With a Song in My Heart (1952) - Turner Classic Movies

With a Song in My Heart


1h 57m 1952
With a Song in My Heart

Brief Synopsis

This film focuses on the rise of an aspiring songstress.

Film Details

Also Known As
I'll See You in My Dreams, Stardust, The Froman Story, The Jane Froman Story, You and the Night and the Music
Genre
Musical
Biography
Release Date
Apr 1952
Premiere Information
World premiere in Miami, FL: 20 Feb 1952; New York opening: 3 Apr 1952; Los Angeles opening: 11 Apr 1952
Production Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 57m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Film Length
10,504ft (13 reels)

Synopsis

On the night of the annual New York newspapermen's ball, singer Jane Froman is honored as "the most courageous entertainer of the year." As Jane sings, John Burn, who is sitting at her table, remembers her rise to fame: In the mid-1930s, Jane rushes into a Cincinnati radio station to audition for a job. The tardy Jane has missed the audition, however, and mistakes vaudevillian Don Ross for the station manager. Impressed by Jane's lovely voice, Don persuades the real manager to listen to her, and soon Jane is performing as the station's staff singer then undertakes a series of personal appearances. Don, who often appears at the same theaters, is not as successful, but helps to maintain the momentum of Jane's career. As time passes, Don acts exclusively as Jane's manager as she becomes a hit in New York nightclubs. Eventually, Jane is selected as radio's "number one girl singer," while Don realizes that his career in show business is over. In love with Jane, Don presses her to marry him, but although Jane is grateful for his help, she is not in love with him. Don finally wears Jane down, however, and the couple marry. During their honeymoon in California, Jane appears in a movie, then skyrockets to even greater fame through her records and nightclub engagements. Jealous of Jane's career and feeling unproductive, Don provokes quarrels with her, although she offers to quit entertaining and focus on their marriage. Don refuses to let Jane make such a sacrifice, however, and the couple struggle to improve their relationship. After the United States enters World War II, Jane applies to the USO to be sent overseas, and in February 1943, she is notified that she will be leaving for Europe the next day. During the long flight to London via Bermuda and Lisbon, Jane converses with her fellow passengers, including entertainer Jennifer March and handsome co-pilot John Burn. Just before the plane lands on the Tagus River in Lisbon, Jane and Jennifer inadvertently switch seats as they prepare to buckle in. The plane crashes into the river, and the seriously injured Jane is held afloat by John for forty-five minutes. In the hospital, Jane is told that in addition to her other injuries, her right leg has been almost severed below the knee. She also learns that John has suffered serious injuries, and that Jennifer died in the crash. The fifteen survivors of the wreck slowly recover, thanks to the dedication of nurses such as the Brooklyn-born Clancy. Jane still cannot walk, however, and is under constant threat of having her leg amputated. She maintains a cheerful attitude though, with the help of her deepening friendship with John. One day, John confesses to Jane that he has fallen in love with her, and although Jane is touched, she tells him that his feelings are caused only by their shared experiences. Don then arrives to escort Jane and Clancy back to New York, where Jane undergoes a grueling series of operations to save her leg. When John returns to New York, he continues to pursue Jane, and she admits to Clancy that she reciprocates his feelings. Clancy advises her to concentrate on her recovery, and so Jane, desperate for money to pay her medical bills, opens in a show staged by Don. Even though she must be carried on and off the stage, Jane is a success, and the applause touches her deeply. The show's run is cut short by the necessity for more surgery on Jane's leg, and the constant uncertainty depresses Jane, who complains to Clancy that she will never be a normal woman again. Motivated by her devotion to Jane, Clancy refuses to allow her to wallow in self-pity and lectures her about her many blessings. Later, Jane again sings at a nightclub, and one evening, both Don and John tell Jane that she must choose between them. Jane tells John that she must stay with her husband, although John knows that Jane is afraid to commit to him because she is still in danger of losing her leg. During the show, the audience is charmed when Jane sings to a shy, young paratrooper. Later, Jane tells Clancy that she is determined to "finish what she started" by going overseas to entertain the troops, even though she still has difficulty walking and is in great pain. Clancy accompanies Jane on a thirty-thousand mile tour through seven countries, during which Jane sings for many wounded soldiers. Jane's courage inspires the men, and on one visit, she again meets the paratrooper from the New York nightclub. The youth is suffering from shell shock, but Jane's gentle concern prompts him to talk for the first time in months. Meanwhile, back in New York, a drunken Don telephones John to tell him that he intends to move on with his life, and that he will not be there to welcome Jane when she returns home. At her farewell performance in Europe, Jane is presented with a cake by her loving fans, and she leads the soldiers in a song-filled tribute to their homes. Back in New York, at the banquet, John's reminiscences come to an end, and he watches with pride as Jane sings for the newspapermen.

