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Alice Faye

Alice Faye (born Alice Jeanne Leppert; May 5, 1915 – May 9, 1998) was an American actress and singer. A musical star of 20th Century-Fox in the 1930s and 1940s, Faye starred in such films as On the Avenue (1937) and Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938). She is often associated with the Academy Award–winning standard "You'll Never Know", which she introduced in the 1943 musical film Hello, Frisco, Hello.

Alice Faye
Faye in 1934
Born
Alice Jeanne Leppert

(1915-05-05)May 5, 1915
DiedMay 9, 1998(1998-05-09) (aged 83)
Resting placeForest Lawn Cemetery
Occupations
  • Actress
  • singer
Years active1934–1995
Spouse(s)
(m. 1937; div. 1940)

(m. 1941; died 1995)
Children2
Websitealicefaye.com

She left her career as a film actress and became known for her role on the radio show The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show.

Life and career

1915–1933: Early life and career beginnings

Alice Jeanne Leppert was born on May 5, 1915, in Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan,[1] the daughter of Alice (née Moffit), who worked for the Mirror Chocolate Company, and Charles Leppert, a police officer. She had an older brother, Charles. Faye was raised an Episcopalian. Faye's entertainment career began in vaudeville as a chorus girl. She failed an audition for the Earl Carroll Vanities when she was found to be too young, then moved to Broadway and a featured role in the 1931 edition of George White's Scandals. By this time, she had adopted her stage name and first reached a radio audience on Rudy Vallée's The Fleischmann's Yeast Hour.[2]

1934–1938: Early work

Faye gained her first major film break in 1934, when Lilian Harvey abandoned the lead role in a film version of George White's Scandals (1934 film), in which Vallee was also to appear. Hired first to perform a musical number with Vallee, Faye ended up as the female lead. She became a popular film star for audiences of the 1930s, particularly when Fox production head Darryl F. Zanuck made her his protégée. He softened Faye from a wisecracking showgirl to a youthful, and yet somewhat motherly figure, such as her roles in a few Shirley Temple films.[3] Faye received a physical makeover, going from a version of Jean Harlow to a wholesome appearance, in which her platinum hair and pencil-line eyebrows were swapped for a more natural look.

 
Alice Faye in That Night in Rio (1941)

Faye was cast as the female lead in In Old Chicago (1938). Zanuck initially resisted casting Faye, as the role had been written for Jean Harlow, but critics applauded Faye's performance. The film contained a 20-minute finale, a recreation of the Great Chicago Fire, a scene so dangerous that women, except for the main stars, were banned from the set. In the film, she appeared with two of her most frequent co-stars, Tyrone Power and Don Ameche, as it was customary for studios to pair their contract players together in more than one film.

Faye, Power, and Ameche were reunited for the 1938 release Alexander's Ragtime Band, which was designed to showcase more than 20 Irving Berlin songs; Faye again received strong reviews. One of the most expensive films of its time, it also became one of the most successful musicals of the 1930s.

1939–1940

By 1939, Faye was named one of the top-10 box-office draws in Hollywood.[4] That year, she made Rose of Washington Square with Tyrone Power. Although a big hit, the film was supposedly based on the real life of comedian Fanny Brice, who sued Fox for stealing her story.

Because of her bankable status, Fox occasionally placed Faye in films more for the sake of making money than showcasing Faye's talents. Films such as Tail Spin and Barricade (both 1939) were more dramatic than regular Faye films, and often did not contain any songs. Due to her immense popularity, though, none of the films that she made in the 1930s and 1940s lost money; this success garnered her the nickname "Queen of Fox".[4]

One of Faye's most memorable parts was the title role in the musical biopic Lillian Russell (1940). Faye always named this film as one of her favorites, though it was also her most challenging role. The tight corsets Faye wore for this picture caused her to collapse on the set several times.

After declining the lead role in for Down Argentine Way (also 1940) because of an illness, Faye was replaced by the studio's newest musical star, Betty Grable. She was paired as a sister act opposite Grable in the film Tin Pan Alley (also 1940). During the making of the picture, a rumor arose that a rivalry had arisen between the two. In a Biography interview, Faye disclosed that the Fox publicity department built up the rumor, and that the two actresses were in fact close friends.

