Cher, Tina Turner and Kate Smith Rock The Beatles
It’s one of those things that could only happen in the 1970s. Read that headline again: Cher, Tina Turner and Kate Smith Rock The Beatles.
Wait…what?
April 27th, 1975 is the exact date when Cher, Tina Turner and Kate Smith sing The Beatles happened. It was during the first season of “The Cher Show” – and it’s just bizarre (watch for Tim Conway’s cameo).
Cher and The Beatles
Cher had a long standing love for the Fab Four going back to 1964 and the height of Beatlemania – she released a song called “Ringo, I Love You” under the pseudonym Bonnie Jo Mason. It was an unabashed love letter to Ringo with lyrics like:
“Ringo, I love you, Yeah yeah yeah, More than anything in this world, I wanna be your girl, Please let me hold you, Ringo, they say yeah, yeah, yeah, I’ll never get to hold ya tight, But still I dream of you at night, Please let me hold your hand.”
It’s Amazing We Ever Did Homework
I was thinking about being a kid in the 1970s, how did we ever get any homework done with stuff like this on at night? I don’t remember seeing this when it first aired (I’m sure my Grandma probably didn’t like Cher…she had a thing about hippies). And I’m still trying to figure out how Kate Smith came to the party (not complaining) – but I can get my head around Cher and Tina Turner…but Kate Smith? Told you, the 70s were just weird. WEIRD.
If we weren’t watching Cher, Tina Turner and Kate Smith sing The Beatles – we were contemplating jumping anything as Evel Knievel or I’d take the screens out of the windows at grandmas house and pretend to be one of the members of SWAT (best TV show theme of all time).
Cher, Tina Turner and Kate Smith sing The Beatles
Did you watch all of it? It’s pure madness – colorful, confusing, funny, cool and weird. Kinda like the 70’s, huh?
50 Best Movies from the 1970s
The 1970s were a magical time for movies, with a whole new crop of stars and directors becoming household names, from Robert Redford and Al Pacino to Steven Spielberg and Woody Allen. After the tumultuous Sixties that included the civil rights movement, the sexual revolution, and the Vietnam War, America was a different place, and Hollywood reflected the changing culture like a cinematic mirror. Films started exploring new ground with changing gender roles, political mistrust, and more subversive forms of comedy. The result was a new era, both in American cinema and around the world.
To celebrate the cinematic heyday of the 1970s, this list was compiled to rank the best movies of the decade. Stacker compiled data on all 1970s movies to come up with a Stacker score—a weighted index split evenly between IMDb and Metacritic scores. To qualify, the film had to have a premiere date between 1970 and 1979, have a Metascore, and have at least 1,000 votes. Ties were broken by Metascore and further ties were broken by IMDb user rating and votes. All data updated as of January 12, 2020.
This decade, part of the “New Hollywood” era of movies, was led by the film school generation. These filmmakers challenged the traditional, stagnant perspective of Hollywood while also encouraging the academic study of film and distribution of international films. These latter initiatives really gave birth to the field of film criticism as we know it today which, in turn, have changed how films are crafted and made, leading to the demise of the New Hollywood age at the end of the ’70s.
Keep reading to discover the Italian-American series that cleaned up at the Oscars and find out which controversial director appeared on the list three separate times.