Celeste Holm "I Can't Say No" on The Ed Sullivan Show
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- Опубліковано 19 жов 2024
- Celeste Holm "I Can't Say No" on The Ed Sullivan Show, March 27, 1955. Subscribe now to never miss an update: ume.lnk.to/EdS...
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The Ed Sullivan Show was a television variety program that aired on CBS from 1948-1971. For 23 years it aired every Sunday night and played host to the world's greatest talents. The Ed Sullivan Show is well known for bringing rock n' roll music to the forefront of American culture through acts like Elvis Presley, The Beatles, and The Rolling Stones. The entertainers each week ranged from comedians like Joan Rivers and Rodney Dangerfield, to Broadway stars Julie Andrews and Richard Burton, to pop singers such as Bobby Darin and Petula Clark. It also frequently featured stars of Motown such as The Supremes, The Temptations, Stevie Wonder and The Jackson 5. The Ed Sullivan Show was one of the only places on American television where such a wide variety of popular culture was showcased and its legacy lives on to this day.
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A voice that was perfect for a big Broadway stage - right up there with Ms. Merman! Absolutely spectacular !
My favourite actress who always makes me smile. Talented, funny and so so beautiful whatever happened to good acting?
There was nothing beyond the scope of Celeste Holm's talents. Wonderful!
Adorable!!! Proves her versatility
Celeste was such a profound professional. Nothing was left to chance.
One of the best real lyrics ever written
I have a picture of Patricia Routledge singing this song to Emmet in one of his neighborhood musicals on the Memoirs of Hyacinth Bucket..
Both women where excellent singers in real life.
I adored her. Thank god so much of her work is on film
The melody of "It aint so much a question of not knowing what to do" apparently comes from "Rising Early in the Morning We Proceed to Light the Fire" from "The Gondoliers" by Gilbert and Sullivan.
fascinating. I have never seen this before. She squeezes every ounch of humor out of this number, I am amazed how consistently she plays to the camera ,rather than more broadly to the live Ed Sullivan audience as she did for two years on the stage. Its very well done.
Great
One of the funniest songs by Oscar Hammerstein. 😊
She's singing the same year Gloria Grahame did it on the silver screen -- and only six years older!
Hayseed comedian and longtime Grand Ole Opry regular Minnie Pearl (born Sarah Ophelia Colley Cannon, in real life the daughter of a prosperous small-town businessman and graduate of Nashville's most prestigious finishing school) auditioned for the role of Ado Annie and was considered a strong contender until Holm was chosen. Holm's performance won her a long-term film contract with Twentieth Century-Fox; this appearance is twelve years after Holm opened with the original Broadway production in 1943, possibly as a tie-in to the then-upcoming 1955 film version with Gloria Grahame as Ado Annie.
My mom's cousin was in the olympic and he new celeste Holmes she was a great swimmer
Probably Eleanor Holm who also screen tested for Hollywood and appeared in a few films. The best known was "Tarzan's Revenge" (1938).
@@MostlyBrenda Celeste Holmes was in the olympic from around 1920s to 1930
@@pamczech5984 It's Holm, not Holmes and no, she was not a swimmer, but you can believe it if you want. That's all I will say about it.
Sweeter than cream!
The original Ado Annie!
Well, this isn't how Celeste sounded when she sang in "The Tender Trap".
More Rodgers and Hammerstein. 🙂
loved her in All About Eve.....but this is atrocious
Guess you are not familiar with Oklahoma, the musical by Rogers and Hammerstein. She won a Tony for this role, in 1941, I think.
This is how the character of Ado Annie is supposed to perform the song.
I don't know, guys... I thought maybe it was intentional so as to add character, but if JadeZee of all people says it's atrocious...
@@burtihalI think the Tonys started in 1947.