With Ava's voice, the character of Julie is complete and adds credibility to Magnolia's infatuation with her. It was insane not to use this original track. She looked and sounded perfect.
Ava was just an absolutely gorgeous woman! She said in an interview many years after her career ended, that she was brought up in a poor family, money wise, but rich in love. She was devoted to her parents, siblings, nephews and nieces.
@@TabithaReminiec3399 This actually came from Ava’s own mouth on a interview she did while living in London. Her father was a sharecropper, lost his farm and then Molly her mother began taking in boarders to help.
You mean beyond your ears. She would be totally ok today, but in 1950 ears were more demanding for every sort of singing. She may be good for entertaining and casual listening, but not good enough if you want to go "beyond". Just compare her singing, and I'm not even talking about the lousy tempo they used for that film, to Helen Morgan's or that of Lena Horne: she just did not have a developed voice, and a plain voice is good enough for plain ears. Today people are more appreciative of "feeling" than vocal and musical quality, in opera like in country.
@@dmnemaine I did not say wrong, I said not good enough. I was likewise not talking about sensibilities, I was talking prejudices of the decision makers, prejudices based on a real difference: you say that difference does not matter, but back then it was decided it did matter.
Looking at her older appearance here, by today's standards, she would have been in serious trouble like Mary Kay Letourneau being with a little boy like Mickey...even though he was of age. He looked 12-16 years of age when they were together.
TheRetroWoman80 ...... You're very observant.... Mickey Rooney played part's with MGM just like Michael J Fox who also looked very young for his age...
She's good, but Frederica von Stade is simply awesome! She belts this song out in a brisk, up tempo version with a snappy orchestra, here in UA-cam. It gets your blood surging and makes you want to get out of your chair and dance to it! :)
Definitely, but that is very different when talking about singers back then, and no changes are made all of a sudden: the prevalence we suffer today had a small beginning in the past, and it had many different phases.
+KaydeyRai the only thing I can think of is that they wanted a more powerful 'classic' soprano--but the trade off of lost intimacy with the lyrics wasn't worth it.
MGM in those days strived for perfection. They would dub great singers if they felt their vocals weren’t what they wanted. One example would be Angela Lansbury in The Harvey Girls. She was dubbed in that, but we all know Lansbury was an accomplished singer actress who won multiple Tonys on the Broadway stage for her work in musicals. This is another example. It’s hard for us to wrap our heads around the fact that people at MGM didn’t think Ava’s vocals were good enough. In today’s world, her vocals and emotional delivery are outstanding! I’d love to see them edit her vocals back into the film.
So this woman literally put me in a trance watching this performance. What did they think was so bad about her voice that they thought to dub her singing? I found her mesmerizing singing this!♥️
True, considering I have Julie London's intimate version of this standard. But have you heard Ella Fitzgerald's or Barbra Streisand's versions of this standard? They belted during the middle (Barbra's) and at the end of the song (Ella's). Wonder how the composer Jerome Kern would have liked it to be sung?
Louis Phillipe Who knows? It's impossible to say. I bet he would have appreciated the fact that he wrote such a versatile song. Belting is great! But personally I wish more broadway actresses, directors, and composers recognized that it isn't /always/ the most effective way to communicate an emotion.
I have to agree with your last statement there Siri. After all, most of the definitive versions of these standards from Broadway were the versions recorded by jazz singers like Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday or Julie London rather than by the quasi-operatic versions or originals by folks like Judy Garland or Lena Horne
Siri Hammond halleluiah Siri, well said.......I am so tired of singers belting out everything...no nuance... no feeling for the lyrics and sentiment of the song....Ava sings this with feeling and in character and it works...it is a thoughtful introspective song, Its as though she is thinking and talking to herself .She doesn't need to "shout it from the highest hills "
Wow! I didn’t know Ava Gardner could sing so well! And this is coming from someone with a trained ear. Her intonation is dead center and her phrasing is smooth and musical and I love the gentle yet smoky and sultry quality of her timbre. Bravo!
