
Wednesday, September 24th TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA HD
Andy Hardy Gets Spring Fever (1939)
Judge Hardy (Lewis Stone) tries to talk Andy (Mickey Rooney) out of quitting high school to marry his drama teacher.
Up the Down Staircase (1967)
A novice teacher (Sandy Dennis) finds hostile students and staff apathy at a tough New York high school.
A Yank at Oxford (1938)
Students haze a swaggering Kansas track star (Robert Taylor) who takes up rowing and romance at Oxford.
A Yank at Eton (1942)
A rowdy American boy's (Mickey Rooney) British stepfather (Ian Hunter) puts him in a stuffy prep school.
Two Loves (1961)
An American spinster (Shirley MacLaine) teaches Maoris in New Zealand and loves two men (Laurence Harvey, Jack Hawkins), one after the other.
Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939)
Charles Edward Chipping imposes strict discipline on his young charges, but the love of spirited young suffragette Katherine Ellis brings the Latin instructor out of his shell and makes him a beloved campus institution.
Sex and the Single Girl (1964)
The editor (Tony Curtis) of a scandal magazine targets a psychologist (Natalie Wood) and her sex-studies institute.
Barefoot in the Park (1967)
A conservative lawyer (Robert Redford) marries a vivacious woman (Jane Fonda), and the two move into a busy Greenwich Village apartment.
Hotel (1967)
The manager (Rod Taylor) of a posh New Orleans hotel handles a hostile takeover, a scandal and a thief (Karl Malden).
The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972)
A small-time outlaw takes over a town by dispensing his own form of justice and confiscating property for court costs.
The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964)
A British lord (Rex Harrison), an Italian mobster's moll (Shirley MacLaine) and a U.S. widow (Ingrid Bergman) own the car during the 1920s, '30s and '40s.
Hollywood Without Makeup (1965)
A compilation of home movies that captures some of Hollywood's celebrities in candid, off-screen moments.
Your Cheatin' Heart (1964)
Country singer/composer Hank Williams' (George Hamilton) wife (Susan Oliver) drives him to fame, cut short by tragedy.