POPULARITY
Welcome to a delayed Film Club and it's The Third Man, Carol Reed's 1949 masterpiece starring Joseph Cotton, Alida Valli, Trevor Howard and of course, Orson Welles from a script by Graham Greene. Joining Ollie we have director Tim Hewitt and historian Roger Moorhouse. There are plenty of links in the show notes including Tim's film based on the Greene short story A Little Place on the Edgware Road which you can watch for free. Links A Little Place Off the Edgware Road, directed by Tim Hewitt The Third Man Special Collector's Edition The Third Man Touch of Evil Journey Into Fear The Criterion Collection Ollie on X Tim on X Roger on X Latest Issue out - Annual Subscription to Aspects of History Magazine only $9.99/£9.99 Aspects of History on Instagram Get in touch: history@aspectsofhistory.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Big Variety Old Time Radio Podcast. (OTR) Presented by Chemdude
Strange Case of Joseph Cotton
A Dangerous TuesdayFirst a look at the events of the dayThen The Adventures of Philip Marlowe starring Gerald Mohr, originally broadcast January 28, 1950, 75 years ago, The Hairpin turn. Marlowe meets a pistol-packin' mama, who happens to be a champion sharpshooter, and a dead body, drilled dead center with a target pistol! Keep your ear on Mutt, chum!Followed by The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, originally broadcast January 28, 1946, 79 years ago, The Case Of Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber. Holmes and Watson try to keep an actor who is portraying a fiendish killer, from being driven crazy. Holmes fails when the actor is found with his throat slit, just as Sweeney Todd would have done it! Holmes almost makes a very serious mistake.Then Dangerous Assignment starring Brian Donlevy, originally broadcast January 28, 1953, 72 years ago, Mexico City. Steve Mitchell goes to Mexico City to find that sometimes the only way to catch the right guy is to chase the wrong guy! Steve tries to trap an international killer known only as "Mr. Charon."Followed by Suspense, originally broadcast January 28, 1952, 73 years ago, Carnival starring Joseph Cotton. Rene, a side show "mechanical man," has very human feelings after all. Finally, Superman, originally broadcast January 28, 1942, 83 years ago, Lita the Leopard Woman. The Leopard Woman escapes, leaving behind a medallion with the Japanese words, The Society Of The Leopard. Clark Kent is fired by the Secret Service! A want-ad appears for a leopard skin coat!Thanks to Honeywell for supporting our podcast by using the Buy Me a Coffee function at http://classicradio.streamIf you like what we do here, visit our friend Jay at http://radio.macinmind.com for great old time radio shows 24 hours a day
Actor, writer and producer Amanda Jane Stern – whose psychosexual thriller Perfectly Good Moment has launched on Tubi this month – joins us to discuss David O. Selznick's production of Portrait of Jennie. Based on a popular novella by Robert Nathan that Ray Bradbury said "touched and frightened" him, the romantic fantasy won an Oscar for Best Special Effects in 1948, but was not a success. Set in depression-era New York, it starred Jennifer Jones as the titular Jennie, an enigmatic young woman who inspires an impoverished painter, played by Joseph Cotton. The film is well regarded among those who remember it or have rediscovered it, but it's not easy to come by on streaming services or physical media. Unless you stumble upon it on Youtube, of course. But does it deserve to escape the oubliette and be immortalised? Find out! Follow us on Tiktok, Facebook, Instagram and Bluesky. Support us on Patreon to nominate future films, vote on whether films should be released or thrown back, and access exclusive bonus content!
This week we jump ahead to Under Capricorn, which practically feels modern after having spentabout14 weeks in the 20s and 30s. This 1949 period drama stars Joseph Cotton and Ingrid Bergman as a married couple in 19th Century Australia. An Irishman comes Down Under and begins unravelling the mysteries of their relationship. Details: A Transatlantic Picture, produced by Hitchcock and Sidney Bernstein. Screenplay by James Birdie, with adaption by Hume Cronyn based on the novel by Helen Simpson, via the play by John Colton and Margaret Linden. It stars Joseph Cotton, Ingrid Bergman, Michael Wilding and Margaret Leighton. Cinematography by Jack Cardiff. Ranking: 39 out of 52. Ranking movies is a reductive parlor game. It's also fun. And it's a good way to frame a discussion. We aggregated over 70 ranked lists from critics, fans, and magazines Under Capricorn got 799 ranking points.
2 hours of CrimeFirst a look at the events of the dayThen The Lives of Harry Lime starring Orson Welles, originally broadcast September 28, 1951, 73 years ago, Work of Art. In Buenos Aires in July, 1944, Harry is hired to swindle an original Rubens from its beautiful owner. We follow that with Big Town starring Edward Pawley, originally broadcast September 28, 1948, 76 years ago, The Trap. Bart Slade is going to "the chair" tonight. He invites Steve to visit him, which puts Wilson on the spot. It's all a very clever trap by the condemned man!Then Dragnet starring Jack Webb, originally broadcast September 28, 1954, 70 years ago, The Big Bible. Carl Hamlin has committed suicide...or has he? There's something fishy about the gun found in his dead hand. Next Suspense, originally broadcast September 28, 1950, 74 years ago, Fly By Night starring Joseph Cotton. . After being deprived of sleep, a murder suspect is forced to confess to the crime. A conspiracy unravels a complex plot against him. Finally, Claudia, originally broadcast September 28, 1948, 76 years ago. Claudia has lost appetite while David's in the hospital. Thanks to Honeywell for supporting our podcast by using the Buy Me a Coffee function at http://classicradio.streamIf you like what we do here, visit our friend Jay at http://radio.macinmind.com for great old time radio shows 24 hours a day
The 60-minute reggae mixtape show curated by Dubmatix showcases the finest Sticky Icky Reggae tunes from around the globe — spanning dub to dancehall, rocksteady to roots, and every rhythm in between. PLAYLIST Dubmatix - Babylon Dub King Toppa & Peppery - Slow Wine Purpleman - Hold Them Di Anointed Vale - Portland Tallis Ities & Singing Asher - War Dem A Fight Anthony B - Build Back Ras Ijah - Stepping Stone Yeyo Perez - Too Much Information Great Even Haris Pilton & Joseph Cotton - Grammy Award Kali G - Ghetto Life Zamunda - Every Sound Amejah - Judgement Over Dem Head Cheshire Cat - Release The Pressure Fikir Amlak - Discipline Fabiola Rosoa, Joseph Cotton & Dubstation - Black And White Time Niyorah - Calculate Carry the show on your station. Get in touch dubmatix@dubmatix.com https://www.mixcloud.com/dubmatix/
Estrela francesa do reggae e do raggamuffin, o francês Biga Ranx desponta internacionalmente, inclusive na Jamaica. Multidisciplinar, o músico também se dedica às artes plásticas e à poesia. Em 2012, Gabriel Piotrowski - conhecido sob o nome artístico de Biga Ranx - foi gravar um documentário na ilha do reggae e convenceu os jamaicanos que um francês também pode se destacar neste estilo musical. A experiência foi tão proveitosa que, desde então, o artista trava grandes parcerias, como a com os jamaicanos U-Roy, U-Brown, Big Youth e Joseph Cotton, para a gravação da faixa "Hate", que entrou para o álbum "Night Bird", de 2015.Para além da música, Biga Ranx também investe nas artes plásticas e faz parte da "ride culture", produzindo telas e colagens, apelidadas por ele de "delírios gráficos". O francês ainda demonstra um forte talento pela poesia, que pode ser conferido nas letras de suas músicas. É o caso de "Le Rang des Etoiles", faixa escolhida pela programação musical da RFI. O Balada Musical pode ser ouvido no Spotify e no Deezer. Confira também as playlists mensais da Programação Musical RFI no YouTube, Deezer e Spotify!
