Two Sisters from Boston | |
---|---|
Directed by | Henry Koster |
Written by | Myles Connolly |
Produced by | Joe Pasternak |
Starring | Kathryn Grayson June Allyson Lauritz Melchior Jimmy Durante Peter Lawford |
Cinematography | Robert Surtees |
Edited by | Douglass Biggs |
Music by | Charles Previn |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Loew's Inc. [1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | 112 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $2,223,000 [2] |
Box office | $4,461,000 [2] |
Two Sisters from Boston is a 1946 American musical-comedy film directed by Henry Koster and starring Kathryn Grayson, June Allyson, Lauritz Melchior, Jimmy Durante and Peter Lawford. The film features songs by Sammy Fain and Ralph Freed.
In the 1900s, Abigail, a young lady from Boston, leaves home to go to New York City for singing lessons in pursuit of her grand ambition to sing for the Metropolitan Opera. Unable to make ends meet, she takes a job singing in a Bowery beer hall without telling anyone from her family back home.
When a rumor gets back to Boston that Abigail is performing at a beer hall and showing her limbs, her family is shocked, and they decide that they must come to New York to investigate the rumor. Abigail then lies to her family and claims to sing in the Metropolitan Opera, not a beer hall. She even sneaks into a performance at the Met, persuading her family that she really is a singer there despite causing a mishap that interferes with Olaf Olstrom, the company's top tenor.
Martha, Abigail’s sister, eventually figures things out. She decides that she must help Abigail really get into the opera so that Abigail can leave her scandalous job at the beer hall. Along the way, Martha must cover for Abigail and protect the secret of her job at the beer hall. Martha meets a young man named Lawrence and begins a romance with him.
Music by Sammy Fain, lyrics by Ralph Freed.
What is never mentioned in reviews of this film is that the operatic aria duet sung at the climax of the film by Melchior and Grayson are actually the music of Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto to which English words have been very cleverly adapted.
According to MGM records, the film was a hit, making $3,334,000 in the U.S. and Canada and $1,127,000 in other markets, leading to a profit of $605,000. [2] [3]
The English post-punk band The Chameleons used a sample from the film as the introduction to the song "Don't Fall," the first song on their 1983 debut album Script of the Bridge . The scene features Lawrence Tyburt Patterson, Jr., Lawford's character, asking his mother, played by Nella Walker, about the age of his father. After she tells him that his father is younger than he looks and still 'spry,' Patterson, Jr. says "In his autumn, before the winter, comes man's last mad surge of youth." His mother quickly replies "What on earth are you talking about?" [4] These two lines consist of the sample as used by the Chameleons. [5] Patterson, Jr. goes on to say that he is quoting Sophocles, but the quote appears to be either apocryphal, misattributed by the screenwriters or else created by them originally. The Chameleons also used the same sample on an otherwise instrumental recording "Prisoners of the Sun." [6]
Lauritz Melchior was a Danish-American opera singer. He was the preeminent Wagnerian heldentenor of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s and has come to be considered the quintessence of his voice type. Late in his career, Melchior appeared in movie musicals and on radio and television. He also made numerous recordings.
Kathryn Grayson was an American actress and coloratura soprano.
Marjorie Florence Lawrence CBE was an Australian dramatic soprano, particularly noted as an interpreter of Richard Wagner's operas. She was the first Metropolitan Opera soprano to perform the immolation scene in Götterdämmerung by riding her horse into the flames as Wagner had intended. She was afflicted by polio from 1941. Lawrence later served on the faculty of the School of Music at Southern Illinois University Carbondale.
June Allyson was an American stage, film, and television actress.
Peter Sydney Ernest Lawford was an English-American actor.
Helen Francesca Traubel was an American opera and concert singer. A dramatic soprano, she was best known for her Wagnerian roles, especially those of Brünnhilde and Isolde.
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Ib Jørgen Melchior was a Danish-American novelist, short-story writer, film producer, film director, and screenwriter of low-budget American science fiction movies, most of them released by American International Pictures.
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Ernest Thurston Hall was an American film, stage and television actor.
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Shirlee Emmons was an American classical soprano, voice teacher, and author on vocal pedagogy. She began her career in the early 1940s as a concert soprano, eventually becoming one of the original singers in the Robert Shaw Chorale in 1948. She branched out into opera in the 1950s; performing mainly with regional companies in the United States. She achieved several honours as a performer, including winning the Marian Anderson Award in 1953 and an Obie Award in 1956.
The King Steps Out is a 1936 American musical comedy film directed by Josef von Sternberg and starring Grace Moore, Franchot Tone and Walter Connolly. It is based on the early years of Empress Elisabeth of Austria, known as "Sisi" or "Sissi", and her courtship and marriage to Franz Joseph I of Austria, after he was initially engaged to her older sister Duchess Helene in Bavaria. The film is set from 1852 to 1854.
Angelene Collins Rasmussen was an American soprano. In 1950, she was a winner of the Walter W. Naumburg Competition.