Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

The Hollywood Palace (1964)
The Hollywood Palace is an hour-long American television variety show that was broadcast weekly on ABC from January 4, 1964 to February 7, 1970. Originally titled The Saturday Night Hollywood Palace, it began as a mid-season replacement for The Jerry Lewis Show, another variety show which had lasted only three months. It was staged in Hollywood at the former Hollywood Playhouse on Vine Street, which was renamed The Hollywood Palace during the show's duration and is today known as Avalon Hollywood. A little-known starlet named Raquel Welch was cast during the first season as the "Billboard Girl", who placed the names of the acts on a placard.
The Hollywood Palace is an hour-long American television variety show that was broadcast weekly on ABC from January 4, 1964 to February 7, 1970. Originally titled The Saturday Night Hollywood Palace, it began as a mid-season replacement for The Jerry Lewis Show, another variety show which had lasted only three months. It was staged in Hollywood at the former Hollywood Playhouse on Vine Street, which was renamed The Hollywood Palace during the show's duration and is today known as Avalon Hollywood. A little-known starlet named Raquel Welch was cast during the first season as the "Billboard Girl", who placed the names of the acts on a placard.
The Hollywood Palace was a variety show focused on mainstream entertainment, featuring a wide array of performers without promoting any specific political or ideological agenda. Its primary objective was broad audience appeal through apolitical content.
This 1960s variety show featured a range of performers, including some visible diversity inherent to the variety format, but did not engage in explicit DEI-driven casting or race/gender swaps of traditional roles. Lacking a continuous narrative, the show maintained a neutral or positive framing of traditional identities without explicit social critique.
The Hollywood Palace was a variety show from the 1960s. Based on available information and the typical content of variety shows from that era, there are no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes present in its episodes. Therefore, the film's portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements is not applicable.
The Hollywood Palace was a 1960s variety show. No identifiable transsexual characters or themes are present in its content, nor are there any narrative elements that address transsexual identity or experiences. Therefore, an evaluation of its portrayal is not applicable.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
As a variety show, "The Hollywood Palace" featured real performers and did not contain narrative characters with established canonical or historical genders that could be subject to a gender swap.
The Hollywood Palace was a variety show featuring guest performers, not a narrative production with established fictional or historical characters. The concept of a 'race swap' does not apply to this format.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