1941–1995: Later work

 
Alice Faye, Phil Baker, and Carmen Miranda in The Gang's All Here (1943)

In 1941, Fox began to place Faye in musicals photographed in Technicolor, a trademark for the studio in the 1940s. She frequently played a performer, often one moving up in society, allowing for situations that ranged from the poignant to the comic. Films such as Week-End in Havana (1941) and That Night in Rio (1941), in which she played a Brazilian aristocrat, made good use of Faye's husky singing voice, solid comic timing, and flair for carrying off the era's starry-eyed romantic story lines.

 
Alice Faye (center), Jack Haley (left), Don Ameche, and Tyrone Power (right), in a trailer for Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938)

In 1943, after taking a year off to have her first daughter, Faye starred in the Technicolor musical Hello, Frisco, Hello. Released at the height of World War II, the film became one of her highest-grossing pictures for Fox. In this film, Faye sang "You'll Never Know". The song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song for 1943, and the sheet music for the song sold over a million copies. Since a clause in her contract (as was the case with most other Fox stars) stated that she could not officially record any of her movie songs, other singers, such as Dick Haymes (whose version hit number one for four weeks), Frank Sinatra, and Rosemary Clooney have been more associated with the song than Faye. However, it is still often considered Faye's signature song. That year, Faye was once again named one of the top box-office draws in the world.

End of motion picture career

As Faye's star continued to ascend during the war years, family life became more important to her, especially with the arrival of a second daughter, Phyllis. After her birth, Faye signed a new contract with Fox to make only one picture a year, with the option of a second one, to give Faye a chance to spend more time with her family.[5] Her second pregnancy resulted in a hospitalization, forcing her to surrender a plum dramatic role in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn to Joan Blondell, and she declined a musical role in The Dolly Sisters (her intended part went to June Haver).[6]

Faye finally accepted the lead role in Fallen Angel (1945). Although designed ostensibly as Faye's vehicle, Zanuck tried to build his new protégé Linda Darnell, ordering many of Faye's scenes cut and Darnell emphasized.[7] When Faye saw a screening of the final cut—with her role reduced by 12 scenes and a song number—she wrote a scathing note to Zanuck, went straight to her car, gave her dressing room keys to the studio gate guard, and drove home, vowing never to return to Fox. Faye was still so popular that thousands of letters were sent to Faye's home and the Fox studios from around the world, begging her to return for another picture. In 1987, she told an interviewer, "When I stopped making pictures, it didn't bother me because there were so many things I hadn't done. I had never learned to run a house. I didn't know how to cook. I didn't know how to shop. So all these things filled all those gaps."[1]

After Fallen Angel, Faye's contract called for her to make two more movies. Zanuck hit back by having her blackballed for breach of contract, effectively ending her film career, although Faye no longer cared to pursue it. Fallen Angel was Faye's last starring film. Zanuck, under public pressure, tried to lure Faye back onto the screen; Faye returned all the scripts.

Alice Faye did return to Fox later, for a character role in a remake of an old Fox property, State Fair (1962). While she received good reviews, the film was not a success.[8] She made only infrequent cameo appearances in films thereafter, playing a secretary in Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood (1976) and in The Magic of Lassie (1978) as a waitress.[9]

Faye was the subject of This Is Your Life for British television in 1984, when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at Hollywood's Metromedia Studios.[citation needed]

Marriage and radio career

Faye's first marriage, to Tony Martin in 1937, ended in divorce in 1940; both had busy careers that monopolized most of their time, leaving few opportunities for togetherness. In May 1941, she married bandleader Phil Harris. Their marriage, one of the most successful in Hollywood, became a plotline in the hit radio comedy, The Jack Benny Program, where for 16 years Harris was a regular cast member.

The couple had two daughters, Alice (b. 1942) and Phyllis (b. 1944), along with Harris's adopted son from his first marriage, Phil Harris, Jr. (1935–2001). Faye and Harris began working in radio together as Faye's film career declined. First, they teamed to host a variety show on NBC, The Fitch Bandwagon, in 1946. The Harrises' gently tart comedy sketches made them the show's stars. By 1948, Fitch was replaced as sponsor by Rexall, the pharmaceutical company, and the show, now a strictly situation comedy with a music interlude each from husband and wife, was renamed The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show.

