+

poster of Frost on Friday
Rating: 0/10 by 0 users

Frost on Friday (1968)

One of the triumvirate of Frost programmes that dominated ITV weekends in the late 1960s and early 70s, Frost on Friday concentrated on current affairs often creating the headlines, as well as reporting on them. Made at a time when David Frost was hosting a chat show in the US and then jetting back to the UK to do three shows over the weekend, Frost on Friday concentrates this energy into forty minutes worth of incisive and insightful commentary on current affairs as well as a number of remarkable interviews with often controversial, high-profile public figures.

Writing:
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Aug 23, 1968

Country:
Language:
Runtime:

Season 1:

Moshe Dayan
Episode 1: Moshe Dayan (Aug 23, 1968)
General Moshe Dayan discussing his role in the Six Day War
Baldur von Schirach
Episode 2: Baldur von Schirach (Sep 13, 1968)
War criminal Baldur von Schirach on his relationship with Hitler.
Ian Smith
Episode 3: Ian Smith (Sep 20, 1968)
David Frost interviews Ian Smith, former Prime Minister of Rhodesia.
James Callaghan
Episode 4: James Callaghan (Oct 18, 1968)
James Callaghan gives a bullish and frank interview in his position as then-Home Secretary.
Cardinal Heenan
Episode 5: Cardinal Heenan (Dec 06, 1968)
Cardinal Heenan outlines his position on contraception.
Muhammad Ali
Episode 6: Muhammad Ali (Dec 13, 1968)
Muhammad Ali is interviewed in New York (during a period when he had been stripped of his title and boxing licence for refusing to be drafted into the Vietnam conflict).
Enoch Powell
Episode 7: Enoch Powell (Jan 03, 1969)
A highly emotional interview with Conservative politician Enoch Powell.
Christiaan Barnard
Episode 8: Christiaan Barnard (Oct 10, 1969)
David Frost interviews Christiaan Barnard the South African cardiac surgeon.
Debate on Capital Punishment
Episode 9: Debate on Capital Punishment (Oct 24, 1969)
A powerful debate on capital punishment includes contributions from the father of Derek Bentley who was hanged for murder in 1953 (and pardoned three decades after this debate was recorded).


My Favorite

Welcome back!

Support Us

Like Movienade?

Please buy us a coffee

scan qr code