Various guest hosts present a musical variety show.Various guest hosts present a musical variety show.Various guest hosts present a musical variety show.
- Won 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 win & 9 nominations total
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Did you know
- TriviaAfter being cancelled by ABC in the spring of 1970, the show was never re-ran because of the musician's union contract fees, as well as the entertainer/actor rerun fees. The program was just too expensive for any network or for any independent marketing format.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Hollywood Palace (1982)
- SoundtracksPut On A Happy Face
Written by Lee Adams and Charles Strouse
Performed by the Les Brown and His Band of Renown (as Les Brown Orchestra) and then the Mitchell Ayres Orchestra and the Mort Lindsey Orchestra
Featured review
How I loved the Hollywood Palace back in the day. It was ABC TV's best contribution to our culture back in the day. Of course the fact that the most frequent guest host was the Greatest Entertainer Ever made it a must see item.
Highlights that I remember would include such things as: Bing Crosby dueting with Sonny&Cher, Nelson Eddy making his last big or small screen appearance, Tony Martin and Rudy Vallee, not singing together, but dueting with the clarinet and saxophone, instruments that both played but put aside when their singing careers took over.
The show was a homage to the old Palace Theatre in New York City. In the days of vaudeville it was the summit of every entertainer's ambition; to play at the Palace Theatre.
It was good that people got to see a lot of these folks. I wish that TV Land would broadcast some of these shows.
Classics every one.
Highlights that I remember would include such things as: Bing Crosby dueting with Sonny&Cher, Nelson Eddy making his last big or small screen appearance, Tony Martin and Rudy Vallee, not singing together, but dueting with the clarinet and saxophone, instruments that both played but put aside when their singing careers took over.
The show was a homage to the old Palace Theatre in New York City. In the days of vaudeville it was the summit of every entertainer's ambition; to play at the Palace Theatre.
It was good that people got to see a lot of these folks. I wish that TV Land would broadcast some of these shows.
Classics every one.
- bkoganbing
- Jan 2, 2006
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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