Harris's comic talent was already familiar through his tenure on Jack Benny's radio shows for Jell-o and Lucky Strike. From 1936 to 1952, he played Benny's wisecracking, jive-talking, hipster bandleader. With their own show revamped to a sitcom, bandleader-comedian Harris and singer-actress Faye played themselves, raising two precocious children in slightly zany situations, mostly involving Harris's band guitarist Frank Remley (Elliott Lewis), obnoxious delivery boy Julius Abruzzio (Walter Tetley, familiar as nephew Leroy on The Great Gildersleeve), Robert North as Faye's fictitious deadbeat brother, Willie, and sponsor's representative Mr. Scott (Gale Gordon), and usually involving bumbling, malaproping Harris needing to be rescued by Faye.

The Harrises' two daughters were played on radio by Jeanine Roose and Anne Whitfield; written mostly by Ray Singer and Dick Chevillat; the show stayed on NBC radio as a fixture until 1954.

 
Alice Faye and Phil Harris with their daughters, Alice and Phyllis, in 1948

Faye's singing ballads and swing numbers in her honeyed contralto voice was a regular highlight of the show, as was her knack for tart one-liners equal to those of her husband. The show's running gags also included references to Alice's wealth from her film career ("I'm only trying to protect the wife of the money I love" was a typical Harris drollery), and occasional barbs by Faye aimed at her rift with Zanuck, usually referencing Fallen Angel.

In its early years, the Harris-Faye radio show ranked among the top-10 radio programs in the country. The radio show also provided Faye with the perfect balance between show business and home life; since radio only required her to be present for a read-through and the live broadcast, Faye was still able to spend most of her time at home with her daughters.

Later life and death

She supported Adlai Stevenson's campaign during the 1952 presidential election[10] and Barry Goldwater in the 1964 United States presidential election.[11]

Faye and Harris continued various projects, individually and together, for the rest of their lives. In 1974, Faye made a return to Broadway after 43 years in a revival of Good News, with her old Fox partner John Payne (who was replaced by Gene Nelson). In later years, Faye became a spokeswoman for Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, promoting the virtues of an active senior lifestyle.[12] The Faye-Harris marriage endured 54 years until Harris's death in 1995. Faye admitted in an interview that when she married Harris, most of the Hollywood elite had predicted the marriage would only last about six months.

Three years after Phil Harris' death, Alice Faye died of stomach cancer in Rancho Mirage, California, four days after her 83rd birthday. She was cremated and her ashes rest beside those of Phil Harris at the mausoleum of the Forest Lawn Cemetery (Cathedral City) near Palm Springs, California.[13] She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in recognition of her contribution to Motion Pictures at 6922 Hollywood Boulevard. In 1994, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs, California, Walk of Stars was dedicated to her.[14] The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show remains a favorite of old-time radio collectors.

Popularity and legacy

Her voice, The New York Times wrote in her obituary, was "inviting". Irving Berlin was once quoted as saying that he would choose Faye over any other singer to introduce his songs, and George Gershwin and Cole Porter called her the "best female singer in Hollywood in 1937".[1] During her years as a musical superstar (from the 1930s to the early 1940s), Alice Faye managed to introduce 23 songs to the Hit Parade.[15] She was the first female crooner and equivalent to Bing Crosby.[16][17]

 
Alice Faye's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Although Faye has had fans around the globe, she was never more popular than in Great Britain and in The Alice Faye Movie Book an article is devoted to Faye's popularity there. The author, Arthur Nicholson, mentions how enormously popular she was even in her Harlow days and though other films shown in England were usually shown for three days a week, Faye's films played for an entire week. After Faye retired in 1945, her reissued films made as much money (in some cases, more) as current releases. When Faye returned to the screen for State Fair in 1962, the film broke records in England.

