Christina, bring me the mic!👑👑💛💛🤎🤎💜💜🩵💙💙💚💚🧡🧡🩷61 years and Now I find out that Joan Crawford has a well controlled voice and gives an outstanding musical performance! And she's holding back for some reason, could Joan be a shy singer, yes. Joan sing your songs like they should be sung like a Diva!
God, how I love internet "experts". Did you read the note with the clip? Did you even watch the clip to hear Joan talking in the middle? I put India Adams name at the beginning because the first line is her voice. The rest is Joan's unused attempt that I restored. Sheesh.
Cary Grant was a very talented man. As for being gay. His daughter said he wasn't. That being said whether he was or not would be his private business. I cannot believe a so-called friend could violate his privacy. That's not a friend. Either way, if you are listening, Mr. Grant, thank you for the laughs and the tears
Here's some advice: read the note before you comment. This was from Orry-Kelly's private diary that he never shared with anyone. It was only published after his death.
@@GreatClips99 then wouldn't my comment apply to whoever published it? I guess I'm unique because I would not have published it. Private is private. That's okay though, I'll move to another site
@@kimleone5496 Obviously since it was only published after his death, it was not a friend. It was also not shameful as you seem to think it is - we talk about the romances of straight stars all the time. Gay and bi stars deserve the same treatment. And please do go to another channel, since I doubt you even watched this video.
She has a good range and tone, I was surprised. I always think of her as one of the greatest Hollywood actors and dancers but I didn't know she could sing as well.
Her own singing voice would have worked well if she'd been playing a cabaret singer-- she very emotive-- but playing as a belter in a big theater I think not.
She had vocal training - here she is years earlier, singing in French, German and English: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GQDMYD5f4tc.htmlsi=x8FS2FamFtQF4CR7
@GreatClips99 Yeah, i absolutely will. i had to look around for a while, and for whatever reason, the RU-vid search didn't point me this way, but the google search led me here.
This is such bull. 2 of his exes have said he was not gay or bi. Plus, Cary was gorgeous but Mr Kelly was, sorry not sorry, ugly as a mud fence in a downpour. Sounds like a sensational story to sell Mr Kelly’s book & to make Mr Kelly look better.
Very cleverly done but I am glad I have the original. I think sensibilities were different in the 1950s. We went to the cinema to escape reality not simulate it. The charm of the film was its dream like qualities, the colours enhanced that.
I have seen this & the amended version. To me, it doesn't detract from the obvious meaning of the ballet- a deep sexual attraction between a naive heavily smitten boy & a mature, experienced female, albeit one sided romance. It's simply sublime & wonderful to watch. Of course the jazz accompaniment is superb- this goes without saying !!
No that was just someone trying to protect him. If he was bisexual he could have been happy with one of his wives. He was miserable because the love of his life was a man and the studio didn't want him married to or related with or any way affiliated with the man he was in love with. So they made him miserable, making him into stay in one relationship after another. It was stupid
There's a scene in this film where she's in black face makeup then she rips off her wig after an argument with red hair underneath in 2023 that looks insane
I always found Cary Grant to be a one-note actor. He seemed to project the same stiff persona in every movie and when he did love scenes with an actress, I never saw any romantic energy from him. Once I found out he was gay, the wooden performances made sense. I guess I have good gaydar.
They should have done an extra take of every filtered shot *without* the filter(s). That would have been insurance against a possible disastrous result. They could have also added the color in the lab as an optical or visual effect instead of "baking it in" during the original photography.