The Orson Welles Show (Lady Esther) || (08) Symptoms of Being Thirty-Five (with Joseph Cotton) // (10) There are Frenchmen and Frenchmen (1ST HALF) (with Rita Hayworth) || Broadcast dates: December 8, 1941; December 29, 1941: : : : :My other podcast channels include: MYSTERY x SUSPENSE -- DRAMA X THEATER -- SCI FI x HORROR -- COMEDY x FUNNY HA HA -- VARIETY X ARMED FORCES.Subscribing is free and you'll receive new post notifications. Also, if you have a moment, please give a 4-5 star rating and/or write a 1-2 sentence positive review on your preferred service -- that would help me a lot.Thank you for your support.https://otr.duane.media | Instagram @duane.otr
In Breaking Walls episode 150 we parachute into Easter Sunday, 1944 for a day of radio, recollections, and reconciliation. It's now less than two months before D-Day and U.S. citizens are awaiting word of a full-scale European invasion with held breath. —————————— Highlights: • Cracks In The Nazi Foundation • Invitation To Learning at 11:30AM • Ceiling Unlimited with Joseph Cotton at 2PM • The Life of Riley at 3PM • Bulldog Drummond at 3:30PM • The Shadow at 5:30PM • The Catholic Hour & Radio Hall of Fame at 6PM • The Great Gildersleeve at 6:30PM • Jack Benny and The Mysterious Traveler at 7PM • Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy at 8PM • Fred Allen at 9:30PM • Bob Crosby and The Thin Man at 10PM • Duke Ellington and The News at 11:15PM • Looking Ahead to Jack Benny Changing Sponsors —————————— The WallBreakers: http://thewallbreakers.com Subscribe to Breaking Walls everywhere you get your podcasts. To support the show: http://patreon.com/TheWallBreakers —————————— The reading material used in today's episode was: • Treadmill to Oblivion & Much Ado About Me — By Fred Allen • Citizen Welles — By Frank Brady • On The Air — By John Dunning • Invitation To Learning — By Martin Grams Jr. • Network Radio Ratings — By Jim Ramsburg —————————— On the interview front: • Don Ameche, George Balzer, Jack Benny, Conrad Binyon, Himan Brown, Joseph Cotton, Shirley Mitchell, Brett Morrison, Les Tremayne, and Paula Winslowe spoke with Chuck Schaden. Hear these full chats at Speakingofradio.com. • Jackson Beck, Edgar Bergen, and Hans Conreid spoke to Dick Bertel and Ed Corcoran for WTIC's The Golden Age of Radio. Hear these interviews at Goldenage-WTIC.org • Ralph Bell and Himan Brown spoke to SPERDVAC. For more info, go to SPERDVAC.com • Jack Kruschen and Shirley Mitchell spoke to Jim Bohannon in 1987 • Jack Benny spoke with Jack Carney • Fred Allen spoke with Tex McCrary and Jinx Falkenburg • Parker Fennelly spoke with David S. Siegel • Duke Ellington spoke with Dick Cavett —————————— Selected music featured in today's episode was: • Besame Mucho — By Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra • Danse Macabre — By Camille Saint-Saëns —————————— A special thank you to Ted Davenport, Jerry Haendiges, and Gordon Skene. For Ted go to RadioMemories.com, for Jerry, visit OTRSite.com, and for Gordon, please go to PastDaily.com. —————————— Thank you to: Tony Adams Steven Allmon Orson Orsen Chandler Phil Erickson Gerrit Lane Jessica Hanna Perri Harper Thomas M. Joyce Ryan Kramer Earl Millard Gary Mollica Barry Nadler Christian Neuhaus Ray Shaw Filipe A Silva John Williams Jim W. WildEyeWheel
We're nearing the end of our Classic Noir themed month we're calling THE LEFT HAND ENDEAVOR and it's just banger after banger each week and our last week is no different. Today's classic noir is one that might show up on several “Best Movie” top 20 lists. One of the few classic noir that seem to shine beyond it's genre. Chock full of stunning, shadowy, shots seared into the annals of film history and appreciation. A western writer by the name of “Holly” strolls into Vienna not long past the end of WWII to meet an old friend who he discovers is dead. The case seems to be officially closed but Holly finds conflicting information outside of the official narrative of Harry Lime's death. Meanwhile, Lime's girlfriend is fraught with her own issues but is bonding with Holly over their mutual connection with Harry. The interaction has Holly smitten with his dead friend's gal but is she down? Of course, we're talking about Carol Reed's 1949 classic “THE THIRD MAN” starring Joseph Cotton, Valli, Trevor Howard and Orson Welles as the ultimate irredeemable charmer that appears in the movie for, maybe, 7 minutes. Half of that because he didn't want to do the sewer scenes. You better believe we got a link for it. Hope it still works: https://archive.org/details/the-third-man-1949 Subscribe to us on YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuJf3lkRI-BLUTsLI_ehOsg Contact us here: MOVIEHUMPERS@gmail.com Hear us on podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/6o6PSNJFGXJeENgqtPY4h7 Our OG podcast “Documenteers”: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/documenteers-the-documentary-podcast/id1321652249 Soundcloud feed: https://soundcloud.com/documenteers Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/culturewrought
This weeks show kicks off with classics from Brigadier Jerry, Johnny Osbourne, The Viceroys, Wayne Wade, Al Campbell, Cornell Campbell, Hortense Ellis, Leroy Smart, Lacksley Castell, Errol Dunkley, Errol Flabba Holt, Junior Byles, Pablo Moses, Daweh Congo, Sugar Minott, Tenor Saw, and Mikey Dread. New music this week comes from Jah Lil, Macka B and Jacin, Christos DC, Naaman & Alborosie, Exco Levi, Rokkku, Hezron, Zoe Mazah & Randy Valentine, Sean Paul & Beres Hammond, Rafaelya & Vinney Satta, Subajah, Eesah, EyeGen, Alam, Dukes Of Roots with Andrew Tosh, Joseph Cotton, and Manudigital with Daddy Freddy. Also this week we present a block of Gayla's music in honor of the great singer BB Seaton who passed away last week at the age of 79 in England. Enjoy! Brigadier Jerry - Born To Love Jah - On The Road - Ras Records Johnny Osbourne - Folly Ranking - Mr. Buddy Bye - VP Records The Viceroys - They Can't Stop Us Now - Can't Stop Us Now: Linval Thompson Productions - Easy Star Wayne Wade & Scientist - Poor & Humble/Cloning Process - Linval Presents: Space Invaders - Greensleeves Al Campbell - Jah Army - Jedi Roland Alphonso & Brentford All Stars - Sir D Special - Studio One: Black Man's Pride 2 - Soul Jazz Records Cornell Campbell - Natty Dread Inna Greenwich Farm - I Shall Not Remove 1975-1980 - Blood & Fire Hortense Ellis - Woman Of The Ghetto - Demon 7” Leroy Smart - No Love - Dread Hot In Africa - Makasound Leroy Smart - No Love In Dub - Mr. Smart In Dub - Jamaican Recordings Lacksley Castell - Message To My Woman - Morning Glory - Negus Roots Errol Dunkley - Want No More - Park Heights 7” Errol Flabba Holt - My Heart Is In Danger - Ohm Records Earth & Stone - False Ruler - Cha Cha 12” Junior Byles w/Skin Flesh & Bones - Fade Away/Fading Dub - Jama 7” Pablo Moses - Come Mek We Run - I Love I Bring - Liberty Daweh Congo - Jah Children - Jah Children - Super Vibez Production Sugar Minott - Jam In The Street - Jammy's Presents: Cries From The Youth - VP Records Tenor Saw - Pumpkin Belly - Fever - Ras Records Mikey Dread - Roots & Culture - The Prime Of Mikey Dread: Massive Dub Cuts From 1978-1992 - Music Club Jah Lil - Lift Me - Roots & Culture Riddim - Silly Walks Discotheque Macka B & Jacin - Aim High/Aim Ruff (N-Tone Dub Remix) - Reservoir Dub Records Christos DC - Mountain King - Kung Fu Action Theatre - Honest Music Naaman feat. Alborosie - Walk (remix) - Big Scoop Records Exco Levi - Slave Trade - Born To Be Free - Penthouse Productions Samory I - Blood In The Streets - Strength - Overstand Entertainment/Easy Star Records Rokkku - Target On Lock - Rokkku Music Perfect Giddimani - Reason - Murda Dem Riddim - Irie Ites Records Barrington Levy - Tell Dem Already - Murda Dem Riddim - Irie Ites Records Barrington Levy - Murderer/Murderer Version - Jah Life Intl 7” Hezron - Natural Woman - Tad's Records Zoe Mazah & Randy Valentine - Tonight - Gwari Music Dennis Brown & Impact All Stars - Cheater/Harvest in The East - Impact 7” The Gaylads - Joy In The Morning - Studio One Rocksteady - Soul Jazz Records The Gaylads - Africa - Studio One Selector - Mojo The Gaylads - Tears From My Eyes - The #1 Sound: From The Vaults - Studio One The Gaylads - It's Hard To Confess - Let's Do The Rocksteady: The Story of Rockstaedy 1966-1968 - Trojan Records The Gaylads - My Jamaican Girl - The Gaylads: The Best Of - Beverly's Records Tony Chin - I'm Not A King - Tribute To The Late Great Delroy Wilson: In The Style Of Tony Chin - Rough Sounds Sean