Frank Sinatra, her partner at that time, instructed her for this song. She is said to have been quite devastated when MGM did n´t. accept her version. No wonder. She´s perfect.
Absolutely beautiful voice with all of the depth that this song deserves, the studio heads were ignorant. How wonderful that this is here for us to enjoy, wow
She was one of the most beautiful actresses. Her voice matched her beauty. Hollywood was crazy not to use her voice. She was also a wonderful actress. A complete package in my estimation.
@@sylviacarlson3561 That she does not represent standards of a bygone era that people would laugh at today, you know, like fat Venuses and all that, but that her features are closer to today's standards, and Ava Gardner's looks could be more marketable today than, say, those of her contemporary Virginia Mayo.
YIKES !! She is a true beauty- after so many years of being gone one does forget just what the fuss was about, now looking at the clip, I understand why she caused men's hearts to swoon, WOW beautiful and she can sing with such feeling -
People saying Ava's version is beautiful and evocative should remember that she listened to her good friend Lena Horne's (who was robbed of the part because of her race) version over and over to prepare, picking up some of her phrasing and tone. Partial credit should go to Lena for training Ava to sing this song in a part she herself had desperately wanted. Their friendship was truly unbreakable!
+3goodtimes Lena was very bitter over losing this part--I don't think she ever got over it--she learned to accept and move on. Its nice that she rose above the situation and coached Ava (thank you for sharing). Nice that they were friends. All the makeup developed by Max FActor for Lena's skin tone was, I think, still in use by black americans.
Thanks for the information. I didn't know Lena. Just checked her videos and she was awesome. No matter how beautiful Ava is, Lena seemed perfect for the role. Ava's character had black blood. I remember watching that and thinking how ridiculous was to cast a so white actress to role-play someone with black blood.
Lena Horne's voice was nothing like Ava's, but Ava admired Lena (as I did on many songs but not all). Ava sang a very nice rendition of the song here, her own feelings in it, very nice. It never pays to try to be like someone else in public, the public usually knows and isn't fooled!
Ava Gardner should have never been dubbed! She was beautiful & her voice is timeless- they really did a disservice to the audience & fans. She was absolutely the whole package.
The strange thing is, from what I've read, is that this song with her voice is on the MGM soundtrack album, and not restored, but the one from the '50s!
One of my favorite musical movies! Ava Gardner, what a beautiful woman! She certainly sang the song well enough for me that her version could have stayed in the movie!
I own a copy of this film where it’s Ava singing her songs and I absolutely love it. I could listen to her sing all day, everyday... God I wish Hollywood would have been more supportive of her singing voice so I had more songs to listen to. The craze of those days was “song birds” and Ava was definitely not one of those, she was unique and beautiful and soulful and I absolutely adore it.
Lovely. Thanks for posting. For me she was never more desirable than playing the slightly over ripe widow in Night of the Iguana … luscious and available and real.
I had the very great pleasure of meeting Ava Gardner when she moved to London, on two occasions. Just a wonderful lady. Natural and easy to meet. Two days that I will never forget. Sad to say she passed away not long after that. God bless Ava. R I P
So beautiful! So much feeling, and so sultry. It's a shame that they didn't use Ava's voice in the movie. I read that she worked really hard on this, and was heartbroken when they went with a more professional singer. Her vocals show so much more vulnerability in my opinion.
Ava Gardner's voice was perfectly suited for this song and her sensual and heart felt emotions while singing this tells the story perfectly. Bravo to Ava for taking us on this beautiful musical journey.
She really had a lovely soft voice, -- on tune too! Even if it was dubbed for this show. She certainly wasn't known for her singing but I didn't realize she was that good although she is lip syncing above, but that's how they did it for film! Beautiful woman, gorgeous figure, no wonder Frank Sinatra was smitten with her! She could certainly sing a LOT better than some of those female singers today! I sang that song years ago, I think her rendition was better than mine! I didn't sing it quite that slowly, 1951 was Ava's first year married to Frank. He liked her voice (of course) and wanted her to take singing lessons, but she wouldn't, according to a bio I read!
