Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 May 1983, p. 50

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10:30 PM O MOVIE: Doyrnvnas a Trouuiea PACE 22 FRIDAY, JUNE 3 9:00PM O O i ® Falcon Crest Richard Chonnmg uses hit newspaper to exploit Chase's county supervisor position. (R) (60 mm.) 0 CD @9 To Be Announced (D Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau (3D @9 ® American Playhouse 'Northern lights.' Tonight's film is a story of farming in the winter of 1*15 and the first Scandinavian immi­ grants. (R) (90 mm.) (Closed Cap­ tioned] (B Olympic Perspective (D Human Sexuality © MOVIE. 'Richard Fryer Live on the Sunset Strip' @ MOVIE: 'For Your Eye* Only" mm Tom Cottle Up Clote 10 3rd Annual Big Laff Off Finals QD Newt According to Playboy © (2® At Final del Arco Iris @D CNN Headline New* 9:30PM O Yesteryear in Nashville ® D. Drysdate's IcMebai USA CD Crisis Counselor CD (38) Entertainment Tonight © lie Detector © Great Poet* in the spotlight Carlo Maria Giulini, music director of the Los Angelas Philharmonic, conducts the works of Brahms. Giulini conducts Brahms In a year which celebrates the 150th anniversary of the birth of Johannes Brahms, one of the composer's most popular works will performed in the third of a special series of four Wednesday evening concerts featuring Maestro Carlo Maria Giulini and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Brahms' "Symphony TMo. 1," videotaped at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at the Music Center in, Los Angeles, will air over PBS on Wednesday, June 1. (Please check local listings for time.) Brahms was extremely self-critical of his work and his Firdt Symphony took two decades to complete. In 1854, after hear­ ing Beethoven's Ninth Symphony fpr the first time, he resolved to write one in the sahie key. that of D Minor Dissatisfied with his first attempts, Brahms instead used the materials for a sonata for two pianos. The first two characters of that sonata ultimately became part of his dramatic First Piano Concerto in D Minor. The Symphony, was not, in fact, written in the D Minor key of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony but in C Minor, although its opening and closing movements owe mufcb to Beethovi influence. (c) 1983 Compulog York Met* at Lee Angeles 9:45 PM O Alphome Mucha 1860-1939: 10:00 PM 8 8 a o @888,88 New* o Na»hvi>o After Hour* ©Soap CD Su tines* Report I Night Flight i Nature of Thing* MOVIE: 'Twice a Woman' Lisa Peluso New producer hopes 'Search' has tomorrow By Connie Passalacqua, When NBC picked up "Search for Tomorrow" 18 months ago after its 30- year run on CBS, the net­ work hoped that the ratings of the moderately low-rated soap would improve. Instead, they've worsened. The only hope of staving off cancellation, now seems to lie with the innovations brought by the show's new executive producer, Joan­ na Lee, who joined the show in early April. Although Miss Lee has no previous daytime drama experience, she has been cited for her excellent work on nighttime shows. She won a 1974 Emmy for best writing of a dramatic epi­ sode -- "Thanksgiving" on "The Waltons." She's also produced, directed and written several TV movies. Miss Lee doesn't approve of the subject matter of some recent "SFT" plot lines such as art thefts, laundered money and the events revolving around a plane crash in a South American forest. "Women pre not inter­ ested in that. They want love and romance, things which naturally evolve in real people's lives," she says. Miss Lee plans to use the most of the natural talents of the actors playing "SFT's" characters. The talented Marie Cheatham, who plays Stephanie . Wyatt, has beeh - ignored the last few years, whjl$ • story lines revolved around the show's younger char­ acters. But Miss Lee plans to make the most of Miss Cheat ham's comic flair. Tina Johnson, who played dizzy but endearing Lurlene on. "Texas," has recently been hired to, play Stephanie's sidekick, cbun- try singer Rhinda Rue Huckaby. Stephanie is slated' to have a .scan­ dalous older w6man- younger man romanceiwith sportscaster Steve Kdhdall, played by newlyagjired "hunk." Phii Brown. ... •- • J » -4 She is also changing, the rather goody-goody "char­ acter of Stephanie'sj daughter Wendy into a villainess. "Isn't Lisa Peluso (who plays Wendy) abso­ lutely gorgeous?" raves Miss Lee. "We're going to make her into the Joan Col­ lins of daytime," . .Will ther& be a tonjQrrow for "Sea'rbh"? Joanr)^ Lee thinks so/^ >V Computog

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