Host: Jane Pauley
HEADLINES: Supporters of January 6 insurrectionists rally in D.C.
Demonstrators are expected in Washington, D.C., this weekend, to protest the arrests of hundreds who participated in the deadly attacks on the Capitol on January 6. Correspondent Jeff Pegues reports.
COVER STORY: A trip to the original “Mayberry”
Andy Griffith was born and raised in Mount Airy, North Carolina, a community that was the inspiration for Mayberry in the classic comedy “The Andy Griffith Show” and its spinoff, “Mayberry, R.F.D.” Now, Mount Airy has reinvented itself as a destination for fans who come by the hundreds of thousands each year. Senior contributing correspondent Ted Koppel visits Mount Airy to find out what attracts so many nostalgic for a show created more than 50 years ago.
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ART: Christo’s dream unveiled: A wrapped Arc de Triomphe
When the artist known as Christo – famous for monumental projects that involved wrapping landmarks and landscapes in brilliant fabric – died in 2020, many doubted there would still be more of his spectacles to experience. But last week, the artist’s nephews and studio manager teamed up to realize a long-planned dream of Christo and his late wife, Jeanne-Claude: the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, wrapped in the colors of the French flag. Correspondent John Blackstone reports on what may be just the first of the couple’s projects to be realized posthumously.
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Christo & Jeanne-Claude put Berlin’s Reichstag under wraps (Video)
n this “CBS Sunday Morning” report which originally aired on June 25, 1995, correspondent Martha Teichner reported from Berlin on one of the most famous works by the artistic team: Wrapping the Reichstag in fabric, which revealed as much as it concealed.
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MOVIES: How dialect coaches put the accent on performances
Dialect coaches teach actors to sound more like the characters they’re playing, accentuating the performances of such stars as Kate Winslet in “Mare of Easttown,” and Rachel McAdams in “Eurovision Song Contest.” Correspondent Martha Teichner talks with some of today’s leading coaches for films and TV about how accents and dialects help tell a story.
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THE NEW SEASON: Art – The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures premieres
On September 30 the long-awaited museum dedicated to film history and culture will open in Los Angeles. It’s just one of the highlights of the new exhibition season. Correspondent Serena Altschul looks at some of what museums and galleries across the country will have to offer this fall.
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PASSAGE: TBD
HARTMAN: Football field of dreams
TV: James Brolin about love of work, and love of Barbra
The actor who came to fame (and won an Emmy) on the 1970s TV series “Marcus Welby, M.D.,” James Brolin, has appeared in scores of films and TV shows since, and is currently the narrator of the new Netflix sci-fi series, “Sweet Tooth.” Correspondent Tracy Smith talks with Brolin, now 81, about his continued love of work, and about his 23-year marriage to singer Barbra Streisand.
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THE NEW SEASON: Film – With theaters reopening, stories are writ large once again
From the return of James Bond and “Top Gun,” to the sci-fi epic “Dune” and the musical remake of “West Side Story,” Hollywood is aiming big this fall. Correspondent Lee Cowan talks with critic Elvis Mitchell about what audiences may expect to find among the season’s new offerings on screen – and if they are ready to go back into theaters.
BOOKS: Anderson Cooper on the Vanderbilt dynasty
In his new book,” CNN anchor and “60 Minutes” correspondent Anderson Cooper tells the story of the Vanderbilt family dynasty, which included his mother Gloria. Cooper’s great-great-great-grandfather, Cornelius “Commodore” Vanderbilt, once the richest man in America, built his fortune through steamships and railroads. Cooper talks with correspondent Mo Rocca about how the wealth and privilege of this side of his family marked succeeding generations.
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THE NEW SEASON: Music – New works
“Sunday Morning” looks at some of the most hotly-anticipated new albums this fall.
NATURE: TBD
WEB EXCLUSIVE:
FROM THE ARCHIVES: From 2001: A town says farewell to a 9/11 victim (YouTube Video)
After the terror attacks of 9/11, “Sunday Morning” correspondent Bill Geist reported on the shock and grief felt by his hometown of Ridgewood, N.J., which lost 12 of its residents at the World Trade Center. In this report that originally aired on September 23, 2001, Geist visits a memorial service for Ridgewood resident Jon Vandevander, during which people spoke of the many ways in which their friend and neighbor had touched their lives – a balm for a devastating wound from an incomprehensible tragedy.
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