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Camera Three Season 10 Episodes

47 Episodes 1964 - 1965

Episode 1

I Woke Up This Morning

Sun, Sep 6, 1964

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Episode 2

Fifty Years of Dance

Sun, Sep 13, 1964

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Episode 3

Festival

Sun, Sep 20, 1964

A preview of the second New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center.

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Episode 4

Music of Future

Sun, Sep 27, 1964

An introduction to electronic music as Professor Vladimir Ussachevsky explains with demonstrations.

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Episode 5

The Alchemist

Sun, Oct 4, 1964

Scenes from the 17th century playwright Ben Jonson's "The Alchemist" currently running off-Broadway, are performed by the cast on Camera Three.

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Episode 6

Italics - The Hand of Beauty

Sun, Oct 11, 1964

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Episode 7

The Fine Art of Political Wit

Sun, Oct 18, 1964

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Episode 8

A Touch of Greatness

Sun, Oct 25, 1964

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Episode 9

Commedia del 'Arte: Hamlet

Sun, Nov 1, 1964

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Episode 10

Brecht on Shakespeare

Sun, Nov 8, 1964

Two practice pieces written by Bertolt Brecht to train actors in his own method (reducing the heroic stature of characters by showing them as ordinary people to produce a more human portrayal) are displayed in two of Shakespeare's plays: "Romeo and Juliet" and "Hamlet".

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Episode 11

The Political Spectacle

Sun, Nov 15, 1964

This revue takes a long, hard squint at the Supreme Court's school prayer ban, the Berlin Wall, and other current foibles.

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Episode 12

Through Monocle: The Political Spectacle

Sun, Nov 22, 1964

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Episode 13

The Cradle Will Rock

Sun, Nov 29, 1964

Blitzstein's tale of greed and corruption in "Steeltown, U.S.A." centers on an attempt to organize a union. Semi-operatic, it is sung throughout. The first production, during the Great Depression, was produced by John Houseman and directed by Orson Welles. The United States Government demanded that the show be canceled. The resulting crisis and the triumph of the artists is dramatized in Tim Robbins' film "Cradle Will Rock".

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Episode 14

The New Math

Sun, Dec 6, 1964

Dr. Howard Feahr of Columbia and Dorothy Rom, a TV teacher, discuss the new method of teaching mathematics.

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Episode 15

The Coach with the Six Insides: Part 1

Sun, Dec 13, 1964

Members of the 1962 off-Broadway cast perform scenes from Jean Erdman's "The Coach with the Six Insides." The play is an adaptation of James Joyce's "Finnegan's Wake" done in pantomime, dialog, song and dance.

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Episode 16

The Coach with the Six Insides: Part 2

Sun, Dec 20, 1964

This program contains an except from Jean Erdman's dance-drama based on James Joyce's "Finnegan's Wake."

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Episode 17

Claire Bloom Reads Poetry

Sun, Dec 27, 1964

British actress Claire Bloom is heard in a reading of poems and songs of her choosing ranging from Sir Philip Sidney and Lord Byron to T.S. Eliot, Marianne Moore and Ezra Pound.

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Episode 18

Over the Top to Bebop

Sun, Jan 3, 1965

James Macandrew discusses syncopated dance and its development from tap to clog, to shuffle, etc. with Dr. Marshall Sterns, author of "The Jazz Story", and dancers Honi Coles and Charlie Atkins provide illustrations.

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Episode 19

Are We Alone?

Sun, Jan 10, 1965

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Episode 20

Alexander Calder

Sun, Jan 17, 1965

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Episode 21

Goyeseas

Sun, Jan 24, 1965

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Episode 22

The Pinter Plays

Sun, Jan 31, 1965

Excerpts from performances of two early plays by Harold Pinter ("The Room" and "A Slight Ache") are presented. Staged in 1965 at the Writer's Stage in New York City the show includes a brief interview with director Word Baker.

