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Van Cliburn
(Harvey
Lavan Cliburn, Jr.)(1934-2013)
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![]() ![]() Page's signature song, "The Tennessee Waltz," recorded in 1950, was one of the biggest-selling singles, Country or Pop, of the 20th century. ![]() |
Patty Andrews of the Andrews Sisters 1919-2013 - Patty Andrews was part of the World War ll entertainment scene as a member of the trio known for harmony, the Andrews Sisters. Her fame moved into the 50s and even later but this group was best known for the radio, and movie appearances during World War ll and afterwards. Patty was the youngest of the Andrews SistersPatty Andrews of the Andrews Sisters 1919-2013 - Patty Andrews was part of the World War ll entertainment scene as a member of the trio known for harmony, the Andrews Sisters. Her fame moved into the 50s and even later but this group was best known for the radio, and movie appearances during World War ll and afterwards. Patty was the youngest of the Andrews Sisters |
Dave Brubeck (1921-2012) His 1960's jazz reached across into mainstream music, making his pioneering of distant cords that normally musicians would not use together, combined with a very hip musical quartet made him a household name. |
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![]() Singer Andy Williams, best known for his rendition of Moon River, his Christmas TV specials and his long-running show in Branson, Missouri, died Tuesday, September 25 at the age of 84, following a year-long battle with bladder cancer.
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Roger Williams, the pianist who topped the Billboard pop chart in the 1950s and played for nine U.S. presidents during a long career, died Saturday. He was 87. Williams died at his home in Los Angeles of complications from pancreatic cancer. (Saturday, October 8, 2011) (song Autumn Leaves -ASCAP-Reissue) Jerry's tribute to Roger Williams: ![]() ![]() |
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Eddie Fisher: 1918- 2010
Eddie Fisher
was a teen idol. Before
Rock n' Roll and he had a
million-dollar contract with Coca
Cola which included his being on TV late
afternoon for
fifteen minutes a couple of times
a week. He was hot until Rock knocked
him out of
Tin Pan Alley and into the night
club world. He is best known for his
female problems. He married
pretty women, first
Debbie Reynolds, then left her
for Elizabeth Taylor who left him for
Richard Burton. Then he married
Connie Stevens, with whom he had
two more children, and had romances with
big-name stars such as
Marlene Dietrich,
Ann-Margret, Kim Novak,
Dinah Shore and Angie Dickinson.
He also married
Terry Richard and Betty Lin. He
had a daughter who is pretty famous as
well, Carrie Fisher. He passed away in
Berkeley Wednesday,
September 22,
2010.
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We have part of an old kinescope of a show he did in 1953, quality is poor because back in those they they literally filmed live shows off the cathode ray tube of the TV picture. |
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Friday, July
23, 2010 -
Daniel
Schorr,
who had a 60-year career as a journalist, 24
of those years with
CBS news, 25 years with
NPR radio and a brief stint at
CNN dies a few days after his last
broadcast on NPR where he was a regularly
featured commentator and guest. His
career in broadcasting became well known in
the early 50s when he was based in Moscow
for CBS news, later when he came to
Washington DC, he made the Nixon enemies
list and was at the forefront of countless
historical events as an on-the-scene witness
and reporter.
CLICK HERE
for his biography as read by Bostonred,
President Nixon talking about Schorr,
his recounting his surprise on
live TV when he was told to read the
enemies list for the first time on the air
as it was just handed to him and his name
appeared at number 17, then a discussion
with
Scott Simon on NPR's
weekend edition where he and Simon
held forth almost every weekend on various
subjects; then
Jerry Pippin joins the discussion
with tidbits and observations about Schorr,
Social media, the real media and how today's
news commentators are short on the news part
but heavy on the commentary.
CLICK HERE
to listen to
this archived show from blogtalk radio.
![]() CLICK HERE for Jerry's tribute to Daniel Schorr, "Role Models are Becoming a Rare Breed" |
Gary Coleman From Jan Pheneger,
Advertising & Promotion, The Jerry Pippin
Show:
I thought perhaps you would
like to see her. God Bless, and many
Condolences to the Gary Coleman Family..our
Prayers & thoughts are with you. Jan Pheneger |
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CLICK HERE for NPR's morning edition tribute to Michael Jackson (aired on June 26, 2009) |
Michael Jackson made music video history
with Billy Jean, a
favorite that seemed to cut thru
age and color barriers alike:
![]() ![]() CLICK HERE to view ![]() |
Michael
Jackson's Thriller.
Thriller was the
best-selling Album of all time..and
still sells very well.
![]() ![]() CLICK HERE for ![]() |
Bostonred, blogtalk show host did a show about Michael Jackson with Jerry as guest. CLICK HERE to listen. |
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McMahon died shortly after midnight at
Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center
surrounded by his wife, Pam, and other
family members, said his publicist,
Howard Bragman who would only say
McMahon was suffering from various serious
health issues in recent months.
Before Ed did a children's show in Philly, or maybe shortly after that, he started on his career of commercial spokesperson by sitting on the hood of a car and talking live in a studio about a local Ford Dealer, then he made the move to network television. CLICK HERE to view clips of Ed's first network television show, "Two for the Money" with Sam Levinson.
