Word: showing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...MARGRET SHOW (CBS, 9-10 p.m.). The shapely Swedish actress's first television special. Guests: Bob Hope, Jack Benny and Danny Thomas...
AMONG the crowds of holiday - visitors to the Exhibition Center in the TIME & LIFE Building these days, many people will find the show familiar. By now, it is almost as much a part of the season in Manhattan as the great tree that is decorated every December around the corner in Rockefeller Plaza. Year after year, people come back to see the Nativity as portrayed by Renaissance masters-25 color photographs of delicate accuracy, blown up to the size of the originals. Carols from the 15th to the 18th century provide background music, and visitors can also listen...
...Christmas Show was first opened to the public in 1960. It has been brought back every year except one: in 1967 it was replaced by a collection of papier-mache animals. The complaints from longtime fans were so numerous that there are no plans to change the exhibit again...
...voyeur, it is sexier to imagine plays with nudes than to actually see them. Sweet Eros is no exception to this rule, even though the naked girl (Sally Kirkland) in this off-Broadway one-acter by Terrence Mc-Nally is on view for almost an hour. The skin show is more abstract than erotic, and terribly sedate. The girl is bound to a chair and gagged most of the time, and initially clothed. Possibly the most exciting scene in this distinctly lethargic drama is the one in which she is undressed by her captor, a soft-spoken psychopath (Robert Drivas...
...Breakfast at Tiffany's. He always hated the movie version ("a mawkish valentine to Audrey Hepburn") and predicts that a TV spinoff, starring Stefanie Powers (The Girl From U.N.C.L.E.) will be even more "jerky." The fact that highly seasoned producing and writing talent is at work on the show fails to moderate Capote's opinion. He insists that he will not stand for the TV version "if they give me all the money in Christendom." Since Paramount already paid for the book's movie rights, and interprets this to include TV rights as well, Capote may well...