Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. The show was known as either Ford Startime—TV's Finest Hour or Lincoln–Mercury Startime, depending on which division of the Ford Motor Company was presenting commercials within that show. The contents varied from week to week – dramas, musical comedies, and variety shows were all presented.

  2. Startime: With Ethel Merman, Dean Martin, William Hickey, Alice Backes. The Ford Motor Company sponsored this hour-long program which rotated between variety shows, dramatic productions, and musical comedies.

    • (230)
    • 1959-10-06
    • Comedy, Drama, Musical
    • 60
  3. Ford Startime. ) " The Turn of the Screw " was an American television movie broadcast by NBC on October 20, 1959, as the third episode of the television series, Ford Startime. It was written by James Costigan as an adaptation of Henry James ' novella of the same name. John Frankenheimer was the director and producer.

  4. The Turn of the Screw: Directed by John Frankenheimer. With Ingrid Bergman, Isobel Elsom, Laurinda Barrett, Hayward Morse. A governess put in charge of two young children begins to see the ghost of her dead predecessor.

    • (104)
    • Comedy, Drama, Musical
    • John Frankenheimer
    • 1959-10-20
  5. The Jazz Singer (. Ford Startime. ) " The Jazz Singer " is a videotaped adaptation, starring Jerry Lewis, of Samson Raphaelson 's 1925 play of the same title. It was broadcast on October 13, 1959, as the second episode of the American television anthology series Ford Startime on NBC. [1]

  6. This is a TV version (Broadcast Live) of the screen play, Beware My Lovely, which starred Ida Lupino and Robert RyanA psychopath takes a job as a handyman at...

    • 49 min
    • 14.5K
    • Addie
  7. People also ask

  8. Musical salute to the post-World War II era of big bands and vocalists, when many former band vocalists became singing stars and the swing bands began to play for audiences of listeners instead of dancers. Sequel to the 2/9/60 Ford Startime episode, ""The Swingin' Years,"" which covered the big swing bands of the Thirties.