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1934 George White's Scandals Kitty Donnelly / Mona Vale Film debut
1934 Now I'll Tell Peggy Warren
1934 She Learned About Sailors Jean Legoi
1934 365 Nights in Hollywood Alice Perkins
1935 George White's 1935 Scandals Honey Walters
1935 Every Night at Eight Dixie Foley
1935 Music Is Magic Peggy Harper
1936 King of Burlesque Pat Doran
1936 Poor Little Rich Girl Jerry Dolan
1936 Sing, Baby, Sing Joan Warren Nominated—Academy Award for Best Original Song
1936 Stowaway Susan Parker
1937 On the Avenue Mona Merrick
1937 You Can't Have Everything Judith Poe Wells
1937 Wake Up and Live Alice Huntley
1937 You're a Sweetheart Betty Bradley
1938 In Old Chicago Belle Fawcett
1938 Sally, Irene and Mary Sally Day
1938 Alexander's Ragtime Band Stella Kirby Nominated—Academy Award for Best Original Song
1939 Tail Spin Trixie Lee
1939 Rose of Washington Square Rose Sargent
1939 Hollywood Cavalcade Molly Adair Hayden
1939 Barricade Emmy Jordan
1940 Little Old New York Pat O'Day
1940 Lillian Russell Lillian Russell
1940 Tin Pan Alley Katie Blane
1941 That Night in Rio Baroness Cecilia Duarte
1941 The Great American Broadcast Vicki Adams
1941 Week-End in Havana Nan Spencer
1943 Hello, Frisco, Hello Trudy Evans Academy Award for Best Original Song
1943 The Gang's All Here Edie Allen
1944 Four Jills in a Jeep Herself Cameo
1945 Fallen Angel June Mills
1962 State Fair Melissa Frake
1976 Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood Secretary at Gate Cameo
1978 Every Girl Should Have One Kathy
1978 The Magic of Lassie The Waitress (Alice) Final film role
1995 Carmen Miranda: Bananas is My Business Herself Documentary

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode/source
1950 Lux Radio Theatre Alexander's Ragtime Band[18]
1951 Suspense Death on My Hands[18]

References

  1. ^ a b c Harmetz, Aljean (May 11, 1998). "Alice Faye, Hollywood Star Who Sang for Her Man, Di". NY Times. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
  2. ^ "Rudy Vallee (1901-1986)". Riverside Cemetery Journal. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  3. ^ Elder, Jane Lenz, Alice Faye: a life beyond the silver screen, (2002), p. 83.
  4. ^ a b "Alice Faye, '30s Musicals Star, Dies". Los Angeles Times. 1998-05-10. Retrieved 2020-03-04.
  5. ^ Elder, Jane Lenz, Alice Faye: a life beyond the silver screen, (2002), p.168.
  6. ^ Elder, Jane Lenz, Alice Faye: a life beyond the silver screen, (2002), p. 170-171.
  7. ^ Hare, William (2014-01-10). Pulp Fiction to Film Noir: The Great Depression and the Development of a Genre. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-9029-5.
  8. ^ Crowther, Bosley (1962-04-12). "The Screen: 'All Fall Down,' Inge's Version of Herlihy Novel:Beatty and Miss Saint Starred in Drama 4 Other Movies Have Local Premieres". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-03-04.
  9. ^ Natale, Richard (1998-05-11). "Fox tuner Faye dies at 83". Variety. Retrieved 2020-03-04.
  10. ^ Motion Picture and Television Magazine, November 1952, page 33, Ideal Publishers
  11. ^ "ELECTIONS AROUSE HOLLYWOOD STARS; New and Old Film Figures Active in Campaigns". The New York Times. 13 October 1964.
  12. ^ Lade, Diane. "ACTRESS FOCUSES ON 'YOUNG-ELDERS'". Sun-Sentinel.com. Retrieved 2020-03-04.
  13. ^ Brooks, Patricia; Brooks, Jonathan (2006). "Chapter 8: East L.A. and the Desert". Laid to Rest in California: a guide to the cemeteries and grave sites of the rich and famous. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot Press. p. 245. ISBN 978-0-7627-4101-4. OCLC 70284362.
  14. ^
  15. ^ Perlman, Michael H. (2015-03-02). Legendary Locals of Forest Hills and Rego Park. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4396-5010-3.
  16. ^ Hare, William (2014-01-10). Pulp Fiction to Film Noir: The Great Depression and the Development of a Genre. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-9029-5.
  17. ^ Clarke, Andra D.; Denton-Drew, Regina (2015-11-30). Ciro's: Nightclub of the Stars. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4396-5384-5.
  18. ^ a b "Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. Vol. 39, no. 1. Winter 2013. pp. 32–41.

