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January 6, 2013

“Les Miserables” film reviews mention Jeanette and Nelson

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson 0 Comments

The filmed musical show Les Miserables opened over Christmas with much fanfare. Reviews have been slightly mixed..those receiving huge praise are singing actors Hugh Jackman and Anne Hathaway (who apparently is an early favorite to win a Best Supporting Actress Oscar). But some of the other (great) actors have been criticized for not being able to sing the Broadway score in a traditional manner. The director Tom Hopper (The King’s Speech) filmed the musical numbers live so there is “talk-singing” in some instances. Musical purist and “American Idol” star Adam Lambert has taken a lot of heat this week for voicing on Twitter what some movie-goers are thinking:

“Les Mis: Visually impressive w great Emotional performances. But the score suffered massively with great actors PRETENDING to be singers. It’s an opera. Hollywood’s movie musicals treat the singing as the last priority. (Dreamgirls was good). The industry will say ‘these actors were so brave to attempt singing this score live’ but why not cast actors who could actually sound good?”

“Those raw and real moments when characters broke down or were expressing the ugliness of the human condition were superb. However… My personal opinion: there were times when the vocals weren’t able to convey the power, beauty and grace that the score ALSO calls for.”

“DO go see it for Anne Hathaway’s performance. It’s was breathtaking….One last thing though: Anne Hathaway was so good- had me tearing up. Oscar worthy performance for sure!”

Whatever your feelings about this film (feel free to add your comment about it), it is interesting that a few reviewers have brought up Jeanette and Nelson… always the highest standard singing stars for comparison when discussing a movie musical!

HeraldNet.com: “As the adult Cosette, Amanda Seyfried (who also warbled in “Mamma Mia!”) displays a sweet soprano that makes her a throwback to the days of Jeanette MacDonald. Her scenes with young lover Marius (Eddie Redmayne) give the movie its dewy, tragical romance.”

Voxxi.com: “There are moments when Redmayne and Seyfried resemble a modern-day Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald in their fluting, birdlike lyricism.”

 

 

January 6, 2013

Nelson Eddy mentioned in Marc Blitzstein biography

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson 0 Comments

This New York Times article caught my attention. Marc Blitzstein was a contemporary of Nelson Eddy’s and they both studied at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia. Even in his earliest career, Nelson was known for singing music of upcoming new American songwriters and composers.

Although in the same league with George Gershwin and Aaron Copland, subjects of two earlier biographies by Howard Pollack, Marc Blitzstein is relatively unfamiliar for a variety of reasons, among them his leftist politics and his openly gay sexuality in an era when both were disdained. Three years after Blitzstein’s death from what was evidently a gay-­bashing in Martinique in 1964, Copland said, “It is disheartening to realize how little the present generation knows who he was or what he accomplished,” and Leonard Bernstein expressed dismay in 1976 at “the rapidity with which his name’s been forgotten,” calling him “the greatest master of the setting of the American language to music.” ….

Born in 1905 and raised in a nonreligious Russian Jewish Marxist family in Philadelphia, Blitzstein was a prodigy at piano, a child with perfect pitch. By the age of 14 he had already formed the ambition to be a composer. He studied with Rosario Scalero at the Curtis Institute and Alexander Siloti in New York, and completed his education with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and Arnold Schoenberg in Berlin.

But Blitzstein’s career followed an uncertain path, as the opportunities for having his works performed were continually thwarted…. Some of his songs did manage to reach a public, including “The Dream Is Mine,” which was heard on Broadway in 1925; “Two Coon Shouts,” sung by Nelson Eddy in Philadelphia in 1928; and two of several songs with Walt Whitman texts that were performed in recitals. He gave the first performance of a one-movement piano sonata in 1928, but only after it was revived in the 1980s did it receive critical acclaim.

Here’s a quote from the book itself:

Blitzstein premiered [his piano sonata] in New York at a league of Composers concert…on February 12, 1928, his first major new York appearance…Blitzstein repeated the piece in Philadelphia on March 13, 1928, at the same concert on which he accompanies Nelson Eddy in the first performance of “Two Coon Shouts”…Audience members responded well to the Philadelphia world premieres of “Gods” and “Two Coon Shouts,” insisting that Nelson Eddy encore the second “coon shout”. Both works also elicited some positive remarks in the local press (along with some highly negative ones), one review…saying of “Two Coon Shouts,” There is elemental power and terror in them.”

