CTVA US Anthology - "Camera Three" (CBS) Season 20 (1974-75)

CTVA - The Classic TV Archive

US Anthology series (chronological order)US Anthology series (alphabetical order)  -  Sponsors
<Previous      "Camera Three"         Next>
 Season 20 (CBS)(1974-75)
Episode Guide compiled by The Classic TV Archive
with contributions by:  Rina Fox [Uploaded Feb 2018]
references:
TV Guide / Library of Congress (telnet://locis.loc.gov)
Internet Movie Database (https://us.imdb.com)
UCLA Film and Television Archive / Writers Guild of America (wga)

 

################# Camera Three ###############
############## season 20 1974-75 #############
##############################################

20.01 [848] Camera Three: The Films of Scott Bartlett [Part I]
08Sep1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Film buffs and students interested in the experimental, low-budget, short features created by inspired members of the independent film movement,
will want to tune in today, and next Sunday for a two-part study of the films of Scott Bartlett, three of which will course of be seen during the the programs.
As Camera Three begins its 20th season, it continues its imaginative-role as a showcase for new idea's and talents in all phases of-the arts and sciences.

20.02 [849] Camera Three: The Films of Scott Bartlett [Part II]
15Sep1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Part II. Film buffs with an eye for the experimental will want a glimpse of Scott Bartlett's mood pieces, particularly if they missed Part I last week.
This morning, his autobiographical film, "1970," part of the becomes a major program, with the former Mrs. Bartlett, Freude Bartlett, providing the commentary.
Other short films include "Moon" and "Medina".

20.03 [850] Camera Three: The Family - Scenes from British Working Class Life [Part I]
22Sep1974 [rerun 31Aug75]
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
First of a two-parter featuring excerpts from "The Family" a BBC cinema-verite study which aired in 12 segments in England.
Family Scenes from British Working-Class Life
For 14 weeks the Wilkinses, a working-class family from Reading, England, allowed a BBC crew to film their daily lives.
The result was a 1974 TV series, "The Family," which is excerpted in the first of two programs focusing on how the cinema-verite study was made.
Included are interviews with the documentary's producer Paul Watson, who explains why he chose the Wilkinses.
The second of two shows about "The Family," a study of English working-class life aired by the BBC. Included are highlights from the 12-part series
and interviews with the documentary's subjects, the Wilkinses.

20.03 [850] Camera Three: The Family - Scenes from British Working Class Life [Part II]
29Sep1974 [rerun 07Sep75]
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Part II with an illuminating visit from the producer and members of "The Family", Britain's version of Public television's "An American Family" series broadcast on TV last year.
All of them are extremely interesting people, and manage to get the point across that family unity is the most important factor in their lives, which means
that tolerance and understanding is at a premium.

20.04 [851] Camera Three: Modern Jazz Quartet/Juilliard String Quartet
06Oct1974 [rerun 27Oct79]
Produced and directed by Merrill Brockway
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
The famed Modern Jazz Quartet has rarely performed classical works, and the Julliard group, although it plays a great deal of contemporary music, has just
as rarely attempted pieces in the jazz idiom. On this "Camera Three" program, the two quartets join forces for one composition in each idiom
— "Sketch" by MJQ member John Lewis, and "Progression in Tempo," by Gunther Schuller.

On its own, the Modern Jazz Quartet — comprised of John Lewis, piano; Milt Jackson, vibraharp; Percy Heath, bass, and Connie Kay, drums — performs "Regret?"
and "Blues in A Minor" by Lewis.

The Juilliard String Quartet — made up of Robert Mann, violin; Earl Carlyss, violin
; Samuel Rhodes, viola, and Joel Krosnick, cello — plays the Andante from Mozart's "Quartet" (KV575) and the Scherzo from Mendelssohn's "Quartet in A Minor, Opus 44, No. 2."
An unorthodox blend---progressive jazz and chamber music---sparks this performance by the Modern Jazz Quartet and the Juilliard String Quartet.
The program features works composed for their collaboration by Gunther Schuller and John Lewis. Each group also performs in separate sets.
Contemporary jazz and classical musicians combine their styles in John Lewis' "Sketch" and Gunther Schuller's "Progression in Tempo".

*NOTE: Two outstanding quartets which represent the acme of their respective musical fields, the Modern Jazz Quartet and the Julliard String Quartet,
perform together for the first time on television.

