Showing posts with label Alice Faye. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alice Faye. Show all posts

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Well, Nobody's Perfect

 
TYRONE POWER
May 5, 1914 - November 15, 1958
 
 
ALICE FAYE
May 5, 1915 - May 9, 1998
 
 
"I wanted to marry Tyrone Power. But I decided he was too fond of the boys for it to work out." -- Alice Faye

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Cosmic Fabulosity

TAMMY WYNETTE
May 5, 1942 - April 6, 1998

PAT CARROLL
May 5, 1927

ANN B. DAVIS
May 5, 1926

ALICE FAYE
May 5, 1915 - May 9, 1998

TYRONE POWER
May 5, 1914 - November 15, 1958


The Creator was certainly in a gay mood on May 5, wasn't He?

Friday, September 18, 2009

Our Last Mystery Guest...

...was not Faye Dunaway.


It wasn't Faye Emerson, either.


Heck, it wasn't even Alice Faye.


No, friends, as our dearest MC guessed right out of the box, it was the erstwhile Fay Wray - who survived not only the namesake simian of King Kong (1933), but a similarly nostril-flaring, chest-beating Joan Crawford in Queen Bee (1955).


As soon as MC sends us his measurements, we'll start cracking on his award: a pair of custom-made, printed silk hose. Everyone's guesses were fabulous, with special bonus points going to joe*to*hell and Jason for their cheekiness. Thanks for playing, darlings!

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Miss Alice Faye


TIN PAN ALLEY (1940)

We're quite excited about the upcoming release of The Alice Faye Collection Vol. 2 on DVD; we've become quite enamored of this lovely lady and her liquid gold voice. She began her movie career as a sort of Jean Harlow knockoff, complete with platinum hair, plucked eyebrows and satin on the bias.



But by the time her stardom really began ascending with In Old Chicago (1937) and Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), Faye's appearance had become considerably more refined. Hers was a mature, womanly appeal, in contrast to the more cheerful, girl-next-door image of her contemporary and rival at 20th Century Fox, Betty Grable.



Faye alternated between lavish "prestige" films like Lillian Russell (1940) and the splashy, almost-nonsensical musicals that Fox was famous for in the 1940's; the ultimate of these must be the almost surreal The Gang's All Here (1943), a Busby Berkeley-directed smorgasborg of camp, featuring Faye, Carmen Miranda, the barest whisper of a plot, and lots of very phallic bananas.


AN UNUSUALLY SUBDUED MOMENT FROM THE GANG'S ALL HERE (1943)

After nearly a decade as a major star, Faye walked out on her Fox contract when she realized that her leading role in Fallen Angel (1945) had been minimized by studio head Darryl Zanuck, in order to build up Linda Darnell's supporting role. Blackballed from the film industry by Zanuck, Faye didn't make another film until 1962; apparently letting bygones be bygones, she returned to Fox, for the remake of State Fair.



Unfortunately, although she received positive personal notices, the film was a commercial and critical failure, and didn't lead to any further films for Faye. She kept more than busy, however, with projects including a revival of Good News on Broadway, with her former Fox leading man John Payne; and becoming spokesperson for Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, promoting active senior lifestyles.

The lovely Miss Alice Faye passed away on May 9, 1998, just days after her 83rd birthday.


MISS ALICE FAYE (May 5, 1915 - May 9, 1998)