To the contrary - you have discernment! I am 83 and grew up with these beautiful, talented actresses in the late 40's and 50's. Every time I see these movies, or clips, I thank God that I lived during this wonderful time and witnessed with my eyes, ears, and heart these wonderful artists. They may not have been perfect, but in my memory they will be young, beautiful and talented for ever!! ::::sigh
You're not crazy. You're a young person who has great taste in music. Back then they created beautiful melodies which have stood the test of time. Today they play instruments that make a lot of noise, and the people that mouth the lyrics sound like a bunch of sick feral cats looking for their next meal🐀. IMO, of course. And... their "music" fades in a week. No one will ever remember them 50 years from now and their feeble attempt to be famous. But this gorgeous music will last forever.🎼🎵🎶🎹
When Barbra Streisand recorded this song in her Broadway album, she said that Ava Gardner’s rendition was the one she loved the most, and she based her own singing on this version.
Beautiful. I doubt they would have dubbed her today. It is so easy to add a little width and depth to a voice now. Then, though she might have had it naturally, the mic might have not been the best for her lower tones. You can hear them when she speaks. If you compare the two voices, that is the basic difference. So glad her original vocals are still available to us. Nice...Thanks!
I just heard a 1952 Lux Radio Theatre version of Show Boat w/ most of the cast (Kathryn Grayson, Ava Gardner, Howard Keel, William Warfield, Marge And Gower Champion). Lux Radio Theatre was broadcast live, Monday nights on CBS. Ava did her own singing on that broadcast, and did a great job. Her being dubbed in the film is one of life's mysteries. The Lux show was performed in front of an audience at what is now the Ricardo Montalban Theatre on Vine Street in Hollywood. MGM must have felt confident enough of Ava's abilities if they allowed her to sing live on one of the nation's top radio programs.
Stunning. Real and emotional. Timeless. Watched this immediately after seeing the scene in the film on TV. The dubbed version - like many of the performances - are a little too reminiscent of the 1936 version with Irene Dunne, with the trilly vocal performances.
There is something about someone's own voice that you just cannot get by dubbing. It's so natural, because every voice is different and fits it's owner just so. Whenever someone is dubbed it's so obvious that the voice does not belong to that person. If the actor can sing, let them keep their voice! Again, it's so much more natural looking as well as sounding. They dubbed so much in these old movie musicals and it makes me so mad. I can understand if for a Hollywood movie they want Hollywood actors but the actors are not strong singers and must be dubbed, but they've dubbed people who played the same roles on Broadway! Juanita Hall in South Pacific, for example. And in this case Ava Gardner's voice is truly gorgeous, so why dub her? It makes me so mad, and I can't even imagine how the actors must feel. Being cast in a singing role, singing your heart out, and then basically being told that you're not good enough. If they weren't good enough why cast them? They never even told Audrey Hepburn that she was going to be dubbed in My Fair Lady. She didn't find out until she went to see it! Rant over.
I just got on this blog because I was watching Show boat and did not connect the voice with Ava... I came on to see if it was dubbed...and behold! I was right. I was pleasantly surprised at her rendition.
I agree, they should of let the actors sing their own songs instead of dubbing them, it feels more real when you hear the actual actor's voices, and if they couldn't accept that, why couldn't they get say Marni Nixon or the other "Ghost singers" in the roles instead if they did all the singing instead of the actual actors playing the characters who lip-synced to only sing? I never understood that. (It must of been really awkward for the actors to lip-sync to someone else dubbing them for songs, and upsetting too, which I don't blame them, and isn't fair honestly.
With Ava's voice, the character of Julie is complete and adds credibility to Magnolia's infatuation with her. It was insane not to use this original track. She looked and sounded perfect.
MGM should have let Ava sing in her own voice. She sings with her soul.
The funny thing is: Annette Warren's dubbed singing seems a bit outdated nowadays while Ava's original singing is quite timeless.