Paul & Beres Hammond - Tender Tender - Brimstone Riddim - Dutty Rock Productions Christos DC - Dread And Alive - Kung Fu Action Theatre - Honest Music Ernest Ranglin - Surfin' - Studio One Rockers - Soul Jazz Records Jackie Mittoo & Brentford Rockers - Sidewalk Doctor - Studio One Scorcher Intrumentals - Soul Jazz Records Burning Spear - Swell Headed - Creation Rebel: The Original Classic Recordings From Studio One - Heartbeat Records Pablove Black - Push Pull - Studio One Scorcher Intrumentals - Soul Jazz Records Prince Fatty - The Inversion - Prince Fatty Meets The Gorgon In Dub - VP Records Jah Stitch - Give Jah The Glory - Original Ragga Muffin 1975-1977 - Blood & Fire Johnny Clarke - Crazy Baldhead - Jackpot 7” Jah Stitch - Watch Your Step Youthman - No Dread Can't Dead - Third World King Tubby - A Better Version - The Roots Of Dub: The Dubmaster - Jamaican Recordings Patrick Andy - Words Of The Wise - Walls Of Jerusalem Riddim - Heartical Productions/BDF Dahvid Slur - Jah Never Fail I - Walls Of Jerusalem Riddim - Heartical Productions/BDF Basque Dub Foundation - Walls Of Dub - Walls Of Jerusalem Riddim - Heartical Productions/BDF Rafeelya & Vinney Satta - Tek Your Position/Position Dub - Sir Coxsone Outernational Subajah feat. Sarah Tobias - Lion/Lioness - Lion - Dashan Records Eesah - Behold The Conquering Lion - Deep Medz - King I-Vier/Loud City EyeGen - All Right - EyeGen Music Alam - Rise - Rise - Alam Productions Dukes Of Roots feat. Andrew Tosh - Tosh - Dukes Of Roots - Migration Records/Young Pow Productions Joseph Cotton & DJ Afrique - Tribute To Peter Tosh - Air Afrique Records Manudigital feat. Daddy Freddy - Digital Man - Digitital UK Session - X Ray Production Carl Meeks - Danger - Reggae Anthology: Redman International: We Run Things - VP Records Gregory Isaacs - Mind Yu Dis - Red Rose For Gregory - Ras Records Solo Banton & BB Seaton - Sound System We Want To Go - Africa We Want Riddim - Conquering Records
It's WOMEN IN CRISIS all month long and our classic film discussion today is a little bit different. Most of our selections actually have women going through a detrimental mental change Our heroine in this movie is being completely manipulated into thinking she is crazy. Based on a play by Patrick Hamilton, this tale coined a very common term to signify emotional and mental manipulation in a relationship. Of course we're referencing the term “gaslighting” and term was popularized by George Cukor's 1944 film adaptation of the play, “GASLIGHT”. It stars Ingrid Bergman in full range of love and despair, an impressively villainous Charles Boyer and an extremely intuitive Joseph Cotton. It also features Angela Lansbury in her peak “would” era. Let's be honest, we'd hit it in her “Murder She Wrote” era as well. She'd probably go crazier. Wilder. More experience there. Think about it, man. Here's a link we found to this movie: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8i5me5 Subscribe to us on YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuJf3lkRI-BLUTsLI_ehOsg Contact us here: MOVIEHUMPERS@gmail.com Hear us on podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/6o6PSNJFGXJeENgqtPY4h7 Our OG podcast “Documenteers”: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/documenteers-the-documentary-podcast/id1321652249 Soundcloud feed: https://soundcloud.com/documenteers Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/culturewrought
Alors que vient de sortir son troisième album, Step Up, le plus international des beatmakers français sur la scène reggae mondiale, nous reçoit à domicile, dans les Yvelines, à l'ouest de Paris. Dans son studio, entouré de sa basse, de sa MPC et de ses nombreux claviers, il raconte à Hortense Volle son rapport aux machines, sa découverte de la Jamaïque, sa passion pour la culture de cette île et la manière dont il a façonné son propre son entre reggae et bass music. Portrait. S'il a fait ses armes sur scène, en tant que bassiste, aux côtés de tonton David, Nuttea ou encore Babylon Circus, Manudigital s'est ensuite concentré sur la production pour Biga*Ranx et Soom T, entra autres.Depuis ses débuts en solo, l'auteur des albums Digital Pixel (2016) et Bass Attack (2018) a également sorti une pléiade d'EPs et de projets collaboratifs. L'occasion de s'entourer d'artistes des quatre coins du globe tels qu'Alborosie, L'Entourloop, Skarra Mucci ou encore Joseph Cotton.Musicien, compositeur, producteur, « riddim maker », « selecteur » au sein du sound system Digital Sound, Manudigital est aussi connu pour ses nombreux concepts vidéo comme les incontournables « Digital Session ». Muni de son clavier Casio MT40 ou « Sleng Teng Keyboard », il arpente les rues de Kingston, New York ou Trinidad à la rencontre d'artistes tels que Capleton, Elephant Man ou encore Queen Omega qui, en sa compagnie, revisitent en une prise leurs classiques.Manudigital dans SessionLab, c'est aussi l'occasion de revenir sur l'histoire du reggae, en musique, depuis son ancêtre, le ska, né dans les années 50, jusqu'au reggae digital, dont l'artiste a fait sa marque de fabrique et qui, au mi – temps des années 80, a révolutionné la manière de produire de la musique en Jamaïque.Journaliste : Hortense VolleRéalisation : Benjamin SarraliéMixage 3D en Dolby ATMOS pour une écoute immersive au casque : Jérémie BessetResponsable d'unité de production FMM – RFI Labo : Xavier Gibert Pour suivre Manudigital :YouTube / Instagram / Facebook / TwitterTitres diffusésExtraits de l'album Step Up (X-Ray Production – 2023) : Step Up (ft. Joseph Cotton & Bellyman) ; Quieren Mas (ft Alika & Blackout JA) ; Dub and Bass (ft. Caporal Negus) ; Reggae Music and Love (ft. Alborosie & Yami Bolo)Extrait de l'album Bass Attack (X-Ray Production – 2018) : Dem A Poison (Ft. Soom T)Extrait de l'EP Digital Lab vol.3 (X-Ray Production – 2015) : Already Midnight (Ft. Marina P)Extraits de l'album Digital Kingston Session vol.2 (X-Ray Production - 2021) : Digital Kingston Session (Ft. Capleton) ; Digital Kingston Session Ft. Elephant ManExtrait de l'album Digital Kingston Session vol.1 (X-Ray Production - 2018) : Don't call me local (Ft. Queen Omega)Et aussi des extraits de :Under me Sleng Teng – Wayne SmithJ'ai trouvé le son – Tonton DavidOnly Just Begun – Manu Digital feat Joseph CottonNiggers Are Scared of Revolution – The Last PoetsMy boy Lollipop – Millie SmallTake It Easy [1966] – Hopeton LewisStorm Dance – Biga RanxGreen island – Donald drummondPeople funny boy – Lee Perry
"They had 500 years of democracy and peace and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock." Carol Reed's The Third Man is a gorgeously photographed bit of post-war film noir that gave us one of the greatest grins in the history of cinema. It also gave us a ton of zither! Clint, Cal and Alex dive into the classic detective yarn that's not really about a detective at all. They discuss the dutch angles that kept Joseph Cotton on his heels for most of the film, just how bad a guy Orson Welles as Harry Lime really is and just how bad a guy Orson Welles was on set, as legends have it. It got booted off of AFI's Top 100 movies list but find out where it ranks on the CineFix Top 100! Meanwhile, producer Dan's algorithm is somewhere under the rubble of post-war Vienna… CineFix Top 100 is produced by Tayo Oyekan, with Director of Photography, Jamie Parslow and Technical Producer, Marhyan Franzen. Our Executive Producers are Clint Gage, Dan Parkhurst and Corrado Caretto. Logo and graphic design by Eric Sapp and title animations by Casey Redmon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this episode of WILD IN THE STREETS, Tomas Milian is RAMBO in Umberto Lenzi's spaghetti-western influenced SYNDICATE SADISTS from 1975! After Rambo's friend is brutally murdered, he takes it upon himself to go up against two criminal gangs (one led by Joseph Cotton's Paternò), while also rescuing a young boy who has been kidnapped. Does he manage to embarrass them all while everyone gazes on him in total awe? Yep! Check it out! The post Episode 186 – Wild in the Streets – Syndicate Sadists (1975) first appeared on Cinema Smorgasbord.
Your globe trotting hosts jump into their custom bathysphere to talk about the movie LATITUDE ZERO (1969) starring Joseph Cotton and Cesar Romero. Yes, this is the movie that features Cotton as a fashion guru and Cesar Romero's perfect mustache. It's all submarines and undersea kingdoms that make up this Unsane therapy session. What can … Continue reading "Unsane Radio 0227 – Cesar Romero Salad. Latitude Zero Calories."
