What a week for new releases it is! Best known for his work on Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, director Robert Aldrich takes the spotlight in this week’s new releases, with two of his other classics now hitting home video….
Read more →Lucille Ball
Check Out These TV Treasures That Are Now On Sale
Continuing the television theme from this week’s poll, here’s a rundown of some classic television shows that are currently on sale. These TV treasures offer up “the top from the tube for every generation.” Take a look: I Love Lucy:…
Read more →Lucy and Desi Encounter Infinite Laughs and “Too Many Girls”
In the 1940 musical comedy Too Many Girls, carefree college freshman Connie Casey (Lucille Ball) didn’t have the complete trust of her wealthy dad, so he put four of the campus jocks (Desi Arnaz, Richard Carlson, Eddie Bracken, Hal LeRoy)…
Read more →Great Sitcom Moments: Lucy and Ethel Wrap Chocolates On “I Love Lucy”
I Love Lucy began it’s second season on September 15, 1952 with “Job Switching,” an episode that saw Lucy and Ethel taking work in a candy factory…with hilarious results. Above you see the iconic assembly line scene that many feel…
Read more →Open Thread: Tell Us About Your Run In With A Celebrity!
We tend to put celebrities on a pedestal, but it’s easy to forget that they are people with the same hopes, dreams, and failings as the rest of us (albeit with a lot more wealth and fame). Sometimes in life…
Read more →Cinema Desilu
While they’ll always be remembered as the Ricardos on TV’s I Love Lucy, stars Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz also had big-screen success before, during and after their marriage. MovieFanFare looks at the duo’s work, focusing on their ’50s films The Long, Long Trailer and Forever Darling.
Read more →TV Classics: The Lucy Show
The Lucy Show: USA 1962-68, six seasons, 156 episodes 30 minutes each, CBS, black & white (first season) and color (seasons 2 through 6). Narrated by: Roy Rowan, Cast: Lucille Ball, Vivian Vance, Gale Gordon, Mary Jane Croft, Candy Moore,…
Read more →Lucille Ball: One Hundred and One Years of Fun
Lucille Ball: Her prodigious gift for physical farce was never really maximized during her years in Old Hollywood, and it would take the young television medium to elevate this indomitable onetime showgirl to her well-earned position as an American icon….
Read more →Two Smart People (1946): Movie Review
Two Smart People could just as easily have been titled Three Smart People. It’s a “road trip” film featuring a pair of con artists, Ace and Ricki (John Hodiak and Lucille Ball), as well as a genial police detective, Bob (Lloyd…
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