External links

alice, faye, born, alice, jeanne, leppert, 1915, 1998, american, actress, singer, musical, star, 20th, century, 1930s, 1940s, faye, starred, such, films, avenue, 1937, alexander, ragtime, band, 1938, often, associated, with, academy, award, winning, standard, . Alice Faye born Alice Jeanne Leppert May 5 1915 May 9 1998 was an American actress and singer A musical star of 20th Century Fox in the 1930s and 1940s Faye starred in such films as On the Avenue 1937 and Alexander s Ragtime Band 1938 She is often associated with the Academy Award winning standard You ll Never Know which she introduced in the 1943 musical film Hello Frisco Hello Alice FayeFaye in 1934BornAlice Jeanne Leppert 1915 05 05 May 5 1915Manhattan New York City U S DiedMay 9 1998 1998 05 09 aged 83 Rancho Mirage California U S Resting placeForest Lawn CemeteryOccupationsActress singerYears active1934 1995Spouse s Tony Martin m 1937 div 1940 wbr Phil Harris m 1941 died 1995 wbr Children2Websitealicefaye wbr comShe left her career as a film actress and became known for her role on the radio show The Phil Harris Alice Faye Show Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 1915 1933 Early life and career beginnings 1 2 1934 1938 Early work 1 3 1939 1940 1 4 1941 1995 Later work 2 End of motion picture career 3 Marriage and radio career 4 Later life and death 5 Popularity and legacy 6 Filmography 6 1 Film 6 2 Radio appearances 7 References 8 External linksLife and career Edit1915 1933 Early life and career beginnings Edit Alice Jeanne Leppert was born on May 5 1915 in Hell s Kitchen Manhattan 1 the daughter of Alice nee Moffit who worked for the Mirror Chocolate Company and Charles Leppert a police officer She had an older brother Charles Faye was raised an Episcopalian Faye s entertainment career began in vaudeville as a chorus girl She failed an audition for the Earl Carroll Vanities when she was found to be too young then moved to Broadway and a featured role in the 1931 edition of George White s Scandals By this time she had adopted her stage name and first reached a radio audience on Rudy Vallee s The Fleischmann s Yeast Hour 2 1934 1938 Early work Edit Faye gained her first major film break in 1934 when Lilian Harvey abandoned the lead role in a film version of George White s Scandals 1934 film in which Vallee was also to appear Hired first to perform a musical number with Vallee Faye ended up as the female lead She became a popular film star for audiences of the 1930s particularly when Fox production head Darryl F Zanuck made her his protegee He softened Faye from a wisecracking showgirl to a youthful and yet somewhat motherly figure such as her roles in a few Shirley Temple films 3 Faye received a physical makeover going from a version of Jean Harlow to a wholesome appearance in which her platinum hair and pencil line eyebrows were swapped for a more natural look Alice Faye in That Night in Rio 1941 Faye was cast as the female lead in In Old Chicago 1938 Zanuck initially resisted casting Faye as the role had been written for Jean Harlow but critics applauded Faye s performance The film contained a 20 minute finale a recreation of the Great Chicago Fire a scene so dangerous that women except for the main stars were banned from the set In the film she appeared with two of her most frequent co stars Tyrone Power and Don Ameche as it was customary for studios to pair their contract players together in more than one film Faye Power and Ameche were reunited for the 1938 release Alexander s Ragtime Band which was designed to showcase more than 20 Irving Berlin songs Faye again received strong reviews One of the most expensive films of its time it also became one of the most successful musicals of the 1930s 1939 1940 Edit By 1939 Faye was named one of the top 10 box office draws in Hollywood 4 That year she made Rose of Washington Square with Tyrone Power Although a big hit the film was supposedly based on the real life of comedian Fanny Brice who sued Fox for stealing her story Because of her bankable status Fox occasionally placed Faye in films more for the sake of making money than showcasing Faye s talents Films such as Tail Spin and Barricade both 1939 were more dramatic than regular Faye films and often did not contain any songs Due to her immense popularity though none of the films that she made in the 1930s and 1940s lost money this success garnered her the nickname Queen of Fox 4 One of Faye s most memorable parts was the title role in the musical biopic Lillian Russell 1940 Faye always named this film as one of her favorites though it was also her most challenging role The tight corsets Faye