Thursday, October 17, 2024

They choose a nobody over a true talent--that’s our media--media gives top obit billing to Liam Payne (who?) over Mitzi Gaynor (photos and videos)


Mitzi Gaynor at app. 30 years of age, circa 1961


By Grand Rapids Anonymous
thursday, october 17, 2024 at 7:16:00 p.m. edt

GRA: Payne, of one direction (barely heard of them) it's surmised, jumped to his death, after a drug binge (he said he had a "drug problem"). Payne's death was the lead headline on abc noise.

Meanwhile, a star of substance for decades--Mitzi Gaynor--is relegated to a quickie wrapup at the end.

“(Broadway.com) Mitzi Gaynor, a star from the golden age of Hollywood musicals, known for roles in There’s No Business Like Show Business and South Pacific, has died. Her death, from natural causes, was confirmed by her team in a statement. She was 93.

“‘As we celebrate her legacy, we offer our thanks to her friends and fans and the countless audiences she entertained throughout her long life,’ her management team said in a statement shared on x.

“Gaynor was born Francesca Marlene de Czanyi von Gerber in Chicago in 1931. Daughter to a musician father and dancer mother, she knew she wanted to become a performer by the age of 9, after she was taken to see Carmen Miranda in the stage revue The Streets of Paris. “‘I was mesmerized!’ she told Closer earlier this year. ‘I remember telling my mother, “I can do that. I want to do that.” From that moment on, everything became about making ‘Tootie’—my childhood nickname—a star.” She embarked on ballet training and was performing in shows around Los Angeles by the age of 11.


Mitzi Gaynor singing “I'm Gonna Wash that Man Right Out of My Hair, in South Pacific (1958) (and yes, she did her own singing)




“Signing a contract with Twentieth Century-Fox at age 17—and changing her name at the behest of a studio executive—Gaynor made her film debut in a supporting role in the musical My Blue Heaven (1950). More musical roles followed in rapid succession: Golden Girl (1951); Bloodhounds of Broadway (1952); Down Among the Sheltering Palms (1953); There’s No Business Like Show Business (1954), featuring Ethel Merman and Marilyn Monroe; and Anything Goes (1956), co-starring Bing Crosby. She married Jack Bean, a talent agent and public relations executive for MCA who masterminded her career, in 1954. Bean died in 2006.

“Gaynor’s most famous role came in 1958, playing Nellie Forbush in the musical film adaptation of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific. She was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960. The wane of the era of the Hollywood movie musical meant that she made her final notable film role just three years later in For Love or Money, co-starring Kirk Douglas.

“She remained in the public eye by redirecting her energies to television variety shows such as The Frank Sinatra Show and The Ed Sullivan Show. Notably, Gaynor was the headline act on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964 when The Beatles made their second live appearance on U.S. television. Later in the decade, she starred in her own standalone song-and-dance specials— Mitzi… A Tribute to the American Housewife; Mitzi & 100 Guys; Mitzi… What's Hot, What's Not and more—outfitted by star costumier Bob Mackie.

“‘My legs looked better in a [sic] very high heels,’ Gaynor told EW in 2021.”

“Later in her career, Gaynor performed in nightclubs around the U.S.—making her Manhattan nightclub debut in 2010, age 78, in her show, Razzle Dazzle! My Life Behind the Sequins—and served as a featured columnist for the Hollywood Reporter.”

GRA: They choose a nobody over a true talent--that's our media.

--GRA

“Mitzi Gaynor 1931 - 2024 | TCM Remembers”
6,575 views Oct 17, 2024



“We are deeply saddened by the loss of legendary performer and our dear friend, Mitzi Gaynor. A triple-threat across mediums, Gaynor danced & sang through 8 decades, capturing our hearts with her music and warmth – with performances that will endure long after this curtain call.”



Gaynor had legs... and so did her career!




2 comments:

Longtime Reader said...

Sandy Irvine's foot was a bigger story than Liam Payne.

Anonymous said...

GRA:I had to look it up.

(bbc)Last month, a team of climbers filming a National Geographic documentary stumbled on a preserved boot, revealed by melting ice on a glacier.

This boot was believed to belong to Andrew Comyn "Sandy" Irvine, who disappeared while attempting to climb Everest in June 1924 with his partner George Mallory.

What's more, it could potentially help solve one of mountaineering's biggest mysteries: whether or not the pair succeeded in becoming the first people to summit Everest, 29 years before Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the top.


Well-known adventurer Jimmy Chin, who led the team for National Geographic, hailed the discovery of the boot - with a foot inside it - as a "monumental and emotional moment".

But for Irvine's great-niece Julie Summers it was simply "extraordinary".

"I just froze.... We had all given up any hope any trace of him would be found," she told the BBC.

GRA:Revise those questions on "Jeopardy".

--GRA