Your globe trotting hosts jump into their custom bathysphere to talk about the movie LATITUDE ZERO (1969) starring Joseph Cotton and Cesar Romero. Yes, this is the movie that features Cotton as a fashion guru and Cesar Romero's perfect mustache. It's all submarines and undersea kingdoms that make up this Unsane therapy session. What can … Continue reading "Unsane Radio 0227 – Cesar Romero Salad. Latitude Zero Calories."
In this fascinating episode, your Film Freaks Mark Jordan Legan and Phoef Sutton dive deep into the filmography of the great British master of suspense, Alfred Hitchcock. With fun and engrossing trivia about the behind-the-scenes productions and all the talented actors Hitch worked with, we look at six of our favorite movies from his 50-year career. With so many good films to choose from, everything from “Strangers on a Train” to “Rear Window” are analyzed, along with other classics. Talents like Raymond Chandler, Jimmy Stewart, Janet Leigh, Patricia Highsmith, Joseph Cotton are discussed along with entertaining audio clips from the thrillers and mysteries that this extremely talented filmmaker made (both in England and the United States). Today's episode is sponsored by: Libro.fm (FILMFREAKSFOREVER) | 2 audiobooks for the price of 1 when you start your membership The Writer's Bone Podcast Network
In Breaking Walls episode 141, we finish a three part series on the radio career of Orson Welles by picking up as he left The United States for Europe in the late 1940s. For full appreciation, tune into episodes 79 and 104 before hearing this. —————————— Highlights: • Macbeth, HUAC and Leaving the U.S • Harry Alan Towers, and Harry Lime • Othello and The Black Museum • Song of Myself and Theatre Royal • Moriarity • The BBC Sketchbook and Moby Dick • Mr Lincoln and Mr Arkadin • Returning to the U.S. • Tomorrow and Yesterday • Looking Ahead to Barrie Craig —————————— The WallBreakers: http://thewallbreakers.com Subscribe to Breaking Walls everywhere you get your podcasts. To support the show: http://patreon.com/TheWallBreakers —————————— The reading material for today's episode was: • A Book by Desi Arnaz • Citizen Welles by Frank Brady • This is Orson Welles by Welles and Peter Bogdanovich • On the Air — By John Dunning • Discovering Orson Welles by Jonathan Rosenbaum • Orson Welles on the Air, at OrsonWelles.Indiana.edu • Wellesnet.com. As well as articles from: • Broadcasting Magazine • Life Magazine —————————— On the interview front: • Orson Welles was with BBC's Monitor, Peter Bogdonavich, Dick Cavett, Michael Parkinson, and Dinah Shore. • Harry Alan Towers spoke with Sheridan Morley and the BBC. • Joseph Cotton was with Chuck Schaden. Hear the full chat at SpeakingofRadio.com. • Jeanette Nolan was with SPERDVAC, the Society to Preserve and Encourage Radio Drama, Variety, and Comedy. For more information, please go to SPERDVAC.com • Lurene Tuttle spoke with Same Time, Same Station in 1972. —————————— Selected music featured in today's episode was: • Wilderness Trail — By Walter Scharf for National Geographic • Irish & Celtic Waltz — By The Irish & Celtic Folk Wanderers • The Colorado Trail, Op. 28 Fantaisie for Harp — By Elizabeth Hainen • Seance on a Wet Afternoon — By John Barry —————————— A special thank you to Ted Davenport, Jerry Haendiges, and Gordon Skene. For Ted go to RadioMemories.com, for Jerry, visit OTRSite.com, and for Gordon, please go to PastDaily.com. —————————— Thank you to: Tony Adams Steven Allmon Orson Orsen Chandler Phil Erickson Jessica Hanna Perri Harper Thomas M. Joyce Ryan Kramer Earl Millard Gary Mollica Barry Nadler Christian Neuhaus Ray Shaw Filipe A Silva John Williams —————————— WallBreakers Links: Patreon - patreon.com/thewallbreakers Social Media - @TheWallBreakers
It seems fitting that the way in which Orson Welles described Alexander Woollcott is the same way many who knew Welles would have described him. That's going to bring our look at Orson Welles' radio career to a close. We've now covered Mr. Welles in long form three times — in episodes 79, 104, and now 141. We also covered his time as The Shadow in depth in episode 131. Is this the last time we focus on Orson Welles? That remains to be seen, but next month on Breaking Walls we'll move to NBC where we'll focus on one of the more underrated detective shows of the mid-1950s. That show? Barrie Craig, Confidential Investigator. The reading material used in today's episode was: • A Book by Desi Arnaz • Citizen Welles by Frank Brady • This is Orson Welles by Welles and Peter Bogdanovich • On the Air — By John Dunning • Discovering Orson Welles by Jonathan Rosenbaum • Orson Welles on the Air, at OrsonWelles.Indiana.edu • Wellesnet.com. As well as articles from: • Broadcasting Magazine •Life Magazine On the interview front: •Orson Welles was with BBC's Monitor, Peter Bogdonavich, Dick Cavett, Michael Parkinson, and Dinah Shore. • Harry Alan Towers spoke with Sheridan Morley and the BBC. • Joseph Cotton was with Chuck Schaden. Hear the full chat at SpeakingofRadio.com. • Jeanette Nolan was with SPERDVAC, the Society to Preserve and Encourage Radio Drama, Variety, and Comedy. For more information, please go to SPERDVAC.com •Lurene Tuttle spoke with Same Time, Same Station in 1972. Selected music featured in today's episode was: • Wilderness Trail — By Walter Scharf for National Geographic • Irish & Celtic Waltz — By The Irish & Celtic Folk Wanderers • The Colorado Trail, Op. 28 Fantaisie for Harp — By Elizabeth Hainen • Seance on a Wet Afternoon — By John Barry Breaking Walls Episode 142 will spotlight William Gargan and Barrie Craig, Confidential Investigator. This episode will be available beginning August 1st, 2023 everywhere you get your podcasts, and at TheWallBreakers.com. In the meantime, give Breaking Walls a quick rating on whatever platform you listen, especially itunes. You can also join The Breaking Walls Facebook group at Facebook.com/Groups/TheWallBreakers. And support this show for as little as a buck a month at Patreon.com/TheWallBreakers.
Ever feel like you're being watched? Someone is following you? The entire town hates you? Well, that's the main storyline of this film. Oh yeah, and ghost sex.
In 1948 author Graham Greene was in Vienna getting a tour of the city, its back alleys, less-reputable nightclubs, and even its sewers. He was also introduced by actress Elizabeth Montagu to Peter Smolka, the central European correspondent for The Times. Greene was working on a novella that would become a screenplay called The Third Man. Greene sold the film rights to producers Alexander Korda and David O'Selznick. In the story a man named Holly Martins comes to Vienna to accept a job with his friend Harry Lime, only to learn that Lime has died. Martins is a writer. He's told Lime was killed by a car while crossing the street. At Lime's funeral, Martins meets two British Royal Military Police: Sergeant Paine, a fan of Martins' books, and Major Calloway. Martins thinks the death is suspicious, so he stays in Vienna to investigate the matter. Orson Welles was cast as Lime with longtime Mercury Theater friend Joseph Cotton cast as Martins. Principal photography began in Vienna in early November of 1948 and lasted for six weeks. The rest was done around London and completed by March of 1949. Then-unknown composer Anton Karas was hired to create the musical score, performing it on a zither. The film was released in the UK in September of 1949, quickly becoming that year's most popular. When released in the U.S. audiences loved it. Time wrote that the film was "crammed with cinematic plums that would do Hitchcock proud—ingenious twists and turns of plot, subtle detail, full-bodied bit characters, atmospheric backgrounds that become an intrinsic part of the story, a deft commingling of the sinister with the ludicrous, the casual with the bizarre.” At the 1951 Academy Awards, the film took home the award for Best Black and White Cinematography, while at the British equivalent, it won for Best British Film. In the meantime Welles and Tyrone Power made The Black Rose in 1950, directed by Henry Hathaway. Welles played Mongolian warrior Bayan of the Hundred Eyes. Hathaway, who liked Welles, later said the casting was poor, with Welles purposely outwitting people during shooting. While in England making The Third Man, Orson Welles became acquainted with Harry Alan Towers. Towers was a thirty-year-old radio producer whose company, Towers of London, was heavily into syndicated productions in British, American, Australian, and Canadian markets. His anthology series Secrets of Scotland Yard had proven that there was a lucrative market for high-end entertainment and, in Welles, he saw a personality and a talent that could quickly make his production company a leading one. Towers and Greene had the same literary agent. Finding out that Greene hadn't sold Harry Lime's character rights when he sold the screenplay, Towers quickly bought the rights to the character with plans to put a syndicated radio series into production. Welles signed with Towers to produce The Adventures of Harry Lime. They were prequel stories showcasing some of the more good-hearted things Harry Lime was supposed to have done. Only sixteen of the episodes were acquired and broadcast by the BBC. It was the first time that the BBC broadcast episodes of a dramatic series that it did not produce. The full fifty-five episodes were syndicated to radio stations in the U.S. Welles is credited as the author of ten scripts, including the first episode, “Too Many Crooks” which aired on August 3rd, 1951. The fifth episode was called, “Voodoo,” something Orson Welles had a lot of experience with, dating back to his time in South America during World War II.
