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The Jackie Gleason Show: American Scene Magazine (CBS, 7:30-8:30 p.m.). Guests: Frank Fontaine and the Newton Brothers.
Saturday Night at the Movies (NBC, 9-11 p.m.). Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises, with Tyrone Power, Ava Gardner, Mel Ferrer, Errol Flynn and Eddie Albert.
Sun., Jan. 13
Look Up and Live (CBS, 10:30-11 a.m.). First of a three-part presentation of Tobias and the Angel, a fantasy by the late Scottish playwright James Bridie.
Camera Three (CBS, 11-11:30 a.m.). A dramatization of John Updike's novel, The Poorhouse Fair.
Sunday Sports Spectacular (CBS, 2:30-4 p.m.). Olympic ski-jumping trials from Garmisch-Partenkirchen, and downhill racing trials from Vail, Colo.
National Football League Pro Bowl Game (NBC, 4 p.m. to end).
A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy (CBS, 4-5 p.m.). Repeat.
The Twentieth Century (CBS, 6-6:30 p.m.). U.S. aircraft surveyed from the early experimental jet models of 1942 to the coming Dyna-Soar.
Voice of Firestone (ABC, 10-10:30 p.m.). Guests: Robert Merrill, Anna Moffo and Martha Wright.
Howard K. Smith . . . News and Comment (ABC, 10:30-11 p.m.).
Mon., Jan. 14
David Brinkley's Journal (NBC, 10-10:30 p.m.). A look at Brasilia, Brazil's new capital.
Tues., Jan. 15
Young Performers (CBS, 7:30-8:30 p.m.). Four pianists are featured on this season's third New York Philharmonic Young People's Concert.
As Caesar Sees It (ABC, 10:30-11 p.m.). Sid Caesar's fourth special of the current season.
THEATER
On Broadway
Never Too Late, by Sumner Arthur Long, is pulverizingly funny about a piffling subjectbelated fatherhood. As the pater dolorosus, Paul Ford is unimaginably droll.
Little Me. Miming the seven suitors of Belle Poitrine, the All-America show girl, Sid Caesar is the most brilliantly versatile playboy of the Western world.
Beyond the Fringe, a remarkable revue, offers four young English antiEstablishmentarians aiming blowgun darts of parody with poisonously amusing accuracy.
Tchin-Tchin sees the world through a whisky glass, as a couple of wistful rejects drink the lees of abandonment by their mutually unfaithful spouses. Margaret Leighton and Anthony Quinn are amusing, affecting and marvelous.
Stop the WorldI Want to Get Off is a petulant British everyman's How to Succeed, written, directed, composed, mimed, sung, and stage-hogged by Anthony Newley, who is not all that talented. His helpmate, Anna Quayle, is a comic find.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, by Edward Albee, is a jolting, mesmeric, wittily savage theatrical experience. In this brilliantly devised night of marital horrors, Arthur Hill is monstrously intelligent, and Uta Hagen is a power-and-sex-hungry witch.
Off Broadway
The Dumbwaiter and The Collection, by Harold Pinter. In these two one-acters, Britain's most provocative dramatist puts his characters in an enigmatic rat's maze where they twist, turn and stumble, seeking each other and the truth with absurd and terrifying results.
BOOKS
Best Reading
