Dolly Parton fans have a new way to enjoy the “Queen of Country’s” music. The songwriter announced her Vinyl Me, Parton subscription, with a Parton Record of the Month available to members. Here’s what we know about the first record in the collection — My Tennesse Mountain Home.
Dolly Parton debuted the ‘Vinyl Me, Parton’ subscription Dolly Parton performs on stage at the Echo Arena | Richard Martin-Roberts/Redferns via Getty Images
The “Queen of Country” released over a dozen records throughout her career. Now, there’s a new way to listen to Parton’s music. The artist announced her monthly vinyl record subscription, created with Vinyl Me Please.
“Vinyl Me, Parton is finally here,” Parton wrote on Twitter. “Start your subscription to my record club at [Vinyl Me Please] to get a full year of my albums delivered monthly, starting with My Tennessee Mountain Home. Join the club and learn more about this exciting news at Vmp!
Dolly Parton debuted the ‘Vinyl Me, Parton’ subscription Dolly Parton performs on stage at the Echo Arena | Richard Martin-Roberts/Redferns via Getty Images
The “Queen of Country” released over a dozen records throughout her career. Now, there’s a new way to listen to Parton’s music. The artist announced her monthly vinyl record subscription, created with Vinyl Me Please.
“Vinyl Me, Parton is finally here,” Parton wrote on Twitter. “Start your subscription to my record club at [Vinyl Me Please] to get a full year of my albums delivered monthly, starting with My Tennessee Mountain Home. Join the club and learn more about this exciting news at Vmp!
- 3/22/2023
- by Julia Dzurillay
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
By Lee Pfeiffer
The Warner Archive has released the 1951 comedy Callaway Went Thataway. The film is a low-key but delightful tale that has more than a wisp of Frank Capra in its story line. The movie opens with a montage of scenes showing young boys and girls glued to their television sets as they watch the adventures of singing cowboy Smoky Callaway (Howard Keel). They don't realize they are actually viewing old "B" movies from the 1930s. Not that it matters. Callaway has found a new audience with a younger generation and they have made him America's favorite TV hero in these early days of the medium.(Since so many households did not have televisions in 1951, the film shows a common sight during this era: people crowded around department store windows to watch TV broadcasts). Network brass and sponsors immediately want to keep the gold train rolling by initiating more new films starring Smoky.
The Warner Archive has released the 1951 comedy Callaway Went Thataway. The film is a low-key but delightful tale that has more than a wisp of Frank Capra in its story line. The movie opens with a montage of scenes showing young boys and girls glued to their television sets as they watch the adventures of singing cowboy Smoky Callaway (Howard Keel). They don't realize they are actually viewing old "B" movies from the 1930s. Not that it matters. Callaway has found a new audience with a younger generation and they have made him America's favorite TV hero in these early days of the medium.(Since so many households did not have televisions in 1951, the film shows a common sight during this era: people crowded around department store windows to watch TV broadcasts). Network brass and sponsors immediately want to keep the gold train rolling by initiating more new films starring Smoky.
- 8/1/2015
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
Top box office movies of 2013: If you make original, quality films… (photo: Sandra Bullock has two movies among the top 15 box office hits of 2013; Bullock is seen here in ‘The Heat,’ with Melissa McCarthy) (See previous post: “2013 Box Office Record? History is Remade If a Few ‘Minor Details’ Ignored.”) As further evidence that moviegoers want original, quality entertainment, below you’ll find a list of the top 15 movies at the domestic box office in 2013 — nine of which are sequels or reboots (ten if you include Oz the Great and Powerful), and more than half of which are 3D releases. Disney and Warner Bros. were the two top studios in 2013. Disney has five movies among the top 15; Warners has three. With the exception of the sleeper blockbuster Gravity, which, however dumbed down, targeted a more mature audience, every single one of the titles below were aimed either at teenagers/very,...
- 12/31/2013
- by Zac Gille
- Alt Film Guide
The actor Fess Parker, who has died aged 85, was a quintessential westerner, a tall, rugged, Texas-born athlete turned actor, famous for his portrayals of two frontiersmen, Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone, as well as sheriffs, cowboys and ranchers. He greatly appreciated the commercial success of these two title roles, and himself became a substantial businessman.
The Walt Disney Studio was the first in Hollywood to move wholeheartedly into television, and had the bright idea of combining three episodes of the Davy Crockett series Parker had made for them in 1954 into a feature. The result, Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier (1955), spawned the craze for "racoon-fur" hats and became a box-office hit on the back of its singalong theme - Bill Hayes's recording of The Ballad of Davy Crockett topped the charts for three months,...
The Walt Disney Studio was the first in Hollywood to move wholeheartedly into television, and had the bright idea of combining three episodes of the Davy Crockett series Parker had made for them in 1954 into a feature. The result, Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier (1955), spawned the craze for "racoon-fur" hats and became a box-office hit on the back of its singalong theme - Bill Hayes's recording of The Ballad of Davy Crockett topped the charts for three months,...
- 3/19/2010
- by Brian Baxter
- The Guardian - Film News
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