV drama " . Also known as problem plays .
@miriammeisliklee130526 күн бұрын
The panel includes: (from left to right) Rob Penny, Chawley Williams, Gerald Rhodes (fairly certain), August Wilson, and Nicholas Flournoy. All part of Pittsburgh's Black Arts Movement.
@reynaldoflores452228 күн бұрын
Arlene Dahl speaks with a faint, barely noticeable foreign accent. Norwegian or German, perhaps. Incidentally, she was already 30 in this video. But she could've passed for 20 ! 😊
@ajg255829 күн бұрын
Ch 5 wnew TV NYC mid 60s
@Kerry-G29 күн бұрын
The different theme music is interesting
@robertmassengill1262Ай бұрын
Jack's facial expressions crack me up. Especially when his eyes get big, looks at the camera and then gets aggravated.
@SesWanto-j6fАй бұрын
There's million video oj KZbin and yet i'm watching ADs
@JAMESPATTERSON-mk9srАй бұрын
Back in the days when ABC without the star power , money , prestige or the number of affiliates of NBC. CBS tried to imitate them with NYC based programs . Before ABC found its identity with comedy, westerns and action adventure series in partnership with the Hollywood studios .
@kcfraserАй бұрын
I'm not crazy about the songs, but I think I'll take up smoking.
@XIIIRaphaelАй бұрын
ゲッ!テッキリ静止画かmp3だと思ったら動いてるぞ? トスカニーニが動いてる!奇跡か?
@DeniseLopez-gt9wgАй бұрын
I was born in the wrong era i wish i was born after 1945 i dont care if i would be old right now that generation was te best and will never be seen ever again
@fromthesidelinesАй бұрын
25:47- "The preceding program, originally telecast by ABC in Hollywood, has come to you by special video recording. This is ABC, the *AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANY."*
@snoopstp4189Ай бұрын
lol,, "skin diving" = scuba back then
@Paolo-fy6loАй бұрын
@paolob berti, quanta fretta il grandissimo Toscanini................
@NaftalinoffАй бұрын
34:35 The Florida Trio, the so called "Rag Doll Act". They had fantasy back then! Bizarre, but entertaining.
@jamesslick4790Ай бұрын
I was born in early 1962 in PITTSBURGH (Where Eleanor Schano was based) So, There is a NON-ZERO chance my mother saw this, And would have been in the market for maternity clothes at the time! LOL. Eleanor Schano was a media powerhouse for most of my life, Sadly lost to Covid in 2020.
@jamesslick4790Ай бұрын
Thrift Drug Stores was a Pittsburgh based chain dating to the 1930s. In the 1960s it was bought by J.C. Penney. Even after the JCP purchase, Thrift remained headquartered in Pittsburgh until the 1990s
@jamesslick4790Ай бұрын
I would be born a year later in the same city. (Pittsburgh, PA) Elanor Schano was a FIXTURE of Pittsburgh TV & Radio for Decades, Especially on Channel 11 (Then WIIC, now WPXI) and 1410 AM (KQV).
@steverhodesvideos6244Ай бұрын
A dryer that "croons a tune when your clothes are dry"? Incredible!
@FLEISSMEISE_41Ай бұрын
Diese Aufnahme hat sage und schreibe 76 Jahre auf der Filmrolle. Hört sich für die damals verfügbare Video- und Tontechnik doch recht gut an. Meine Großeltern väterlicherseits (beide leider schon verstorben) schworen eher auf die Wiener Philharmoniker und waren auch einige Male in Wien und eben auch im "GOLDENEN SAAL" des Wiener Musikvereins. Ich schaue mir fast jedes Jahr das Neujahreskonzert LIVE aus Wien im ZDF an. Zu diesem Video: I - 6:20 II - 19:26 III - 33:20 IVa - 46:49 IVb - 53:01
@roicastutorialesАй бұрын
16:10 desde argentina "El moco de Toscanini"
@gianlucamattei264Ай бұрын
Historical performance❤❤❤❤
@gianlucamattei264Ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@rogerevans9666Ай бұрын
In the second movement of B's second piano concerto, you can hear the six chords that reappear in the first movement of the first movement of the 9th symphony. Also, I read somewhere that the first and third movements of the 9th are in B's third style. The second and fourth movements are in his second style. After years of listening his works, this comment seems to be true.
@tj-co9goАй бұрын
Finally someone with the right tempo! In the first movement
@JRMNJАй бұрын
Was born and raised in Pgh. remember channel 4 news vividly..nice memories from a much better time. Thanks for posting.
@doberman1ismАй бұрын
I like the way all the men took off their hats when a woman entered the elevator. Manners and respect.
@FalconlibraryАй бұрын
$375,000 in 1964 is about $3,750,000 today, 10x the amount.
@Lafuerza_V2 ай бұрын
Very interesting to watch
@ZahraF93982 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
@ZahraF93982 ай бұрын
مو به تنم سیخ شد موقع اجرای گروه کُر....❤❤❤
@rodneygolden27962 ай бұрын
The absolute grandeur of the restrained-modern, spare, surging, flowing orchestrations, which developed the backdrops for the dramatis-personae of these Westinghouse Studio One kinescopes (this one in particular) makes them a fascinating treat. The almost baroque sets, shown against the contrasts in the segues between intermittent ad commercials, showing progressive technologies of Westinghouse makes my mind wander successfully to other places and spaces over the last seven deades; " to planes far out is where these lives have become. .. " to coin and take poetic license from and with modernist/abstract poet Joseph Jarman, later on into the mid sixties. YES!
@misterakt2 ай бұрын
This is the clearest transfer of this important speech I've ever watched. Thank you so much for sharing. 61 years ago today (11.27.24), the day before Thanksgiving
@John-uf8ky2 ай бұрын
So many great anthology series from those times. There should be a network with all these great old shows. They really need to be conserved there's nothing close to the quality of this programming today. Thanks for posting this with commercials and all.
@Dorthy-wx9fq2 ай бұрын
There was an AVON store in downtown Marysville California years ago. But,ya I miss AVON. There's a lot of the ads that I see in this video that I remember. Gee, do I miss those days.
@Randomclip272 ай бұрын
What happens at 30:58 look Toscanini's eyes, and after that he says NO moving his head ?
@HassoBenSoba2 ай бұрын
Great to see Robert Coote in a major, serious role; he usually played lighter comic parts. Two years later, he would create the role of Colonel Pickering in Broadway's phenomenal success "My Fair Lady."
@alandesouzacruz51242 ай бұрын
A good movie but I still prefer it Pride of the Yankees
@jimslim812 ай бұрын
Thank you for uploading this!
@H.L.-fj6zd2 ай бұрын
Arch Moore plead guilty to an indictment that said he accepted illegal payments from lobbyists during his 1984 and 1988 election campaigns, which he failed to report on his Federal income tax returns for 1984 and 1985. Furthermore, he also plead guilty to extorting more than $573,000 from Maben Energy Corporation, a coal company based in the town of Beckley, and obstructed the investigation of this activity. Moore had helped Maben receive a refund of $2 million from the state's Black Lung Fund, an aid program for miners with the disease, in exchange for roughly 25% of this sum. For these crimes, Moore was fined $3.2 million, though he paid only $750,000, after reaching a settlement. He was sentenced to five years and ten months in prison.