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  1. American Bandstand

    American Bandstand

    TV-G1957 · Talk-Show

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  1. American Bandstand (AB) is an American music-performance and dance television program that aired regularly in various versions from 1952 to 1989, and was hosted from 1956 until its final season by Dick Clark, who also served as the program's producer.

  2. American Bandstand: With Dick Clark, Charlie O'Donnell, Peaches Johnson, Stan Rodarte. Dick Clark hosts a daily to weekly dance show that features the latest hit music for the attending teens to dance to.

  3. Welcome back to 1963! Unfortunately, whoever was in charge of filming this kinescope cut out quite a bit including the Top 10, the Spotlight Dance and today’s guests. Gene Pitney sang “Twenty ...

  4. S19.E3 ∙ Episode #19.3. Ralph Carter (from the sitcom "Good Times") sings "When You're Young and in Love." Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods perform "Our Last Song Together." Dick Gautier, from the TV series "When Things Were Rotten," talks with Dick Clark.

  5. S10.E49 ∙ Episode #10.49. American Bandstand's 10th Anniversary Show, Part Two. On film: A visit with Bandstand regulars, now adults, who danced on the first American Bandstand in 1957. Vintage footage of The Mamas and the Papas, The Supremes, and The Olympics.

  6. Finally, on Sept. 7, 1963, the show was lengthened back to an hour but aired only once a week, on Saturday, where it would remain for the remainder of its run. This episode is the only half hour ...

  7. Sep 8, 2022 · American Bandstand is an iconic audio-visual time capsule encompassing four decades worth of dances, performances, fashions and fads in popular music. The show, hosted by Dick Clark from 1956 to 1989, introduced new musical acts to generations of Americans.

  8. Welcome back to the summer of ’66!In June, 1966 - The last episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show aired (June 1), Janis Joplin made her debut as a rock vocalist...

  9. Jun 12, 2019 · American Bandstand featured a sampling of almost every genre in American music pop culture, bringing national attention to racial integration, dance crazes, and new hit sensations.

  10. From 1957 through 1963 Philadelphia was the “Home of the Hits,” a reflection of the power of Dick Clark’s American Bandstand television show, carried nationally on the American Broadcasting Company network. The program’s format was simple: singers mimed to their records, and the show’s teenage.

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