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February 10, 2015

New documentation re: “New Moon” reconciliation…

maceddy Announcements, Jeanette & Nelson by Sharon Rich, documentation, new moon, Sweethearts book 0 Comments

In December, our friends (and sleuths) Angela and Katie returned to the Library of Congress to continue searching for documentation regarding the Jeanette MacDonald – Nelson Eddy love affair.  What continues to be amazing is that more and more information and proof is surfacing and/or newly made available. And happily – they pounced on it!

I don’t know about you but it gives me goosebumps to have some new piece of information fall into our lap that verifies something I read in a letter (in a postmarked envelope) written in the 1940s – we’re talking like 70 years ago! To have these puzzle pieces fall into place in the 21st century is very rewarding on all levels.

Here’s the first interesting fact they discovered. Katie describes it in great detail on her blog. The setting is this: The movie “New Moon” went into production in late October 1939. This was their first film together after Nelson married Ann Franklin in January 1939. (We are talking about 9 months that they did not work together as a team…something that had never happened in the past.) It was a terrible year for Jeanette in particular, his marriage such a devastating blow that she refused to re-sign her MGM contract for many months. By mid-year she was no longer suicidal (thanks to her first national concert tour which kept her mind off her personal problems) but she wrote to Margaret Ritchie (Bob’s mother) that for the summertime she was still planning to try and get back her health and well-being.

During the late summer of 1939, both Nelson and Jeanette wavered back and forth on whether they could or would work together again. In the end, for a variety of reasons discussed in Sweethearts, they agreed to make the film. And once that decision was made, there seemed the inevitability (at least to Nelson) that they would have a personal reconciliation.  We know from Isabel Eddy’s memoirs that her son wrote Jeanette the following note regarding the song “One Kiss” as they began the project:

Sing even if you don’t mean it – sing it just for me. You can take all the time you want, but you are coming back to me, you have to. Meanwhile, remember this, my love for you is indestructible. No matter what happens, nothing and no one in all the universe can change or hurt it. Remember that.

What I was unaware of was how Jeanette responded to that note. Katie notes that on October 23, 1939, Jeanette pre-recorded the song at the studio for the film (which had not yet begun shooting). From another report that I quote in the book, it is likely that Nelson was not present while Jeanette did her solo recording, as Jeanette avoided him. But – now it gets interesting. The following week, on October 29, Jeanette made her next appearance on a radio show and guess what she chose to sing? Yes indeed – “One Kiss.”

Note that it would make sense for her to sing this song on a show to promote the film – when it was released the following year. But to sing it now, when it had little apparent significance to radio audiences – that’s a totally different story.

This particular radio show has never available before…but you can now listen (at the link above on Katie’s blog). This would appear to be Jeanette’s first olive branch toward Nelson – an acknowledgement that she understood the circumstances of his marrying Ann, that she was still very hurt – as she described it, she could forgive but not forget – and that she still loved him despite herself.

It is an amazing fact that Nelson and Jeanette carried out their romance on a sub-level of their music – we have learned more and more that this was their “code” and way to send messages to each other and to re-affirm their feelings at that particular moment in time.

You now have the opportunity to hear Jeanette sing “One Kiss” in response to Nelson’s letter above…and to understand what radio audiences of that time missed.

Thanks to Angela and Katie for finding this treasure, and Katie for spelling it out in such great detail.

UPDATE: I suddenly realized that exactly one week prior to this event, Nelson hosted the Chase and Sanborn show on October 22 as well as sang as normal host Don Ameche was away. Nelson chose for his program three songs of great interest to us.  Two numbers from the film Sweethearts, “Every Lover Must Meet His Fate” and “Sweethearts.” Remember that the summer of 1938 was when Jeanette and Nelson last sang those songs together and were last happy together. And the other number was “Danny Boy” which was a song that that meant a lot to him and Jeanette…note that Nelson was already trying to break down the “wall of icy pride” that Jeanette had toward him. Remind her of the love they had for each other…Amazing…

January 18, 2015

50 years ago today…

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson Jeanette funeral, We will remember 0 Comments

A lengthy article published last year detailed Jeanette MacDonald’s funeral, written after new newsreel footage was unearthed. It was titled Nelson Eddy: “The most miserable day of my life” (Jeanette MacDonald’s funeral).