She wasn't the orginal...check it out.
Definitely agree, RoLorenz.
Agreed :)
@@roseharris6941 The original is Helen Morgan over 20 years earlier. Reference is to Ava's original track, before dubbing.
Check out Annette's on UA-cam - you can scarcely tell the difference in their voices.
Ava was just an absolutely gorgeous woman! She said in an interview many years after her career ended, that she was brought up in a poor family, money wise, but rich in love. She was devoted to her parents, siblings, nephews and nieces.
Ava wasn't raised in a poor family..that was movie studio publicity..the same thing with their saying that Ava's real name was Lucy Johnson
It’s shame she wasted her love on Sinatra! Big cheat!
@@TabithaReminiec3399 This actually came from Ava’s own mouth on a interview she did while living in London.
Her father was a sharecropper, lost his farm and then Molly her mother began taking in boarders to help.
Her older sister Beatrice "Bappie" was her protector, and accompanied her when she first went to Hollywood, and outlived her by many years.
I'm her cousin.
Ava's beauty is truly mesmerizing, and to think, those who saw her in the flesh say film and photos did not fully capture the extent of her beauty.
I don’t see it, now Josephine Jobert, she gorgeous
@@Ciscodaysне бабы, а женщины, недоумок!🙄
@@SuperBeachbum74 Then you're blind
She sang this so well, and with so much feeling, it brings tears to your eyes. Why they didn't use this version is beyond me.
Ask Louie B Mayer about it
she actually did sing " Bill" though
You mean beyond your ears. She would be totally ok today, but in 1950 ears were more demanding for every sort of singing. She may be good for entertaining and casual listening, but not good enough if you want to go "beyond". Just compare her singing, and I'm not even talking about the lousy tempo they used for that film, to Helen Morgan's or that of Lena Horne: she just did not have a developed voice, and a plain voice is good enough for plain ears. Today people are more appreciative of "feeling" than vocal and musical quality, in opera like in country.
@@haranoe Nonsense. Gardner sang this song exquisitely, even for 1950s sensibilities. Absolutely nothing wrong with her vocals.
@@dmnemaine I did not say wrong, I said not good enough. I was likewise not talking about sensibilities, I was talking prejudices of the decision makers, prejudices based on a real difference: you say that difference does not matter, but back then it was decided it did matter.
@@haranoe They were prejudiced against Ava Gardner herself, not her singing style. They simply assumed "She's not a singer", so they dubbed her.
Ava's low notes are so much sexier and full of warmth and femininity! I love her! She is so real....
What a beautiful woman Ava was. Nothing wrong with her voice.
She is stunning in that green. This is just mesmerizingly slow. Serious vocals here.
just imagine she was lucky Mickey Rooney's first wife at the age of 20.
Looking at her older appearance here, by today's standards, she would have been in serious trouble like Mary Kay Letourneau being with a little boy like Mickey...even though he was of age. He looked 12-16 years of age when they were together.
TheRetroWoman80 ......
You're very observant.... Mickey Rooney played part's with MGM just like Michael J Fox who also looked very young for his age...
Thanks, Jason. Yes, Michael J. was hot and still is:-) Family Ties was one of my favorite shows as a kid.
Mickey was over 2 years older.
In my opinion, I think Ava's voice is better than probably 90% of today's singers.
She's good, but Frederica von Stade is simply awesome! She belts this song out in a brisk, up tempo version with a snappy orchestra, here in UA-cam. It gets your blood surging and makes you want to get out of your chair and dance to it! :)
Alan Weaver Yes, & not an auto-tune in sight either.
I agree
You just like the genre of music.
Definitely, but that is very different when talking about singers back then, and no changes are made all of a sudden: the prevalence we suffer today had a small beginning in the past, and it had many different phases.
She's timeless, My dad named me after her, his favorite actress!
Wow- what an honor!
God, why they dubbed her??? What an angel voice, so right, in tune ...perfect. I didn't know she could sing like this!