20.05 [852] Camera Three: The Otrabanda Company
13Oct1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Here's another showcase for an experimental theater group. Called the Otrabanda Company, it performed in a circus tent pitched in towns
alongside the riverbanks of the Mississippi, making its way from town- to town on the river in a homemade raft.
Drama lovers will want to see this venturesome group performing their "River Raft Revue" on tour.

20.06 [853] Camera Three: Max Ernst
20Oct1974
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Rosamond Bernier
Synopsis:
Art critic Rosamond Bernier offers an illustrated profile of the world renowned painter, Max Ernst, a man in his 80s, who has made use of all manner
and kind of experimental and avant garde ideas in his long and highly creative life. Once again, the program becomes a showcase for the artist.

20.07 [854] Camera Three: A Video Event With Merce Cunningham and Dance Company [Part I]
27Oct1974 [rerun 03Aug75]
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Merce Cunningham
Synopsis:
Of Special interest to dance buffs and students of the dance, this two-part study of choreographer Merce Cunningham's creative approach to the dance
as a personal expression of identity as well as choreographed movement in space, is particularly welcome this morning.
In addition: to illustrating his ideas through his dancers, Mr. Cunningham interpolates his meaning through his own commentary.
"He has done a great deal for the acceptance of American dance around the World" critic Clive Barnes has written of choreographer Merce Cunningham,
in the first of a two-part program, Cunningham and his company are seen in performance.

20.08 [855] Camera Three: A Video Event With Merce Cunningham and Dance Company [Part II]
03Nov1974 [rerun 10Aug75]
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Merce Cunningham
Synopsis:
Part II. Whether or not you watched part one last week, dance students and dance buffs will want to tune in this morning for a glimpse of
choreographer Merce Cunningham's imaginative avant grade creations, performed by Cunningham and his talented group

20.09 [856] Camera Three: Henry Moore [Part I]
10Nov1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
First of a two-part study of the great English contemporary sculptor Henry Moore, whose art works brighten and enliven any room, garden or square they dominate,
is most viewing for any lover of modern art. Filmed on-location at his home in rural England, the vibrant 77-year-old sculptor is shown talking about his work,
his early life, his favorite artists and their influence on him.

20.10 [857] Camera Three: Henry Moore [Part II]
17Nov1974
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Rosamond Bernier
Synopsis:
Part II. Whether or not you tuned in last week, take this opportunity to meet 77-year-old sculptor Henry Moore, world famous artist, still at work as vigorously as ever,
in his spacious rural home outside London, whose grounds are marvelously endowed with his magnificent works of art. Unassuming genius that lie is,
Mr. Moore answers questions posed by art critic Rosamond Bernier with such simplicity, any viewer can be enriched with a deeper knowledge of sculpture, Henry Moore style.

20.11 [858] Camera Three: Three Greek Plays [Part I]
24Nov1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Theater buffs and students interested in avant garde experimentation will enjoy this two-part offering a glimpse of the latest work of
Ellen Stewart's La Mama Experimental Theater Club in New York.
This morning excerpts from Euripedes' "Medea" and Sophocles' "Electra" as conceived and directed by Andrei Sarban with music by Elizabeth Swados and spoken
in a combination of the original Greek and the Latin of Seneca offer an extraordinary evocation of their classic themes.

20.12 [859] Camera Three: Three Greek Plays [Part II]
01Dec1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Part II. "The Trojan'Women."
Enthusiastic fans of experimental theater, particularly those who enjoyed watching "Medea" and "Electra" last week, will want to tune in for
Andrei Serban's avant-garde approach to Euripides' tragedy, performed by members of Ellen Stewart's La Mama Expeiimental Theater Club in New York.
There's music for background composed by Elizabeth Swados, and an adaptation that uses the original Greek and the Latin of Seneca.

20.13 [860] Camera Three: Music of Black Composers
08Dec1974
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Faye Robinson
Paul Freeman conductor
Synopsis:
The CBS Chamber Orchestra under the baton of Paul Freeman perform works by two contemporary composers, George Walker and Toque Cordero and by
18th century French musician Joseph St. Georges in this program devoted to black composers.
George Walker concert pianist and music professor at Rutgers University is represented by "Lyric for MK";
Roque Cordero on the faculty of Illinois State University by "Eight Minatures" and St. Georges' opera "Ernestine" is offered in excerpts sung by soprano Faye Robinson.