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Episode 23

The Hutchinson Family Singers

Sun, Feb 7, 1965

During the middle of the 19th Century, the Hutchinson Family Singers were the best-known vocal group in America. Ardent supporters of Abraham Lincoln, the quartet sung of reform, antislavery and temperance. The New Hutchinson Family Singers (Meg Welles, Roy Hines, Ty McConnell and Bob Henry), who have adopted the costume and technique of the original group, re-create songs of the Civil War era.

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Episode 24

The Poetry of Norman Rosten

Sun, Feb 14, 1965

Poet-playwright Norman Rosten, actress Uta Hagen and actor Robert Elston give a dramatized reading from Rosten's soon-to-be-published book "Thrive Upon the Rock."

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Episode 25

Today's Dancer

Sun, Feb 21, 1965

New York Times dance critic Walter Terry is the guide for this tour showing the American dancer's versatility. Dancers Rochelle Zide and Michael Maule demonstrate dance gymnastics and the development of the dance. Students Pamela Ladimer and Tony Catanzaro of New York City's High School of Performing Arts illustrate modern dance techniques.

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Episode 26

Yiddish Stories of Two Worlds

Sun, Feb 28, 1965

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Episode 27

The Love Poems of William Butler Yeats

Sun, Mar 7, 1965

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Episode 28

American Dance Theater: Poem

Sun, Mar 14, 1965

Sophie Maslow choreographs a modern dance based on Lawrence Ferlinghetti' s poem "Autobiography." Morrie Pierce reads the poem and the piece is interwoven with group dancing, one duet, and three solo performances.

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Episode 29

The Film Director

Sun, Mar 21, 1965

Veteran film director Josef von Sternberg and New Republic film critic Stanley Kauffmann discussed the art of Film and its development.

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Episode 30

Conversations with the Editors: Part 1

Sun, Mar 28, 1965

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Episode 31

Music? or Else ...

Sun, Apr 4, 1965

American composer-musician Peter Schickele, who claims he's the youngest and oldest of Bach's 20-odd children, discusses humor in music and illustrates musical parody. He performs his composition 'The Gross Concerto.'

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Episode 32

The Young Composer

Sun, Apr 11, 1965

Two works by 24-year-old Stuart Sacks are premiered. 'Saul' inspired by the conversion of St. Paul is sung by Johanna Simon with Harry Schulman as solo oboist.

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Episode 33

The Making of a Musical

Sun, Apr 25, 1965

"Do I Hear a Waltz?" is the new Broadway musical by Richard Rodgers, Arthur Laurents and Stephen Sondheim and Camera Three traces the progression from stage play to motion picture to musical play.

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Episode 34

That Eager Zest

Sun, May 2, 1965

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Episode 35

As I Lay Dying

Sun, May 9, 1965

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Episode 36

The World in 1984

Sun, May 16, 1965

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Episode 37

Jan's Pantomime

Sun, May 23, 1965

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Episode 38

New German Writing

Sun, May 30, 1965

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Episode 39

Conversations with the Editors: Part 2

Sun, Jun 6, 1965

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Episode 40

Modern Jazz Quartet

Sun, Jun 13, 1965

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Episode 41

The Extension of Life

Sun, Jun 20, 1965

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Episode 42

Poems of Edith Sitwell

Sun, Jun 27, 1965

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Episode 43

Conversations with the Editors: Part 3

Sun, Jul 4, 1965

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Episode 44

The Art and Science of Translation

Sun, Jul 11, 1965

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Episode 45

A Visit with Earl Robinson

Sun, Jul 18, 1965

The composer of "The House I Live In" and "The Lonesome Trail" discusses his work in classical and popular music. Earl Robinson sings several of his compositions, including "Ballad for Americans."

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Episode 46

Valentina Felix Sings the Songs of Portugal

Sun, Jul 25, 1965

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Episode 47

Traveling Poets

Sun, Aug 1, 1965

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