wore for this picture caused her to collapse on the set several times After declining the lead role in for Down Argentine Way also 1940 because of an illness Faye was replaced by the studio s newest musical star Betty Grable She was paired as a sister act opposite Grable in the film Tin Pan Alley also 1940 During the making of the picture a rumor arose that a rivalry had arisen between the two In a Biography interview Faye disclosed that the Fox publicity department built up the rumor and that the two actresses were in fact close friends 1941 1995 Later work Edit Alice Faye Phil Baker and Carmen Miranda in The Gang s All Here 1943 In 1941 Fox began to place Faye in musicals photographed in Technicolor a trademark for the studio in the 1940s She frequently played a performer often one moving up in society allowing for situations that ranged from the poignant to the comic Films such as Week End in Havana 1941 and That Night in Rio 1941 in which she played a Brazilian aristocrat made good use of Faye s husky singing voice solid comic timing and flair for carrying off the era s starry eyed romantic story lines Alice Faye center Jack Haley left Don Ameche and Tyrone Power right in a trailer for Alexander s Ragtime Band 1938 In 1943 after taking a year off to have her first daughter Faye starred in the Technicolor musical Hello Frisco Hello Released at the height of World War II the film became one of her highest grossing pictures for Fox In this film Faye sang You ll Never Know The song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song for 1943 and the sheet music for the song sold over a million copies Since a clause in her contract as was the case with most other Fox stars stated that she could not officially record any of her movie songs other singers such as Dick Haymes whose version hit number one for four weeks Frank Sinatra and Rosemary Clooney have been more associated with the song than Faye However it is still often considered Faye s signature song That year Faye was once again named one of the top box office draws in the world End of motion picture career EditAs Faye s star continued to ascend during the war years family life became more important to her especially with the arrival of a second daughter Phyllis After her birth Faye signed a new contract with Fox to make only one picture a year with the option of a second one to give Faye a chance to spend more time with her family 5 Her second pregnancy resulted in a hospitalization forcing her to surrender a plum dramatic role in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn to Joan Blondell and she declined a musical role in The Dolly Sisters her intended part went to June Haver 6 Faye finally accepted the lead role in Fallen Angel 1945 Although designed ostensibly as Faye s vehicle Zanuck tried to build his new protege Linda Darnell ordering many of Faye s scenes cut and Darnell emphasized 7 When Faye saw a screening of the final cut with her role reduced by 12 scenes and a song number she wrote a scathing note to Zanuck went straight to her car gave her dressing room keys to the studio gate guard and drove home vowing never to return to Fox Faye was still so popular that thousands of letters were sent to Faye s home and the Fox studios from around the world begging her to return for another picture In 1987 she told an interviewer When I stopped making pictures it didn t bother me because there were so many things I hadn t done I had never learned to run a house I didn t know how to cook I didn t know how to shop So all these things filled all those gaps 1 After Fallen Angel Faye s contract called for her to make two more movies Zanuck hit back by having her blackballed for breach of contract effectively ending her film career although Faye no longer cared to pursue it Fallen Angel was Faye s last starring film Zanuck under public pressure tried to lure Faye back onto the screen Faye returned all the scripts Alice Faye did return to Fox later for a character role in a remake of an old Fox property State Fair 1962 While she received good reviews the film was not a success 8 She made only infrequent cameo appearances in films thereafter playing a secretary in Won Ton Ton the Dog Who Saved Hollywood 1976 and in The Magic of Lassie 1978 as a waitress 9 Faye was the subject of This Is Your Life for British television in 1984 when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at Hollywood s Metromedia Studios citation needed Marriage and radio career EditFaye s first marriage to Tony Martin in 1937 ended in divorce in 1940 both had busy careers that monopolized most of their time leaving few opportunities for