20.14 [861] Camera Three: Brief Lives
15Dec1974
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Roy Dotrice
Synopsis:
Drama lovers get a special treat this morning as British actor, Roy Dotrice, performs extracts from his oneman show, which had a short but critically
acclaimed run on Broadway. Young Mr. Dotrice plays the doddering, old 17th century wit, gossip and author, John Aubrey, evoking that gentleman's last week on earth.

20.15 [862] Camera Three: Las Cantigas De Santa Maria
22Dec1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
This holiday show offers a rare concert by The Waverly Consort, a group of six musicians, singers and instrumentalists performing on antique instruments,
the medieval music and verse heard at the Spanish Court of King Alfonso 10th Again.

20.16 [863] Camera Three: The Yoshi Show
29Dec1974
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Yoshi, a Japanese-born actor-mime-musician whose training in the Noh drama of his ancestors is embellished by his work in avant-garde experimental
theater pursued by Peter Brook, best remembered in this country for his unconventional production of Shakespeare's "Midsummer Night's Dream".

20.17 [864] Camera Three: Morbidezza: The Dark Chopin
05Jan1975
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Garrick Ohlsson
Synopsis:
A piano recital by the young American virtuoso Garrick Ohlsson performing works by Chopin which display the famous composer's moodier and darker nature.
Selections included are Prelude No. 2 A Minor, OP. 28 and Scherzo no. 1 in B Minor.

20.18 [865] Camera Three: Hirshhorn: Man and Museum
12Jan1975 [rerun 17Aug75]
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Rosamond Bernier
Joseph H. Hirshhorn
Synopsis:
Art critic Rosamond Bernier is on hand to guide the art enthusiasts through the new Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden on the Mall in Washington, D.C.
In addition to offering a glimpse of Mr. Hirshhorn's bequest of art amounting to 4,500 paintings and 2,000 sculptures and including works by artists
ranging from Degas and Brancuzi to Giacometti, Calder and Miro, Miss Bernier takes time out to interview Joseph H. Hirshhorn himself on his Connecticut estate.

20.19 [866] Camera Three: The Manhattan Transfer
19Jan1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Camera Three introduces a quartet of singers accompanied by a quartet of instrumentalists whose style has been called, "art deco in sound". The music is
filled with rhythm and blues, love songs, funky jazz and gospel.

20.20 [867] Camera Three: The Olympics of Dance
26Jan1975 [rerun 24Aug75]
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Mikhail Baryshnikov
Synopsis:
Ballet performance by Russian dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov who recently defected to the West performs as a member of the American Ballet Theater.
Filmed excerpts of the 1966 Varna International Ballet competition known as "The Olympics of Dance" feature Baryshnikov then aged 18, the gold medal winner
that year in performance.

20.21 [868] Camera Three: D.W. Griffith: The Biograph Years [Part I]
02Feb1975
directed and produced by Merrill Brockway
Host: Ron Mottram.
Synopsis:
D.W. Griffith. Part 1, The Biograph years
In commemoration of the great American filmmaker, D.W. Griffith's 100th birthday last Jan. 22,
Camera Three offers a two-part study of his most productive years (1908-1913) at the Biograph Studios in New York City.
On hand to discuss and analyze the extraordinary effectiveness and creativity of the Griffith style, with photographs and film clips in illustration,
is Ron Mottram, director of the retrospective exhibit of Griffith's work prepared by the New York Museum of Modern Art.

20.22 [869] Camera Three: D.W. Griffith [Part II]
09Feb1975
directed and produced by Merrill Brockway
Host: Ron Mottram.
Guest: Lillian Gish.
Music, William Perry
Synopsis:
D.W. Griffith. Part 2, The feature film years
An episode of the cultural anthology series which focuses on several of Griffith’s feature films and includes excerpts from Judith of Bethulia,
The Birth of a nation, Intolerance, True Heart Susie and Way down East. Actress Lillian Gish recalls her work in Griffith’s films in an interview conducted by Ron Mottram.
Synopsis 2:
Ron Mottram director of the Griffith retrospective prepare for the Museum of Modern Art in New York City continues his commentary on the famed filmmaker's
developing style in the conclusion of the two-parter saluting D.W. Griffith on the occasion of his birth last January 22.
Lillian Gish one of the most celebrated of the Griffith stars, will be interviewed and excerpts of his films, including "Intolerance", "True Heart Susie" and "Way Down East" will be shown.

