Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Blue Cove is one of the new features of this year's WPS Garden of Lights. You'll find the 12,000 blue lights in the new Carol & Bruce Bell Children's Garden.
The Christmas holiday is quickly approaching and there is no shortage of holiday events to attend in the Green Bay area. Green Bay area offers plenty of holiday events. Here are 16 to check out
Bay Beach is a municipal amusement park in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Situated near the mouth of the Fox River, on the east bank as it flows into Green Bay, the park contains rides, concessions, a roller coaster, and a food pavilion. Dances, movies, and other events are held in a pavilion. The park is adjacent to the Bay Beach Wildlife Sanctuary.
Kaye starred in several movies with actress Virginia Mayo in the 1940s, and is known for films such as The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947), The Inspector General (1949), On the Riviera (1951) co-starring Gene Tierney, Knock on Wood (1954), White Christmas (1954), The Court Jester (1956), Me and the Colonel (1958), and Merry Andrew (1958).
Chiller Theatre aired on various local television stations in the Green Bay market from 1984 until early 2009. [1] It last aired Saturday nights on WGBA - Channel 26 in Green Bay, Wisconsin following Saturday Night Live, and then Saturdays on WACY 32 at 11pm. The show is hosted by Ned the Dead and his sidekick Doc Moreau.
Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney: 2 hours, 25 minutes 109 12/26/1964 Adam's Rib (1949) Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn: 2 hours 110 1/2/1965 The Last Hunt (1956) Robert Taylor (American actor), Debra Paget, Stewart Granger: 2 hours 111 1/9/1965 Just for You (1952) Bing Crosby, Jane Wyman, Ethel Barrymore: 2 hours 112 1/16/1965 The ...
The Danny Kaye Show is an American variety show, hosted by the stage and screen star Danny Kaye, which aired on Wednesday nights from September 25, 1963, to June 7, 1967, on the CBS television network. [1] Directed by Robert Scheerer, it premiered in black-and-white. It switched to color broadcasts in the fall of 1965.
The Danny Kaye Show featured singing, instrumental music, and various kinds of comedy sketches. [2] In Nobody's Fool, Martin Gottfried wrote about the program: "Everything about it was to be top drawer, beginning with Kaye's then record salary of $16,000 a week (compared to the $100 apiece he had been paid for three minor CBS radio shows in 1940)."