22 one-hour programs giving a truly balanced and entertaining perspective of the most exciting, topical and human interest events of 1970 to 1991. There's something for everybody! The politics, fashions, music, stars, personalities, conflicts and the disasters which touched all our lives.
1. 1970
Troops shoot students at Kent State. First 'Jumbo' lands at Heathrow. Edward Heath...
Songs Include: For Once in My Life, Please Be Kind, My Way, Film Clip Medley (including song highlights of the following): I Couldn't Sleep a Wink Last Night/You're Sensational/All the Way, The Tender Trap, Little Green Apples, Out Beyond the Window, A Man Alone, Didn't We, Forget to Remember, Fly Me to the Moon, Street of Dreams, Love's Been Good To Me, Goin' Out of My Head, M...
Songs Include: Hello Young Lovers, Baubles Bangles and Beads, Cycles, [It's the] Music That Makes Me Dance (Diahann), Where Am I Going (Diahann); Medley (Frank & Diahann): Diane/Deep River/Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child/Lonesome Road/Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen/Amen, Medley: Glad to Be Unhappy/Here's That Rainy Day/It Never Entered My Mind/Gone with the Wind, I...
Hermes Pan began choreographing Hollywood musicals in 1933, when his long-standing collaboration with Fred Astaire began. For over three decades he was the man who made the stars dance - Ginger Rogers, Betty Grable, Rita Hayworth, Cyd Charisse, Shirley MacLaine and many others. Assimilating elements from the multitude of cultures that co-existed around him, Pan created a style ...
Vintage black and white footage is masterfully set in between colour commentary and interviews from Nancy, Tina and Frank Sinatra Jr. It is a wonderfully narrated portrayal of the man known as The Voice. The music is recognizable even before Frank starts to sing and he seems to bare his soul when he sings One For My Baby to a bartender in the most unforgettable way.
Taking a break from a recording session, Frank Sinatra comes across a group of ten boys out to lynch an eleventh. He finally gets it out of them that the lynching is because they don't like his "religion" (he's Jewish). Frank tries to impress upon the boys that such attitude is the way the Nazis think. Regardless of religion, they all are Americans, whose families not only h...
A behind-the-scenes look at how Frank Sinatra and his Rat Pack made a movie, did two shows a night, got a president elected and made the city of Las Vegas world famous while never letting the party stop.
SINATRA: All or Nothing at All is an up-close and personal examination of the life, music and career of the legendary entertainer. Told in his own words from hours of archived interviews, along with commentary from those closest to him, the documentary weaves the music and images from Sinatra's life together with rarely seen footage of Sinatra's famous 1971 "Retirement Concert"...
Returning from retirement, Frank Sinatra gives a concert that includes both old standards like "I Get a Kick Out of You" as well as newer fare such as "Send in the Clowns". Much of the program consists of Sinatra solo, but he is reunited with former MGM co-star Gene Kelly during one charming segment.