Videokarma.org TV - Video - Vintage Television & Radio Forums

Videokarma.org TV - Video - Vintage Television & Radio Forums (http://www.videokarma.org/index.php)
-   Early Color Television (http://www.videokarma.org/forumdisplay.php?f=36)
-   -   Dinah Shore Color (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=265417)

iong 10-08-2015 05:45 PM

Dinah Shore Color
 
Can't believe it. Jewish Life TV has Dinah Shore in Living color looks like RCA TV Tape! Another show at 10:00 pm.

oldtvman 10-08-2015 06:12 PM

You can pull some of those shows off You tube also.

Phil Nelson 10-08-2015 08:05 PM

More on old color Dinah Shore shows on VHS & DVD:

http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=256599

Phil Nelson
Phil's Old Radios
http://antiqueradio.org/index.html

Dave A 10-08-2015 10:01 PM

Watching the JLTV show. Great that they got the all the rights for all of the show. You cannot just slap this stuff up anymore on Youtube. Gotta pay someone. Not on my Comcast tier but the JLTV live stream will do with my laptop to my Sony XBR via HDMI. Gotta figure out streaming recording.

A show from 1961 with a "See The USA In Your Chevrolet" singing number at the end. Great guests. Jackie and Roy were jazz singers for 50 years. Dick Van Dyke singing and dancing. Laurence Harvey doing Shakespere. A three camera show with amazing matching of color. George Schlatter and Tony Charmoli producing. Charmoli also doing the choreography. Only one camera had a sort of overdrive on the left side. A roundie would have covered all of it. And a few razor splices in the show.

Go JLTV...and I am Lutheran.

sampson159 10-08-2015 10:27 PM

yes,go jewish life tv!i used to watch soupy sales but direct tv stopped carrying jltv.jack benny was on too.i miss jltv

Electronic M 10-08-2015 10:55 PM

Ain't DianaShore extinct?

David Roper 10-18-2015 07:07 PM

Badump tss!

Sandy G 10-18-2015 07:21 PM

Dinah was Jewish, rather odd for a little girl in Tennessee back then.

old_tv_nut 10-19-2015 08:42 AM

To a Chicago boy's ears, her touch of a Southern accent was like pure honey.

Sandy G 10-19-2015 09:06 AM

Hers was perhaps a BIT on the "Contrived" side... One of US can always tell when someone is "Puttin' on "Airs" w/the Southern drawl. Subtle, but its there. Hers was/is a LOT better than most, though.. We CAN "Turn it Up or Down"... When I went up to Cape Cod to meet my future wife's family, I cranked mine up to "11" or "12"... Dropped a LOT of "Yes, Ma'ams", & "No, Ma'ams", too. Had 'em eatin' outta my hand... Was SCARED to death of 'em, initially, but they were/are LOVELY people. I think even my paternal granny, who was a REAL "Jawja Cracker", would have approved... (grin)

dieseljeep 10-19-2015 09:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sandy G (Post 3146779)
Dinah was Jewish, rather odd for a little girl in Tennessee back then.

Her parents probably owned a clothing or dry-goods store. OY! :D

dieseljeep 10-19-2015 09:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Electronic M (Post 3145981)
Ain't DianaShore extinct?

We always called her "Dinahsore".

Sandy G 10-19-2015 09:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dieseljeep (Post 3146804)
Her parents probably owned a clothing or dry-goods store. OY! :D

Believe it or not, I THINK you are correct...

WA3WLJ 10-19-2015 06:43 PM

Her Father
 
Her father would often take her to his store where she would perform impromptu songs for the customers. In 1924, the Shore family moved to McMinnville, Tennessee, where her father had opened a department store. By her fifth-grade year the family had moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where she completed elementary school

earlyfilm 10-20-2015 01:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sandy G (Post 3146803)
Hers was perhaps a BIT on the "Contrived" side... One of US can always tell when someone is "Puttin' on "Airs" w/the Southern drawl. Subtle, but its there. Hers was/is a LOT better than most, though.. ... (grin)

Speaking as a former West Tennessee native, if you listen to Dinah's recordings from the 1940's and 50's, her accent was a blend of McMinnville-rural with Nashville-educated and it worked! By the time of her TV shows, with great effort, she had lost that speech "problem", but then found it was good business to add a bit of southern drawl back in.

In Tennessee, before television, one could travel a few miles and the accent was completely different.

When I moved to Georgia in 1959, I had no trouble understanding the people of Atlanta, but once you were ten miles away from the city, I needed a translator!

James


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:35 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©Copyright 2012 VideoKarma.org, All rights reserved.