Birthday: June 29, 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA
Birth Name: Nelson Ackerman Eddy
Height: 183 cm
The only career Nelson Eddy ever considered was singing. His parents were singers, his grandparents were musicians. Unable to afford a teacher, he learned by imitating opera recordings. At age 14 he worked as a telephone operator in a Philadelphia iron foundry. He sold newspaper advertising and performed in amateur musicals. Dr. Edouard Lippe coach...
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The only career Nelson Eddy ever considered was singing. His parents were singers, his grandparents were musicians. Unable to afford a teacher, he learned by imitating opera recordings. At age 14 he worked as a telephone operator in a Philadelphia iron foundry. He sold newspaper advertising and performed in amateur musicals. Dr. Edouard Lippe coached him and loaned him the money to study in Dresden and Paris. He gave his first concert recital in 1928 in Philadelphia. In 1933 he did 18 encores for an audience that included an assistant to MGM studio chief Louis B. Mayer, who signed him to a seven-year contract. After MGM acting lessons and initial trials, his first real success came as the Yankee scout to Jeanette MacDonald's French princess in La fugue de Mariette (1935), a huge box-office success made on a small budget. Eddy and MacDonald were paired twice more (Rose-Marie (1936), Le chant du printemps (1937)) when Metropolitan Opera star Grace Moore was unavailable; they became an institution. Their last work together was in 1942. Critics nearly always panned his acting. He did have a large radio following (his theme song: "Short'nin Bread"). In 1959 Eddy and MacDonald issued a recording of their movie hits which sold well. In 1953 he had a fairly successful nightclub routine with Gale Sherwood which ran until his death in 1967. He and his wife Anne Denitz had no children. Show less «
[reacting to seeing himself in an elaborate costume and makeup onscreen] Get him. Ain't he purty?
[reacting to seeing himself in an elaborate costume and makeup onscreen] Get him. Ain't he purty?
[In 1957] I don't know why people still want to believe that Jeanette MacDonald and I were a couple ...Show more »
[In 1957] I don't know why people still want to believe that Jeanette MacDonald and I were a couple off the set. There's no truth to that rumor, at all. She's happily married to Gene Raymond and I'm happily married to Anne. I guess people want to believe that what they see on the screen is reality while in actuality, it's just a movie! Show less «
[In 1934, about his career] I engaged a dramatic coach and began to study the technique of acting on...Show more »
[In 1934, about his career] I engaged a dramatic coach and began to study the technique of acting on the screen. That same day I discovered how little I really knew, and I've been studying ever since. Show less «
[on why he refused to see his own films] I was too ashamed of them.
[on why he refused to see his own films] I was too ashamed of them.
[his last words onstage as he was having a stroke that would prove fatal] Will you bear with me a mi...Show more »
[his last words onstage as he was having a stroke that would prove fatal] Will you bear with me a minute. I can't seem to get the words out. [after asking his accompanist to play "Dardanella"] My face is getting numb. Is there a doctor here? Show less «
[to a reporter a couple of days prior to his death] I'll go on singing until I drop because I love i...Show more »
[to a reporter a couple of days prior to his death] I'll go on singing until I drop because I love it. Show less «
[during his 1960s nightclub tour] I want to keep going until I drop.
[during his 1960s nightclub tour] I want to keep going until I drop.
[about some of the films he and Jeanette MacDonald were offered in their later career] We've been as...Show more »
[about some of the films he and Jeanette MacDonald were offered in their later career] We've been asked to do what might be called "B" pictures. Rather than do that, we decided to leave it on a high note. Show less «