The book is available at Amazon.com.

January 5, 2013

Debbie Reynolds’ Unofficial Validation of the Jeanette-Nelson Affair

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson costumes, Debbie Reynolds 1 Comment

It is unusual for a Hollywood star to come forward and publicly support the Jeanette MacDonald-Nelson Eddy love affair…as Joanne Woodward has done in recent years.

There are several reasons for this hesitation. First, stars are loath to discuss something that might be controversial, thus opening them up to attack. Case in point – the lovely Eleanor Powell who was an early member of this club and was supportive of what was being revealed. She felt we were very courageous to speak out defending Jeanette and Nelson in the late 1970s when it wasn’t yet fashionable to do so. As a result of her support, she received a letter threatening a lawsuit from the Jeanette MacDonald fan club. We continued to speak on the phone and I attended her last birthday party, but she cancelled a scheduled appearance at an upcoming club meeting due to the unpleasantness from the other club.

Some of you may remember the TV interview in which Jimmy Stewart grunted his non-denial when asked by Merv Griffin if Jeanette and Nelson had had an affair…after all, Griffin said, “They sang so close together.” And then June Allyson, the other guest, piped up, “Everyone at the studio knew about it.”

Miliza Korjus, also an early member of this club (until her death), staunchly defended the Mac/Eddy affair when she attended the early Los Angeles club meetings. She didn’t know much of the particulars back in 1938 when she was at MGM, but when she met with Jeanette during Jeanette’s last illness, much of Jeanette’s discussion had to do with Nelson and their upcoming plans. It was then that Miliza realized that this had been a long-standing love.

Howard Keel, a later MGM star told me that he didn’t have problems with studio head Louis B. Mayer but while at MGM he heard about the problems Mayer caused for Jeanette and Nelson. Debbie Reynolds was at the studio during the same time period as Keel.

We missed this post from Ms. Reynolds’ website when it was first posted but certainly are – even belatedly – appreciative of the mention!

…In 1994, “Sweethearts: The Timeless Love Affair Onscreen and Off Between Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy,” by Sharon Rich, proposed that Eddy and MacDonald had had a torrid love affair that resulted in four pregnancies for MacDonald, including one during the filming of “Bittersweet” [actually, it was “Sweethearts”] in 1938 that ended in a miscarriage. Supposedly Mayer himself had a yen for MacDonald, plus he had a vested interest in keeping her married to Gene Raymond, a blonde handsome MGM star who was gay and, times being what they were, living on the down low.

So here’s what I’m wondering–did Mayer take MacDonald off of “Balalaika” not because he wanted to boost Massey’s career but because he wanted to cool things off between MacDonald and Eddy? Well, yes–Mayer was king of MGM, and as you know, it’s always good to be king.

For more info about the MacDonald/Eddy affair, you can read the very descriptive Kirkus Review of “Sweethearts,” then catch up on all things MacDonald/Eddy at MacEddy.com…

Link to Debbie Reynolds’ official website blog

PS: Back in the day, Debbie Reynolds and Jane Withers were the only two Hollywood stars pushing for a permanent Hollywood museum. They put endless money, work, love and care into preserving the film industry’s heritage and memorabilia. (Ms. Withers told me that the only reason she continued to work in the 1970s and ’80s was to pay for all the storage units housing her collection.) Both women finally had to give up on the idea. Debbie Reynolds auctioned off much of her extensive collection in 2011. She is to be commended for trying so hard for so many years to preserve a precious chunk of 20th century American history.

Sold at the auctions and pictured on this page are costumes of interest to us: Jeanette’s gown from her 1930 Technicolor film, The Vagabond King, and Nelson’s costume from Balalaika (1939).

PPS: We understand that Ms. Reynolds has had health issues these last few months and wish her a full recovery.

 

 

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1935 Nelson sings on the "California Melodies" radio show.

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