texallennyc
Joined Aug 2017
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texallennyc's rating
Both lead actors Bruce MacDonald ("Mike") and Karen Trott (Maura) had appearance and actor qualities and capabilities which could have made them later movie stars.
Neither continued work in the movie business or, apparently, desired to follow the rigors and problems part of climbing to the top of the movie actor heap into the realm of stardom, big money, fame, etc.
Movie actor work is very hard.
Actress Ursala Andress once stated that "there are a lot of very good movie actors, but very few good movies for them to act in."
Movie acting is a field which many try out, and walk away from after getting a close look at the world of movie making, and the way it treats actors.
Retired movie actor Tex Allen retired in 2014 at age 70 after decades of work in major SAG signatory Hollywood studio films, and stated:
"I "retired" from movie actor work in 2014 at age 70 and was granted "honorable withdrawal" status by the Screen Actors Guild (now named SAG-AFTRA).
"I'm glad to be retired from movie acting. Movie actor work was very hard work, and included many, many 18 hour days, often lots of physical dangers of various flavors.
"Movie sets were often unsafe, especially outdoor, on-location non-movie studio sets (e.g. high speed car chases, explosions, flying debris, dangerous sunburn, frostbite, etc.).
"During my career I was injured often, and witnessed and heard about gruesome accidents and injuries other actors suffered. Actors are almost never compensated for injuries they suffer on movie sets, the SAG-AFTRA union usually doesn't help much or at all, and movie employers pass the buck, put the blame on others, and wring their hands.
"The life of a non-movie star working actor is always hard, has been that way throughout movie history since early Silent Movie days."
The Return Of The Secaucus 7 (1979) is a movie with good actors who didn't continue the hard life of movie actor work.
Neither continued work in the movie business or, apparently, desired to follow the rigors and problems part of climbing to the top of the movie actor heap into the realm of stardom, big money, fame, etc.
Movie actor work is very hard.
Actress Ursala Andress once stated that "there are a lot of very good movie actors, but very few good movies for them to act in."
Movie acting is a field which many try out, and walk away from after getting a close look at the world of movie making, and the way it treats actors.
Retired movie actor Tex Allen retired in 2014 at age 70 after decades of work in major SAG signatory Hollywood studio films, and stated:
"I "retired" from movie actor work in 2014 at age 70 and was granted "honorable withdrawal" status by the Screen Actors Guild (now named SAG-AFTRA).
"I'm glad to be retired from movie acting. Movie actor work was very hard work, and included many, many 18 hour days, often lots of physical dangers of various flavors.
"Movie sets were often unsafe, especially outdoor, on-location non-movie studio sets (e.g. high speed car chases, explosions, flying debris, dangerous sunburn, frostbite, etc.).
"During my career I was injured often, and witnessed and heard about gruesome accidents and injuries other actors suffered. Actors are almost never compensated for injuries they suffer on movie sets, the SAG-AFTRA union usually doesn't help much or at all, and movie employers pass the buck, put the blame on others, and wring their hands.
"The life of a non-movie star working actor is always hard, has been that way throughout movie history since early Silent Movie days."
The Return Of The Secaucus 7 (1979) is a movie with good actors who didn't continue the hard life of movie actor work.
"The Very Best Of Ed Sullivan, Part 2 w/ Burt Reynolds" (1991) is a dramatic portrait of the USA in the 1950's and 1960's complete with revolutionary social changes.
The nostalgia entertainment documentary was created 20 years after the final broadcast of the famous Sunday night Ed Sullivan Show (originally called "The Toast Of The Town" hosted by Ed Sullivan).
The program featured both celebrity entertainers and vaudeville/ circus type novelty entertainers and was presented in a simple vaudeville/ talent show type format with each "act" lasting about 3 minutes and introduced by host Ed Sullivan.
The show ran weekly on the CBS Television Network for a total of 23 years from 1948 to 1971. Both the 1950 and 1960 decades were totally included and chronicled during the 23 year run of the show.
The show was a portrait of show business in America (the USA) during those decades: its changing tastes, values, taltent, and preferences.
An earlier "Part One" show hostessed by Carol Burnett was presented, and was similar in format to the "Part Two" show hosted by Burt Reynolds.
The "Part One" show had wonderful highlights but the "Part Two" show was better by far in terms of overall presentation and entertainment value.
The "Part Two" 1991 segment of the two part "The Very Best Of Ed Sullivan Show" package included both celebrity talent, and also interesting and arguably amazing circus/ vaudeville talent and entertainers not credited in the packaging or end of show credit titles.
A partial list of celebrity entertainers in the "Part Two" show includes:
Burt Reynolds ... Himself - Host
The 5th Dimension
Julie Andrews
The Beatles
Clyde Beatty
Harry Belafonte
Jack Benny
Richard Burton
The Byrds
Nat 'King' Cole
Phyllis Diller
The Everly Brothers
Dame Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nuyev
Connie Francis
Frank Gorshin
Non-celebrity performers and entertainers recruited from travelling circuses and vaudeville type entertainment venues (kept alive by Las Vegas and other major gambling centers which later included Atlantic City, New Jersey) included knife throwers, animal acts, high wire trapeze acts, juggling acts, plate spinner acts, and grand opera aria singers (usually celebrities such as Beverly Sills), and classical ballet acts (usually celebrity ballet dancers including Jacques D'Amboise, Rudolf Nuryev, and Dame Margo Fonteyn).
Steve Allen stated during an interview about the Ed Sullivan Show that the show presented over 10,000 important show business acts to network television audiences over the 23 years it lasted.
