Entries Tagged as ''

Utica’s “Great Artists Series” Mentions Nelson Eddy

Immersed in music culture

Roland Chesley was born in Rochester, N.H., on July 24, 1881. He came to Utica in 1931, transferred here from Albany as an agent for a school book publisher, Ginn & Co. He retired from that position in 1949 after 40 years of service. But even when he was so employed, he immersed himself in the city’s classical music culture, a tenor singing occasionally in B Sharp Musical Club programs and associating himself with Gertrude Curran’s inspiration to bring the best of classical music to the city.

After he retired from Ginn & Co., he was able to devote full attention to the artists’ series and to the many organizations in which he volunteered, most notably, the Utica Boys Club.

During Chesley’s long tenure with the Great Artists Series, he brought hundreds of distinguished national and international performers to the city. These include names such as Vladimir Horowitz, Arthur Rubinstein, Sergei Rachmaninov (sometimes Racmaninoff), Lily Ponds, Isaac Stern, Nelson Eddy, Van Cliburn, Mario Lanza and countless symphony orchestras from all parts of the world.

All of them performed at Utica’s illustrious Stanley Theater, which opened in September 1928.

Link to complete article 

News about Nelson’s Halvern home (which was sold to Fred MacMurray)…

Former MacMurray home gets a remodel

Fred MacMurray, a leading man who co-starred in 1944’s Double Indemnity and played the father on the TV series My Three Sons, was one of those Hollywood actors who relished investing in real estate.

He purchased a wide range of properties, including orange groves and office buildings, although MacMurray and his family didn’t move much. By one account, the family lived in their Brentwood home for 56 years.

He died at age 83 in 1991. He was married for 37 years to actress June Haver, who died at 79 in 2005.

John Cottrell, a man Architectural Digest has canonized as one of the world’s top 100 interior designers, would like to buy MacMurray’s home, but it’s not yet available, he said, and so he leased it, promptly stripping the wallpaper and installing new carpet.

“I was as happy as a pig in mud,” Cottrell said. “I love to work on good American houses.”

The MacMurray house, built in 1939 for singer Nelson Eddy, has four or five bedrooms in about 7,000 square feet. It is on nearly 2 acres.

It isn’t listed for sale, but when it is, expect to see it come on the market in the vicinity of $10 million.

Link to complete article

Note: according to Nelson’s close friend K.T. Ernshaw, Nelson began work on this house a year or so earlier than 1939, with the intention of it being the home he shared with Jeanette MacDonald - where they would raise their children. After all the work he put into it - Nelson might not have sold it as quickly as he did had things turned out differently. He ultimately moved in to it with wife Ann Franklin and her son Sidney, Jr…. he had no children with Ann.

Connecticut opera program featured Nelson & Jeanette

“MERIDEN - When opera superstar Luciano Pavarotti completed his rendition of “Giorgio,” nearly 50 people at the Augusta Curtis Cultural Center watching the videotaped performance stood and cheered.

That was the reaction that Valerie Bubon, secretary of the Rosa Ponselle Fund, was hoping to get from her program, “Love in Bloom,” Sunday afternoon as she passed on her passion and knowledge of opera to area residents as part of the center’s monthly Sunday cultural series.

“My premise is you don’t need to know about opera to enjoy it,” Bubon said. “I want them to open their minds and their hearts to the music. The singing is beautiful and I want them to be able to enjoy that, that’s the most important goal.”

Starting with the silent film era, Bubon took her audience through a walk through 20th-century opera using examples such as the Broadway hit, “The King and I,” duets with 1930s stars Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald and classic performances from singers such as Pavarotti.”

Link to complete article

Choreographer Anya Flesh worked with Jeanette

“Flesh was born in Seattle in 1933. Her mother, Kaye Brinker, was an actress on radio soap operas. Her stepfather, Manfred B. Lee, was the creator and co-author of the Ellery Queen mystery novels, radio and TV shows and movies. She fell in love with dancing after seeing a performance as a child.

At 17, she got “this harebrained idea to go to Paris to study ballet. My parents let me go, but I didn’t study a lot,” she recalled.