Hey, an Actor! has taken a long run up to feature one of cinema's most prominent names of yesteryear in Orson Welles. Straight out of the gate is the legendary Citizen Kane, followed by European hit The Third Man, and capped off by Tex-Mex crime thriller Touch of Evil. Recorded whilst Ian is fully sober and Pandy looks to publicly available AI for the purposes of film-specific raps, The Brothers Wilson also discuss the recurrence of Joseph Cotton, offer up competing song choices to close the episode, and critique Welles' introduction to British television in 1955. And it's all quite silly!
Hey, an Actor! has taken a long run up to feature one of cinema's most prominent names of yesteryear in Orson Welles. Straight out of the gate is the legendary Citizen Kane, followed by European hit The Third Man, and capped off by Tex-Mex crime thriller Touch of Evil. Recorded whilst Ian is fully sober and Pandy looks to publicly available AI for the purposes of film-specific raps, The Brothers Wilson also discuss the recurrence of Joseph Cotton, offer up competing song choices to close the episode, and critique Welles' introduction to British television in 1955. And it's all quite silly!
In 1947, wanting to bring Macbeth to film, Welles teamed with producer Charles K. Feldman to convince Herbert Yates, President of Republic Pictures, to finance. Welles guaranteed to deliver Macbeth on a budget of seven-hundred thousand dollars. When some members of Republic's board expressed misgivings on the project, Welles agreed to personally pay any amount over the initial ask. He brought in Irish actor Dan O'Herlihy as Macduff, and cast former child star Roddy McDowall as Malcolm. To cast Lady Macbeth, Welles visited longtime friend and radio legend Jeanette Nolan. The two had known each other since the 1930s in New York. Nolan and her husband, fellow actor John McIntire, were excited to work with Orson. Welles made several changes to Shakespeare's original, like adding significance to the witches. They were played by two other Hollywood radio legends: Peggy Webber, and Lurene Tuttle. Welles expressed frustrations with wardrobes and the tight schedule. He had the cast pre-record all their dialogue. Locations were leftover sets from westerns normally made at Republic. The entire production was done in twenty-three days in July of 1947. In September, Welles signed on to star in Gregory Ratoff's Black Magic. Shooting would take place in Rome. He wouldn't return until 1948. Republic initially trumpeted the film as an important work, entering it in the 1948 Venice Film Festival. It was abruptly withdrawn after poor comparisons with Lawrence Olivier's version of Hamlet, also being screened. LIFE Magazine gave the film a terrible review in October of 1948, saying that Welles' days as the “boy wonder” were long over. When he returned from Europe in the Spring, Welles cut twenty minutes from the film at Republic's request and recorded narration to cover some gaps. But when finally released, it too was called a disaster. In July of 1948 Welles signed on to co-star with Tyrone Power in the Italian film, Prince of Foxes. The film would be released in December of 1949. Welles' last appearance in the 1940s on American radio was in a pre-recorded segment on Mail Call over the Armed Forces Radio Service, on October 13th, 1948. Now thirty-three years old, Orson Welles had enough of Hollywood. He was in deep debt and needed to move to Europe, full-time. His first main stop would be in Vienna, to star with Joseph Cotton in a new film called The Third Man.
We didn't expect to have as much fun with this as we did. Underwater adventures, Atlantis esque utopia, ageless citizens and a flying lion griffin thing.
Tornem a reivindicar que el ball no est
Exploring roots, steppers, dub, and some classic golden era hip hop - this week's session features legendary singer Joseph Cotton, and Zoe Mazah as The IRIE Track of the Week, Heavy D & The Boyz with Kid 'N Play for the Hip Hop Throwback plus new cuts from Stranjah Miller, Raggattack and more. Kick back, crank it up - this week's show is now in session PLAYLIST Winston Francis - I Kill The Devil Last Night Black Beanie Dub - Militant Joseph Cotton - Rub A Dub Thursday Joseph Cotton & Manudigital - Rhum Talk Joseph Cotton, Atili Bandalero - The Real Godstep Kid ‘N Play - Gittin' Funky 91 Heavy D & The Boyz & Pete Rock - Don't Curse Dubmatix - Wake Up Raggattack & George Palmer - Fling It Up Stranjah Miller & Irie Ites - Hit Hit Hit Burro Banton - Bad Like Mi Zoe Mazah - Soul Rebel King Kong & Burron Banton & Pinchers - Old School Jonnygo Figure - Unemployment Iron Dubz, Stanjah Miller & Nicky Silk - Ganja Haffi Bun JOIN THE MAILING LIST Join me in the Bassment each week for a session of top vibes. www.bassmentsessions.com IRIE MAGAZINE for the latest in the world of reggae and beyond, jump on over to the number one online reggae magazine that matters https://www.iriemag.com/ FREE 2GB DUB & REGGAE LOOP PACK Produced by Dubmatix https://reggae-loops.com/2023-free-pack
Book Vs. Movie: Touch of Evil The 1956 novel Badge of Evil Vs. the 1958 Film Noir ClassicThe Margos dive right back into one of our favorite genres--film noir! The 1958 Orson Welles's directed film Touch of Evil is based on a 1956 novel by Whit Masteron titled Badge of Evil. The book sold reasonably well at the time, but at the time, the movie was given mixed reviews due to Welles not staying until the final edit process. In 1998, a “re-cut” of the film was based on a 58-page memo Welles had sent to the studio 40 years previously is now considered a modern classic and one of the last true “film noirs” to be released. Whit Masterson was the nom de plume of two writers--Wade Miller and Will Daemer who wrote more than 30 books together (including Kitten With a Whip in 1964!) Their original story is about a man, Rudy Linneker, killed by a dynamite blast at this home. His daughter Tara stands to make $2 million and is engaged to someone her father disapproved of before her death. There are other suspects, including Ernest Farnum, a disgruntled employee who improbably confesses. Detectives Leron McCoy and Hank Quinlan are considered “legends” in Los Angeles for their excellent work, and Assistant District Attorney Mitch Holt is suspicious. The rest of the story is a mish-mash of double-crossing police and families in danger, with several lives and careers ruined while exposing hypocrisy and crime in the L.A. police. Orson Welles was given this project as a B Movie and decided to take apart the story and rebrand it as his vision moving the book action from San Diego to the U.S. & Mexico border. Our protagonist (played by Charlton Heston) was renamed Miguel Vargas and played in “brown face” to serve Welles's theme of racism and American relations with Mexico. 34-year-old pre-Psycho Janet Leigh rounds out the cast as Vargas's new bride, Susan Vargas, pre-Duel Dennis Weaver as the Night Manager, and an array of top-notch character actors played by a multi-racial cast.Stars like Zsa Zsa Gabor, Keenan Wynn, and Marlene Dietrich agreed to work for union pay to help keep on budget. The Margos debate between the novel and the classic film--which did we like more?In this ep the Margos discuss:The backstory of the movieThe cast of the 1958 film: Charlton Heston (Ramon Miguel Vargas,) Janet Leigh (Susan Vargas,) Orson Welles (Police Captain Hank Quinlan,) Joseph Callaeia (Sgt. Pete Menzies,) Akin Tamiroff (Uncle Joe Grandi,) Joanna Cook Moore (Marcia Linnekar,) Ray Collins (District Attorney Addair,) Dennis Weaver (the Night Manager,) Zsa Zsa Gabor (Strip-club owner,) Marlene Dietrich (Tana,) Mercedes McCambridge (gang leader) and Joseph Cotton as a coroner.Clips used:“You Have No Future”Touch of Evil 1958 trailerAcid attack sceneAre you wearing a wire?Nightclub shakedownWelles and DietrichMusic: Touch of Evil opening title sequence with music by Henry ManciniBook Vs. Movie is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more podcasts you will love Frolic.Media/podcasts. Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.comEmail us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D. @BrooklynMargo www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.comMargo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/ Our logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine
