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Corona - what does help you? Your fears, thoughts, everything
Jeff Wrangler:
--- Quote from: serious crayons on April 28, 2021, 06:27:03 pm ---I considered adding Rex Harrison, who I remembered speak-singing his songs in My Fair Lady. But I took a quick look at "Why Can't the English Teach Their Children How to Speak?" and he's actually carrying a bit of a tune.
I also saw enough to conclude the show wouldn't go over very well today -- very classist, for one thing. I realize Prof. Harold Hill is supposed to be a bit of a snob, but that's not emphasized enough.
--- End quote ---
Sorry, you threw me for a minute there until I realized you meant Prof. Henry Higgins.
--- Quote ---Plus, I've always resented the movie for dumping Julie Andrews, the star of the play, for Audrey Hepburn, whose singing had to be dubbed.
--- End quote ---
I'm with you there, though I do watch the movie for Rex Harrison. But that was outrageous, casting Audrey Hepburn and dubbing her. And not only did they dub her, they dubbed her with a soprano (I think it was Marni Nixon, but I'm not sure about that). The singing voice is so nothing like Audrey Hepburn's speaking voice.
I read somewhere that Hepburn was cast because she was a box office draw, and the powers that be thought of Julie Andrews as a stage actress. But you know what happened that year, don't you? They gave Julie Andrews the Oscar for Mary Poppins.
I'm sure there must be an original Broadway cast album out there somewhere. I have the London recording, and it's wonderful.
If you want to see/hear a successful dubbing from a few years before My Fair Lady, Marni Nixon dubbed Deborah Kerr in The King and I. I call that successful because Kerr's speaking voice and Nixon's singing voice are a pretty good match.
CellarDweller:
--- Quote from: CellarDweller on April 28, 2021, 04:10:57 pm ---Hello All!
*waves*
As of 2 hours ago, I am double vaxxed! ;D
--- End quote ---
Woke this morning with a sore arm, but other than that, I seem to be ok.
Jeff Wrangler:
--- Quote from: CellarDweller on April 29, 2021, 07:44:52 am ---Woke this morning with a sore arm, but other than that, I seem to be ok.
--- End quote ---
Mine's sore, too.
Getting this second dose was quite different from getting the first dose. This time it was given higher up in my arm, almost to my shoulder, and farther forward than the firs dose. The needle looked larger, too. I didn't feel the first shot going in, but I sure felt this one! ;D
Was it the dose itself, the size of the needle, or the technique and experience of the person giving the shot?
I'm glad I didn't have to go to a massvax center and get stuck by an inexperienced member of the National Guard.
serious crayons:
--- Quote from: Jeff Wrangler on April 28, 2021, 11:01:43 pm ---Sorry, you threw me for a minute there until I realized you meant Prof. Henry Higgins.
--- End quote ---
Oops! Sorry, I mixed up my 1950s musical Prof. H. H.s. :laugh:
--- Quote ---I'm with you there, though I do watch the movie for Rex Harrison. But that was outrageous, casting Audrey Hepburn and dubbing her. And not only did they dub her, they dubbed her with a soprano (I think it was Marni Nixon, but I'm not sure about that). The singing voice is so nothing like Audrey Hepburn's speaking voice.
I read somewhere that Hepburn was cast because she was a box office draw, and the powers that be thought of Julie Andrews as a stage actress. But you know what happened that year, don't you? They gave Julie Andrews the Oscar for Mary Poppins.
I'm sure there must be an original Broadway cast album out there somewhere. I have the London recording, and it's wonderful.
--- End quote ---
It was Marni Nixon, which I only know from double checking my memory of the dubbing. Her name came back to me then. I suspected I also knew her from another context, and sure enough, she dubbed for Natalie Wood in West Side Story.
Julie Andrews is a better fit for Eliza Doolittle, whereas Audrey Hepburn is a better fit for Breakfast at Tiffany's and Two for the Road. Hard to imagine Julie in those roles.
If Julie had played Eliza the same year she played Mary Poppins, she could have canceled herself out at the Oscars! But how fun if they were a year apart and she'd won a trifecta -- Best Actress for those two plus The Sound of Music (for which she was nominated -- the award went to another Julie, Julie Christie).
There's undoubtedly an original Broadway cast MFL out there, because I had the album myself when I was a child, which is one reason I prefer Julie. If only I still had that record and had kept it in pristine condition for the past 50+ years! Somebody probably did.
Sason:
--- Quote from: CellarDweller on April 28, 2021, 08:49:03 pm ---
I got the Moderna, and I believe that after 2 weeks I'm considered "immune", but I don't think that's true.
--- End quote ---
Nobody is 100% immune.
But all the vaccines are supposed to give a high immunity.
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