They dubbed Harry Belafonte too at some point! 🙄
Never was she more beautifully photographed than she was here. Look at those close ups! Her skin and make up are flawless.
riversidefan2 and that waistline!! So small, my how things changed -
She grew up in a local city. Rumor has it she was African-American,
@@tbastrikes7847 you mean mixed? because she's clearly not black.
Elise Jackson “biracial” or “multiracial” is another way to say it because “mixed”should only be used when describing dog breeds
@@tbastrikes7847не пишите чушь🙄
Ava was so beautiful in Showboat, no idea why MGM dubbed her, I loved the way she sang here
+KaydeyRai the only thing I can think of is that they wanted a more powerful 'classic' soprano--but the trade off of lost intimacy with the lyrics wasn't worth it.
MGM in those days strived for perfection. They would dub great singers if they felt their vocals weren’t what they wanted. One example would be Angela Lansbury in The Harvey Girls. She was dubbed in that, but we all know Lansbury was an accomplished singer actress who won multiple Tonys on the Broadway stage for her work in musicals. This is another example. It’s hard for us to wrap our heads around the fact that people at MGM didn’t think Ava’s vocals were good enough. In today’s world, her vocals and emotional delivery are outstanding! I’d love to see them edit her vocals back into the film.
So this woman literally put me in a trance watching this performance. What did they think was so bad about her voice that they thought to dub her singing? I found her mesmerizing singing this!♥️
"literally"
@@jamesmcinnis208 My Mexican dinner literally made my mouth explode. Luckily, after multiple bone and skin grafts, and dental surgery, I recovered.
@@akrenwinkle Glad to hear you're OK. Stay away from those nitroglycerin tacos!
@@jamesmcinnis208 Oh, I'm dead! Literally dead! 🤣🤣🤣
It makes no whatsoever they didn't use Ava's voice. She sang the song beautifully! Moviemakers are their own worst enemies 😅
Ava didn't have a range but she surely sang with the right emotions of the song. A truely geniuine performance
You don't need a huge range for this song. And that's okay!
True, considering I have Julie London's intimate version of this standard. But have you heard Ella Fitzgerald's or Barbra Streisand's versions of this standard? They belted during the middle (Barbra's) and at the end of the song (Ella's). Wonder how the composer Jerome Kern would have liked it to be sung?
Louis Phillipe Who knows? It's impossible to say. I bet he would have appreciated the fact that he wrote such a versatile song. Belting is great! But personally I wish more broadway actresses, directors, and composers recognized that it isn't /always/ the most effective way to communicate an emotion.
I have to agree with your last statement there Siri. After all, most of the definitive versions of these standards from Broadway were the versions recorded by jazz singers like Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday or Julie London rather than by the quasi-operatic versions or originals by folks like Judy Garland or Lena Horne
Siri Hammond halleluiah Siri, well said.......I am so tired of singers belting out everything...no nuance... no feeling for the lyrics and sentiment of the song....Ava sings this with feeling and in character and it works...it is a thoughtful introspective song, Its as though she is thinking and talking to herself .She doesn't need to "shout it from the highest hills "
A bad girl with class! What a goddess! My heroine...
Wow! I didn’t know Ava Gardner could sing so well! And this is coming from someone with a trained ear. Her intonation is dead center and her phrasing is smooth and musical and I love the gentle yet smoky and sultry quality of her timbre. Bravo!
Frank Sinatra, her partner at that time, instructed her for this song. She is said to have been quite devastated when MGM did n´t. accept her version. No wonder. She´s perfect.
Absolutely mesmerizing. No wonder it's called the Golden Age of Hollywood.
Absolutely beautiful voice with all of the depth that this song deserves, the studio heads were ignorant. How wonderful that this is here for us to enjoy, wow
Best looking actress ever!!!!!!
Yes she was. Jxxx
Perfection
Certainement la plus belle actrice de toute l'histoire du cinéma!
She was one of the most beautiful actresses. Her voice matched her beauty. Hollywood was crazy not to use her voice. She was also a wonderful actress. A complete package in my estimation.
