Entries Tagged as 'JEANETTE MACDONALD'

Harry Knowles’ review of new Lubitsch collection

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Harry Knowles runs the very popular Ain’t It Cool News movie website. His audience is largely made up of younger movie-goers. Hence, it’s nice to see his two thumbs up review of the new Lubitsch DVD release:

“One of the most forgotten great directors of the Golden Age of Hollywood amongst today’s younger set is Ernst Lubitsh. One of the greatest directors of any era. Here we have a great collection of his musicals – 3 of the 4 films were nominated for Best Picture. They star the likes of Jeanette MacDonald and Maurice Chevalier and Claudette Colbert – and the musicals are those fantastic melodrama musicals. As usual – Criterion kicks ass with the presentation and mastering of these four films. These are incredibly superior films – which is as usual with Lubitsch.”

Link

LA Times Review of the New Lubitsch DVD collection

 

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Ernst Lubitsch added sex, bawdiness and sophistication to the musical

The director redefined the genre some 80 years ago with films starring Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald.

By Susan King, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 10, 2008

DIRECTORS like Rob Marshall, Bill Condon, Adam Shankman and Tim Burton might be the latest filmmakers to craft engaging cinematic musicals, but, back when sound was new to the art form, it was German emigre director Ernst Lubitsch whose breezy, clever style and sophisticated story lines redefined the genre.

After making a name for himself in silent cinema in Europe and Hollywood, Lubitsch brought his unique vision to the musical. His first sound film, 1929’s “The Love Parade,” also was the first movie musical that integrated songs within the story, and, over the next three years, he would direct three more glorious, sexy, bawdy musical comedies — 1930’s “Monte Carlo,” 1931’s “The Smiling Lieutenant” and 1932’s “One Hour With You” — before the Hays production code took effect in 1934.

But trying to see these films has been next to impossible. Finally, the four will make their DVD debut Tuesday via Criterion’s Eclipse line, and nearly 80 years after their initial release, these gems are just as exhilarating as they were back during the infancy of sound.

“The Love Parade” earned six Oscar nominations, including best picture and lead actor for Maurice Chevalier, who stars in three of the films in the collection and here plays Count Alfred Renard, a womanizing military attaché who finds himself marginalized after he weds Jeanette MacDonald’s queen.

The chemistry between MacDonald and Chevalier was undeniable, and the pair reunited with Lubitsch for 1932’s “One Hour With You,” another best picture nominee. They play a happily married couple whose “perfect” union is put to the test when her best friend, Mitzi (Genevieve Tobin), arrives for a visit.

Each of the stars pairs up with another romantic foil in the other two films in the collection. MacDonald’s feisty countess falls for Englishman Jack Buchanan’s morally dubious aristocrat in “Monte Carlo.” Buchanan has plenty of charisma, whether posing as Rudy the Hairdresser to gain access to the lady’s boudoir or performing the wacky number “Trimmin’ the Women,” with John Roche and Tyler Brooke.

Link to complete article

A newspaper article about Jeanette MacDonald from the Philippines!

Not sure we agree that Shirley Jones and Gordon MacRae replaced Jeanette and Nelson with the same box office magic…no one has ever done that and Gordon MacRae was never the highest paid singer in the world like Nelson Eddy! Still, it’s great to see Jeanette mentioned in this article!

“By the mid-’30s Jeanette MacDonald was the Queen of Hollywood Musicals, having topbilled a series of successful films with Nelson Eddy. The duo was Tinseltown’s most successful singing pair—until Shirley Jones and Gordon MacRae paired up in “Oklahoma” and “Carousel” more than 20 years later. Soon, the studios started importing opera divas like Lili Pons and Rise Stevens.”…

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2 More Articles About “Yes, Yes, Jeanette”

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We heard nice things about the singers and the show, which apparently opens with Jeanette and Gene recreated on the Edward R. Murrow TV interview…then it flashes back to Jeanette’s early years. For the record, the Jeanette-Nelson off-screen romance is not addressed.

A New England Jeanette & Nelson show, “Yes, Yes, Jeanette” is well-received!

From The Salem News:

“Before Bogie and Bacall, before Tracy and Hepburn, the silver screen’s most celebrated couple was Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy.

The acting partners were Hollywood’s sweethearts, rising to fame in MGM films in the 1930s.

They were the reigning singing/acting duo of their day — but like modern-day Hollywood couples, they weren’t without controversy.

Long before the rumored romances of present-day Hollywood — think Brad and Angelina — the question of whether Jeanette and Nelson were lovers off-screen swirled around Tinseltown.”…

Link to full article

Margaret Truman Passes

Margaret Truman and Jeanette MacDonald

Margaret Truman, author and former singer, daughter of President Harry S. Truman, died today at age 83.

Though most famous for her murder mystery novels, in 1947 the President’s daughter tried to launch a singing career like her idols, Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy.

The following year, Margaret met both stars. Jeanette MacDonald attended Margaret’s 25th Birthday party on February 17, 1948, held at the Washington, D.C. Mayflower Hotel. Then Nelson Eddy, who was on a concert tour, was invited to dinner at the White House with President and Mrs. Truman, and Margaret. He wrote about it in a letter from early May 1948: “They all talked about [Jeanette] constantly, and Margaret seems to fairly worship her. The President remarked that it was the ambition of her (Margaret’s) life to sing on my [radio] program - so I said of course that would be an honor for me and perhaps it could be arranged this summer if he was willing. We left it at that but I know that would please Jeanette, as no one else has been able to arrange that - so it would be a feather in my cap. Margaret told me Jeanette had invited her as a house guest if she comes to Hollywood this summer. My little minx is always looking out for her husband’s (sic) interests. Margaret, by the way, is a very charming girl - plain and sincere.”

Nelson’s summer radio program was The Kraft Music Hall. The above quote is from the book Sweethearts by Sharon Rich, page 392.

Link to obituary

Jeanette & Nelson’s most famous recording chosen for 2008 Grammys Hall of Fame!

Indian Love Call Sheet Music Cover

The 1936 recording of “Indian Love Call” sung by Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy from the movie Rose Marie has been chosen as a 2008 inductee into the Grammys Hall of Fame! You can read the official Grammys Press Release with the list of new inductees at this link.

Listen to the original recording by Jeanette and Nelson digitally remastered at this link!