Beautiful scene and song...! ⭐️🌹⭐️ From the great time of Hollywood musicals... As usually I‘m getting all nostalgic, thinking about the loss of this adorable genre... (I wish I could watch the entire movie... Maybe there‘s a DVD available - but musicals are usually more or less ignored by the DVD productions in my country...) Thank you so much for sharing this delight! 🙏🍀
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They were a marvelously matched pair. And thank you, Mr. Noel Coward for giving us your wonderful music! Cheers! Drink a toast of Tokay, from "Bittersweet." :)
I agree with you, to some extent, Mikey, but Nelson Eddy made up for his lesser acting talents with that gorgeous voice. After all, we are talking musicals here. 👍
Noel Coward didn't like Nelson Eddy in his musical. "That rag bag," he said. :) I can't envision Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald not doing this song! Cheers!
Noel Coward owned the rights to Bitter Sweet, since he wrote the music, the lyrics, and the script. He produced it on stage in London and in New York during the 1930's, and allowed MGM to make a movie of it. When Noel Coward saw the movie he said that it reminded him of "a leather suitcase making love to a mad rocking horse". Years later, when Jeanette asked him if he would produce it on stage and star her in it, he politely declined.
i dont know how theu sang this song to each other as though knowing that it would happen they leave each other and then see e ach other again at parties and the such i could never do it if i really loved someone they they claim to have loved each otherl. it just doesnt make sense
I love the films Jeanette MacDonald did with the great Maurice Chevalier - The Smiling Lieutenant, The Merry Widow and particularly Love Me Tonight. They had great chemistry together, and she was so much more animated - and a hell of a lot sexier - than when she was paired with Nelson Eddy, who, let's face it, was a very wooden actor. Their so-called great passion certainly never came across on screen, which no doubt contributed to their being referred to as The Iron Butterfly and The Singing Capon.