" YOUR HIT PARADE " OCTOBER 30 1954 MUSICAL TV SHOW w/ RAYMOND SCOTT LUCKY STRIKE ADS XD46754
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- Опубликовано: 29 окт 2021
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This episode of "Your Hit Parade" popular music show dates to October 30 1954. The presentation is a kinescope, or a television signal that was recorded from a TV set onto 16mm film. The "Hit Parade" musical review show was sponsored by Lucky Strike cigarettes and Richard Hudnut Quick Home Permanent, and features advertisements for both products. At 13:21, golfer Sam Snead promotes Luckys. At :33, the animated Lucky Strike cigarettes sequence was created by special effects guru Ray Harryhausen.
"Your Hit Parade" featured elaborate sets and choreography that was inspired both by Hollywood movies and "soundies" -- popular short film versions of popular songs. The show utilized a cast to perform the songs, as opposed to playing the versions then on the air.
The "Your Hit Parade" program started out on radio before moving to television in 1950, and ran until 1959. The show presented seven top hit songs. This episode features Giselle Mackenzie, Roy Landman / Snooky Lanson, Polly Bergen, and Russel Arms, as well as Raymond Scott and the Hit Parade Orchestra. (Some other singers on "Your Hit Parade" in this era often included Dorothy Collins, Eileen Wilson and June Valli.) Songs include "Papa Loves Mambo" (00:02:43:11),
"If I Give My Heart To You" (00:04:51:10), "That Old Black Magic" (00:07:20:08), "Count Your Blessings Instead Of Sheep" (00:09:35:04), "This Ole House" (00:13:32:17), "The High And The Mighty" (00:16:05:20), "Hey There" (00:19:02:14), "Gypsy In My Soul" (00:21:48:04) "I Need You Now" (00:25:17:05)
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This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com
This is so camp. I could put a tent on it.
Home perms were beauty must haves in the fabulous 1950s
B-52's, steam locomotives and proto-rock. What a time to be alive. I was still 23 light years from Earth when this was broadcast.
it's only now making it over to this arm of the galaxy great shows !!
OMG: Giselle's spoof of the Dance Apache is hilarious. They had to come up with so many ideas for staging these songs, sometimes the same song week after week, if it remained popular. I always found it interesting that they didn't present the countdown in order.
They always scrambled the order of the "Top Seven" songs presented, because presenting them in order every week would have been very predictable to the viewers after several weeks in a row.
Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it! Consider becoming a member ruclips.net/video/ODBW3pVahUE/видео.html
Richard Hudnutt. Who could forget a name like that?
Richard Hudnut was a leading munfacturer in hair care products, cosmetics, perfumes, and the like, from the beginning of the 20th Century. It was a part of Warner-Hudnut at the time, then merged with Lambert Pharmacal (the makers of Listerine) in 1955 to become Warner-Lambert. The Hudnut name vanished by the 1970's.
Beautiful
Cool
The "This Old House" skit -- inspiration for The Addams Family?
They pretty much did the same scene with Heartbreak Hotel and Gisele steals it with the eyebrow thing that she occasionally did.
ruclips.net/video/gp0j4n-RKug/видео.html
No, the Addams Family (original magazine cartoons) predate this by several years
Charles Addams' cartoons in THE NEW YORKER magazine featured the Addamses long before the original TV series was produced in 1964.
I miss those recognizable staff announcers like Andre Baruch
I don't remember this being on TV, but I do remember Your Hit Parade on radio. This is pretty fancy, was it a weekly show?
Yes
The radio show lasted through 1953 (the last two seasons featured Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians, and his regular vocalists [and a guest female singer each week]). The TV series lasted nine years, through 1959 {it was on CBS in its final season, featuring Dorothy Collins and Johnny Desmond, and guest performers}.
WTH was that guy doing to Gizzy Mac on If I Give My Heart to You. You can hear some thuds if you listen with head phones. Tough Winnipeg girl.
She had very loud high heels when they hit the floor. 😉
29:33- "The Gentleman", starring Donald Woods and Joan Westmore [11/1/54].
That Giselle seems to be into the rough stuff
Snooky, mutha!
His given name was Roy Lanson. He was called "Snooky-ookums" when he was a baby and toddler......and the name stuck with him all through his life.
No audio.
Only if you open the sound ;)