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- The saga of high fashion glamour, honor, romance, passion, and most importantly, family.
- A poor family make the best of things in the Chicago housing projects.
- Stanley and Helen Roper sold their apartment complex and moved into a new one. Their characteristic quirks are intact as they deal with new neighbors and frequent visits from Helen's sister.
- Variety show hosted by singing group The Hudson Brothers.
- Follow the political struggles for power and personal machinations between two conflicting families, the wealthy Cleggs and the middle-class McCandlesses.
- Celebrities & their spouses, playing for sections of the studio audience, try to match answers to questions about their personal lives.
- Hugh Hefner hosts a party at his home with celebrity guests.
- A variety show with comedy skits and musical numbers, performed by a regular cast and special guests.
- Dinah's show premiered 9 September 1974 and continued through to 4 September 1981. She started out the 70's with Dinah's Place which usually featured one guest and was more of a home oriented show about cooking, crafts and occasionally music. This format lasted until May of 1974. When the show came back in October of 1974 the format had changed drastically to a variety talk show which was called Dinah. and went on until 1981. This show was also known as "Dinah and Friends" during the summer of 1976.
- Primary focus on the multi-talented Kaye - singing and dancing his way through comedy skits and monologues - assisted by semi-regular guests, singers, dancers and orchestra.
- Two contestants, each with a celebrity partner, must guess words from their partners' clues; then the roles are reversed. Winners face the pyramid.
- Nineteen-seventies' era comedy/variety television show, starring Tony Orlando (and Dawn).
- Set in ancient Bagdad the intersection of commoners and kings occurs. A princess falls in live with a beggar, her father the beggar's daughter. Songs include "Stranger in Paradise," " Night of My Nights, " and "Rhymes Have I."
- A revival of the classic game show featuring host Monty Hall. In this show, contestants are given unusal tasks to complete within a limited amount of time. Rather than requiring brain power of muscle power, the assignments frequently rewarded physical dexterity, lack of inhibitions and plain old luck. Contestants who succeeded in beating the clock won cash and prizes, and became eligible for the bonus rounds.
- An hour long variety show hosted by Jim, and his Gomer Pyle co-stars.
- Art designer Susan Winslow learns she's pregnant, and not wanting to marry the father estranges her from her elitist parents, Evelyn and Warren. Luckily, she has neighbor Harold, a gruff author, to lean on as a single mother.
- This acclaimed television drama from 1974 tells the story of Edith Wilson, second wife of President Woodrow Wilson. It deals specifically with how after his severe stroke in 1919, she played an influential role in his administration. For the remainder of his presidency, she managed his staff and determined which communication and matters of state were important enough to bring to her husband's attention. Thus she came to be known as "the first woman president."
- Irma Peterson was the typical dumb blonde secretary living with a roommate, Jane Stacy, in a run-down Manhattan apartment run by Mrs. O'Reilly. A neighbor was nutty Professor Kropotkin. Jane's boss and boyfriend was millionaire Richard Rhinelander III. During the second season, Jane Stacy moved to Panama and Kay Foster moved in with Irma; Irma's 7-year-old nephew Bobby also moved in. Irma also acquired a new boyfriend, Joe Vance, and a new neighbor, Mr. Corday, an actor.
- Comedy routines, featuring Johnny Carson and guests, and singing were the theme of this program.
- Years before "The Larry Sanders Show" came this Canadian-made sitcom taking place behind the scenes of the fictional "David Steinberg Show," starring real-life comic David Steinberg. Like the later Garry Shandling series, the show alternates between backstage antics and big-name guest stars on stage. The series is best remembered for co-starring many later comic powerhouses such as John Candy, Martin Short and Dave Thomas, years before they did "SCTV."
- Ann-Margret starts her journey to Hollywood from the countryside, traversing the Freeway until she gets to Hollywood. The first segment is titled "The Game Called Hollywood" which follows a young star-to-be (Ann-Margret) from nobody to star using a giant board game metaphor. Dean Martin joins Ann-Margret for a song medley sequence that is part country and part pop music. A comedy sequence has Larry Storch reporting on the two sides of the marriage of Dean Martin and Ann-Margret. Lucille Ball plays both herself and an autograph hound in a show business song and dance sequence. The finale finds Ann-Margret doing an on-location tribute to the USO with the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band.
- A program featuring original comedy skits written as a tribute to Stan Laurel.
- At the height of his KOJAK TV series fame, Savalas stars in this variety special that was sponsored by Kraft Foods and shown without commercial interruption - Barbara Eden, Cloris Leachman and others appear and join in the singing and dancing and mugging. Savalas had even recorded an album also titled "Who Loves Ya Baby?".
- A young teenage girl becomes jealous of her widowed father when he starts to woo a beautician.
- This lightwight summer series (which apparently very few people remember) was a comeback of sorts for Dave Garroway. Over the last few years before this series aired, he had discovered most of the cast at various venues across the United States (e.g. nightclubs, dinner theaters). The series was supposed to be the launching pad for the regulars listed below, but very few went on to stardom and if they did they were in forgettable roles. Although this was primarily a musical show, there were also comedy sketches, with comedy troupe The Good Humor Company as regulars. This family-friendly show added the perfect touch to a warm summer's night back in 1971. Sadly, it hasn't been seen since it left the air on September 6 of that year. Maybe a good idea for a TV retrospective airing?
- Brings Sid Caesar back to television and has parodies including a 25 second bit on The Exorcist.
- Dean Martin and his famous guests roast comedian and actor Don Rickles
- Unsold pilot for game show.
- Robert Young hosts a series of sketches poking fun at the American family.
- Don Knotts hosts his first music/comedy special.
- The Show had 15 stars caught on film for the videotaped show. 3 Contestants competed to the 1st to name the subject (topic) what they discussing. Correct Answers for the 1st part is worth $150, the 2nd part-$100 and the 3rd part-$50 before it ended. The 1st to raise $250 wins and he/she play a bonus clip name round and that will win up to $2000 and the champion will be played again faced 2 challengers.
- An over-the-hill heavyweight boxing champion who suffers from the ravages of years of head trauma is exploited by his manager, despite the efforts of a compassionate young woman who tries to help him recover his self-respect.
- Sammy Hogarth, a vaudeville comedian who now has his own TV show, is a ruthless egomaniac who demands instant obedience from his staff and heaps abuse on those in lesser positions than his. His most vituperative behavior, however, is reserved for his weak-willed brother, Lester, whom Sammy has hired as his assistant but whom he really uses as his whipping boy.
- An alcoholic falls in love with and gets married to a young woman, whom he systematically addicts to booze so they can share his "passion" together.
- An American is hired to work for a displaced persons camp in Italy. He falls in love with a Czechoslovakian refugee, but he is confronted with obstacles when he decides to marry and bring his bride back to the United States.
- Americans try to cope with the aftermath of a nuclear catastrophe.
- Ernie Pandish has tried to be a writer for years and has never made much money out of it. But now he seems likely to hit the big-time.
- A wealthy mill owner finances the education of a clever, but poor, young man.
- Just after World War Two ends, an American woman takes in a Polish war orphan boy, a concentration camp survivor. But conflict arises when her husband, a returning Air Force bomber pilot,hates the boy and his psychological baggage.
- A weakling sheriff is unable to prevent a lynching. Can he redeem himself by preventing a second one?
- Much of the action takes place in the mind and memory of Ned, a father who is struggling to cope with a spiritual crisis. He has placed his only son, who is retarded, in an institution and it is a hard decision to live with. Tortured by doubt, Ned searches desperately in his past, reliving and twisting memories, hoping to sift out solace and some answers from the heritage handed down by his father and his mother.