Book Vs. Movie: Touch of Evil The 1956 novel Badge of Evil Vs. the 1958 Film Noir ClassicThe Margos dive right back into one of our favorite genres--film noir! The 1958 Orson Welles's directed film Touch of Evil is based on a 1956 novel by Whit Masteron titled Badge of Evil. The book sold reasonably well at the time, but at the time, the movie was given mixed reviews due to Welles not staying until the final edit process. In 1998, a “re-cut” of the film was based on a 58-page memo Welles had sent to the studio 40 years previously is now considered a modern classic and one of the last true “film noirs” to be released. Whit Masterson was the nom de plume of two writers--Wade Miller and Will Daemer who wrote more than 30 books together (including Kitten With a Whip in 1964!) Their original story is about a man, Rudy Linneker, killed by a dynamite blast at this home. His daughter Tara stands to make $2 million and is engaged to someone her father disapproved of before her death. There are other suspects, including Ernest Farnum, a disgruntled employee who improbably confesses. Detectives Leron McCoy and Hank Quinlan are considered “legends” in Los Angeles for their excellent work, and Assistant District Attorney Mitch Holt is suspicious. The rest of the story is a mish-mash of double-crossing police and families in danger, with several lives and careers ruined while exposing hypocrisy and crime in the L.A. police. Orson Welles was given this project as a B Movie and decided to take apart the story and rebrand it as his vision moving the book action from San Diego to the U.S. & Mexico border. Our protagonist (played by Charlton Heston) was renamed Miguel Vargas and played in “brown face” to serve Welles's theme of racism and American relations with Mexico. 34-year-old pre-Psycho Janet Leigh rounds out the cast as Vargas's new bride, Susan Vargas, pre-Duel Dennis Weaver as the Night Manager, and an array of top-notch character actors played by a multi-racial cast.Stars like Zsa Zsa Gabor, Keenan Wynn, and Marlene Dietrich agreed to work for union pay to help keep on budget. The Margos debate between the novel and the classic film--which did we like more?In this ep the Margos discuss:The backstory of the movieThe cast of the 1958 film: Charlton Heston (Ramon Miguel Vargas,) Janet Leigh (Susan Vargas,) Orson Welles (Police Captain Hank Quinlan,) Joseph Callaeia (Sgt. Pete Menzies,) Akin Tamiroff (Uncle Joe Grandi,) Joanna Cook Moore (Marcia Linnekar,) Ray Collins (District Attorney Addair,) Dennis Weaver (the Night Manager,) Zsa Zsa Gabor (Strip-club owner,) Marlene Dietrich (Tana,) Mercedes McCambridge (gang leader) and Joseph Cotton as a coroner.Clips used:“You Have No Future”Touch of Evil 1958 trailerAcid attack sceneAre you wearing a wire?Nightclub shakedownWelles and DietrichMusic: Touch of Evil opening title sequence with music by Henry ManciniBook Vs. Movie is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more podcasts you will love Frolic.Media/podcasts. Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.comEmail us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D. @BrooklynMargo www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.comMargo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/ Our logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine
Suspense "Sneak Preview" March 23, 1944 A Hollywood movie director joins the New York police in a hunt for a Nazi spy, murderer, and all-around bad guy. A good twisting plot! + Sneak Preview Tells of a rather remarkable adventure experienced by a noted director of screen fellows, Frank Henderson played by Joseph Cotton. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/waldina/message
Host, Christopher Lee, brings you the greatest mystery detective horror and sci-fi from the golden age of radio. The Screen Director's Playhouse 1-25-51 “Spellbound” w/ Joseph Cotton, Mercedes McCambridge and guest director, Alfred Hitchcock (1-hour) Adventures By Morse 3-4--44 “City of the Dead – The Trail of the Phantom Church Bells” Pt. 9 of 10 w/ Elliott Lewis To access more classic radio shows visit classicradioclub.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this weeks show we celebrate Bob Marleys birthday by featuring many Marley tunes throughout the show. Also in the mix this week is Peter Broggs, Soul Power & Sound, Desi Roots, Musical Youth, Bonnie Gayle and Conscious Minds, Flabba Holt & Prince Far I, The interns, and Junior Byles. New music this week comes from Al Campbell, Zamunda, Green Lion Crew, Alaine and Lukie D, Indra, Baba The Fayahstudent, Turbulence, Uzly HiFi, Joseph Cotton, Dubmatix and Lone Ranger, Natty King, and Yaadcore with Biggadread. Go Deh! The Wailers - Soul Rebel - Roots Of A Legend - Trojan Records Bob Marley & The Wailers - Roots - Exodus Deluxe Edition - Tuff Gong Peter Broggs - Vank Out - Never Forget Jah The Early Years - Motion Records Soul Power & Sound - The Right Procedure - In Dub Procedure - Hornin' Sounds Dean Fraser - Roots Rock Reggae - Dean Plays Bob - Ras Records The Wailers - Soul Shakedown Party - Roots Of A Legend - Trojan Records Bob Marley & The Wailers - Revolution - Natty Dread - Tuff Gong Desi Roots - Warning - Emmanuel Music 7” Musical Youth - Mirror, Mirror - Anthology - One Way Records Bonnie Gayle & Conscious Minds - How Many Strongs w/ Version - Love 7” Al Campbell & Irie Ites - Jah Love Conquers All - Irie Ites The Wailers - One Foundation - Burnin' Deluxe Edition - Tuff Gong Bob Marley & The Wailers - Jump Nyahbinghi - Confrontation - Tuff Gong Errol Flabba Holt - Who Have Eyes To See - Prince Far Bob Marley & The WailersI: Silver & Gold 1973-1979 - Blood & Fire Prince Far I - Dry Bone - Message From The King - Virgin The Wailers - Hypocrites - Songs Of Freedom - Tuff Gong The Interns & Ansel Collins - Nothing Is Impossible/Black Out - Roots Techniques - Pressure Sounds Bob Marley & The Wailers - War - Rastaman Vibration - Tuff Gong Wailers Band - War Dub - The War Album - Human Race Junior Byles - Fade Away - The Channel One Story - VP Records Kabaka Pyramid feat. Buju Banton - Faded Away - The Kalling - Ghetto Youths International Zamunda - He Save Me - Jah Surround Me - Sweet Waters Spawn Music Baba The Fayahstudent - No Love - Gideon Productions Bob Marley & The Wailers - All Day All Night - Catch A Fire Deluxe Edtion - Tuff Gong Bob Marley & The Wailers - Guiltiness - Exodus - Tuff Gong Green Lion Crew & Nick Sefakis - Burn Them Out - Riddim Full Of Culture - Ineffable Records Green Lion Crew & Iotosh - Skillful - Riddim Full Of Culture - Ineffable Records Indra - Shine On You - Kingdom Call - Reality Shock Records Bob Marley & The Wailers - Small Axe - Burnin' - Tuff Gong Bob Marley & The Wailers - Real Situation - Uprising - Tuff Gong Bob Marley & The Wailers - Is This Love - Kaya - Tuff Gong Alaine & Lukie D - Really Together - We Remember Bob Andy - VP Records Turbulence & True Move International - Where Do I Go - Purity Riddim - True Move International Bob Marley & The Wailers - Kinky Reggae(live) - The Capitol Session 73 - Tuff Gong Bob Marley & The Wailers - Lively Up Yourself (Bombay Dub Orchestra Remix) - Roots Rock Remixed - Tuff Gong Big Youth - Waterhouse Rock(Groove Corporation Remix) - Select Cuts From Blood & Fire Chapter 3 - Select Cuts Black Uhuru - Eye Market - Chill Out - Mango Black Uhuru - Boof N Baff N Biff - The Dub Factor - Island Records Uzly HiFi feat. McGump - Monkey Dub - Without Connection - Culture Dub Records Pitch Black - Exodus - Dubmission Records Bob Marley & The Wailers - Want More - Rastaman Vibration - Tuff Gong Joseph Cotton - Start It Up - Ur Love Riddim - Stingray Records Dubmatix feat. Lone Ranger - Ask Me/Ask Me Dub Mix - ReWired - Echo Beach Bob Marley & The Wailers - Top Rankin - Survival - Tuff Gong Prince Theo & Lion's Flow - Tears - ZionI Matic Riddim - Lion's Flow Production Zamunda feat. Popcaan - Lights In The Sky - Jah Surround Me - Sweet Waters Spawn Music Yaadcore & BiggaDread - Nyquill - Evidence Music Natty King - Herbs Fi Smoke - Souled Out Riddim - Giddimani Records Bob Marley & The Wailers - Kaya (Kaya 40 Mix) - Kaya 40 - Tuff Gong Bob Marley & The Wailers - Punky Reggae Party - Gold - Tuff Gong Bob Marley & The Wailers - Iron Lion Zion - Gold - Tuff Gong
Suspense, originally broadcast January 28, 1952, 71 years ago, Carnival starring Joseph Cotton. Rene, a side show "mechanical man," has very human feelings after all.Visit my web page - http://www.classicradio.streamWe receive no revenue from YouTube. If you enjoy our shows, listen via the links on our web page or if you're so inclined, Buy me a coffee! https://www.buymeacoffee.com/wyattcoxelAHeard on almost 100 radio stations from coast to coast. Classic Radio Theater features great radio programs that warmed the hearts of millions for the better part of the 20th century. Host Wyatt Cox brings the best of radio classics back to life with both the passion of a long-time (as in more than half a century) fan and the heart of a forty-year newsman. But more than just “playing the hits”, Wyatt supplements the first hour of each day's show with historical information on the day and date in history including audio that takes you back to World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. FDR, Eisenhower, JFK, Reagan, Carter, Nixon, LBJ. It's a true slice of life from not just radio's past, but America's past.Wyatt produces 21 hours a week of freshly minted Classic Radio Theater presentations each week, and each day's broadcast is timely and entertaining!