Today marks the 50th anniversary of that day and it is appropriate to re-visit the event that marked the end of an era…and the beginning of a fast decline for Nelson Eddy, who followed Jeanette in death a scant two years later.

January 14, 2015

Jeanette MacDonald – 50 years gone today…Remembering her and her sister Blossom Rock

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson blossom rock, We will remember 0 Comments

Hard to believe that half a century has passed since the death of beloved 1930s icon Jeanette MacDonald.  Today is the 50th anniversary and it also is the date that Jeanette’s beloved older sister Blossom died as well, thirteen years later in 1978.

Jeanette MacDonald was more than just an MGM superstar in that studio’s Golden Years. By singing opera in films, she (and her co-star on screen and in life, Nelson Eddy) helped introduce opera to the masses. So she inspired people in two mediums – movies and music. I cannot tell you how many people I have spoken to over these decades who tell me that they became an opera singer, a Broadway singer,a Hollywood singer, an actor, something in show biz, because Jeanette made it look beautiful and desirable to sing that music. Some of the greatest names in opera of the latter part of the 20th century found their initial inspiration in her movies – mostly the ones she made with Nelson but also San Francisco. And many, many actors in all genres, from drama to comedy, have found her their inspiration as well.

The photo above was given to me by Blossom when she first asked me to write a book about her sister. Blossom had quite a few younger shots of Jeanette, original portraits. I liked this one very much because it caught the essence of Jeanette – a childlike fragile innocence mixed with a hint of impishness, determination and repressed sensuality. I decided to use it on the cover of that book and Blossom loved it.

The candid above shows Blossom visiting Jeanette on the set of Jeanette’s 1942 MGM film Cairo. Blossom was a character actress; under the name Marie Blake she appeared in over 100 films, most notably the MGM Dr. Kildare series starring Lew Ayres and Lionel Barrymore. Blossom was a talented actress and comedienne but perhaps her greatest role in life was being Jeanette’s confidante. Whether it was Jeanette calling Blossom to come to Lake Tahoe to provide moral support after some personal heartache, or needing someone to stay with her to stave off loneliness and despair during months of hospitalization in the last year of Jeanette’s life – Blossom without complaint dropped everything to be there for Jeanette. Based on the letters we have seen from the 1940s, Blossom was (sadly) the only family member that Jeanette trusted, and remained her ally through thick and thin.

Below, a photo of Blossom when she finally found stardom for herself as a senior citizen, starring as “grandmama” in the TV series “The Addams Family.”

And finally, no tribute to Jeanette MacDonald could be written without the impact she had as half the team of “Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy.” Great as her early films were and even her first two at MGM (The Cat and the Fiddle and The Merry Widow), she finally found her stride as a superstar when she and Nelson worked together. There was an added dimension to her – an electrifying chemistry of beauty, sensitivity, sensuality and tenderness. No one has ever been able to recreate that MacDonald-Eddy magic, that indefinable quality…but you know it when you see it, and it was noticeably absent when they worked with others.

Today we honor both sisters and yes…we will remember.

Below, Jeanette MacDonald sings.

Dream Lover (from her first film, The Love Parade)
Will You Remember (duet with Nelson Eddy and yes, we will remember!)
Italian Street Song (just fabulous!)
San Francisco (the one and only!)
Farewell to Dreams (duet with Nelson Eddy, his favorite recording with her)
Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes

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Today in J/N History

1944 Jeanette stars on "Radio Hall of Fame" live broadcast from New York.

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