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1-28 of 28
- In 16th-century Italy, devil-may-care playboy Don Juan runs afoul of the despotic Borgias.
- The New York Philharmonic performs several works in a concert at Rockefeller Center's renowned Studio 8H, made famous by Arturo Toscanini, conductor of the NBC orchestra for 17 years (1937-54). The "floating studio," which is suspended in midair by cables within the building, was built to Toscanini's specifications during his tenure at NBC, and at the time was the most acoustically perfect studio devised. During the intermission, Mehta guides a portrait of Toscanini - including clips from his televised concerts.
- Frank Fernandez and Cynthia Revesz produce part two of the New York Philharmonic 1997 South American tour. Filmed in five nations, this one hour television special aired in the fall of 1997 on USA Latin America, a division of the USA Network.
- In a ninety minute interview with excerpts from rehearsals and concerts, Leonard Bernstein reminisces about the beginning of his career as a conductor and his experiences with the New York Philharmonic, the Israel Philharmonic, and the Vienna Philharmonic.
- A special concert given in memory of President John F. Kennedy, who had been assassinated just two days previously. The featured work was Mahler's Symphony No. 2 (the "Resurrection" Symphony).
- Leonard Bernstein discusses Beethoven's Ninth Symphony and performs the last movement, which includes the "Ode to Joy".
- A New Year's Eve concert of music from Italian opera.
- 1958–197255m9.0 (9)TV Episode
- 1971– TV-G8.4 (51)TV Episode
- 1958–197255m8.6 (15)TV Episode
- 1958–197255mTV Episode
- 1958–197255mTV EpisodeSecond of the season's "Young People's Concerts," Leonard Bernstein takes a "fond look backward" to the 19th Century, when music had a distinctly national flavor and features works by Bedrick Smetana, Manuel de Falla and Charles Ives.
- 1958–197255m7.2 (9)TV Episode
- 1958–197255m7.8 (18)TV EpisodeWaltzes by Johann Strauss, Richard Strauss, Beethoven, Mozart, and Mahler.
- 1976– 1h 50mTV Episode
- 1958–19721h7.8 (17)TV EpisodeBernstein discusses the origins and characteristics of American music. In closing, Aaron Copland conducts parts of his own Third Symphony.
- 1971– TV-G8.8 (37)TV Episode
- 1958–197255mTV EpisodeLeonard Bernstein's first "Young People's Concert" from Philharmonic Hall (now Avery Fisher Hall). Here, he discusses how a hall's acoustics affect a concert performance.
- 1958–197255m8.0 (6)TV Episode
- 1958–197250mTV Episode
- On March 25, 1911, New York City's Triangle Shirtwaist Factory burst into flames, and 146 workers - nearly all young women, many of them teenage immigrants - perished. We visit the building and learn how public outcry inspired workplace safety laws that revolutionized industrial work nationwide. Descendants and activists show us how that work reverberates today.