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February 26, 2008

Poignant news story of woman who lost her Nelson Eddy sketches!

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson In the News

Heartbroken is what she is.

No, that is not adequate, the way her lower lip quivers when she recounts what happened on Monday afternoon, the way she slaps her kitchen counter, looks to the ceiling and blinks back tears.

It was the first time in at least 60 years that she had taken them outside of her home.

Maybe she was just lonely that day, perhaps wanting to impress the two elderly gentlemen she’d befriended in the park.

Or, if nothing else, the reason was, simply, that artists will break even the most hardened personal rules for anyone asking to view their work.

“It was my youth!” Wenona Casedy says bitterly, over and over.

She is 86 years old.

Ah, but when she talks in her expansive way of her intricately drawn pencil sketches, it is once again late-1930s, Depression-era Denver, and she is a starry-eyed 16-year-old hunting down musicians and celebrities outside the old City Auditorium downtown.

All of her opera and popular music heroes would come to town most every year.

And she would storm the stage door, begging an agent or a manager – anyone – to please have the subject of her portrait autograph it for her.

She remembers the day in ’38 when Nelson Eddy, the singer and movie star, came to town. As president of the Denver Nelson Eddy Fan Club, she’d tracked him to the sixth floor of the Brown Palace.

She gathered her girls and they stormed the sixth floor. His manager met them at the hotel room door. Well, they asked him, would he at least sign their autograph books?

Wenona Casedy handed him the pencil sketch of her idol – she was too poor to afford paints.

“The next thing I know, the manager walks back into the hallway as we are leaving, asking if Wenona Hampson is here,” she recalls.

“Well, Mr. Eddy wants to see you!” she is told. Had she just gone to heaven?

“Here I am, this 16-year-old girl getting to see this great big movie star!” she says, looking away in clear reverie, as if it is happening all over again.

Nelson Eddy walks from a back room as she enters the room, throws his hands up and exults that he had always wanted to meet her, the girl with the sketches.

“He actually hugged me and signed my portrait for me!”

“I liked him because he was such a great singer,” Wenona Casedy says now. “And because he was well, just so beautiful!”

In her basement today are three, professional-quality pencil sketches of Nelson Eddy from years before that time, none of them signed.

At City Auditorium, which evolved into the Denver Performing Arts Center, she became legendary. Every artist, opera star or band member demanded to see the girl with the sketches, to see if they had been included.

Soon, she was often a guest backstage. Managers often asked that she come to every performance. Artists began to feel insulted if they did not have a Wenona Hampson sketch when they arrived in town.

Jeannette MacDonald sat for her three times. She loved it, if only because Nelson Eddy was always right there.

She took a phone company job across the street from the auditorium when she turned 18, and arranged for her work hours to end at curtain time, just so she could see the curtain rise and, later, have artists sign her work.

During the war, she married. She had children. For years she never sketched. She had compiled some 40 pencil sketches of stars that ultimately were all autographed.

And then came Monday.

The two elderly gentlemen she’d befriend over the past six months – both of whom could never keep up with her on her daily walks around Harvey Park in southwest Denver – had finally asked if they could see her drawings.

Oh, she never let them out of the house, she told them.

OK, maybe this once.

They were impressed by the intricacy of the drawings, of learning who the Depression-era stars were. They’d grown up on a farm in western Kansas. They didn’t even know who Nelson Eddy was, she said.

She soon gathered her drawings, all of them in black notebooks, and bid the men adieu. When she arrived back at her West Yale Avenue condominium, she could not find them.

The best she can figure now is she drove off with the notebooks, each containing at least 10 sketches, still on the trunk of her car. She immediately drove back.

She and Tim Todd, the longtime recreation director at the park, searched for hours.

Nothing.

On Thursday, she’d drawn up and was posting $200 reward notices for the drawings around the park. Tim Todd was doing the same thing.

“I feel so bad for her,” he later said. “My mom died last September, and Wenona, she reminds me of her.”

The sketches still have not surfaced.

“No questions asked,” Wenona Casedy says of the reward.

“They were my whole youth,” she says. She paces the floor with her late, beloved husband Selman’s wedding ring swinging on a gold chain around her neck.

“They are everything to me. And I cannot tell you how sick I feel about it.”

If you’ve seen them, just drop them off with Tim Todd at Harvey Park. He will arrange the reward for you.

No questions asked.

Link

NOTE: This story had a happy ending:

Passer-by, brother return sketches, joy to artist

SOURCE: Bill Johnson, Rocky Mountain News
The old woman met the younger one almost before she walked into the backyard through the sliding glass door. She threw her arms open wide, and the two embraced.