Hollywood Star Playhouse | Of Night and the River | This episode aired, Monday, October 09, 1950.Sponsored by: Bromo Seltzer. Story: A gangster being fitted with concrete overshoes trying to escape his fate at the hands of the rest of the gang.: : : : :My other podcast channels include: MYSTERY x SUSPENSE -- SCI FI x HORROR -- COMEDY x FUNNY HA HA -- VARIETY X ARMED FORCES -- THE COMPLETE ORSON WELLESSubscribing is free and you'll receive new post notifications. Also, if you have a moment, please give a 4-5 star rating and/or write a 1-2 sentence positive review on your preferred service -- that would help me a lot.Thank you for your support.https://otr.duane.media | Instagram @duane.otr
Big Variety Old Time Radio Podcast. (OTR) Presented by Chemdude
Strange Case of Joseph Cotton
First story "Mr. Henry" stars Janet Gaynor and Joseph Cotton. Second story stars Ray Bidwell Collins as "Mr. Brown". Ray Collins (December 10, 1889 – July 11, 1965) was an American character actor in stock and Broadway theatre, radio, films, and television. With 900 stage roles to his credit, he became one of the most successful actors in the developing field of radio drama. A friend and associate of Orson Welles for many years, Collins went to Hollywood with the Mercury Theatre company and made his feature-film debut in Citizen Kane (1941), as Kane's ruthless political rival. Collins appeared in more than 75 films and had one of his best-remembered roles on television, as Los Angeles homicide detective Lieutenant Arthur Tragg in the CBS-TV series Perry Mason. Ray Collins, Glenn Anders and Orson Welles perform a short story written by Arthur Stander and presented on The Orson Welles Mercury Theater Show on CBS Radio December 1st, 1941.
In this episode, my wife Mary Jane joins me to review the 1944 classic movie "Gaslight." Starring Ingrid Bergman, Charles Boyer, Joseph Cotton, and Angela Lansbury (in her film debut), it is from this movie that the term “gaslighting” originated. It's a psychological thriller in which the viewer is witness to a woman being intentionally driven to madness by her husband so that he can carry out his sinister plan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
#428 - Today we find out if Citizen Kane is as good as The AFI always tells us! (SPOILERS! It's not...kinda...) Starring Orson Welles, Joseph Cotton, Dorothy Comingore, Agnes Moorehead, Ruth Warrick, Ray Collins, Erski Sanford, Everett Sloane, and William Alland. HSF Rating Alex-6, Scott-6, Jeff-4 Please follow and contact us at the following locations: Patreon: http://patreon.com/hansshotfirst Facebook: Hans Shot First Twitter: http://twitter.com/hansshot1st Email: hansshotfirst@outlook.com iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/hans-shot-first/id778071182 Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/m/I5q2th5tzsucvpzgmy3kmzgtd44?t=Hans_Shot_First iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/256-hans-shot-first-30934202/ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0ityvhlXhdtoXFJFOO1cvA
If you loved the first two men, then boy have I got a film for you! Join the DBFS as we discuss Joseph Cotton, Orson Welles, the undefeatable sounds of the zither(!), Vienna's hate for and eventually embrace of this film, watchin it as a silent film, men with women's names, foreign film noir, $20,000 dots, top shelf Columbo, Harry Lime and the possible (dirty?) cockney rhyming slang, post war poverty, distrust and immorality, dutch angles, writing lessons from Graham Greene, Leonardo da Vinci and cuckoo clocks, the improved lines, ferris wheel death threats, murder mysterys with twist endings, the victim being the antihero, the script starting as a sentence on an envelope, our pitch for a samurai version, the five (FIVE!!) season television show, and dreams of a zither/theramin soundtrack. So grab a pack of contraband Tums and hit play for an in depth The Third Man film analysis! (Special Guest: Mychal) Click here to follow Mychal on instagram for sweet film content!
This weeks show starts off with Reggae legends like Cedric Congo and Mad Professor, The Wailing Souls, Rod Taylor, The Heptones, Jackie Mittoo, Justin Hinds, The Mighty Diamonds with the Aggrovators, Culture, Earl Sixteen, Junior Byles with Rupert Reid, Earth & Stone, Dezarie, Peter Broggs, Carlton Livingston, Freddie McGregor, Bob Marley and The Wailers with U-Roy, Prince Buster and Keith & Tex. New Music this week comes from Clinton Fearon, L'Entourloop with Ken Boothe, The Carey James, Samora with Jah Mason, Naomi Cowan, Mikey General, Kabaka Pyramid with Damian Marley, Black Am I, Mungo's Hifi with Kiko Bun, Anthony B, and Jamaram with Jahcoustix. Also this week we ride the Rockin' Rock Riddim as well as the new Mighty Kuchie Riddim featuring Anthony Cruz, Mikey General, Abajonai Kushites, Lutan Fyah, Rob Symeon, Perfect Giddimani, and Young Shanty. In the dub zone this week you will hear dubs from Augustus Pablo, Manwel T, King Tubby, King Jammy, Cultur Horn, and Dubmatix with The Future Dub Orchestra. Extended dub mixes feature Mikey Melody and Russ D, 3gypt with Elad and Jallanzo, Joseph Cotton with Cornel Campbell, and Barry Brown. Enjoy! Cedric Congo & Mad Professor - Jah Lightning/Dub Lightning - Cedric Congo Meets Mad Professor: Ariwa Dub Showcase - Ariwa Wailing Souls - Down In Trenchtown - Back A Yard - VP Records Rod Taylor - Promised Land - Strong Like Sampson: Linval Thompson The 12” Mixes - Hot Milk The Heptones - Mistry Babylon - Lee Scratch Perry & Friends: The Black Ark Years - Trojan Records The Heptones - Mistry Babylon Dub - University Of Dub - Trench Town Jackie Mittoo - Ram Jam - Champion In The Arena 1975-1977 - Blood & Fire Norris Reid - Freedom Train - Give Jah The Praises - Rockers International Justin Hinds & The Dominoes - Tell Me Not Of Other Lands - Jack Ruby Presents: The Black Foundation - Heartbeat Records The Mighty Diamonds - You Should Be Thankful - Bunny Lee: Dreads Enter The Gates With Praise - Soul Jazz King Tubby w/ Prince Jammy & The Aggrovators - A Thankful Version - Bunny Lee: Dreads Enter The Gates With Praise - Soul Jazz Culture - This Way - In Culture - Heartbeat Records Earl Sixteen - Rastaman - Soldier Of Jah Army - Patate Records Earth & Stone - False Ruler/Dub Ruler - Kool Roots - Pressure Sounds Junior Byles & Rupert Reid - Remember Me - Singerman: Blood & Fire All Stars - Blood & Fire Paul Blackman - Earth Wind & Fire - The Rockers Story: The Mystic World Of Augustus Pablo - Shanachie Lennox Brown & Sheila Rickards - Jamaican Fruit Of African Roots - When Jah Shall Come - Pressure Sounds Dezarie - Living Ones - Love In Your Meditation - Benjamin Newton Peter Broggs - International Farmer - Rise & Shine - Ras Records Carlton Livingston - 100 Weight Of Collie Weed - Hi Grade Ganja Anthems - Greensleeves Freddie McGregor - Holy Mount Zion - Big Ship - Greensleeves Inner Visions - Street Corner Musicians - Street Corner Musicians - Blue Bitch Music Bob Marley & The Wailers - Mr. Brown - Roots Of A Legend - Trojan Records The Wailers feat. U-Roy - Mr. Brown (vocal) - My Cup Runneth Over - Tsosume Records Prince Buster & The All Stars - Prince Of Peace - Roll On Charles Street - Rock A Shacka Keith & Tex - Hotel Corona - Freedom - Liquidator Music Bob Andy - Unchained - When Rhythm Was King - Heartbeat Records Yami Bolo & Merciless - Curly Locks - Crucial Duets Vol. 1 - Yam Euphony Music Clinton Fearon - Breaking News - Breaking News - Boogie Brown Productions Baco Music L'Entourloop feat. Ken Boothe & Lion In Bed - Eternal Roses - La Clarte' Dans La Confusion - X Ray Production The Carey James - Danger - Self Fulfillment - MoreLove Music Samora feat. Jah Mason - Let Them Go - Chameleon - Staudenmann Naomi Cowan - Kingston Traffic - VPal Music Nadine Sutherland - Chatty, Chatty - Tad's Records Dub Zone featuring Strictly Dubwize & Extended Dub Mixes Augustus Pablo - Pablo In Moonlight City - Jammy's From The Roots 1977-1985 - Greensleeves