Thanks so much for posting this classic Welk Show!!! I was a tender teenager of 14 when this aired. Brings back LOTS of happy memories of our family tradition of gathering each Saturday evening for the latest Welk program. The older shows, the better, as far as I'm concerned. Keep these coming!! ;o)
This is one of the shows they prerecorded all the talking, singing and music. All Lip sinking. I dont know why they did it. It just wasnt live. Maybe they had microphone problems. I notice in each of the different videos they used a different piano. Sometimes Baldwin concert grand, other times baby grand, and the worst, a cheap little spinet . I think they must have rented the pianos for each show and maybe they couldnt always get a roper grand for the show. I watched this hsow when I was alittle fellow with my grandparents on Saturday night. Lots of memories. thanks.
The invention of television was the work of many individuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries involving both mechanical scanning, and all electronic scanning (the latter became standard after WWII, and Farnsworth was on the winning team). Others could also claim credit: USSR (Boris Rosing; Leon Theremin; Vladimir K. Zworykin), England (Isaac Shoenberg), Scotland (Alan Archibald Campbell-Swinton; Logie Baird;), USA (Charles Francis Jenkins; Farnsworth; Herbert E. Ives & Frank Gray ), Japan (Kenjiro Takayanagi), Hungary (Kálmán Tihanyi), or Slovinia (Anton Codelli).
He's referring to Lawrence Welk Show, "celebrating more than 50 years on television,' since it debuted on ABC in 1955 and this rerun was first broadcast on PBS around 2008.
Was subjected to this every weekend. Was 4 when this aired. Miss the times, but not the content of this show. What this does exhibit is how quickly times change and people pass away.
Please don’t loop all young people together, I absolutely love Lawrence Welk and am so thankful that my work ( caring for elderly ) has shown this to me. I wish you could see the life brought to my patients with dementia when I play this. I assure you, would have re thought this comment.
52 years later... it's a Saturday night.. and I'm sitting here, watching the Lawrence Welk program. Time sure flies.. but talent never does.
Always loved !!!!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🎶🎵🎵🎶🎵🎶🎶🎶🎶🎵😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁
Great show!
I always loved the energy and personality of both Bob Lido and Jack Imel.
Such handsome men and beautiful women and all so talented and clean and decent!
justess martin - "clean & decent", except for cast members guilty of sexual assault of women and/or children.
@@richardwebb2348 What you talkin bout Willis¿
Wow, another wonderful fun and relaxing video. Joann Castle is a great panio player. Thank you for uploading and God Bless.
Thanks so much for posting this classic Welk Show!!! I was a tender teenager of 14 when this aired. Brings back LOTS of happy memories of our family tradition of gathering each Saturday evening for the latest Welk program. The older shows, the better, as far as I'm concerned. Keep these coming!! ;o)
L-O-V-E that FOXY Tanya!
I wish Jo ann was a part of the show longer, she was such a good addition
4:49
This is one of the shows they prerecorded all the talking, singing and music. All Lip sinking. I dont know why they did it. It just wasnt live. Maybe they had microphone problems. I notice in each of the different videos they used a different piano. Sometimes Baldwin concert grand, other times baby grand, and the worst, a cheap little spinet . I think they must have rented the pianos for each show and maybe they couldnt always get a roper grand for the show. I watched this hsow when I was alittle fellow with my grandparents on Saturday night. Lots of memories. thanks.
Announcer messed up he said celebrating 50 years of television.Television was invented in 1927.
The invention of television was the work of many individuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries involving both mechanical scanning, and all electronic scanning (the latter became standard after WWII, and Farnsworth was on the winning team). Others could also claim credit: USSR (Boris Rosing; Leon Theremin; Vladimir K. Zworykin), England (Isaac Shoenberg), Scotland (Alan Archibald Campbell-Swinton; Logie Baird;), USA (Charles Francis Jenkins; Farnsworth; Herbert E. Ives & Frank Gray ), Japan (Kenjiro Takayanagi), Hungary (Kálmán Tihanyi), or Slovinia (Anton Codelli).
He's referring to Lawrence Welk Show, "celebrating more than 50 years on television,' since it debuted on ABC in 1955 and this rerun was first broadcast on PBS around 2008.
As a kid, I felt Arthur Duncan was the only watchable part of this geriatric show that pitched iron pills. Still true today...
Not my thing also.........BORING
It's nostalgic music, which make me remember my childhood and my Dad trying to imitate Joann Castle playing ragtime music, what a hoot.
Was subjected to this every weekend. Was 4 when this aired. Miss the times, but not the content of this show. What this does exhibit is how quickly times change and people pass away.
This is a gross comment
Please don’t loop all young people together, I absolutely love Lawrence Welk and am so thankful that my work ( caring for elderly ) has shown this to me. I wish you could see the life brought to my patients with dementia when I play this. I assure you, would have re thought this comment.
4:45