The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum

The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum

8.0 /10 1 votes
December 12, 1981 2h 56m Released

Storyline

"From The Vault" is a new series of live concerts from The Rolling Stones archive which are getting their first official release. "Hampton Coliseum –Live In 1981" is the first title in this series. The Rolling Stones American Tour in 1981 was the most successful tour of that year taking a then record $50 million dollars in ticket sales. The tour was in support of the critically and commercially successful "Tattoo You" album. There were fifty dates on the tour which ran from Philadelphia at the end of September through to Hampton,Virginia on the 18th and 19th of December. The show on December 18th, which was also Keith Richards' birthday, was the first ever music concert to be broadcast on television as a pay-per-view event. Tonk Women, Brown, Sugar, Start Me Up, Jumping Jack Flash, (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction

Key Information

Director Alan Ashby
Studio Promotone B.V.
Rating 8.0/10
Language EN

Cast & Crew

Mick Jagger

Mick Jagger

Self

Keith Richards

Keith Richards

Self

Charlie Watts

Charlie Watts

Self

Bill Wyman

Bill Wyman

Self

Ronnie Wood

Ronnie Wood

Self

Ian Stewart

Ian Stewart

Self

Frequently Asked Questions

The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum was released on December 12, 1981.

The runtime of The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum is 2h 56m.

The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum is a Music movie.

The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum has a rating of 8.0 out of 10 on TMDB.

The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum is available to watch. Check streaming platforms and theaters near you.

The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum was directed by Alan Ashby.

The main cast of The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum includes Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts.

The Rolling Stones: From the Vault - Hampton Coliseum is originally in English.