20.23 [870] Camera Three: Indians of North America
16Feb1975
Episode no. 10-75.
directed and produced by John MusilliHost James Macandrew
Synopsis:
A historic look at North American Indians thru the photographic images by Edward S. Curtis (1868-1952). This iconic insight of the seasoned journeymans
amazing pictures have told the story of the Native Indian in such a light of admiration and great spirit.

*NOTE: Title also referred to as "Edward Curtis, The Shadow Catcher".

20.24 [871] Camera Three: Michael Tippett: Composer for Our Times
23Feb1975
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Michael Tippett
Synopsis:
Sir Michael Tippett, a leading composer-conductor in Great Britain, discusses his life and work on a program which also includes excerpts from performances
of his third symphony, his oratorio "A Child for Our Time," and his operas "The Mid Summer Marriage" and "The Knot Garden".

20.25 [872] Camera Three: Bach by Daniel Heifetz
02Mar1975
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Daniel Heifetz
Synopsis:
Award-winning young American violinist, Daniel Heifetz, is offered this opportunity to acquaint series followers with the quality of his talent,
performing Bach's "Chaconne, Paganini's "Caprice No. 9," and Eugene Ysaye's "Sonata No. 3."

20.26 [873] Camera Three: Time Passed Summer
09Mar1975 [rerun 07Aug77]
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
The Pennsylvania Ballet is given showcase airtime to perform a ballet danced to a montage of songs by Tchaikovsky, which seeks to evoke a turn-of-the-century
mood of Russia's gentlefolk. Ballet buffs should take time out for this new dance ensemble, whose artistic director, Benjamin Harkarvy choreographed "Time Passed Summer."

20.27 [874] Camera Three: Richard Lester [Part I]
16Mar1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
The career of film director Richard Lester is featured in a two-part program, begins with an interview of Lester, who first came to international attention with his movie,
"A Hard Day's Night" starring The Beatles. Clips from a number of his films will also be shown, including an upcoming sequel to his recent remake of
"The Three Musketeers," starring Oliver Reed, Richard Chamberlain, Frank Finlay and Michael York, called "Four Musketeers."

20.28 [875] Camera Three: Richard Lester [Part II]
23Mar1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Film director Richard Lester is again the central figure of this two-part examination of his films and their style. Whether or not you tuned in last week for Part I,
film buffs and movie-goers won't want to miss this articulate, vibrant personality.

[--] Camera Three:
30Mar1975
pre-empted for Easter Sunday Service


20.29 [876] Camera Three: Boulez Times Three [Part I]
06Apr1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
This three-part series on Pierre Boulez, music director of the New York Philharmonic, begins with a segment called "Management and Contemporary Music,"
a critical subject as well as a controversial one, which the following panel will discuss: Mr. Boulez; Amyas Ames, chairman of the New York Philharmonic;
David Reiser, honorary chairman of the The New York Philharmonic; and Carlos Moseley, president of the New York Philharmonic.
*Title sometimes listed as Boulez X 3.

20.30 [877] Camera Three: Boulez Times Three [Part II]
13Apr1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Pierre Boulez, Music Director of the New York Philharmonic." Part II.
"Musicians and Contemporary Music." Pierre Boulez, known to be an ardent exponent of modern music, conducts a chamber Orchestra in Varese's "Ionination" composed in 1933;
and Peter Lieberson's "Concerto for Violincello with Accompanying Trios" composed in 1974;
in Part II of this three-party study of the man. Stay tuned for a panel discussion on the new music with six members of the New York Philharmonic.

20.31 [878] Camera Three: Boulez Times Three [Part III]
20Apr1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
The three - part series on the music director of the New York Philharmonic, Pierre Boulez, conies to a close with a performance and a discussion on the
"Music Director and Contemporary Music." John Deak will play composer Jacob Druckman's "Valentine," a solo for double bass,
and Boulez will conduct his own composition, "Eclat," after which Boulez, Druckman and Arthur Weisberg, conductor of the Contemporary Chamber Ensemble,
talk about the problems involved in conducting contemporary music.