She learned enough to win a position with what was then called Ballet Theatre, and she later became part of the corps de ballet for the Chicago Lyric Opera and toured in the DeMille shows with such stars as Zero Mostel, Barbara Cook and Jeanette MacDonald.

Link to complete article

“Gidget” author wrote “Three Daring Daughters”

Frederick Kohner’s daughter talks about being “Gidget”, her father’s best-selling book and his screenwriting career.

“Kohner was a screenwriter in Hollywood. In 1939, he was nominated for best writing original story in ‘Mad About Music,’ in which a young woman at a boarding school in Switzerland writes herself letters from an imaginary explorer-adventurer father.

His credits include numerous stories such as ‘Bride for Sale,’ ‘The Men in Her Life,’ and ‘Three Daring Daughters’ that were made into films starring some of the greatest leading ladies of the day, including Loretta Young, Jeanette MacDonald and Rosalind Russell. His style of writing about spunky women was perfectly suited for ‘Gidget,’ and the book became a national bestseller, reaching seventh on the chart, above Jack Kerouac’s ‘On the Road.’:

Link to complete article

UK singing show starring Rebecca Caine will feature Jeanette MacDonald songs…

Rebecca Caine in London’s West End “Phantom of the Opera”

The tribute performances seem to be coming up more frequently these days…

For those of you in the UK, you might want to catch this show. Rebecca Caine is a Canadian soprano who has appeared with major opera companies and in London’s West End musicals. She is performing in May in a show called “Hollywood Ladies.” Among the singers whose songs are showcased is Jeanette MacDonald.

In this photo from her website, Rebecca Caine (as Christine) and other singers from the London West End production of “Phantom of the Opera” pose with the Queen Mother.

Link to press release 

Documentary exposes manipulative tactics of MGM & Louis B. Mayer

Last year I read an article in “Vanity Fair” about a documentary film entitled “Girl 27″ about a dancer at MGM named Patricia Douglas who was raped by an MGM sales rep at an MGM-sponsored convention in 1937. She sued…but the power of MGM and in particular, studio boss Louis B. Mayer, resulted in the case - and the girl - vanishing. The original “Vanity Fair” article can be read here.

I finally had occasion to rent this film on DVD and I have to say, it was devastating. It is difficult at times to watch and not necessarily a perfect film…but its stark quality allows the victim to finally have her say and set the record straight. If you never believed a studio could wield such power over peoples’ lives, you need to watch it. Can’t understand why Jeanette MacDonald, in particular, followed Mayer’s wishes and gave up marrying Nelson Eddy “for her career”? Watch this and understand the viciousness of Mayer and his thugs. It will help you understand what these stars were up against.

You can probably reserve this movie from your local library, rent it from Blockbuster or Netflix, or purchase it from Amazon at the link below. Any way you do it, I highly recommend watching it.

New York Times review of the new Lubitsch collection

onehourwithyou41.jpg

“…Lubitsch’s precise, highly stylized direction of actors, his genius for concentrating the maximum amount of narrative information in a few carefully chosen shots and symbolic details, his masterful sense of ellipsis (presenting only the most important story points and leaving the rest to the viewer’s imagination) — all these devices and more had emerged during Lubitsch’s silent-film period, and by 1929 had already been enshrined as “the Lubitsch touch.”

But Lubitsch wasn’t content to let things stand, not when faced with the transformative technical advance represented by sound. Where so many of the early musicals are simply passive records of already established stage hits (like RKO’s 1929 “Rio Rita”) or strung-together highlights that showcase a studio’s stars in various production numbers (like Warner Brothers’ “Show of Shows,” also 1929), the Lubitsch films are full-fledged book musicals that integrate their songs into their plots and frequently move, operetta style, from spoken dialogue to recitative to full musical performances. They are light, fluid and graceful at a time when the heavy apparatus of the talkies was threatening to render movies flat and stagebound.

For reviewers at the time, these movies were buoyant, witty and casual in a way the plodding stage adaptations were not. Less remarked upon then but more important in the development of the medium was Lubitsch’s innovative way of using sound.

