Posts from DukePilgrim in thread „John Wayne Michael Parkinson Interview“

    I have a feeling JW was only on Parkinson once. If he did appear before this it must have been 1st series in 1971 which according to Parkinson were destroyed by BBC.

    To be honest Parkinson was past his best from mid to late 70s onwards and he will now trot off into the sunset. I think Michael Winner's comments about honours summed it up
    concisely.

    Lets hope the full interview of John Wayne will turn up in some kind of DVD release.

    Mike

    Hi Arthur

    Yes, considering Jimmy Stewart James Cagney & Henry Fonda all got an outing it was disappointing. John Wayne's appearance seems to be in a dark blue suit/tuxedo with dickie bow so I think he was only on once.

    I have a segment of his Parkinson interview so if there are some kind of DVD releases with the full interview I reckon he will be included with other Hollywood stars.

    Mike

    A special last episode of the Parkinson Show is on tomorrow featuring interviews from past shows. Dont know if John Wayne will feature but likely to feature Jimmy Stewart, James Cagney and Orson Welles.

    Hopefully some kind of DVD of interviews will be released this year.

    Parkinson - The Final Show


    Saturday 22 December 2007 10:15pm - 11:20pm on ITV1.
    In the final of three specials that celebrate and conclude the final ever series of Parkinson, this show will be the last to be filmed after four decades of truly mesmerising chat.
    Michael Parkinson will be in the studio taking a fond and poignant look back at all the truly great guests he's had on his show over the years. Personally picking all the clips himself, they'll show us why his chat show is littered with golden TV moments.
    The guests read like a who's who of popular culture of the last thirty years, and many of the encounters have attained legendary status: Muhammad Ali, Fred Astaire, Richard Burton and Orson Welles, to name but a few.
    Parkinson first became established as a regular fixture on Saturday night television in the early 1970s and during Michael's long tenure as Britain's premier talk show host he undertook thousands of interviews.
    The show arrived at ITV in 2004 after over three decades at the BBC. Since then he's welcomed many of the world's biggest stars to the programme including Tom Cruise, Madonna, John Travolta, Tony Blair, Sir Elton John, Ricky Gervais, Robbie Williams, Lauren Bacall, Sir Paul McCartney, Bette Midler and Kate Winslet.
    "The final show is a reminder of how lucky and privileged I have been to meet so many fascinatingly talented people. Fred Astaire to Nureyev, Ali to Ricky Hatton, Best to Beckham, Cagney to Cruise, Ingrid Bergmann to Cate Blanchett, Jack Benny to Billy Connolly. I shall miss it," says Michael Parkinson.
    Director of Entertainment and Comedy Paul Jackson says: "As someone who worked with Michael in a very junior role in the 1970s and was involved in bringing him back to prime-time television in the 1990s, I have been delighted to work with him once again in these last three years at ITV.
    "He has defined the talk show in British television and no-one has come near to equalling his record. His name is synonymous throughout the English speaking world as a benchmark for integrity and quality in the genre and being invited to appear on his show is a recognised landmark in any star's career."
    Mark Wells, Executive Producer of Parkinson, says: "Truly, this is the end of an era. Michael Parkinson is one of the giants of broadcasting, his skills as a talk show host are quite simply the best in the world. The Parkinson show has been a part of the British Saturday night for so long, it's hard to imagine life without it."
    Michael Parkinson is a true TV legend, and one who will be greatly missed by everyone, so sit back and enjoy one final time: Parkinson, the man, the conversation, the stars.

    Michael Parkinson has announced that he plans to release archive programmes of his show so possibly here comes that elusive John Wayne interview plus Jimmy Cagney and James Stewart etc.

    Mike


    He has interviewed 2,000 of the world's most famous people in a TV career spanning 26 years – and now Michael Parkinson plans to spend his retirement watching them all over again.




    He will go back through his archive and "fillet" shows to create a major retrospective series.
    Yet far from being a sign that the 72-year-old is clinging to past glories, he insists he "can't wait" for retirement. He plans to visit Australia and write and promote his autobiography, as well as find a way of repackaging interviews with the likes of Orson Welles, James Cagney, Fred Astaire, Peter Sellers and Muhammad Ali.