togetherness In May 1941 she married bandleader Phil Harris Their marriage one of the most successful in Hollywood became a plotline in the hit radio comedy The Jack Benny Program where for 16 years Harris was a regular cast member The couple had two daughters Alice b 1942 and Phyllis b 1944 along with Harris s adopted son from his first marriage Phil Harris Jr 1935 2001 Faye and Harris began working in radio together as Faye s film career declined First they teamed to host a variety show on NBC The Fitch Bandwagon in 1946 The Harrises gently tart comedy sketches made them the show s stars By 1948 Fitch was replaced as sponsor by Rexall the pharmaceutical company and the show now a strictly situation comedy with a music interlude each from husband and wife was renamed The Phil Harris Alice Faye Show Harris s comic talent was already familiar through his tenure on Jack Benny s radio shows for Jell o and Lucky Strike From 1936 to 1952 he played Benny s wisecracking jive talking hipster bandleader With their own show revamped to a sitcom bandleader comedian Harris and singer actress Faye played themselves raising two precocious children in slightly zany situations mostly involving Harris s band guitarist Frank Remley Elliott Lewis obnoxious delivery boy Julius Abruzzio Walter Tetley familiar as nephew Leroy on The Great Gildersleeve Robert North as Faye s fictitious deadbeat brother Willie and sponsor s representative Mr Scott Gale Gordon and usually involving bumbling malaproping Harris needing to be rescued by Faye The Harrises two daughters were played on radio by Jeanine Roose and Anne Whitfield written mostly by Ray Singer and Dick Chevillat the show stayed on NBC radio as a fixture until 1954 Alice Faye and Phil Harris with their daughters Alice and Phyllis in 1948 Faye s singing ballads and swing numbers in her honeyed contralto voice was a regular highlight of the show as was her knack for tart one liners equal to those of her husband The show s running gags also included references to Alice s wealth from her film career I m only trying to protect the wife of the money I love was a typical Harris drollery and occasional barbs by Faye aimed at her rift with Zanuck usually referencing Fallen Angel In its early years the Harris Faye radio show ranked among the top 10 radio programs in the country The radio show also provided Faye with the perfect balance between show business and home life since radio only required her to be present for a read through and the live broadcast Faye was still able to spend most of her time at home with her daughters Later life and death EditShe supported Adlai Stevenson s campaign during the 1952 presidential election 10 and Barry Goldwater in the 1964 United States presidential election 11 Faye and Harris continued various projects individually and together for the rest of their lives In 1974 Faye made a return to Broadway after 43 years in a revival of Good News with her old Fox partner John Payne who was replaced by Gene Nelson In later years Faye became a spokeswoman for Pfizer Pharmaceuticals promoting the virtues of an active senior lifestyle 12 The Faye Harris marriage endured 54 years until Harris s death in 1995 Faye admitted in an interview that when she married Harris most of the Hollywood elite had predicted the marriage would only last about six months Three years after Phil Harris death Alice Faye died of stomach cancer in Rancho Mirage California four days after her 83rd birthday She was cremated and her ashes rest beside those of Phil Harris at the mausoleum of the Forest Lawn Cemetery Cathedral City near Palm Springs California 13 She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in recognition of her contribution to Motion Pictures at 6922 Hollywood Boulevard In 1994 a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs California Walk of Stars was dedicated to her 14 The Phil Harris Alice Faye Show remains a favorite of old time radio collectors Popularity and legacy EditHer voice The New York Times wrote in her obituary was inviting Irving Berlin was once quoted as saying that he would choose Faye over any other singer to introduce his songs and George Gershwin and Cole Porter called her the best female singer in Hollywood in 1937 1 During her years as a musical superstar from the 1930s to the early 1940s Alice Faye managed to introduce 23 songs to the Hit Parade 15 She was the first female crooner and equivalent to Bing Crosby 16 17 Alice Faye s star on the Hollywood Walk of FameAlthough Faye has had fans around the globe she was never more popular than in Great Britain and in The Alice Faye Movie Book an article is devoted to Faye