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January 8, 2013

Want to see Jeanette MacDonald’s “old lady” Miss Morrison “Maytime” dress in color?

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson costumes 3 Comments

Ever wonder what happened to the dress that Jeanette wore as the elderly “Miss Morrison” in the movie Maytime?

It is not one that has shown up at MGM costume auctions. But thanks to Darryl Winston‘s sharp eye, we know that this dress was recycled for another MGM film, 1941’s Blossom in the Dust.  This was a prestigious Technicolor film starring Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon. The movie was nominated for Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Color and Cinematography; it won for Best Art Direction.

This time the dress was worn by character actress Cecil Cunningham.

Here’s a closer look at Jeanette wearing the dress and then Cecil Cunningham.

We don’t know the fate of the dress after that film or whether it was recycled for use in yet another MGM film.

Interestingly enough, Ms. Cunningham’s path crossed with Jeanette in some of their films. Cunningham had an uncredited part as a Society Woman in the “Impulses” segment of Paramount on Parade (a 1930 film from which Jeanette’s scene was cut). Cunningham also was an uncredited Laundress in Love Me Tonight (1932), the Governor’s wife in New Moon (1940),  Mrs. Herbert Fairmind in I Married an Angel, and Mme. Larga in Cairo (1942). Her height was noted as 5’8″ but remember that that 5’5″ Jeanette was padded and wore heavy weights to better portray the old woman.

Thanks, Darryl!

 

Here’s a black-and-white still from the movie showing Cecil Cunningham in the dress along with Felix Bressart and Greer Garson.

January 6, 2013

Interesting article about Ilona Massey

maceddy Jeanette & Nelson 0 Comments

The Washington Post recently ran an article about Ilona Massey’s longtime Bethesda residence, which has fallen into disrepair and is for sale:

Time was probably kinder to Hollywood starlet Ilona Massey than it was to her Bethesda home. Although she died in 1974, she lives on forever, her blond hair and deep voice just a Netflix rental away in movies such as “Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man” and “Love Happy.”

Her house, on the other hand, is described in its sales literature as a candidate for a tear-down. The front gutter is pulling away from the roof of the white neoclassical rambler on Goldsboro Road near MacArthur Boulevard. Wallpaper peels from the walls like so much desiccated lichen. The kitchen floor is littered with bits of shattered skylight.

Kristin Gerlach, the agent selling the 1935 house, gingerly steps over what is either the tail of some forest creature or a tiny mink stole.

“It’s been on the market for a year,” Kristin says of the house, called Happy Valley and priced, along with its 5.5 acres, at $1,495,000. “It’s been under contract a few times, but then they backed out.”

Ilona was under contract once, too, to Metro Goldwyn Mayer. She was one of three dozen actresses imported from Europe in 1937 to feed Hollywood’s insatiable desire for the next sultry foreigner.

Ilona Hajmassy — her original name — had grown up in Hungary, the daughter of a disabled typesetter. “My salvation,” she once said, “is that I have known misery and hunger. In my youth in Budapest I didn’t know the taste of meat until I was 7 years old. That’s how poor my family was.”

She was apprenticed to a dressmaker and spent her earnings on singing lessons. She got a job dancing in the chorus of a Budapest musical comedy house, then sang at the Staats Opera. Her Hollywood debut was in 1939’s “Balalaika,” opposite Nelson Eddy. [Note: her first film with Nelson was actually 1937’s Rosalie, pictured here.] Wrote the New York Times: “She looks like Dietrich, talks like Garbo and will probably be smiling from all the fan magazine covers in no time.”

In the end, Ilona would make only 11 films, the last 1949’s “Love Happy” with the Marx Brothers.

Her fourth and final husband was the reason she settled in our area. Donald Dawson was a U.S. Air Force general and a former aide to Harry S. Truman. Perhaps the two shared a hatred of communism, as well as a love for each other: Ilona often led pickets in front of the Soviet Union’s United Nations headquarters.

During the Hungarian uprising of 1956, she taped a message to her former countrymen while packing CARE packages. “I will try everything within my power to help you,” she said. “If necessary, we will give our blood, too.”

Ilona sang occasionally — nightclub gigs in Havana and South Africa — but her life in Bethesda was quiet. She was content, she said, to make paprika chicken and play with her two dogs: black Great Danes named Hero and Nero. She loved animals, and in 1972 the Happy Valley estate was the setting of a party celebrating the opening of a Washington office of the Fund for Animals. Two Canadian timberwolves — Jethro and Clem — were the guests of honor. Ilona died two years later and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. Her husband remarried, then died in 2005 at age 97.

Their house is vacant. In one dusty room, a large photo of the general is propped on a mantel. A picturesque stream trickles outside, just six feet from the edge of the house.

The stream is the problem. The Corps of Engineers says any new house must be 100 feet away. The lot may not be subdivided. The existing house is probably too far gone to save.

We all eventually will fall into disrepair and disappear, our only trace a pile of photographs, a few home movies. Some of us will have better movies than others.

 

January 6, 2013

“Les Miserables” film reviews mention Jeanette and Nelson

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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.”

 

 

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Today in J/N History

1957 Jeanette and Nelson appear together on the "Big Record" TV show. This was their second and last TV show together.

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