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This program was originally released on October 29, 1993, under the title Sesame Street's 25th Birthday: A Musical Celebration! 25 Wonderful Years focused on celebrity segments, many coming from segments filmed for the show's upcoming 25th season, of artists such as En Vogue and Ladysmith Black Mambazo.
Saint Walpurga (she was canonised on 1 May c. 870 and Walpurgis Night is celebrated 30 April) [251] February 25 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics) Kitano Baika-sai or "Plum Blossom Festival" (Kitano Tenman-gu Shrine, Kyoto, Japan) [252] Memorial Day for the Victims of the Communist Dictatorships [253] National Day (Kuwait) [254]
Big Bird's Birthday or Let Me Eat Cake: 1993 Sesame Street: 25 Favorite Moments: Sesame Street Jam: A Musical Celebration: Sesame Street Stays Up Late! 1994 Sesame Street All-Star 25th Birthday: Stars and Street Forever! Basil Hears a Noise [10] United States Canada 1996 Sesame Street Film Festival: United States Elmo Saves Christmas: 1998 ...
Sesame Street Jam: A Musical Celebration is a television special which was first broadcast on PBS on March 6, 1994 to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the educational television series Sesame Street. Its home-video version, Sesame Street: 25 Wonderful Years was released on October 29, 1993.
Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever is a 1983 television special, produced by Suzanne de Passe for Motown (founded in January 1959), to commemorate its 25th anniversary. The program was taped before a live audience at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium in Pasadena, California on March 25, 1983, [1] and broadcast on NBC on May 16.
February 29, 2024 at 10:42 AM. When Mary Lea Forsythe turned 16, she’d had only four birthdays. Now that she’s turning 100, she’s getting ready for her 25th birthday celebration.
1990 – NASA's Voyager 1 space probe took the Pale Blue Dot photograph of Earth (cropped version pictured) from a record distance of 40.5 au (6.06 billion km; 3.76 billion mi). 2005 - YouTube is founded by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim. 2007 – The first of several bombings in Zahedan, Iran, killed 18 members of the Revolutionary ...
In Slovene, February is traditionally called svečan, related to icicles or Candlemas. [3] This name originates from sičan, [4] written as svičan in the New Carniolan Almanac from 1775 and changed to its final form by Franc Metelko in his New Almanac from 1824. The name was also spelled sečan, meaning "the month of cutting down of trees". [3]