Wow. She's gorgeous even by today's standards.
She's gorgeous period.Todays standards are far below Ava's (and Lena's) era.
what do you mean by that?
That was her curse.
@@sylviacarlson3561 That she does not represent standards of a bygone era that people would laugh at today, you know, like fat Venuses and all that, but that her features are closer to today's standards, and Ava Gardner's looks could be more marketable today than, say, those of her contemporary Virginia Mayo.
She is natural. The women these day don't count. They are mainly plastic
What a beautiful voice!! Omg, she's lovely in a timeless way.
YIKES !! She is a true beauty- after so many years of being gone one does forget just what the fuss was about, now looking at the clip, I understand why she caused men's hearts to swoon, WOW beautiful and she can sing with such feeling -
Beautiful voice Beautiful woman. Thank you for all your talent. RIP
SOooo Beautiful. I loved her!!! She really tears your heart out at the movies' finale.....
Ava is not with us anymore ,it's been 26 years I enjoy hearing her singing . R..I.P hope to see u someday
Isn't this just wonderful. I watched the movie and thought her voice was dubbed. Shows what I know. This is delightful. Thank goodness we have UA-cam.
+Anthea Close Her voice was dubbed in the movie.
Unfortunately!
A dream…
Beauty like her don’t exist anymore!❤🌹
So much more expressive than the voice used in the movie... and her pronunciation of "shine" is just delicious.
Shane de Leon Esse filme é lindo! Abraços para você, amigo!
People saying Ava's version is beautiful and evocative should remember that she listened to her good friend Lena Horne's (who was robbed of the part because of her race) version over and over to prepare, picking up some of her phrasing and tone. Partial credit should go to Lena for training Ava to sing this song in a part she herself had desperately wanted. Their friendship was truly unbreakable!
+3goodtimes
Love both those gals. True hearts. And yup, Ava could sing. Both heart felt good people who were used and tossed.
namaste and care,
mhikl
+3goodtimes Lena was very bitter over losing this part--I don't think she ever got over it--she learned to accept and move on. Its nice that she rose above the situation and coached Ava (thank you for sharing). Nice that they were friends. All the makeup developed by Max FActor for Lena's skin tone was, I think, still in use by black americans.
Thanks for the information. I didn't know Lena. Just checked her videos and she was awesome. No matter how beautiful Ava is, Lena seemed perfect for the role. Ava's character had black blood. I remember watching that and thinking how ridiculous was to cast a so white actress to role-play someone with black blood.
Ava was mixed race too.
Lena Horne's voice was nothing like Ava's, but Ava admired Lena (as I did on many songs but not all). Ava sang a very nice rendition of the song here, her own feelings in it, very nice. It never pays to try to be like someone else in public, the public usually knows and isn't fooled!
Ava Gardner should have never been dubbed! She was beautiful & her voice is timeless- they really did a disservice to the audience & fans. She was absolutely the whole package.
The strange thing is, from what I've read, is that this song with her voice is on the MGM soundtrack album, and not restored, but the one from the '50s!
Her voice was fantastic! Whoever made the decision not to use her voice, made a big mistake. Her is very authentic.
My favorite actress. She had it all.
she is a lovely girl and a great singer
One of my favorite musical movies! Ava Gardner, what a beautiful woman! She certainly sang the song well enough for me that her version could have stayed in the movie!
What a beauty
I own a copy of this film where it’s Ava singing her songs and I absolutely love it. I could listen to her sing all day, everyday... God I wish Hollywood would have been more supportive of her singing voice so I had more songs to listen to. The craze of those days was “song birds” and Ava was definitely not one of those, she was unique and beautiful and soulful and I absolutely adore it.
You have the Laser disc? That's the only released version with her voice.
She was stunning. Love this.
Lovely. Thanks for posting. For me she was never more desirable than playing the slightly over ripe widow in Night of the Iguana … luscious and available and real.
The most beautiful . She and Monroe. Remarcable. Love Ava. So independent.
