Neha Patil (Editor)

Alive from Off Center

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5.6/10
TV

Original language(s)
  
English

Running time
  
28 minutes

First episode date
  
1985

Number of seasons
  
12

8.4/10
IMDb

Country of origin
  
USA

No. of seasons
  
12

Original release
  
1985 – 1996

Final episode date
  
1996

Alive from Off Center httpsiytimgcomviLy0aIZjyyF4hqdefaultjpg

Production company(s)
  
Twin Cities Public Television

Presented by
  
Susan Stamberg (1985–1986), Laurie Anderson (1987), Ann Magnuson (1988), William Wegman (1988)

Nominations
  
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design and Title Sequences

Cast
  
Eric Bogosian, Ann Magnuson, William Wegman, Susan Stamberg

Similar
  
American Playhouse, Great Performances, Masterpiece, Mystery!, Nature

Alive from off center intro outro 1988


Alive from Off Center, renamed Alive TV in 1992, was an American arts anthology television series aired by PBS between 1985 and 1996.

Contents

Each week, the series featured experimental short films by a mixture of up-and-coming and established directors. Notable episodes included "As Seen on TV," starring comic actor Bill Irwin as an auditioning dancer who becomes trapped in a television, wandering among daytime dramas, MTV, and PBS's own Sesame Street and the atmospheric puppet melodrama "Street of Crocodiles," adapted by the Brothers Quay from the Bruno Shultz story.

Other installments included "Dances in Exile" directed by Howard Silver, a recorded dance piece with text by David Henry Hwang and choreography by Ruby Shang and another directed by Jonathan Demme.

Arguably the series' best-known episode was What You Mean We? a short film written by, directed by, and starring Laurie Anderson, which aired in 1986. Anderson later came back to host the 1987 season of the series, assisted by the Clone (who was eventually renamed Fenway Bergamot with a slightly different body shape), a masculine version of Anderson created by digitally altering her image and obscuring her voice that had been introduced in What You Mean We? Most episodes of the 1987 season opened with a brief skit by Anderson and the clone by way of introducing that week's piece.

Actress Ann Magnuson subsequently co-hosted the 1988 season, after which the series had no regular hosts.

1988 alive from off center intro


References

Alive from Off Center Wikipedia