For Lubitsch the new medium wasn’t just for recording dialogue but also for bringing out the musicality contained in sound effects. (See in “Monte Carlo” how the chugging of a train engine slips into the rhythm of Beyond the Blue Horizon,” sung by Jeanette MacDonald.) He uses sound to suggest whole realms of off-screen space unavailable to the silent film, employing sound cues as a way of replacing dialogue (like the trumpet call in “The Smiling Lieutenant”), much as he would use visual cues to replace entire sequences of dramatic action.

Their formal and historical importance aside, these films remain marvelously adult entertainments, at ease with human desire (and its inevitable conflicts with the institution of marriage) in ways that movies of our own time either ignore or trivialize into crude physical comedy. Lubitsch’s coquettishly liberated women (Jeanette MacDonald in three of the four films here; Claudette Colbert in the fourth, “The Smiling Lieutenant”) unabashedly enjoy sex as much as their rakish mates (Maurice Chevalier in three; Jack Buchanan, a gifted but now forgotten British musical star, in “Monte Carlo”).

In “One Hour With You,” the last of Lubitsch’s musicals for Paramount (he would make one more, perhaps his greatest, for MGM: the 1934 version of “The Merry Widow”), the Chevalier character, a happily married (to MacDonald) Parisian doctor, eventually gives in, despite his better instincts, to the sexual blandishments of his wife’s best friend (Genevieve Tobin). They spend a late night together, during which, Lubitsch clearly indicates, they enjoy a sexual dalliance — for which MacDonald smilingly forgives him at the film’s conclusion. Attitudes like this would disappear with the enforcement of the Production Code in 1934, seldom to return to American movies again.”

Link to complete article

2005 Obit of Italian Actress Who Dubbed Jeanette’s Films

argentina_brunetti.jpg

Argentina Brunetti, an actress and member of the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. since 1967, died of natural causes in Rome Dec. 20. She was 98.

Born in Buenos Aires to actress Mimi Aguglia, she came to Hollywood and was hired by MGM to dub the voices of Jeanette MacDonald and Norma Shearer into Italian.

She appeared in dozens of films including “It’s a Wonderful Life” and “My Cousin Rachel.” She had a recurring role on “General Hospital” in 1985-86 and appeared on TV shows including “Everybody Loves Raymond,” “Quincy,” “Gunsmoke” and “Bonanza.”

Brunetti became an interviewer for Voice of America, interviewing American actors for broadcast in Italy. She continued writing about Hollywood and was awarded the title of Cavalier of the Republic by the government of Italy for her efforts in enhancing Italian-U.S. relations through her film portrayals of Italians and Italian Americans.

Brunetti recently published a novel “In Sicilian Company” about her theatrical family.

Her son, Mario, plans to continue her showbiz blog at argentinabrunetti.com.

Link

Jeanette & Nelson Musical Show in British Columbia!

Note: If anyone sees this show, please post a review of it!

charlotte_corwin.jpg

Operettas Bringing Romance to Sidney

Charlotte Corwin has roots in Victoria, but her first visit to Sidney will be to bring operettas to town.

Guest conductor Donald Hunsberger, of New York’s renowned Eastman Wind Ensemble, will lead the Montreal soprano and the Palm Court Light Orchestra in the great operettas of the silver screen….

The concert Feb. 12 will offer the music of Victor Herbert, Rudolf Friml and Sigmund Romberg in selections from The Desert Song, Rose Marie, Naughty Marietta and The Student Prince. The program evokes memories of screen idols Nelson Eddy, Jeanette MacDonald and Mario Lanza.

“I love operetta and I don’t get the opportunity to do it,” Corwin said. She’s been concentrating on serious opera, and is in her third and final year as an apprentice with the Montreal Opera Company.

“I’m trying to get into the real world now,” she said with a laugh.

Operettas of the Silver Screen is Feb. 12 at 2:30 p.m. in the Charlie White Theatre at Mary Winspear Centre. Tickets are $26 and available throught the Mary Winspear Box office 656-0275. To learn more about the Palm Court Light Orchestra and other venues for this concert visit www.palmcourtorchestra.com

Link