Vivian Blaine

From Robin's SM-201 Website
Jump to navigation Jump to search



This article is part of
"The Pin-up Girl History Project"
Click here for Pin-up girl page
"The YANK Magazine History Project"
Click here for Category:YANK magazine pinups
Click here for Special History Projects information
Vivian blaine - 001.jpg

Vivian Blaine (November 21, 1921 – December 9, 1995) was an American actress and singer, best known for originating the role of Miss Adelaide in the musical theater production of "Guys and Dolls", as well as appearing in the subsequent film version, in which she co-starred with Marlon Brando, Jean Simmons and Frank Sinatra.

Early years

She was born Vivian Stapleton, in Newark, New Jersey to Leo Stapleton, an insurance agent, and Wilhelmina Tepley. The cherry-blonde-haired Blaine appeared on local stages as early as 1934 and she started touring after graduating from South Side High School, While she was still in elementary school, her father, a theatrical agent, booked $1-a-night singing dates for her at nightclubs, company parties and police benefits. At 14 she began singing with the Halsey Miller Orchestra, and after graduating from Southside High School went on the road with little-known bands.

Personal appearances

Blaine was a touring singer with dance bands starting in 1937.

At one point in the 1940s, she was the top-billed act at New York's Copacabana nightclub. In his book, "Dean and Me: (A Love Story)", Jerry Lewis wrote about appearing at the club when Blaine was on the same bill: "We (Lewis and Dean Martin), as the double act Martin and Lewis weren't even the top-billed act. That honor went to a Broadway singing star named Vivian Blaine, who'd conquered Manhattan, gone out to Hollywood to make movies for 20th Century Fox, then returned to the Big Apple in triumph. Vivian was a lovely and very talented actress and singer ..."

Film

In 1942, Blaine's agent and soon-to-be husband Manny Franks signed her to a contract with Twentieth Century-Fox, and she relocated to Hollywood, sharing top billing with "Laurel and Hardy" in "Jitterbugs" (1943) and starring in "Greenwich Village" (1944), "Something for the Boys" (1944), with Carmen Miranda, "Nob Hill" (1945), and "State Fair" (1945), among other films.

Stage

Vivian Blaine as Miss Adelaide and Sam Levene as Nathan Detroit in the 1950 original Broadway production of "Guys and Dolls".

Following her Fox years, Blaine returned to the stage, making her Broadway debut as Miss Adelaide in the Frank Loesser musical "Guys and Dolls" in 1950. Her character Miss Adelaide has been engaged to inveterate gambler Nathan Detroit played by Sam Levene for 14 years, a condition which, according to her song "Adelaide's Lament", has given her a psychosomatic cold as well as chronic heartbreak.

After the show's 1,200-performance Broadway run, Vivian Blaine and Sam Levene reprised their original show stopping Broadway performances as Miss Adelaide and Nathan Detroit in the first UK production of "Guys and Dolls" which opened at London's West End theatre Coliseum a few days before the 1953 Coronation; the two stars performed their roles 553 times, including a Royal Command Variety Performance for Queen Elizabeth on November 9, 1953. Vivian Blaine as Miss Adelaide, Sam Levene as Nathan Detroit and Robert Alda as Sky Masterson also recreated their original Broadway performances twice daily in a reduced version of "Guys and Dolls" when the first Las Vegas production opened a six-month run at the Royal Nevada, September 7, 1955, the first time a Broadway musical was performed on the strip. Vivian Blaine also recreated her role as Miss Adelaide in the film version of "Guys and Dolls" in 1955.

Blaine also appeared on Broadway in "A Hatful of Rain", "Say, Darling", "Enter Laughing", "Company", and "Zorba", as well as participating in the touring companies of such musicals as "Gypsy: A Musical Fable".

Television

As Blaine reached age 50, her television career took off, with guest appearances on shows like "Fantasy Island", "Murder, She Wrote" and "The Love Boat", and a recurring role in the cult hit "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman". On the 25th annual [[Tony Awards]] in 1971, she appeared as a guest performer and sang "Adelaide's Lament" from "Guys and Dolls", providing a visual recording of the performance for posterity.

Blaine in her later years was managed by Rob Cipriano and L'Etoile Talent Agencies in New York City. Cipriano spent the early 1980s developing projects for Blaine, including Puppy Love, a TV sitcom with Jake LaMotta and Pat Cooper. She always commented that working with Cipriano reminded her of working with her first husband Manny Franks.

Personal life

Blaine's first marriage, to Franks, lasted from 1945 to 1956. She then married Milton Rackmil, president of Universal Studios and Decca Records, in 1959, and recorded several albums prior to their 1961 divorce. In 1973, Blaine married Stuart Clark. In 1983 she became the first celebrity to make public-service announcements for AIDS-related causes. She made numerous appearances in support of the then fledgling AIDS-Project Los Angeles (APLA) and in 1983 recorded her cabaret act for AEI Records which donated its royalties to the new group; this included the last recordings of her songs from "Guys and Dolls". Her prior albums for Mercury Records have all subsequently been reissued on CD, "VIVIAN BLAINE - Sings Songs from The Ziegfeld Follies & The Great White Way"

Death

Blaine died of congestive heart failure on December 9, 1995, aged 74.

Pin-up Gallery

Filmography

References

External links

Chain-09.png
Jump to: Main PageMicropediaMacropediaIconsTime LineHistoryLife LessonsLinksHelp
Chat roomsWhat links hereCopyright infoContact informationCategory:Root