CLICK HERE for Chris Mathews Remembers Ed McMahon video link. |
![]() Frankie Laine, 1913-2007 - Frankie Laine was a success even though he had a rough start, in his 20s he was a marathon dancer which needless to say was not a great paying career, but he enjoyed it and probably would not have become a superstar selling 117 million records in the 50s if he had not had a chance meeting a small night club in Hollywood where Hoagy Carmichael saw him perform. This meeting resulted in Laine's getting a steady night club gig and a contract with Mercury records. Interestingly enough he was born to Sicilian parents in Chicago and his real name was Deveccio .. this unlikely beginning and his career as jazz singer in small night clubs seemed to be a stretch that one of his top selling records had nothing to do with Cowboys... however one of his biggest records ever was Mule Train.
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![]() ![]() Produced by Jane Swartley
Terri Gross has a very in-depth tribute to Frankie Laine on her
Fresh Air Public Radio Show from
National Public Radio. |
Jerry pays tribute to the career of Lou Rawls, a musician's musician and a man's man when it came to helping his fellow human beings, who passed away on January 6, 2006 at age 72. With a strong ethic honed in Gospel roots and developed on the West Coast to appeal to jazz and pop fans alike, Rawls had a special knack of doing the right songs at the right time. All music selections courtesy of Capital Records: You'll Never Find Someone to Love You (Ascap), Willow Weep For Me (Ascap), Lady Love (Ascap). Production Assistance for Lou Rawls music was "Grandpa's Goodies", AKA
Bruce, owner of the largest I-Pod collection of music in Northern California
and maybe the world. MP3 available shortly |
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Pryor appeared in many successful movies, but it was his stand-up comedy act, in which nothing was off-limits, including racism, that made him a controversial star. Pryor won Grammy Awards for his comedy albums. In 1972 he portrayed Billie Holiday's piano player in "Lady Sings the Blues," which was nominated for an Oscar. Other movies included "Uptown Saturday Night," "The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings," "Blue Collar," "Stir Crazy," "Superman III" and "Jo Jo Dancer, and Your Life Is Calling." |
![]() Eddie Albert, the Oscar-nominated actor whose homespun manner and varied talents made him a household name while starring as the befuddled city slicker-turned-farmer in the CBS hit series "Green Acres," has died. Albert died Thursday of pneumonia at his home in Pacific Palisades, Calif. He was 99. He achieved his greatest fame on "Green Acres" as Oliver Wendell Douglas, a New York lawyer who settles in a rural town with his glamorous wife, played by Eva Gabor, and finds himself perplexed by the antics of a host of eccentrics, including a pig named Arnold Ziffel. He also earned two Academy Award nominations as supporting actor for 1953's "Roman Holiday" and 1972's "The Heartbreak Kid." Although he appeared in more than 60 feature films and scores of TV shows, Albert was best known for his work on "Green Acres," which ran from 1965-71. Albert portrayed a fastidious Harvard lawyer who was passionate about farming, much to the displeasure of his high-maintenance, big-city wife. (Story by Duane Byrge, The Hollywood Reporter.) |
Note from Jerry: As I grew older, Eddie Albert became more of a hero. Hell, he made it almost to a hundred and had a great career after most folks have retired, including the TV show, Green Acres. Check out Green Acres - The Place To Be! for the not to be forgotten show theme music, reviews, images, fun facts, trivia, memorabilia, and contests. |
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![]() ![]() to see Jerry Pippin's tribute to Johnny. |
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Gene and his wife have written a Will Rogers cookbook. To order it, CLICK HERE. Related program: Clem McSpadden, a relative of Will Rogers and a well known political and cowboy figure in his own right, talks to Jerry about the death of Bodacious the Bull. CLICK HERE to listen. |
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![]() for Jerry Pippin's JFK Remembered. Interviews with listeners and experts on the JFK assassination. Photos and audio clips in Memory of JFK and his presidency. |
Jerry presents his favorite old time radio show, The Shadow. CLICK HERE to read and listen.
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John
Lennon and Paul McCartney planning a Beatles group revival in 1981?
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This one has Audio Samples:
torp.priv.no/woody.
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CLICK HERE for the movie review of Bridge Over the River Kwai. Bridge Over the River Kwai books, available from Amazon.com, Bantam paperback only $4.50. Then, Jerry plays, "I'm Going to Set Right Down and Write Myself A Letter," by Billy Williams. Billy passed away in Chicago in 1972. Comments from Tony Glynn on this segment: Liked
your use of the theme from Lean's Bridge on the River Kwai,
but do you know the significance of that tune? Perhaps many
Americans do not. It is called Colonel Bogey, and it is a perfectly
proper British military march. But - you know what army life is like
- there is a set of soldiers' words to the tune which are decidedly
indelicate. The British prisoners whistled it, with their minds on
the indelicate version, as an insult to their Japanese captors. Ever
since WW2, the British Far East Prisoner of War Association - now a
dwindled band, of course - has whistled it on their annual march to
the London Cenotaph to honor their comrades who did not return.
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