For a previous blog entry that gives a more detailed account of her career, click here. Also, the New York Times is running a full article about her.
Edna Mae David, alias Deanna Durbin, passed away a few days ago in France at the age of 91. Her son, Peter, released the news yesterday. For the past 60+ years, she has lived in complete privacy in a small town outside of Paris. For twelve years in the 1930s and 40s, she was one of Hollywood's super stars. She made 21 feature films, countless recordings, and was a weekly guest on Eddie Cantor's radio show for a while. At one point, Deanna Durbin was the highest paid actress in the world! However, for Canadian-born Edna, the Deanna craze and fame was an intruder. When the time came, she slammed the door on Hollywood and the glamour with a bang that was heard around the world!
For a previous blog entry that gives a more detailed account of her career, click here. Also, the New York Times is running a full article about her.
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America's Singing Sweetheart of the '30s and '40s celebrates her 90th birthday today. Following her overnight success with the release of her first film, Three Smart Girls, in 1936, Deanna Durbin became one of the most popular Hollywood stars worldwide. When she got her first screen kiss in 1939, it pushed the war news off the front pages of many newspapers! There was a line of clothing called "Deanna Durbin Cinderella Frocks" and there was even a "Deanna Durbin Doll". Her Hollywood star soared brightly for twelve years, leaving behind 21 feature films, several short films, lots of recordings, loads of memorabilia and many fans with unforgettable memories. For all the fame, Deanna was never happy with Hollywood, the studio system, and the star fixation of the fans. In 1948, after the release of For the Love of Mary, she packed up and moved to France. There she met and married Director Charles David (who actually directed her film, Lady on a Train). They settled down in a farmhouse and raised her daughter, Jessica, and their son, Peter, who was born in 1951. Today she celebrates her 90th birthday, and is still remembered by many fans across the world. You can still experience her beautiful voice on home video and cds. Who can forget the first time she came onto the silver screen? Her voice soaring over a lake surrounded in pine trees. "My heart is singing . . ." Deanna Durbin, 1930s and '40s singing star, celebrates her 89th birthday today. "Deanna's genius had to be unfolded, but it was hers and hers alone, always has been, always will be, and no one can take credit for discovering her. You can't hide that kind of light under a bushel. You just can't, no matter how hard you try!" (Producer Joe Pasternack) Her real name is Edna Mae Durbin (she was actually always called "Edna" - not Deanna). Born in Winnipeg, Canada, her parents moved to California when she was little. When she was 14, she appeared in an MGM short, Every Sunday, with newcomer Judy Garland. However, MGM dropped her and her contract was picked up by the almost-bankrupt Universal. Together with producer Joe Pasternack and director Henry Koster, they launched what would go on to be a successful five year collaboration that saved Universal Studios from bankruptcy and cemented her as one of the great musical stars of the era. She became, literally, an overnight sensation with the release of her first film, Three Smart Girls. When she was 21 years old, she was the highest paid actress in the world! Deanna's voice was classically trained and she specialized in classical songs, even performing operatic numbers with skill. She did sing some popular and folk selections, but usually with a classical style. However, in Something in the Wind, she performed pop songs with a remarkable effect (although the highlight of the film is when she sings a duet from the opera Il Trovetore with Metropolitan Opera star Jan Peerce). During her career she would costar with such movie greats as Bob Cummings, Herbert Marshall, Robert Stack, Charles Laughton, Joseph Cotten, Pat O'Brien, Gene Kelly, and Donald O'Connor. She also was a frequent performer on Eddie Cantor's radio show, often performing with child singer Bobby Breen. She was one of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill's favorite stars, and he had her movies privately screened before release in Britain. Italian dictator Mussolini published an open letter asking her to persuade President Franklin Roosevelt not to get involved in WWII. Anne Frank had photos of her tacked up on her picture wall in the Annex, which are still there today. During her career, her fan club was the largest in the world. (In the late 1930s, she made a personal appearance in her hometown of Winnipeg, where the crowd went wild at her arrival. Her mother, who was travelling with her, suffered several broken ribs, and the police had to lock Deanna in a jail cell overnight for her own protection!) Her first screen kiss, in her 1939 film First Love, actually pushed the war news of of the front pages of newspapers around the world. Always unhappy with life in Hollywood, she was constantly at odds with the studio. She always insisted that the persona created for her on the screen was nothing like her real self and that all she wanted was to be a normal person. When she was 27 years old, she simply walked away from Hollywood after her 1948 film, For the Love of Mary, turning her back on her career and fame. She moved to France where she married her third husband, Director Charles David (who directed her in Lady on a Train), in Paris and they lived in seclusion until his death in 1999. She has a daughter, Jessica (b. 2/7/46), and a son, Peter (b. 6/20/51). She continues to live privately in a farmhouse in a small town outside of Paris. Deanna Durbin's Feature Films:
Three Smart Girls (1936); One Hundred Men and a Girl (1937); Mad About Music, That Certain Age (1938); Three Smart Girls, First Love (1939); It's a Date, Spring Parade (1940); Nice Girl?, It Started with Eve (1941); The Amazing Mrs. Holliday (1942); Hers to Hold (1943); Christmas Holiday, Can't Help Singing (1944); Lady on a Train (1945); Because of Him (1946); I'll Be Yours, Something in the Wind (1947); Up in Central Park, For the Love of Mary (1948). |
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