“Are you the one who found my sketches?” Wenona Casedy whispered softly, tightly clutching the young woman, who began nodding and hugging her back. “This is such a miracle,” the 86-year-old woman said, looking to the sky. “I never thought I would ever see them…”

February 26, 2008

Obit of woman who cooked a meal for Nelson Eddy!

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson R.I.P.

robbieboard.jpg

Robbie Board: ‘A kindly, gentle spirit’

Robbie Board was a slightly built tower of strength — a woman who worked and raised three children alone after her husband died. She was passionate about justice, say those who knew her, and she always spoke her mind.

Board died June 21, 2006, at age 100. Hers is not a name heard often when people speak of the history of civil rights and desegregation in Roanoke. Yet Board, some say, was an unsung hero of that time and beyond.

“She was a great believer in equal rights for everybody,” recalled her daughter, Jeane Hale Marsh of Roanoke.

“She was a great person, and because she came this way, we’re a better family and this is a better community,” her other daughter, Jackie Bolden said.

Old friends

Robbie Board lived a colorful and eventful life. As a young woman, she worked as a housekeeper at the house of a young John Payne, who would become the Roanoke Valley’s most famous movie star. (Payne was a staple in mid-century movie musicals, but is best remembered as co-star of “Miracle on 34th Street,” along with Maureen O’Hara and a very young Natalie Wood. Payne was the lawyer who defended Santa Claus.)

Board was in her 20s at the time, with three children of her own. (Her first husband, William Hale, had died very young with pneumonia, Jackie Bolden said. Robbie Board was married a second time, to Lynwood Board, when the children were already grown.) Board recalled in interviews that Payne was always clowning around in his kitchen and asking her to critique his singing. “He should have been a comedian,” Board told The Roanoke Times at age 94.

Sometimes Payne took her to the movies. “With his hat turned up, Mr. Payne was the sportiest man in town,” Board told the Roanoker magazine in 1992. Board also said she once cooked country ham and fried potatoes at the Payne house for singer Nelson Eddy.

Link

February 23, 2008

Another great review of Jeanette’s Paramount Films…

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson DVDs

Saucy dialogue and flimsy nighties in spades

 

by WARREN CLEMENTS

February 22, 2008

Critic Andrew Sarris defined the “Lubitsch touch” as the “counterpoint between sadness and gaiety,” to which one might add witty dialogue alongside insinuating pantomime and a view that audiences should be treated as mature enough to get subtle jokes. Director Ernst Lubitsch arrived in Hollywood in 1922 after a successful career in Germany, and in 1929 made one of the first great sound musicals, The Love Parade, with Maurice Chevalier (a star of Parisian music halls) and Jeanette MacDonald, whose background in operettas perfectly complemented Lubitsch’s fascination with the genre.

The finest Chevalier-MacDonald comedy is Rouben Mamoulian’s 1932 romp Love Me Tonight, released on DVD by Kino in 2003, but The Love Parade and three other titles in Lubitsch Musicals (from Eclipse, a subsidiary of the Criterion label) remain a treat. They were filmed before the censors clamped down on dialogue of the sort spoken here, or flimsy nighties of the sort MacDonald wears, or plots that treat infidelity and caddishness with the European offhandedness Lubitsch favoured. The plots are set in artificial kingdoms where people break into song as easily as they speak and where servants echo their employers’ love affairs and spats. Sample lyrics from a Love Parade ditty sung by Lupino Lane (aide to the military attaché played by Chevalier) and Lillian Roth (handmaiden to MacDonald’s monarch): “Squeeze me once, squeeze me twice/ Most improper, but oh it’s nice/ Let’s be common and do it again.”

In Monte Carlo (1930), MacDonald leaves a wealthy duke at the altar and takes up with disguised count Jack Buchanan in a part Chevalier would have played if he hadn’t been otherwise occupied. One influential scene uses the sound of train wheels and whistles as the rhythm for MacDonald’s song Beyond the Blue Horizon. In The Smiling Lieutenant (1931), Chevalier gravitates between free spirit Claudette Colbert and wealthy, reserved Miriam Hopkins. Both Colbert and Hopkins demanded that Lubitsch photograph only the more photogenic right side of their faces; Hopkins won. Chevalier and MacDonald reunited in One Hour With You (1932), which was to have been directed by George Cukor but was handed to Lubitsch two weeks into shooting. Cukor’s contract required him to remain on set, which he recalled in 1971 as “goddamned agony for me.”

Link

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Today in J/N History

1943 Jeanette makes her Montreal opera debut in Gounod's "Romeo and Juliet" to excellent reviews.

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