I have absolutely no clue...this was gorgeous!
What a beautiful lady!!!!!
An extra ordinary beauty and on top of that a beautiful voice. It cant get better than that. Gold bless her soul.
Ava's voice is fantastic! She was talented and beautiful. Loved her and wouldn't miss watching any movie or series featuring Ava in any role.
Breathtakingly beautiful and sang better than most of the women of her era or today. She was stunning!
Stunning-absolutely stunning! Ava’s presence is luminous and her rendition of the song is mag- netic! Bravo!
oh wow ... stunning beauty she was
Beautiful voice and Ava at her most stunning!
What a beautiful voice and a beautiful lady
she so beautiful and singing well
Love her voice (and everything else about her).
Setting and beautiful Ava’s voice just Great.
Wow just Breath taking
wow she is just breathtaking and what a sweet voice!
wow......what a great voice from this beautiful lady!!!
This is the most gorgeous woman that ever walked on earth! I´d marry her! Oh those lips...
Tiago Mourão
Lol
She was the best. So Beautiful and talented. They should have used her voice ! What a shame !!
I had the very great pleasure of meeting Ava Gardner when she moved to London, on two occasions. Just a wonderful lady. Natural and easy to meet. Two days that I will never forget. Sad to say she passed away not long after that.
God bless Ava.
R I P
Can u tell us more about it?
She has a lovely singing voice!
Most beautiful woman Ever!!!!
these kind of movies are never to be done again. classic. wonderful. I love the old musicals.
I have loved Ava since I first saw her, I am now aged 77, if that ain't love, what is?
She was a wild one. Loved her drink and her bull-fighter lovers.
WOW,now that is one beautiful woman!!!! No wonder she was my dad's favorite!!!!
Lovely. Thank you got posting this. Her voice should never have been dubbed.
So beautiful! So much feeling, and so sultry. It's a shame that they didn't use Ava's voice in the movie. I read that she worked really hard on this, and was heartbroken when they went with a more professional singer. Her vocals show so much more vulnerability in my opinion.
such brilliant music and lyrics
One of the most beautiful songs ever.
So beautiful.
As if they decided to dub over this! What were they thinking?! This is literal PERFECTION ♥️♥️♥️
Ava Gardner's voice was perfectly suited for this song and her sensual and heart felt emotions while singing this tells the story perfectly. Bravo to Ava for taking us on this beautiful musical journey.
Oh!, to be the man, that she can't help lovin. they just don't make films like this anymore. truly sublime, and so emotional and moving.
She really had a lovely soft voice, -- on tune too! Even if it was dubbed for this show. She certainly wasn't known for her singing but I didn't realize she was that good although she is lip syncing above, but that's how they did it for film! Beautiful woman, gorgeous figure, no wonder Frank Sinatra was smitten with her! She could certainly sing a LOT better than some of those female singers today! I sang that song years ago, I think her rendition was better than mine! I didn't sing it quite that slowly, 1951 was Ava's first year married to Frank. He liked her voice (of course) and wanted her to take singing lessons, but she wouldn't, according to a bio I read!
such a wonderful song
What a lovely voice!
Why is it that modern music outshines these gems?! I'm young, and I love these songs so much! Everyone thinks i'm crazy for it lol
To the contrary - you have discernment! I am 83 and grew up with these beautiful, talented actresses in the late 40's and 50's. Every time I see these movies, or clips, I thank God that I lived during this wonderful time and witnessed with my eyes, ears, and heart these wonderful artists. They may not have been perfect, but in my memory they will be young, beautiful and talented for ever!! ::::sigh
You're not crazy. You're a young person who has great taste in music. Back then they created beautiful melodies which have stood the test of time. Today they play instruments that make a lot of noise, and the people that mouth the lyrics sound like a bunch of sick feral cats looking for their next meal🐀. IMO, of course.
And... their "music" fades in a week. No one will ever remember them 50 years from now and their feeble attempt to be famous.