20.32 [879] Camera Three: He That Plays the King
27Apr1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Members of the Royal Shakespeare Company are presented in scenes from "He That Plays the King." Presentation is derived from the company's evening-long program
performed recently at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York City.

20.33 [880] Camera Three: Zen and I
04May1975 [rerun 08Aug76]
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
One day in the life of a Zen Buddhist priest is captured in this profile of Tachibana Taiki, abbot of the Imperial Daitokuji Temple in Kyoto, Japan.
Among the topics the priest discusses is what he sees as American misconceptions of Zen.

20.34 [881] Camera Three: Objective Truth - Objective Pictures
11May1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
The title refers to the photographic essay created by W. Eugene Smith, the internationally known photographer and his wife Aileen, as a result of their
visit to the Japanese seaport of Minamata, back in 1971. Their interest was aroused by the fact that hundreds of people in the city were poisoned after
having eaten fish caught in the local waters. Many of the photographs they took, now on display in a gallery in New York City, will be seen and discussed this morning,
by Mr. and Mrs. Smith, as well as writer-photographer Bill Pierce.

20.35 [882] Camera Three: The Magic of Old Buddhism: Borobudur, Indonesia
18May1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Antiquity seems to be the key this Sunday morning on CBS, what with music of the Middle Ages mentioned above, and this visit to a shrine that's 1,000 years-old,
and a celebrated part of ancient Javanese culture and religion. Jan Fontein, curator of the Department of Asiatic Art of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston,
offers additional commentary on the place this shrine plays in contemporary Indonesian life.

20.36 [883] Camera Three: Anais Nin Observed
25May1975
directed and produced by Merrill Brockway
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Anais Nin
Henry Miller
Synopsis:
This program is a portion of a longer film documentary by Robert Snyder about Nin and Miller, two eminent writers of the literary renaissance that started
after World War One. Mr. Miller’s reputation as a wholly original American writer has been secure for a generation through such works as "Tropic of Capricorn"
and "Colossus of Maroussi". Miss Nin was well-known to a mainly European avant-garde audience through her private life, her short stories and novels until
the publication of her diaries, which she had kept from age 11. She was then taken up by a new generation of mainly younger readers, and was much in demand as a lecturer.
Something of a cult figure, Nin seemed to provide a needed synthesis of feminist and aesthetic sensibilities.
Film was shot at the home of Miss Nin in California.

20.37 [884] Camera Three: Film Reality and Film Fantasy
01Jun1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Film buffs and students of filmmaking win want to tune in for this illustrated essay on special effects techniques, their uses and intentions in the making of
feature films and commercials. On the one hand, we're treated to the kind of camera techniques that aim to achieve a vision of "screen reality."
On the other hand, there's the avant-garde approach to image-making techniques bent on inspiring fantasy and illusion.

20.38 [885] Camera Three: The Film Art of John Whitney Sr.
08Jun1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Another treat for the film buff, particularly those interested in new and experimental techniques and ideas. John Whitney Sr.'s films are computer-generated.
offering images which can be seen on video equipment or film projection. Tune in for a demonstration by Whitney, filmed in his studio in Pacific Palisades, Calif.,
of the equipment he has invented himself for the process.

20.39 [886] Camera Three: Tokyo Love Letter
15Jun1975
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Faubion Bowers
Synopsis:
A filmed essay of Japanese life and personalities as Faubion Bowers a well known authority on Asia, took a film crew to Japan, a country he has known intimately
for more than 35 years. In a series of interviews (in Japanese with voice-over translations), Bowers talks with some of Japan's most celebrated personalities:
painter Kumagai Morikazu, Terajima Junko, a leading movie and television actress and Nakamura Kankuro IX already at age 19 a Kabuki actor of unprecedented popularity.
In order to give a cross-section of present day Japanese thought and attainment, Bowers talks with young intellectuals who brought up during the American occupation of Japan,
have reassessed their feelings toward this country, and reminisces with General Arisue Seizo whom he first met in 1945 as a Japanese interpreter for the U.S. Army.
Bowers also visits the Musashino Music University, where Western classical music is taught and takes a backstage look at a Tokyo television studio production.

