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The studio was founded in June 2016 under president Meredith Ahr. [66] In July 2016, the studio's first program, World of Dance, was announced by NBC. [67] The studio sold its first show to another channel (In Search Of... to History). [68] The studio, as did Universal TV, signed a first-look agreement with Chelsea Handler in March 2018. [69]
Until 1962, Desilu was the second-largest independent television production company in the United States, behind MCA's Revue Studios, until MCA bought Universal Pictures and Desilu became and remained the number-one independent production company, until Ball sold it to Gulf and Western Industries (then the parent company of Paramount Pictures ...
co-production with General Television Enterprises, Hal Roach Studios and Lewman Productions/Revue Studios Cameo Theatre: 1950–1955: Victory at Sea: 1952–1953: The Loretta Young Show: 1953–1961: co-production with Lewislor Films and Toreto Enterprises Inner Sanctum: 1954–1955: People are Funny: 1954–1960 Big Town: 1955–1956: The ...
Laramie is an American Western television series that aired on NBC from 1959 to 1963. [1] A Revue Studios production, the program originally starred John Smith as Slim Sherman, owner of the Sherman Ranch, along with his younger brother Andy, played by Robert L. Crawford Jr.; Robert Fuller as Jess Harper, an immature, hot-headed drifter who shows up at the Sherman Ranch in the premiere episode ...
In December 1958, MCA bought the 423-acre (1.71 km 2) Universal Studios lot from Universal Pictures for $11,250,000 and renamed it, as well as the actual television unit, Revue Studios. [10] As part of the deal, MCA leased the studios back to Universal for $2 million a year, plus unlimited access to MCA's clients such as Jimmy Stewart, Rock ...
(L-R) Robert Horton and Ward Bond 1962 cast. Top: John McIntire, Terry Wilson. Bottom: Scott Miller, Frank McGrath. Robert Fuller Wagon Train is an American Western television series that was produced by Revue Studios. The series was inspired by the 1950 John Ford film Wagon Master. It ran for eight seasons, with the first episode airing in the United States on September 18, 1957 (1957-09-18 ...
The Paramount Television Network was a venture by American film corporation Paramount Pictures to organize a television network in the late 1940s. The company built television stations KTLA in Los Angeles and WBBM-TV in Chicago; it also invested US$400,000 in the DuMont Television Network, which operated stations WABD (now WNYW) in New York City, WTTG in Washington, D.C., and WDTV (now KDKA-TV ...
In Danse Macabre, Stephen King's 1981 history and critique of horror fiction, King suggests that Thriller was the best series of its kind up to that point. [2] Alfred Hitchcock hastened the demise of the series after he came aboard on NBC with his half-hour anthology series, Alfred Hitchcock Presents after moving from CBS in 1960. Hitchcock ...