s popularity there The author Arthur Nicholson mentions how enormously popular she was even in her Harlow days and though other films shown in England were usually shown for three days a week Faye s films played for an entire week After Faye retired in 1945 her reissued films made as much money in some cases more as current releases When Faye returned to the screen for State Fair in 1962 the film broke records in England Filmography EditFilm Edit Year Title Role Notes1934 George White s Scandals Kitty Donnelly Mona Vale Film debut1934 Now I ll Tell Peggy Warren1934 She Learned About Sailors Jean Legoi1934 365 Nights in Hollywood Alice Perkins1935 George White s 1935 Scandals Honey Walters1935 Every Night at Eight Dixie Foley1935 Music Is Magic Peggy Harper1936 King of Burlesque Pat Doran1936 Poor Little Rich Girl Jerry Dolan1936 Sing Baby Sing Joan Warren Nominated Academy Award for Best Original Song1936 Stowaway Susan Parker1937 On the Avenue Mona Merrick1937 You Can t Have Everything Judith Poe Wells1937 Wake Up and Live Alice Huntley1937 You re a Sweetheart Betty Bradley1938 In Old Chicago Belle Fawcett1938 Sally Irene and Mary Sally Day1938 Alexander s Ragtime Band Stella Kirby Nominated Academy Award for Best Original Song1939 Tail Spin Trixie Lee1939 Rose of Washington Square Rose Sargent1939 Hollywood Cavalcade Molly Adair Hayden1939 Barricade Emmy Jordan1940 Little Old New York Pat O Day1940 Lillian Russell Lillian Russell1940 Tin Pan Alley Katie Blane1941 That Night in Rio Baroness Cecilia Duarte1941 The Great American Broadcast Vicki Adams1941 Week End in Havana Nan Spencer1943 Hello Frisco Hello Trudy Evans Academy Award for Best Original Song1943 The Gang s All Here Edie Allen1944 Four Jills in a Jeep Herself Cameo1945 Fallen Angel June Mills1962 State Fair Melissa Frake1976 Won Ton Ton the Dog Who Saved Hollywood Secretary at Gate Cameo1978 Every Girl Should Have One Kathy1978 The Magic of Lassie The Waitress Alice Final film role1995 Carmen Miranda Bananas is My Business Herself DocumentaryRadio appearances Edit Year Program Episode source1950 Lux Radio Theatre Alexander s Ragtime Band 18 1951 Suspense Death on My Hands 18 References Edit a b c Harmetz Aljean May 11 1998 Alice Faye Hollywood Star Who Sang for Her Man Di NY Times Retrieved 13 February 2019 Rudy Vallee 1901 1986 Riverside Cemetery Journal Retrieved 17 March 2017 Elder Jane Lenz Alice Faye a life beyond the silver screen 2002 p 83 a b Alice Faye 30s Musicals Star Dies Los Angeles Times 1998 05 10 Retrieved 2020 03 04 Elder Jane Lenz Alice Faye a life beyond the silver screen 2002 p 168 Elder Jane Lenz Alice Faye a life beyond the silver screen 2002 p 170 171 Hare William 2014 01 10 Pulp Fiction to Film Noir The Great Depression and the Development of a Genre McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 9029 5 Crowther Bosley 1962 04 12 The Screen All Fall Down Inge s Version of Herlihy Novel Beatty and Miss Saint Starred in Drama 4 Other Movies Have Local Premieres The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 03 04 Natale Richard 1998 05 11 Fox tuner Faye dies at 83 Variety Retrieved 2020 03 04 Motion Picture and Television Magazine November 1952 page 33 Ideal Publishers ELECTIONS AROUSE HOLLYWOOD STARS New and Old Film Figures Active in Campaigns The New York Times 13 October 1964 Lade Diane ACTRESS FOCUSES ON YOUNG ELDERS Sun Sentinel com Retrieved 2020 03 04 Brooks Patricia Brooks Jonathan 2006 Chapter 8 East L A and the Desert Laid to Rest in California a guide to the cemeteries and grave sites of the rich and famous Guilford CT Globe Pequot Press p 245 ISBN 978 0 7627 4101 4 OCLC 70284362 Palm Springs Walk of Stars by date dedicated Perlman Michael H 2015 03 02 Legendary Locals of Forest Hills and Rego Park Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 4396 5010 3 Hare William 2014 01 10 Pulp Fiction to Film Noir The Great Depression and the Development of a Genre McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 9029 5 Clarke Andra D Denton Drew Regina 2015 11 30 Ciro s Nightclub of the Stars Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 4396 5384 5 a b Those Were the Days Nostalgia Digest Vol 39 no 1 Winter 2013 pp 32 41 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alice Faye Alice Faye at IMDb Alice Faye at the Internet Broadway Database Alice Faye at Playbill Vault archive Alice Faye photos accessed September 7 2014 The Official Alice Faye Website Alice Faye at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alice Faye amp oldid 1130124375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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