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MacDonald was born Jeannette Anna McDonald [4] on June 18, 1903, at her family's Philadelphia home at 5123 Arch Street. [5] She was the youngest of the three daughters of Anna May (née Wright) and Daniel McDonald, a factory foreman [6] and a salesman for a contracting household building company, [7] respectively, and the younger sister of character actress Blossom Rock (born Edith McDonald ...
Jeanette MacDonald in Performance: The Voice of Firestone Season 2 Episode 11 Nov 13, 1950; Jeanette MacDonald – "The Ed Sullivan Show" Episodes 5.17 and 4.47 (1951) Jeanette MacDonald in "Toast of the Town" Season 3 Episode 47. August 5, 1951; Jeanette MacDonald on "Toast of the Town" Season 4 Episode 17. Top Stars of 1951. December 30, 1951
The Sun Comes Up is a 1949 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Technicolor picture with Lassie.Jeanette MacDonald had been off the screen for five years until her return in Three Daring Daughters (1948), but The Sun Comes Up was to be her last.
Sweethearts is a 1938 American Technicolor musical romance film directed by W.S. Van Dyke and starring Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy.The screenplay, by Dorothy Parker and Alan Campbell, uses the “play within a play” device: a Broadway production of the 1913 Victor Herbert operetta is the setting for another pair of sweethearts, the stars of the show.
Rose Marie is a 1936 American musical Western film directed by W. S. Van Dyke and starring Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy and Reginald Owen. It is the second of three Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film adaptations of the 1924 Broadway musical of the same name. A silent version was released in 1928 and a color film in 1954. All three versions are set in ...
Jeanette MacDonald (December 4, 1934) Shirley Temple (March 14, 1935) Joe E. Brown (March 5, 1936) Al Jolson (March 12, 1936) Freddie Bartholomew (April 4, 1936) Bing Crosby (April 8, 1936) Victor McLaglen (May 25, 1936) William Powell and Myrna Loy (October 20, 1936) Clark Gable and W. S. Van Dyke (January 20, 1937) Dick Powell and Joan ...
[examples needed] The 1941 version, though not a shot-for-shot remake, does incorporate several key scenes from the 1932 film verbatim, while adding material that focuses more on World War II, including patriotic songs performed by Jeanette MacDonald.
Million Dollar Legs, directed by Edward F. Cline, starring Jack Oakie and W. C. Fields; The Missing Rembrandt (lost), directed by Leslie S. Hiscott, starring Arthur Wontner and Ian Fleming – The Most Dangerous Game, directed by Ernest B. Schoedsack and Irving Pichel, starring Joel McCrea, Fay Wray, Leslie Banks and Robert Armstrong