Manwel T - Eastern Skank - Manwel T Music King Tubby - Parkway Dub - King Tubby Classics: The Lost Midnight Rock Dubs Chapter 3 - Radiation Records King Jammy's - Down To Dub - Dub Explosion - Jamaican Recordings Culture Horn - True Horns/True Dub - Dublaboratory Vol.1 - Dubophonic Mikey Melody & Russ D - Haile O/Haile Dub - Taitu Records Presents Haile O - Taitu Records Dubmatix Meets Future Dub Orchestra - Blac Arc/Black Arc (Dub Mix) - Frontline Dub - Echo Beach 3gypt feat. Elad - Watta version - Time - 3y3 Vizion Muzik Joseph Cotton & Cornell Campbell - Parents/Teach Dem Dub - Music Dem Want - Patate Records Barry Brown - Step It Up Youthman (extended mix) - Praises - Pressure Sounds ============================================ Mikey General - Hold A Heights - Hold A Heights - Reality Shock/Qabalah First Upper Cut Band feat. Glen Washington - Can't Bowl Me Over - Painting On Silence - Upper Cut Band Kabaka Pyramid & Damain Marley - Red, Gold & Green - Ghetto Youths International Black Am I - Mr. Hurry Come Up - Ghetto Youths International Anthony Cruz - Life Nuh Fair At All - Rockin' Rock Riddim - Jumpout Production Mikey General - This Is The Day - Rockin' Rock Riddim - Jumpout Production Abajonai Kushites - High Frequency - Rockin' Rock Riddim - Jumpout Production Lukie D - Got To Be - Antonee Records Mungo's Hifi feat. Kiko Bun - Miss Burnett/Burnett Version - Scotch Bonnet Records Sevana - Lowe Mi - GodHz Music Jamaram Meets Jahcoustix - Run, Run, Run - One World Records/Turban Records Gentleman - Over The Hills - Gentleman George Nooks & Merciless - War & Crime - This Ones For You - VP Records L'Entourloop feat. Blackout JA & Tippa Irie - Fi Di Yut - La Clarte' Dans La Confusion - X Ray Production The Skints feat. Tippa Irie - Tazer Beam - FM - Easy Star Records Anthony B & Little Lion Sound - Sound Killer - Sound Killer Riddim - Evidence Music Lutan Fyah - Country To Town - Mighty Kuchie Riddim - Giddimani Records Rob Symeon - Over This Land - Mighty Kuchie Riddim - Giddimani Records Perfect Giddimani - Babylon By Bus - Mighty Kuchie Riddim - Giddimani Records Young Shanty - Reggae Music - Mighty Kuchie Riddim - Giddimani Records
On this week's episode, the gang travels back to the early 1970s to chat about a total foodie film set in 2022, Soylent Green! How fantastic is Edward G. Robinson in this movie? Who let Heston wear that hat the whole time? Could we get a few more scenes with that arcade machine? And what's going in that gross stew that Robinson cooks up? PLUS: Did Heston's character come of age during the early-aughts' NYC indie music revival? Soylent Green stars Charlton Heston, Edward G. Robinson, Joseph Cotton, Leigh Taylor-Young, Chuck Connors, and Brock Peters; directed by Richard Fleischer. Check out the WHM Merch Store -- featuring new WHAT IF Donna?, Mortal Kombat & Bean Dinner designs! Advertise on We Hate Movies via Gumball.fm Unlock Exclusive Content!: http://www.patreon.com/wehatemovies See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hi guys and welcome back to the mystery and comedy old time radio podcast. Please join me in welcome back by popular demand. Mr Joseph Cotton ln this first episode Mr Cotton plays a man named Wells who has covered up his death by killing his law firm partner and put on his wallet on him and burns the house with dead partner in it. So Welles goes home to his wife Lesley. But Lesley hides him in the attic of the home. But Welles doesn't know that his wife as not only planning on killing him and her lover. But unfortunately Lesley plans falls and Wells plan succeeds. It's is called until the day I died. In this next episode Mr Cotton plays a set of identical twins brothers. One of the two brothers has a plan of living like his twin brother so he --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mysterycomedypod1942/support
Synopsis On today's date in 1937, one of Aaron Copland's least known works had its premiere performance. This was an opera written for high school students, New York's Henry Street Settlement Music School, to be exact, and entitled “The Second Hurricane.” In his memoirs, Copland recalled that at the time he wrote it, he was living at the Empire Hotel in Midtown Manhattan for $8.50 a week, and that he wrote the score in a studio he rented, located at what is now the site of Lincoln Center. To direct the premiere of his school opera, Copland hired a young actor-director named Orson Welles. Copland's score also called for some adult performers as well, including one professional actor by the name of Joseph Cotton, who was paid $10 for his performance. “The newspapers seem to enjoy the idea that a dyed-in-the wool modernist was writing an opera for schoolchildren,” recalled Copland, “so they gave a great deal of attention to every step along the way, particularly the casting. Those kids must have gotten a kick out of seeing their names in the Times and Tribune! The idea of an opera for high school performers appealed to the press, I suppose, for the same reason it appealed to me. My motives were not all unselfish, either: the usual run of symphony audiences submitted to new music when it was played at them, but never showed signs of really wanting it. The atmosphere had become deadening. Yet the composer must compose. A school opera seemed a good momentary solution for one composer, at any rate.” Music Played in Today's Program Aaron Copland (1900-1990) — The Second Hurricane (High School of Music and Art; New York Philharmonic; Leonard Bernstein, cond.) Sony 60560
Enjoy this crime thriller from Suspense starring Joseph Cotton!!!
Starting the new format of revolving guests, in this week's discussion co-host Lani Gonzalez picks the actress Teresa Wright, the only performer to ever receive Academy Award nominations for each of her first three films, and in particular her film The Steel Trap. On today's episode we dive deep into this 1952 film co-starring Joseph Cotton, her Shadow of a Doubt co-star from nine years previous, its writer/director Andrew L. Stone, and other films of Wright's, from Pride of the Yankees to The Best Years of Our Lives. We also talk her bucking a contract with Samuel Goldwyn for artistic reasons at a time when actors were being dumped by producers, her stage work, and the unique appeal her acting brought to the dignity of so-called “ordinary” women immediately following the end of World War II.Gonzalez writes about film for both Book and Film Globe and, alongside her husband AJ, their blog Cinema Then and Now.
Welcome to the 2018 Christian Humanist Radio Network Halloween Crossover! This year each of the shows in the network are examining a different film from the legendary Alfred Hitchcock. Josh Altmanshofer (of Before They Were Live) and Carter Stepper join Danny Anderson to discuss the classic film Shadow of a Doubt. The film features Joseph Cotton as a serial killer named Uncle Charlie who preys on rich widows. Uncle Charlie visits his disturbingly well-adjusted suburban family in California where his niece (and philosophical double), also named Charlie, discovers her uncle's dark nature. Listen to a discussion about this movie's take on nihilism, feminism, and law and order. And as with any Hitchcock film, mothers are a disturbing symbol as well, of course. Nietzsche, Batman, Thornton Wilder, Jesus, economics, phallic symbols, trains, cops, serial killers, and mothers all work their way into this fun and engaging discussion of one of Hitchcock's most entertaining and fascinating films.
Suspense, originally broadcast March 23, 1944, 74 years ago. Sneak Preview, starring Joseph Cotton. A Hollywood movie director joins the New York police in a hunt for a Nazi spy, murderer, and all-around bad guy.
"Suspense" - originally broadcast March 23, 1944 (73 years ago). Episode titled "Sneak Preview." A Hollywood movie director joins the New York police in a hunt for a Nazi spy, murderer, and all-around bad guy. Joseph Cotton stars.