The entire output of the show, opined Steve Allen, constituted a de-facto library of USA show business and major entertainment talent during the decades the show was presented between 1948 (when priimitive black and white television had just begun ............. the phenomenon of successful, advertising driven national television began immediately after the World War II (1941 - 45) years. The Ed Sullivan Show was an early beginner in the realm of national television shows, and by far the longest lasting of shows which started in the 1940's.
The contrast between the primitive black and white acts from the 1950's presented in the "Part Two" nostalgia 1991 show hosted by Burt Reynolds and the gaudy, sophisticated 1970 color with complex special effects 5th Dimension singer act performing hit songs from the 1969 Broadway HAIR musical show about 1960's hippies and their controversial dreams and hopes is dramatic.
The times really were " 'a changing."
Presentations of landmark song performances from famous Broadway musical stage shows of the 1950's and 1960's included in "Part Two" showed original Broadway stars singing then hit songs from My Fair Lady, Camelot, and Man Of La Mancha.
What times those were. What a nostalgia show "The Very Best Of Ed Sullivan, Part Two" (1991) hosted by Burt Reynolds was.
It's still available used from Amazon.Com for tiny money, and worth buying, enjoying, and thinking about.
The Ed Sullivan Show (1948 - 1971) presented America during a high point of its history. It shows why America was considered the greatest country in the world in the 1950's and 1960's all over the world. Unbeatable, noble, and always entertaining.
God Bless America!
-------------------------------------
Written on December 3, 2018 by Tex (David) Allen, movie scholar, historian, teacher, and writer. Also a SAG-AFTRA movie actor. For details about Tex Allen, visit IMDb.Com movies, TV, and celebrities website database, owned by Amazon.Com. This is the 123rd movie/ television show review Tex Allen has written for WWW.IMDb.Com.
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The nostalgia entertainment documentary was created 20 years after the final broadcast of the famous Sunday night Ed Sullivan Show (originally called "The Toast Of The Town" hosted by Ed Sullivan).
The program featured both celebrity entertainers and vaudeville/ circus type novelty entertainers and was presented in a simple vaudeville/ talent show type format with each "act" lasting about 3 minutes and introduced by host Ed Sullivan.
The show ran weekly on the CBS Television Network for a total of 23 years from 1948 to 1971. Both the 1950 and 1960 decades were totally included and chronicled during the 23 year run of the show.
The show was a portrait of show business in America (the USA) during those decades: its changing tastes, values, taltent, and preferences.
An earlier "Part One" show hostessed by Carol Burnett was presented, and was similar in format to the "Part Two" show hosted by Burt Reynolds.
The "Part One" show had wonderful highlights but the "Part Two" show was better by far in terms of overall presentation and entertainment value.
The "Part Two" 1991 segment of the two part "The Very Best Of Ed Sullivan Show" package included both celebrity talent, and also interesting and arguably amazing circus/ vaudeville talent and entertainers not credited in the packaging or end of show credit titles.
A partial list of celebrity entertainers in the "Part Two" show includes:
Burt Reynolds ... Himself - Host
The 5th Dimension
Julie Andrews
The Beatles
Clyde Beatty
Harry Belafonte
Jack Benny
Richard Burton
The Byrds
Nat 'King' Cole
Phyllis Diller
The Everly Brothers
Dame Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nuyev
Connie Francis
Frank Gorshin
Non-celebrity performers and entertainers recruited from travelling circuses and vaudeville type entertainment venues (kept alive by Las Vegas and other major gambling centers which later included Atlantic City, New Jersey) included knife throwers, animal acts, high wire trapeze acts, juggling acts, plate spinner acts, and grand opera aria singers (usually celebrities such as Beverly Sills), and classical ballet acts (usually celebrity ballet dancers including Jacques D'Amboise, Rudolf Nuryev, and Dame Margo Fonteyn).
Steve Allen stated during an interview about the Ed Sullivan Show that the show presented over 10,000 important show business acts to network television audiences over the 23 years it lasted.
The entire output of the show, opined Steve Allen, constituted a de-facto library of USA show business and major entertainment talent during the decades the show was presented between 1948 (when priimitive black and white television had just begun ............. the phenomenon of successful, advertising driven national television began immediately after the World War II (1941 - 45) years. The Ed Sullivan Show was an early beginner in the realm of national television shows, and by far the longest lasting of shows which started in the 1940's.
The contrast between the primitive black and white acts from the 1950's presented in the "Part Two" nostalgia 1991 show hosted by Burt Reynolds and the gaudy, sophisticated 1970 color with complex special effects 5th Dimension singer act performing hit songs from the 1969 Broadway HAIR musical show about 1960's hippies and their controversial dreams and hopes is dramatic.
The times really were " 'a changing."
Presentations of landmark song performances from famous Broadway musical stage shows of the 1950's and 1960's included in "Part Two" showed original Broadway stars singing then hit songs from My Fair Lady, Camelot, and Man Of La Mancha.
What times those were. What a nostalgia show "The Very Best Of Ed Sullivan, Part Two" (1991) hosted by Burt Reynolds was.
It's still available used from Amazon.Com for tiny money, and worth buying, enjoying, and thinking about.
The Ed Sullivan Show (1948 - 1971) presented America during a high point of its history. It shows why America was considered the greatest country in the world in the 1950's and 1960's all over the world. Unbeatable, noble, and always entertaining.
God Bless America!
-------------------------------------
Written on December 3, 2018 by Tex (David) Allen, movie scholar, historian, teacher, and writer. Also a SAG-AFTRA movie actor. For details about Tex Allen, visit IMDb.Com movies, TV, and celebrities website database, owned by Amazon.Com. This is the 123rd movie/ television show review Tex Allen has written for WWW.IMDb.Com.
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