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Palm Springs Weekend is a 1963 Warner Bros. bedroom comedy film directed by Norman Taurog. [2] It has elements of the beach party genre (AIP's Beach Party became a smash hit in July, while Warner Bros. was still putting this film together [3]) and has been called "a sort of Westernized version of Where the Boys Are" by Billboard magazine. [4]
It's a Great Life – 1954–1956 TV series Season 2, Episode 33, "The Palm Springs Story" (1956) [73] The Jack Benny Program (also broadcast as The Jack Benny Show) – 1932–1965 radio and TV series [62] "From Palm Springs California" (radio) – March 26, 1950 (with Bob Hope and The Guadalajara Trio)
In 1952, at age 18, Wills appeared with her mother and Jim Backus in the TV comedy I Married Joan (1952–1955). She played the younger sister of her real-life mother. [2] After the series ended its run, Wills appeared in four more films, including Some Like It Hot (1959) and Son of Flubber (1963). Wills married three times before the age of 30.
Based on the TV series Follow the Boys: Richard Thorpe: Connie Francis, Janis Paige, Paula Prentiss, Russ Tamblyn: Comedy Romance MGM: For Love or Money: Michael Gordon: Kirk Douglas, Mitzi Gaynor, Thelma Ritter, Gig Young, Leslie Parrish, Julie Newmar: Comedy Romance Universal: Free, White and 21: Larry Buchanan: Frederick O'Neal, Annalena ...
The Martha Stewart Show) "The Palm Springs Show" (May 27, 2010) [62] McMillan & Wife – 1971–1977 TV series Season 1, Episode 5, "The Face of Murder" (1972) Miss California USA – 1989 TV show (for the 1990 Miss California Title) [10] Mission: Impossible – 1966–1973 TV series Season 6, Episode 3, "The Tram" (1971)
Pages in category "Television shows set in Palm Springs, California" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The town known for its exclusivity is notoriously stingy on handing out permits to film commercial motion pictures. Most of this Palm Beach-set series, with the exception of a few aerial shots of ...
However, when Annette Funicello was cast in her first beach movie Beach Party (1963), Walt Disney, who held her contract, insisted that she only wear modest bathing suits and keep her navel covered, to preserve her wholesome persona, though she was the only one of the ample number of young women in the film not showing her navel. [53]