07 May 2022

Carol Bruce Special - Music from Film, Transcription and Radio


Over time, we have been examining the recordings of actor-vocalist Carol Bruce, from her debut on the Broadway stage to her solo recordings of the 50s. I've had the help of vocal connoisseur Bryan Cooper for this series - including today's three-part epic. 

For this post, we'll hear from Carol in songs from her second film musical, on the radio with Buddy Clark just after her great success as Julie in the 1946 revival of Show Boat, and on an Army-sponsored transcription from 1950.

Behind the Eight Ball

Bruce was one of the leads of 1942's Behind the Eight Ball, in quick succession to Keep 'Em Flying of 1941, meaning she went from the Scylla of Abbott and Costello to the Charybdis of the Ritz Brothers. Here's the IMDb precis of Eight Ball:

"The shooting and murder of two guest stars at the Shady Ridge Summer Theatre, operated by Joan Barry [that's Carol], threatens to close the musical 'Fun For All.' To bolster the show, Joan induces Bill Edwards [Dick Foran], who shares joint ownership with her, of the farm the theatre is located on, and Sheriff McKenzie, to hire the Jolly Jesters [aka Ritz Brothers]. They steal the show and, along the way, uncover a spy ring and a bullet-shooting clarinet." Actually, it sounds engagingly goofy.

Carol Bruce and Dick Foran
Besides Carol, Foran and the Ritzes, the movie featured trumpeter Sonny Dunham and his band in their only feature appearance. Dunham was an even-more blaring version of Harry James.

Thanks to Bryan's stellar collection - and his willingness to share its treasures - we already have had on the blog Bruce's studio promos from Keep 'Em Flying. In that set, Universal managed to issue a recording of the Gene de Paul - Don Raye masterwork "You Don't Know What Love Is," even though it was dropped from that film. The great song did then show up in this Ritz Brothers epic.

In today's post, Bryan has uncovered Carol's other recordings from the Eight Ball soundtrack, where she is accompanied by Dunham's band. These come from a rare Universal glass transcription disc (at right) that Bryan recently acquired.

The first of the two songs is "Golden Wedding Day," which had been a 1941 hit in a much different instrumental version by Woody Herman, with drum solo by Frankie Carlson. The song is thought to date back to 1887, when Jean Gabriel-Marie composed it as "La Cinquantaine." I suspect the clever English lyrics - which Bruce handles beautifully - are by Don Raye.

"Golden Wedding Day" leads directly into the Raye-De Paul "Wasn't It Wonderful?" which is very accomplished except for its strong resemblance to a famous movie duet of a few years before. It was as if the producer showed up at the door and instructed the songwriters, "Hey, give me something just like 'Thanks for the Memory'." Carol's fresh reading is perfect.

A 1947 Melody Hour with Buddy Clark

Our next rarity is a April 1947 Melody Hour radio program where Carol guested with the great Buddy Clark and bandleader Percy Faith.

Carol had just completed a year on Broadway as Julie in the highly successful revival of Show Boat. This show, appropriately, gives her the opportunity to perform one of her Show Boat specialties, the famous "Bill," and she is all that one could want in the song (and, I am sure, in the part).

Carol Bruce with Buddy Ebsen and Max Showalter in Show Boat
She also is given the chance to do a number then on the pop charts, the awful "Managua, Nicaragua," which should have been left to Freddy Martin and Guy Lombardo.

Al Gallodoro
For his part, Clark is his sunny and polished self in "I've Got a Pocketful of Dreams," "Old Devil Moon" (from the current Broadway hit Finian's Rainbow) and "There's a Small Hotel." Faith leads a few instrumental numbers, including the concluding showpiece for alto saxophone, Jimmy Dorsey's "Oodles of Noodles," with the remarkable virtuoso Al Gallodoro.

The sound on the broadcast is quite good, but the lossless Internet Archive transfer of the transcription did have several skips, which do not affect Bruce's numbers.

Songs by Carol Bruce (Voice of the Army Transcription)

The third part of our set comes from my own collection. It's one of a series of 16-inch transcription discs sent to radio stations by the U.S. Army to promote recruitment. This entry in the "Voice of the Army" series comes from early 1950, and gives Bruce a chance to perform her other feature from Show Boat - "Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man."

The musical backing is by Johnny Guarnieri, who made his name a decade before with Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw and here is leading his own quintet. Its members probably included George Walter (trumpet), Charles Di Maggio (clarinet, sax), Leo Guarnieri (bass) and Frank Garisto (drums), who recorded with Johnny at about the same time.

Johnny Guarnieri
Guarnieri's many-noted style would not seem ideally suited to Bruce and "Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man," but they work together smoothly. Johnny's also good in his own numbers, including the peppy "Toot-Toot-Tootsie" and "El Relicario."

Carol's concluding numbers are "Somebody Loves Me" and "It Had to Be You," which show off her versality and which she handles beautifully. Both songs date from 1924, and Bruce's vocal shadings are appropriate to that era.

The sound from this transcription - a product of my new turntable - is very good indeed. The radio station KWIK - then in Burbank CA - apparently didn't care for the program, with the program director scrawling "NG" across the label in grease pencil. The station must have preferred the Peter Lind Hayes program on the other side (which I've not transferred).

Thanks again to Bryan for his contributions to this enterprise!

Carol Bruce appearing on an early television program performing one of her numbers from Show Boat

  

14 comments:

  1. Link (Apple lossless):

    https://mega.nz/file/fFt1kKRA#ChyTKcjnfW4mVZoIPRhogYJhtXQwQrxjpQm6Q7IGULU

    ReplyDelete
  2. Any Carol Bruce recordings are welcome news. Thanks for this, especially as I am unlikely to attend a rare screening of "Behind the Eight Ball," given my allergy to the Ritz Brothers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Charlot - Here's a link; you can skip the Ritzes! (You'll have to use JDownloader to get the file):

      https://ok.ru/video/2148516039269

      Delete
  3. Nice stuff, thanks! Good to hear something from that new turntable!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thank you for these recordings. I saw Carol Bruce in 1961 at the NY City Center in PAL JOEY with Bob Fosse--they were both wonderful. I did a show with her a few years later and she was not in great shape vocally or otherwise. Great to have these recordings of her in her prime.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Geoconno - That sounds like great casting for Pal Joey! Thanks for your note, as always.

      Delete
  5. I saw that production, but with Viveca Lindfors. It was a wonderful production and Lindfors -- not primarily a singer -- handled it well. I'd like to havae seen Bruce too. (Incidentally, at the ticket window, I was standing behind an attractive woman who told the clerk there were tickets being held for Mrs. Fosse. This, of course, was Gwen Verdon! New York, New York, a wonderful town!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Philip - Ah, to have seen Gwen Vernon - and Fosse!

      Delete
  6. The City Center production with Carol Bruce was in 1961; the one with Viveca Lindfors was in 1963. There were other cast changes as well: Sheila Bond was replaced by Elaine Dunn, Christine Matthews by Rita Gardner, and Eileen Heckart by Kay Medford. Bob Fosse was the main draw both times.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In a book of actors' interviews, Eileen Heckart tells a nice story of Bob Fosse offering her some post-rehearsal help with the selling of her one song (she not being a habitué of musicals). She happily accepted, came to dinner as requested, found that Gwen was cooking, and after dinner the Fosses took her to a studio that they'd rented for the purpose, and worked her through the song beat by beat for hours. Decades later, she was still grateful to have received such meticulous coaching from "headquarters."

      Delete
    2. JAC - Great anecdote!

      Delete
  7. Another stellar collection. Well done, Buster and Bryan!

    ReplyDelete