Monday, March 23rd TV listings for Turner Classic Movies USA HD
I Love Melvin (1953)
A magazine photographer's helper (Donald O'Connor) rashly promises to put a chorus girl (Debbie Reynolds) on the cover.
Kismet (1944)
Fate follows a beggar king (Ronald Colman), his daughter, a dancer (Marlene Dietrich), and the caliph and grand vizier (Edward Arnold) of Baghdad.
Little Women (1949)
Based on the story by Louisa May Alcott. The four March sisters forge unbreakable emotional ties during the Civil War.
Singin' in the Rain (1952)
A silent-film star (Gene Kelly) loves a chorus girl (Debbie Reynolds) who dubs his squeaky-voiced co-star in a 1927 Hollywood talkie.
The Bad and the Beautiful (1952)
A ruthless producer (Kirk Douglas) uses and discards Hollywood hopefuls as stepping stones to the top of the Tinseltown heap.
When Ladies Meet (1933)
The wife (Ann Harding) of a publisher meets his girlfriend (Myrna Loy), who does not know he's married.
Act of Violence (1949)
A crippled World War II veteran (Robert Ryan) stalks a contractor (Van Heflin) whose prison-camp betrayal caused a massacre.
Tommy (1975)
The Who's rock opera follows a mute, deaf and blind, boy (Roger Daltrey) who becomes a pinball wizard.
Chicago (2002)
A lawyer (Richard Gere) handles the cases of two murderous women (Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renée Zellweger) who are looking to gain celebrity from their public exposure.
Pennies From Heaven (1981)
A sheet-music salesman (Steve Martin) escapes his wife, girlfriend (Bernadette Peters) and the Depression through his songs.
Hair (1979)
An Oklahoman (John Savage) bound for Vietnam falls in love with a New York debutante (Beverly D'Angelo) and discovers the Age of Aquarius with hippies in Central Park.
Divine Madness (1980)
Bette Midler dresses up, tells racy jokes and sings "The Rose," "I Shall Be Released," "Leader of the Pack."
I'll See You in My Dreams (1951)
Songwriter Gus Kahn (Danny Thomas) and his wife (Doris Day) have problems as he pens hit tunes like "It Had to Be You."
Deep in My Heart (1954)
Hungarian Sigmund Romberg (Jose Ferrer) comes to circa-1900 New York and becomes a composer for Broadway and Hollywood.
