George Eells
Auteur van Merman
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Werken van George Eells
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Tagged
Algemene kennis
- Geslacht
- male
Leden
Besprekingen
Prijzen
Misschien vindt je deze ook leuk
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Statistieken
- Werken
- 9
- Ook door
- 1
- Leden
- 161
- Populariteit
- #131,051
- Waardering
- 3.6
- Besprekingen
- 3
- ISBNs
- 16
- Talen
- 1
Fun fact: Her family name is Zimmerman, which she shortened to Merman because her father objected to her chosen career as being not quite respectable at the time (1920s), although both her parents encouraged and supported her choice.
However, it was a bit disconcerting to discover that the songs & pIays remembered were not the ones that were most celebrated at the time, and that she considered the most important.
This is probably due to the dating, because her "prime" was 1930-1954, just before my childhood, we didnt' live near any of her live venues (many of her musicals went through multiple revivals), and once her movies left the theater they weren't available anymore.
My personal recollections are mostly from TV shows where she performed her most-requested hits, which I knew from seeing local revivals of the musicals (without Merman, of course).
This will be most interesting to people who still know who all the personalities are, or have an interest in nostalgia.
Another fun fact: the early musicals were mostly intended as "ads" for the composer's newest works, to see which songs might become hits with the audiences. The story lines were generally exercises in stringing the songs into a somewhat plausible narrative. Later, the stories were written first, and the music selected to fit the particular needs of the plot. Either way, the artists were often surprised that the public "voted" for different songs than they expected.
p. 92: "Reporters often used to ask me how I felt about movies in comparison to the stage. I now knew I preferred delivering my performance in person. I liked to be in control. You couldn't be in films. And I'd already learned that it was cold down there as the face on the cutting-room floor."
There's a catchy book title in that last phrase.… (meer)