The 90’s, episode 112: Drugs And Other Wars
Episode 112 of the award-winning TV series The 90’s. This episode is called “DRUGS & OTHER WARS” and features the following segments:
Episode 112 of the award-winning TV series The 90’s. This episode is called “DRUGS & OTHER WARS” and features the following segments:
Documentary about a festival in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park in August 1976.
Blues man Pervis Spann hosts his absurdist comedy show, which also features music videos from blues and R&B artists.
Raw footage from the 1976 documentary “Making It In Hollywood,” which follows several actors as they attempt to break into the movie business. This tape features an interview with Sally Kirkland at her home.
Footage from radio personality Steve Dahl’s performance of several parodies of well-known rock songs in “Rock on the Roof” during Chicagofest in 1981.
00:00 Opens with a three-minute sketch titled, “On the Way to Broadway (Seven Free Women)” in which actress and comedienne Lily Tomlin plays several different women as they take a road trip to Broadway, as well as the other characters they encounter along the way. 03:34 The opening credits for “Lily Tomlin in Appearing Nitely” roll. 04:15 Shots of the outside of the Huntington Hartford Theater in Los Angeles, where a performance of “Lily Tomlin in Appearing Nitely” is on […]
An episode of the independent film and video showcase, Image Union, featuring Blue Monday by Spike Jones and Michael Prussian. Mark Naftalin (piano) and his band perform a jazz concert. Charles Houff, Dr. Wild Willie Moore and Frankie Lee are guest stars.
Raw footage from the 1976 documentary “Making It In Hollywood,” which follows several actors as they attempt to break into the movie business.
This tape features actress Sally Kirkland phoning to invite people to one of her “press parties”; Kirkland speaks with several people, including actress Dyan Cannon, and musician Kinky Friedman (who confides that he “distrusts” Paul McCartney, and that he will soon be firing his management staff), and Kirkland leaves a message for actors Keith Carradine and Christina Raines.