Edward R. Murrow – The Best of Person to Person


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From 1953 to 1959, Edward R. Murrow informally welcomed television viewers into the homes of the twentieth century’s most well-known stars and celebrities on PERSON TO PERSON. Utilizing perhaps the simplest set in television – a chair, a table an ashtray and a picture window – Murrow greeted two guests per week in remote interviews that candidly revealed the private lives of such notable figures as John F. Kennedy, Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra, Marlon Brando, Elizabe… More >>

Edward R. Murrow – The Best of Person to Person

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  1. #1 by Cynthia L. Nicolosi on March 20, 2010 - 3:37 am

    Edward R. Murrow – The Best of Person to Person

    I GIVE THIS DVD 5 STARS!!!!!!!.

    YOU GET TO SEE VERY CLASSY STARS BEING INTERVIEWED BY EDWARD R. MURROW WHO IS TOPS IN HIS FIELD OF INTERVIEWING FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM AROUND THE WORLD.

    THIS IS GREAT TV HISTORY AND A CLASSIC BECAUSE YOU GET TO SEE WHERE THE STARS LIVE,SEE INSIDE THEIR HOMES,MEET THEIR FAMILYS & JUST SEE THAT THEY ARE REALLY JUST LIKE US BUT THERE JUST FAMOUS.

    YOU GET TO SEE HIM INTERVIEW SAMMY DAVIS JR., FRANK SINATRA,JERRY LEWIS & MANY MORE THOSE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE FAMOUS INTERVIEWS THAT YOU WILL SEE ON THIS DVD.

    THIS IS WHAT I CALL HISTORY FROM THE PAST THAT WILL ALWAYS A COLLECTABLE ITEM TO ME.

    I LOVE THE INTERVIEWS THEY WERE REALLY WONDERFUL TO SEE JUST GREAT.

    I LOVE THIS DVD IT WILL ALWAYS BE MY FAVORITE WITHIN THE INTERVIEWS AREA OF MY COLLECTION.

    ONCE AGAIN I GIVE THIS 5 STARS!!!!!!!!.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. #2 by Brent Stowe on March 20, 2010 - 5:51 am

    EXCELLENT EARLY TV FOOTAGE, I REMEMBER SEEING SOME ON TV IN THE 50′S,RARE BRANDO,MARLYN MONROE,HUMPHREY BOGART,LAUREN BACALL
    Rating: 4 / 5

  3. #3 by Maryrose Eco Baby on March 20, 2010 - 6:05 am

    An outstanding selection of interviews by Edward R. Murrow and a reminder of how fabulous greatness can be!!! So lucky to be a baby boomer and actually be part of the excellence.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. #4 by David Silverbrand on March 20, 2010 - 6:08 am

    Edward R. Murrow set a very high standard for what television could and should be. He is known for taking on Joe McCarthy and telling the stories of America’s migratory workers (“Harvest of Shame.”

    But Person to Person was Murrow’s softer side. He enabled us to look past the veneer of America’s best known people and learn important things about her. As with the Marilyn Monroe interview, we learn as much from body language as from Murrow’s insightful questions.

    I believe that all the great interviewers of our time learned much of their craft from Murrow. This is a collection of historic proportion.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. #5 by T. Davis on March 20, 2010 - 6:33 am

    Better known for his radio broadcasts from London during the Blitz and for his televised confrontations with Joseph McCarthy during the HUAC hearings, Edward R. Murrow was also a fine interviewer, and his television series Person to Person gave us home movies of many of the best-known public personalities of the 40s, 50s, and 60s.

    From 1953 to 1959, Murrow conducted live, remote interviews of famed entertainers and political figures in their apartments or houses, which was quite an innovation for the relatively new medium of TV. Each interview was a carefully staged and scripted affair using multiple cameras and lasting 13 or 14 minutes. The interviewees knew the questions to be asked, yet many were obviously nervous about having their inner sanctums invaded by technicians, bulky equipment, and bright lights. As a result, they come across a bit stiff at times, but all in all they acquit themselves well.

    Murrow’s guests, who are simultaneously our hosts, give us choreographed tours of their beautiful homes and prized possessions — Jonathan Winter’s beer steins, Sid Caesar’s rifles, Dick Clark’s records, Jerry Lewis’ paintings, Sammy Davis’ suits — which tell us a lot about their personal hobbies and passions. Winters draws a sketch, Davis does some gunslinging, and both do impressions. Liberace plays a few arpeggios, and Dean Martin performs card tricks. Some of the stars, like Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward or Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, come across as completely at ease, revealing why they enjoyed such long-lasting careers and happy marriages.

    We meet not only celebrities but also their spouses and, heading to bed, their children, who are invariably coached to greet Mr. Murrow. Certain stars, among them Marlon Brando, Sammy Davis, Marilyn Monroe, and others, introduce us to their parents, relatives, friends, collaborators, and in the case of Frank Sinatra, his Asian houseboys (who complement his new Japanese-style house).

    There are many memorable moments: Liberace and his home are over the top, as is watching him talk about how much he likes women and wants to get married. Marilyn Monroe, on the other hand, seems modest, subdued, and even fragile at the home of her favorite photographer. Watching a young Dick Clark defend rock music and the kids who enjoy it is a great reminder of the social shifts the US was experiencing in the 50s.

    The Kennedy brothers display their pre-White-House charisma and talk about their father, Joseph Sr., and brother, Joseph Jr., who was killed in World War II. Jack shows off framed letters by Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln, demonstrating his unabashed political ambition. Watching Bobby and Ethel put their tired children to bed is particularly touching. Eleanor Roosevelt is charming as she discusses her work at the UN and presents us with some of the art and souvenirs she collected from around the world.

    These selected interviews are snapshots, so not all of the projects that the featured subjects were working on at the time are of enduring value, nor is every personality scintillating, but they frequently refer to important people and events that should whet the appetite of an attentive viewer for further historical and cultural research. The quality of the film from which these shows are drawn also varies greatly, so the viewer should expect fluctuations in contrast and grain. The images are occasionally overexposed or underexposed, or scratched and dirty, but all of the interviews are clear enough to appreciate.

    CBS newsman Bob Schieffer introduces and wraps up each of the DVDs in this 3-DVD set with segments that last a minute or two. Following is a complete alphabetical listing of the personalities on parade in this collection:

    Lauren Bacall

    Milton Berle

    Humphrey Bogart

    Marlon Brando

    Sid Caesar

    Carol Channing

    Dick Clark

    Tony Curtis

    Bette Davis

    Sammy Davis, Jr.

    Kirk Douglas

    Billy Graham

    Andy Griffith

    Oscar Hammerstein

    Helen Hayes

    Charlton Heston

    Gene Kelley

    Ethel Kennedy

    Jacqueline Kennedy

    John F. Kennedy

    Robert Kennedy

    Janet Leigh

    Jerry Lewis

    Liberace

    Art Linkletter

    Sophia Loren

    Dean Martin

    Marilyn Monroe

    Paul Newman

    Norman Rockwell

    Eleanor Roosevelt

    Frank Sinatra

    Elizabeth Taylor

    Danny Thomas

    Mike Todd

    Esther Williams

    Jonathan Winters

    Joanne Woodward
    Rating: 4 / 5

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