20.40 [887] Camera Three: The Story of Pygmalion
22Jun1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
The events surrounding the performance of George Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion" during its London debut in 1914 are described by two participants in the Shaw Festival
in Niagara Falls, Ontario.
Anyone who has an interest in the theater, and has enjoyed George Bernard Shaw's fascinating play, "Pygmalion," in any of its guises including the stage and film version
of the play itself, as well as the Lerner-Loewe musical version "My Fair Lady," will be intrigued with this half-hour history of its first performances in London back in April ot 1914.

20.41 [888] Camera Three: Concerning G.K. Chesterton
29Jun1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
Last week, George Bernard Shaw and his first London production of "Pygmalian" took over the show. This week, it's G.K. Chesterton's turn to be memorialized by Tony van Bridge.
Chesterton, a contemporary of Shaw, wrote prose, poetry, journalistic works and criticism, from which Mr. van Bridge evokes the man's spirit and wit.

20.42 [889] Camera Three: M.F.K. Fisher
06Jul1975
directed and produced by John Musilli
written by Stephan Chodorov.
Host James Macandrew
cast:
M.F.K. Fisher (writer and expert on food and cooking).
Synopsis:
Featured is M.F.K. Fisher, a native Californian who has written cookbooks that contain views on life and love, as well as recipes.
Synopsis 2:
A monologue, with illustrations from her own photo archives, about life and work, by M.F.K. Fisher, who has for a generation written about her life with a special
perspective on food. She talks in the house in Sonoma, CA,m where she has lived for many years.

20.43 [890] Camera Three: Shakespeare for Our Day [Part I]
13Jul1975
Host James Macandrew
cast:
Margaret Croyden
Synopsis:
Theater goers and students of the theater will want to tune in for a discussion about Shakespeare and his plays by an Elizabethan scholar, Prof. Samuel Schoenbaum
of Northwestern University; Bernard Beckerman, Dean of the School of Arts at Columbia University and author-critic Margaret Croyden.

20.44 [891] Camera Three: Shakespeare for Our Day [Part II]
20Jul1975
Host James Macandrew
cast:
John Houseman
Margaret Croyden
Synopsis:
Oscar-winning actor John Houseman, current director of the drama department of the Julliard School in New York City as well as artistic director of the
City Center Acting Company, joins author-critic Margaret Croyden; Prof Samuel Schoenbaum of Northwestern University
and Bernard Beckerman, Dean of the School of Arts at Columbia University, in the continued discussion about Shakespeare and his plays.

20.45 [892] Camera Three: The Limits of Psychiatry
27Jul1975
Host James Macandrew
Synopsis:
The definition and treatment of mental illness are at issue in a debate between psychiatrist-author Thomas Szasz ("Ideology and Insanity")
and Gerald Klerman professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

[--] Camera Three: A Video Event With Merce Cunningham and Dance Company [Part I]
03Aug1975 [repeat from 27Oct74]

[--] Camera Three: A Video Event With Merce Cunningham and Dance Company [Part II]
10Aug1975 [repeat from 03Nov74]

[--] Camera Three: Hirshhorn: Man and Museum
17Aug1975 [repeat from 12Jan75]

[--] Camera Three: The Olympics of Dance
24Aug1975 [repeat from 26Jan75]

[--] Camera Three: The Family - Scenes from British Working Class Life [Part I]
31Aug1975 [repeat from 22Sep74]

[--] Camera Three: The Family - Scenes from British Working Class Life [Part II]
07Sep1975 [repeat from 29Sep74]

################# Camera Three ###############
############### end of season 20 #############
##############################################

 Have you any comments, corrections, episode titles, air dates, production numbers, directors, writers, story/synopsis, guest stars, cast lists, etc?
Have you any old videos, or tv guides? Dust them off and let us know if you have any information on this series or any other tv series from the
Golden Age of TV, which is missing from any episode guides on the web. Perhaps a certain episode of a particular series coincided with a key
moment in your life, or in world events - and or has left a vivid memory of when it was shown. Let us know. Would you like to see any other
tv series guides on this site? If so please e-mail The Classic TV Archive - see Feedback below.
This guide may be distributed and copied freely, in its entirety, for personal use. All original author and copyright information must
remain intact. Any sales or other uses of this document are expressly forbidden, without the specific consent of the author(s).
Copyright © The Classic TV Archive. All rights reserved.


Return to The Classic TV Archive Home Page
 
Feedback 
-  Anthology Forum