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Merv Griffin
Merv at the piano
Cover: Very Good...with original sleeve
Record: VG...tracks well...no noise...$18.00
SIDE 1
1) Love Theme From Romeo & Juliet - Not Given...NTG
2) A Time for Tony - Traditional - Not Given...NTG
3) Love's Been Good To Me - Not Given...NTG
4) I Talk To The Trees - Not Given...NTG
5) When Sonny Gets Blue - Not Given...NTG
SIDE 2
1) Try To Remember - Not Given...NTG
2) These Foolish Things - Not Given...NTG
3) Merv's Original Theme - Not Given...NTG
4) Thur The Night (Based on Chopin's Prelude) - Not Given...NTG
5) Rachmaninoff's 18th Variation - Rachmaninoff...NTG
Side 2 is missed labeled - track 2 These Foolish Things is the first track, Try To Remember is the second track
MERV GRIFFIN has been called "television's total performer."
Every day over 20,000,000 viewers tune in his Emmy award-winning show—the most enjoyable 90
minutes in broadcasting. And as you watch him talking casually with great personalities—actors,
entertainers, writers, politicians—you can't help but be struck by the feeling that here is
a very special man, with a very special talent.
They say a television camera is like an x-ray machine. It sees right through into the inner
person. And what the TV audience admires in Merv are the same things that impress his
friends—his intelligence, his inventive humor, his honesty, and his gentleness.
Merv is a man of so many abilities that people sometimes forget that he began his career as
a singer. He won the music polls as the number one band vocalist several times. He has a
quiet, natural style that is all his own. And when he sits down at the piano, you can feel
the excitement.
Merv got his first singing job at radio station KFRC in San Francisco when a teenager.
The famous bandleader Freddy Martin heard him perform and hired Merv to sing on the
exclusive hotel circuit, movie houses, and ballrooms. Soon Merv was electrifying overflow
crowds from Los Angeles' Coconut Grove to the Waldorf Astoria, to New York's Strand Theatre.
His jaunty recording "I've Got A Loverly Bunch of Coconuts" sold more than three million
copies and catapulted him to stardom. He followed up with other top hits including
"Wilhelmina" and "Never Been Kissed."
One night Doris Day came to see his standing-room-only nightclub performance. She was so
impressed with the young singer that she arranged a screen test at Warner Brothers. And so
he began a new career in films, starring in "So This is Love" (with Kathryn Grayson):
"The Boy From Oklahoma": and "The Phantom of the Rue Morgue."
Merv then broke into television, hosting his own network shows from Miami and New York.
He appeared frequently on "The Jack Paar Show," "The Arthur Murray Show," "The Robert Q.
Lewis Show," and "Keep Talking." Meanwhile, he also starred on Broadway in the first
successful revival of "Finian's Rainbow."
Soon TV executives were talking about "The Merv phenomenon." And as the popularity of
"The Merv Griffin Show" continued to soar, he began a new enterprise as the creator and
producer of such popular television game shows as "Jeopardy!" "Word for Word,"
"One in a Million," "The Memory Game," "Let's Play Postoffice," "Reach for the Stars," and,
most recently, NBC's highest rated daytime show, "Wheel of Fortune."
Today, when Merv's not at the studio in Hollywood or taping a new national special, you'll
find him at home in Pebble Beach, far up the beautiful rugged Pacific coastline. He enjoys
tennis, and deep-sea fishing. And he pilots single engine planes and co-pilots his own.
(A favorite companion in those activities is his 17 year old son, Tony.)
Currently, "The Merv Griffin Show" is syndicated on over 125 stations throughout the country
and Canada. His millions of fans look forward to those moments when Merv sits down at the
piano to play a hauntingly beautiful number (often of his own composition). And when he
sings-with such rich and mellow control—it's unforgettable.
This two-record album (i.e.: Only one record in this albem - never was two) brings together
many of the hits both vocally and playing the piano that Merv has made famous in his 25 years
in show business. Put it on your turn table, sit back, and listen to the quiet mastery of a
great, great performer.
MORT LINDSEY, musical director for "The Merv Griffin Show" holds many distinctions.
He conducted for Judy Garland and Barbra Streisand at the Hollywood Bowl—and also conducted
the classic album "Judy Garland at Carnegie Hall", for which he won a Grammy Award.
Mort holds a Doctoral degree from Columbia University and for several years taught
Orchestration and Scoring at his Alma Mater. He has conducted and composed for five major
movies and is a three time Emmy nominee, as well as an Emmy Award winner.
After three years in the Air Force, Mort joined NBC and has also worked with WCBS-TV and the
ABC Television Network in New York.
Mort and his wife, Judy, have three children and live in Malibu, near Hollywood.
SIDE ONE
Love Theme From Romeo & Juliet*** - Time for Tony***A
Love's Been Good To Me*** - I Talk To The Trees***
When Sonny Gets Blue**
SIDE TWO
Try To Remember** - These Foolish Things**
Merv's Original Theme***A - Thru The Night (Based on Chopin's Prelude)
Rachmaninoff's 18th Variation***
PRODUCED BY:
GRIFFIN RECORDS, INC.
M.F. RECORDS, INC.
DISTRIBUTED BY:
CLASSIC HOUSE, INC.
A-Composed by Merv Griffin
**Under license from M6M Records, Inc.
***Released by arrangement with Metromedia, Inc.
® 1976 Griffin Records, Inc. and M.F. Records, Inc.
® 1976 Griffin Records. Inc. and M.F. Records, Inc.
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