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Displaying 7216 - 7230 of 56403
Actress Maria Riva on appearing in Hallmark Hall of Fame: "The Story of Ruth," on Easter Sunday 1954 (April 18) after appearing with Walter Matthau on Broadway in "The Burning Glass" [she misidentifies it as Omnibus  segment "The Abracadabra Kid" which she did with Matthau the previous year]
00:36
Actress Maria Riva on appearing in the debate/contest show Let's Take Sides
02:23
Interview: Maria Riva Show: Let's Take Sides
Actress Maria Riva on a terrible mishap on live TV when an actor was injured and she discovered him unconscious and bleeding during the show (possibly on Lux Video Theatre: "Cafe Ami")
03:37
Interview: Maria Riva Show: Lux Video Theatre
Actress Maria Riva on an injury she sustained during dress rehearsal on Danger, and how she went on to do the live show immediately thereafter, (likely the episode "Operation Murder" [airdate: 6/12/51], her only confirmed credit with actor Jerome Thor)
04:49
Interview: Maria Riva Show: Danger
Actress Maria Riva offers off-screen descriptions of a few stills from her work on Studio One
02:23
Interview: Maria Riva Show: Studio One
Actress Maria Riva on making costume changes in "live" TV in the 1950s
01:14
Maria Riva on how she became a contract player for CBS in the early 1950s, along with actress Mary Sinclair, John Newland, and (possibly) John Forsythe all of whom then worked on such CBS series of the day as Studio One and Danger
01:43
Maria Riva on establishing herself as a TV star in the 1950s, and how little TV demanded of acting "talent" in the early days of the medium
01:28
Maria Riva on a gaffe that happened on "live" TV in the 1950s when the prop gun that actor Rod Steiger was using didn't fire— prompting him to instead say "bang" (possibly on Lux Video Theater: "Cafe Ami" [their only confirmed co-starring TV show])
01:26
Maria Riva on the Golden Age of "live" TV in New York in the 1950s, exemplified by such classic anthology series as Studio One
01:04
Maria Riva on the Golden Age of "live" TV in New York in the 1950s, exemplified by such classic anthology series as Studio One
01:04
Interview: Maria Riva Topic: Anthology Drama
Maria Riva on the difference to the public between a movie star and a television actor as she noted when approached by a fan while accompanying her mother Marlene Dietrich in the 1950s
01:33
Interview: Maria Riva Topic: Fame and Celebrity
Maria Riva on the difference to the public between a movie star and a television actor as she noted when approached by a fan while accompanying her mother Marlene Dietrich in the 1950s
01:33
Interview: Maria Riva Topic: Pop Culture
Maria Riva on appearing on a series of cerebral palsy telethons in the 1950s at the request of Yul Brynner (the airtime donated by ABC President Leonard Goldenson), and trying to dispel the stigma of the disease
01:26
Actress Maria Riva on the Golden Age of "live" TV in New York in the 1950s, exemplified by such classic anthology series as Studio One
01:04