[78-L] Public Melody Number One

bill freytag bill_freytag at yahoo.com
Wed May 6 16:12:33 PDT 2009


Is it possible that Martha's "dusky" appearance was not "Al Jolson-esque" for some?

Also, Louis comments that the G-Men are like a bunch of NBC(?) men.........is it possible the network reference had an influence?

The grand thing about speculation is that it's not wrong until the actual reason is found!




________________________________
From: "soundthink at aol.com" <soundthink at aol.com>
To: 78-l at klickitat.78online.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 6, 2009 7:04:45 PM
Subject: Re: [78-L] Public Melody Number One

If you look at clip, Armstrong doesn't really perform "with" Raye. He merely appears in the same scene. I only viewed it once, but I believe that during most of the clip, they're not even in the same frame together.

Cary Ginell


-----Original Message-----
From: Ken "Silver Showcase" <kenreg at tds.net>
To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Wed, 6 May 2009 3:55 pm
Subject: Re: [78-L] Public Melody Number One



soundthink at aol.com wrote:
> http://www.tcm.com/video/videoPlayer/?cid=224002&titleId=67674
>
> Anyone know why this clip with Louis Armstrong and Martha Raye was censored 
when it came out in 1937? I like it a lot. Vincente Minnelli apparently 
conceived it. The only thing I heard on first viewing that would be considered 
objectionable then was a reference in the lyrics?to "all the tea in Harlem."
>
> Cary Ginell

I can't seem to put my finger on the information at the moment, but I've 
read that there was a "scandal" surrounding the joint appearance of 
Louis Armstrong and Martha Raye.  I think they had also appeared 
together on stage.  It seems unbelievable today, but in the 30s there 
were strong objections to their joint appearances because, well, he was 
a black male performing with a white female.  As I recall the story, it 
was Louis who got blacklisted for a time because of this.  (The black 
guy got punished.  The white gal was apparently off the hook.)  Satchmo 
was supposed to appear in "Dr. Rhythm," in 1938, a Bing Crosby/Bea 
Lillie musical.  His name is in the credits, on the publicity materials 
and he's even listed in the credits of the NY Times review but he there 
is absolutely no sign of his appearance in the final release.  As best 
as I could determine he was removed from this film at the last minute 
because of the Satchmo/Raye "scandal."  A few years ago I tried to learn 
if his sequence for "Dr. Rhythm" survives or if it was even filmed but I 
came up empty.  If anyone knowns any more about this I'd love to hear 
about it.

-- Ken
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