- (1969) The Don Rickles Comedy Special, ABC TV - Production Designer
- (May 1964 - July 1964) Assistant scenic design/draftsman/model preparation with Production Designer Rouben Ter-Arutunian, New York City Ballet, George Balanchine Production "The Nutcracker"
- (1976) Richard Nixon, Washington D.C. Inaugural 4th of July "Honor America Day" produced by Disneyland Entertainment Chairman Bob Jani. Production (stage set) Designer
- (May 1969 - August 1969) Scenic Production Design, Disneyland Tomorrowland Stage Show, (Monday-Friday Night), Bob Jani Entertainment Division's Live Musical Performers presentation Summer Season, (3 new variety type scenic units opened (1) June, (2) July, (3) August, 1969).
- (4-28-1968). Assistant Art Director-NBC-TV, Andy Williams Special Kaleidoscope Company, Jim Trittipo, Production Designer, Guests Simon and Garfunkel, Ray Charles, Cass Elliot, and Burt Bacharach
- (1968) Assistant Art Director - NBC-TV, Bill Cosby Special, James "Jim" Trittipo - Production Designer (stage set was a giant open iron cubed jungle-Jim framework comprising stacked 2' x 2' open framed box units).
- (June 22, 1970 - September 6, 1970) Scenic Production Designer-"Show Me America", Disneyland Tomorrowland Live stage (45 minutes) fast paced musical comedy revue, 15th Anniversary Birthday Celebration, Bob Jani and Chuck Corson Producers, Disney Land Entertainment Division, presented twice a night, from Monday through Fridan, weekly.
- (1972 - 1974) Parade Production Designer of Disneyland's "The Original Main Street Electrical Parade", Bob Jani, Executive Producer, Disneyland Entertainment Division, 24 parade float display units routed, during Summer Months, every night through the park's Main Street.
- (1961 - 1964) Los Angeles Civic Light Opera (Scenic Shop), Fountain Ave Scene Shop, Hollywood. Wally Reid and Phil Raiguel Scenic Department Supervisors: blow-up from scale paint illustrations the layout, sketching, painting velor, muslin, sharks-tooth scrims, scenic drops, assisting Scenic Designers by building set scale models, summer season musicals, including touch-up touring shows downtown Church-Theatre auditorium.
- (1965) Assistant Set designer & set model, Scenic Designer Rueben Ter-Arutunian "The Devils", (Nov 16, 1965-Jan 8, 1966) Broadway Ny
- (1965, & 1966, & 1967) Scenic Designer, "Esquire Magazine's Fall Male Fashion Parade", Ambassadore Hotel, Paul Roth, Producer and Director.
- (1961, 1962, 1963). Scenic artist, assistant to designer (Harry Horner, Prisoner of Zenda), The Los Angeles & San Francisco Civic Light Opera Association, Edwin Lester-Producer.
- (1988) Design consultant, working with Robert Jillson (Getty Tower art Department) - Universal Studios Top Deck Project, European Street (shopping) expansion
- (Spring 1975) design, art director, supervision of parade floats (construction) designed by Peter Larkin for the Bicentennial Disneyland America On Parade (Summer festival), Bob Jani, Director of Disneyland Entertainment Division
- (1966) Rosemary Clooney, New York Supper Club (Night Club engagements tour); designer of set prop fan, which unfolded revealing family photo blow-ups, built by Troy Barrett. The set prop traveled with Rosemary Clooney's tour engagement schedule.
- (April, May, June 1986) Scenic Designer/Art Director: City of Houston's celebration of the Texas State Sesquicentennial (150 years) and the 25th Anniversary of NASA, at the Houston Astrodome, April 5, 1986. Produced and directed by Chuck Corson, In conjunction with the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.
- (1977) "Dick Enberg's (host-moderator) Sports Challenge" syndicated TV reality-game show, Athlete guests interviews, participation with game trivia question/answer bonus-challenge, with donated winnings for charitable foundations. Production Designer, taped at the "Show Room" - Hilton Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada.
- (1970) NBC TV game show pilot "Simon Says", featuring a giant computer as a set, with the game show host dueling with a contestant competing with the computer named "Simon", with questions and correct solutions provided by "Simon Says". Produced by Nick Vanoff, Directed by Marty Passeta. Production Designer/Art Director. The studio audience was flanked with floor to ceiling length mirrors, introducing Marty to mirrored sets, which he dictated to his set designers to use, from then on!
- (1987) Syndicated Game Show Pilot "Bally's Slot Machine Stakes". Video taped at the Harrah's Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada. Bally had an enormous one armed bandit slot machine, which had been featured at the Harrah's Reno Resort. The slot machine was sixteen feet long, standing eight feet tall. The right side bandit arm had to be pulled by the contestant for the spinning sections to move and drop into their pit-stop. The main problem was for the TV pilot, the contestants could not win! Las Vegas gaming restrictions prevented tampering with the spinning slots! For the pilot, after the slots stopped, the prop-stage crew had to add/change the cherries, grapes, etc., to provide a winner! The pilot was shopped to the syndication cable network for eight years, and never picked up. Production Designer.
- (September 1963 - October 1963) Pasadena Playhouse (Main Stage) "Ladies Of The Corridor" starring Zasu Pitts - Scenic Designer
- (May 1977) Production designer and set decorator, "Section Eight" for Paramount Television; Brian Hickox, producer and production manager. A serious-comedy pilot, an anthology format based upon the military title for mental disorders; insanity may manifest as violations of societal norms including a soldier becoming a danger to themselves and others -- "Section Eight"; about military personnel with mental instability, psychopathology, psychoses, schizophrenia disorders centered around the military medical staff of doctors, nurses and military patients living in a hospital ward. Whew, and they thought this was comedy! Video-taped at the KTLA Television Studio facility. Another bomb!
- (April 1977) Production designer and set decorator, "Hollywood High" for Paramount Television, situation comedy re-make of a failed 1976 NBC TV pilot originally designed by Ed Stephenson. The Paramount TV comedy was video-taped at the KTLA Studio facility; Brian Hickox, producer and production manager.
- (1982) Production Designer, "Quarrell" - Lorimar Television, a MOW television film-pilot for CBS TV; Don Remacle, Set Decorator; directed by the English director -- Ken Hughes (famous for the1968 musical comedy film -- Chitty Chitty Bang Bang); Lake Sherwood locations standing in for a Canadian locale, a "James Bond" type of criminal investigator with a handsome leading Canadian male-star that CBS and Lorimar executives expected to carry as a television dramatic cops-and-robbers format. The MOW was so terrible that CBS aired the project at 2:00 a.m. on a Thursday night instead of in their normal prime-time week-schedule, with Larimar and CBS blaming Ken Hughes for the disaster! and the Canadian male actor shot back to Canadian soil as fast as a mars rover rocket flop!
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