Fame Looks At Music '83

Fame Looks At Music '83

infobox Television episode
Title = Fame Looks At Music '83
Series = Fame


Season = 3
Episode = 50
Guests = Irene Cara
Director = Walter C. Miller
Writer = Ken Ehrlich
Production =
Airdate = 28 January, 1984
Prev = Equals
Next = Appearances |

Fame Looks At Music '83 was a special concert episode for the third season of the hit TV series "Fame". The concert took place on December 27, 1983 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California before a live capacity audience. The broadcast was aired on January 28, 1984. This special features the cast of "Fame," billed as "The Kids from Fame," along with the season three regular dancers. The concert is the second of the season, their first concert in the U.S., and their third overall. The concert featured performances of popular music by the cast taking a look back at popular music in the year 1983 (See 1983 in music). (Guest starring is Irene Cara, who sang "Fame" - the song an Academy Award winner - originally for the film of the same title in which she also starred as the original Coco).

et list

#"1999" – Performed by the Band (Originally by Prince)
#"Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)" – Performed by Debbie Allen (Originally by The Eurythmics)
#"Electric Avenue" – Performed by Gene Anthony Ray (Originally by Eddy Grant)
#"Gloria" – Performed by Valarie Landsburg (Originally by Laura Branigan)
#"Little Red Corvette" – Performed by Cynthia Gibb and Carlo Imperato (Originally by Prince)
#"Puttin' on the Ritz" – Performed by Billy Hufsey (Originally by Taco Ockerse)
#"All Night Long (All Night)" – Performed by the Band (Originally by Lionel Richie)
#"Total Eclipse of the Heart" – Performed by Valarie Landsburg (Originally by Bonnie Tyler)
#"Love Is a Battlefield" – Performed by Valarie Landsburg (Originally by Pat Benatar)
#"Tell Her About It" – Performed by Carlo Imperato (Originally by Billy Joel)
#"Why Me?" – Performed by Irene Cara
#"Maniac" – Performed by Billy Hufsey (by Michael Sembello)
#"Take Me to Heart" – Performed by Cynthia Gibb (Originally by Quarterflash)
#"Heart Attack" – Performed by Cynthia Gibb (Originally by Olivia Newton-John)
#*Tribute to Michael Jackson (with the "Fame" dancers):
#"Beat It" – Performed by Debbie Allen
#"Baby Be Mine" – Performed by Debbie Allen
#"Billie Jean" – Performed by Debbie Allen
#*---End---
#"Cold Blooded" – Performed by Gene Anthony Ray (Originally by Rick James)
#"We've Got Tonight" – Performed by Cynthia Gibb and Billy Hufsey (Originally by Kenny Rogers and Sheena Easton)
#"You Are" – Performed by Debbie Allen and Gene Anthony Ray (Originally by Lionel Richie)
#"Never Gonna Let You Go" – Performed by Carlo Imperato, Valarie Landsburg and Cast (Originally by Sergio Mendes)
#"Flashdance... What a Feeling" – Performed by Irene Cara
#"Up Where We Belong" – Performed by the Band (Originally by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes)
#"Far From Over" – Performed by the Band (Originally by Edwin McCain)
#"Fame" (Reprise) – Performed by Irene Cara and Cast

Credits

* Producer: Ken Ehrlich
* Directed by: Walter C. Miller
* Written by: Ken Ehrlich
* Concert Staged and Choreographed by: Debbie Allen
* Associate Producer: Greg Sills
* Music Arranged, Conducted, and Produced by: Gary Scott
* Art Director: Ira Diamond
* Costumes Designed by: Warden Neil
* Lighting Designed by: Bob Dickinson
* Producer’s Coordinator: Frank Fischer
* Set Dressing by: Leonard Mazzola
* Music Production Assistant: Lori Leiberman
* Assistant Choreographer: Otis Sallid
* Fame Dancers: Derrick Brice, Michael DeLorenzo, Darryl DeWald, Cameron English, Leanne Gerrish, Kimberlee Layton, Joni Palmer, Marguerite Pomerhn, Eartha D. Robinson, Serge Rodnunsky, Allysia Sneed, Bronwyn Thomas, Darryl Tribble, Rocker Verastique, and Margaret Williams.and
* The Waters: Julia, Luther, Maxine, and Oren.
* Production Associate: Terry McCoy
* Production Assistant: Tracy Long
* Production Associate: Debbie Milder
* Stage Managers: John Marsh, Vince Roxon, and Richard Schor
* Technical Director: Gene Crowe
* Audio: Don Worsham
* Video: Keith Winikoff
* Camera: Sam Dowlen, Tom Heren, Dean Hall, Dave Livisohn, Bill Philhin, and Hector Ramirez.
* Make Up: Jack Wilson
* Wardrobe Assistant: Phyllis Corcoran-Woods
* Post Production Supervisor: Frank Merwald
* ???: Morpheus
* Creative Consultant: David DeSilva
* Video Tape Facilities: Greene Crowe
* Executive in Charge of Production: Ted Zachar

ee also

*List of Fame (1982 TV series) episodes
*Fame


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Fame (Série Télévisée) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Fame. Fame Titre original Fame Genre Série dramatique, musicale Créateur(s) Christopher Gore Production MGM Television Pays d’origi …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Fame (serie televisee) — Fame (série télévisée) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Fame. Fame Titre original Fame Genre Série dramatique, musicale Créateur(s) Christopher Gore Production MGM Television Pays d’origi …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Fame (série télévisée) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Fame. Fame Titre original Fame Genre Série dramatique, musicale Créateur(s) Christopher Gore Production MGM Television …   Wikipédia en Français

  • music — musicless, adj. /myooh zik/, n. 1. an art of sound in time that expresses ideas and emotions in significant forms through the elements of rhythm, melody, harmony, and color. 2. the tones or sounds employed, occurring in single line (melody) or… …   Universalium

  • Music video — A music video or song video is a short film integrating a song and imagery, produced for promotional or artistic purposes.[1] Modern music videos are primarily made and used as a marketing device intended to promote the sale of music recordings.… …   Wikipedia

  • Rock and Roll Hall of Fame — The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum is a museum located on the shores of Lake Erie in downtown Cleveland, Ohio, United States, dedicated to recording the history of some of the best known and most influential artists, producers, and other… …   Wikipedia

  • Words and Music (play) — Samuel Beckett wrote the radio play, Words and Music between November and December 1961. [Both James Knowlson ( Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett , p 497) and Stan Gontarski ( The Faber Companion to Samuel Beckett , p 650) quote these… …   Wikipedia

  • 1987 in music — See also: * * Events*January 3 Aretha Franklin becomes the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame *January 16 The Beastie Boys become the first act to be censored by American Bandstand . *January Steve Silk Hurley s innovative… …   Wikipedia

  • choral music — ▪ vocal music Introduction       music sung by a choir with two or more voices assigned to each part. Choral music is necessarily polyphonal i.e., consisting of two or more autonomous vocal (vocal music) lines. It has a long history in European… …   Universalium

  • 2010 in heavy metal music — 2010 in music By location Canada – Europe – Great Britain – Ireland – Sweden – Japan – New Zealand – United States By genre Alternative, country, electropop, heavy metal, hip hop, opera By topic List of albums… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”