But this gorgeous music will last forever.🎼🎵🎶🎹
NC’s finest!!! Sing it lava!!!! ♥️🎁
When Barbra Streisand recorded this song in her Broadway album, she said that Ava Gardner’s rendition was the one she loved the most, and she based her own singing on this version.
Beautiful. I doubt they would have dubbed her today. It is so easy to add a little width and depth to a voice now. Then, though she might have had it naturally, the mic might have not been the best for her lower tones. You can hear them when she speaks. If you compare the two voices, that is the basic difference. So glad her original vocals are still available to us. Nice...Thanks!
No lie her face was magnificient nowadays plenty of women would do anything to have such lips and her eyes ...
And cheekbones
The definitive performance !
I just heard a 1952 Lux Radio Theatre version of Show Boat w/ most of the cast (Kathryn Grayson, Ava Gardner, Howard Keel, William Warfield, Marge And Gower Champion). Lux Radio Theatre was broadcast live, Monday nights on CBS. Ava did her own singing on that broadcast, and did a great job. Her being dubbed in the film is one of life's mysteries. The Lux show was performed in front of an audience at what is now the Ricardo Montalban Theatre on Vine Street in Hollywood. MGM must have felt confident enough of Ava's abilities if they allowed her to sing live on one of the nation's top radio programs.
Beautiful voice!
Oh to have a love like that and to be loved like that. I'm so lucky!
The depth of her acting is incredible here; I don't think she was too old she brings with her a wisdom veiled in youth.
Gardener was only 29 when she made Showboat! Lord! How I loved that woman!!
I don't believe that Ava was insecure about herself... She was the most beautiful and talented actress ever!!!!
What a woman. What a time. Pure natural beauty. No ugly tattoos and silicone.
Stunning. Real and emotional. Timeless.
Watched this immediately after seeing the scene in the film on TV. The dubbed version - like many of the performances - are a little too reminiscent of the 1936 version with Irene Dunne, with the trilly vocal performances.
Bravo! Beautiful.... so beautiful.
There is something about someone's own voice that you just cannot get by dubbing. It's so natural, because every voice is different and fits it's owner just so. Whenever someone is dubbed it's so obvious that the voice does not belong to that person. If the actor can sing, let them keep their voice! Again, it's so much more natural looking as well as sounding. They dubbed so much in these old movie musicals and it makes me so mad. I can understand if for a Hollywood movie they want Hollywood actors but the actors are not strong singers and must be dubbed, but they've dubbed people who played the same roles on Broadway! Juanita Hall in South Pacific, for example. And in this case Ava Gardner's voice is truly gorgeous, so why dub her? It makes me so mad, and I can't even imagine how the actors must feel. Being cast in a singing role, singing your heart out, and then basically being told that you're not good enough. If they weren't good enough why cast them? They never even told Audrey Hepburn that she was going to be dubbed in My Fair Lady. She didn't find out until she went to see it!
Rant over.
I just got on this blog because I was watching Show boat and did not connect the voice with Ava... I came on to see if it was dubbed...and behold! I was right. I was pleasantly surprised at her rendition.
I agree, they should of let the actors sing their own songs instead of dubbing them, it feels more real when you hear the actual actor's voices, and if they couldn't accept that, why couldn't they get say Marni Nixon or the other "Ghost singers" in the roles instead if they did all the singing instead of the actual actors playing the characters who lip-synced to only sing? I never understood that. (It must of been really awkward for the actors to lip-sync to someone else dubbing them for songs, and upsetting too, which I don't blame them, and isn't fair honestly.
Ava Gardner, what a beautiful creature she was. She's the stuff men go crazy for
This is Ava Garner's own voice? I never knew she could sing. She sounds lovely.
Beautiful voice, beautiful woman.
You're absolutely right. Thank you for these gems, (Bill.)
Oh, what a beautyfull Woman and a good Actress and singing can she also! Ohooh yeah!
She's so frickin gorgeous
Gorgeous singing... why did they substitute her? GORGEOUS!! and Ava keeps doing Diminuendi in every note... gorgeous