Cast

Susan Hayward

Jane Froman

Rory Calhoun

John Burn

David Wayne

Don Ross

Thelma Ritter

Clancy

Robert Wagner

Paratrooper

Helen Westcott

Jennifer March

Una Merkel

Sister Marie

Richard Allan

Dancer

Max Showalter

Harry Guild

Lyle Talbot

Radio director

Leif Erickson

General

Paul Maxey

General

Stanley Logan

Diplomat

Eddie Firestone

USO performer

Beverly Thompson

USO performer

Frank Sully

Texas

George Offerman

Muleface

Fred Datig Jr.

G.I.

Robert Marr

G.I.

George Sawaya

G.I.

Bud Stark

G.I.

John Duncan

G.I.

Fred Shellac

G.I.

Wyatt Cooper

G.I.

Mike Galloway

G.I.

Ralph Pucci

G.I.

Ken Worthen

G.I.

Ernest Newton

Specialty

Harry Carter

Chauffeur

Donald Kerr

Cab driver

Frank Kreig

Waiter

John Forte

Waiter

Charles Calvert

Theater manager

Charles Marsh

Minister

William Baldwin

Announcer

Dick Winslow

Conductor

Bradford Hatton

Stage manager

John Mckee

Pilot

Jewel Rose

Laboratory technician

Rosa Marie Monteiro

Nurse

Carol Savage

Nurse

Adele Longmire

Nurse

Carlos Molina

Doctor

Nestor Paiva

Doctor

Emmett Vogan

Doctor

Albano Valerio

Priest

John Duval

Priest

Robert Easton

Kansas

Maude Wallace

Sister Margaret

John Hedloe

Intern

John Vosper

Leading man

Shirley Tegge

Cigarette girl

William Slack

Texan

Douglas Evans

Colonel

Dick Ryan

Officer

Robert Nach

Conductor

Mario Pacheco Jr.

Radio man

Fabio Ramos

Radio man

Hal Schaeffer

Pianist

Vito Mumolo

Guitarist

Eddie Oliver

Bandleader

Ernie Felice

Bandleader

The Four Girl Friends

The Modernaires

The Melody Men

The Skylarks

The Starlighters

Mary Newton

Joe P. Oliviera

Crew

Harold Arlen

Composer

Dave Barbour

Composer

Katharine Lee Bates

Composer

Gil Bower

David Wayne's piano instructor

Lew Brown

Composer

Nacio Herb Brown

Composer

Jerry Bryan

Dialogue Director

Irving Caesar

Composer

Sammy Cahn

Composer

Billy Daniel

Dances staged by

Eliot Daniel

Composer

Ken Darby

Vocal Director

Ken Darby

Composer

Leonard Doss

Technicolor Color Consultant

Sammy Fain

Composer

Arthur Freed

Composer

Jane Froman

Technical Advisor

Jane Froman

Singing voice double for Susan Hayward

George Gershwin

Composer

Ira Gershwin

Composer

Bob Graham

Vocal stand-in for Richard Allan

Earle Hagen

Orchestration

Lorenz Hart

Composer

Roger Heman

Sound

Gus Kahn

Composer

Ray Kellogg

Special Photography Effects

Father Christopher Kennedy

Technical Advisor

Arthur L. Kirbach

Sound

Hal Klein

Assistant Director

Ted Koehler

Composer

Peggy Lee

Composer

Charles Lemaire

Wardrobe Director

Thomas Little

Set Decoration

Fred Livingston

Composer

Frank Loesser

Composer

Matt Malneck

Composer

Alfred Newman

Composer

Alfred Newman

Music Director

Ben Nye

Makeup Artist

Dr. John Penido

Technical Advisor

Ralph Rainger

Composer

Leo Robin

Composer

Richard Rodgers

Composer

Arthur Schwartz

Composer

Walter M. Scott

Set Decoration

Fred Sersen

Special Photography Effects

Leon Shamroy

Director of Photography

Max Showalter

Composer

Herbert Spencer

Orchestration

Jule Styne

Composer

Lamar Trotti

Producer

Lamar Trotti

Writer

Samuel Augustus Ward

Composer

J. Watson Webb Jr.

Film Editor

Dr. Howard J. Weinberger

Technical Advisor

Lyle Wheeler

Art Director

Joseph C. Wright

Art Director

Vincent Youmans

Composer

Darryl F. Zanuck

Executive Producer

Film Details

Also Known As
I'll See You in My Dreams, Stardust, The Froman Story, The Jane Froman Story, You and the Night and the Music
Genre
Musical
Biography
Release Date
Apr 1952
Premiere Information
World premiere in Miami, FL: 20 Feb 1952; New York opening: 3 Apr 1952; Los Angeles opening: 11 Apr 1952
Production Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 57m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Film Length
10,504ft (13 reels)

Award Wins

Best Score

1952

Award Nominations

Best Actress

1952
Susan Hayward

Best Costume Design

1952
Charles Lemaire

Best Sound

1952

Best Supporting Actress

1952
Thelma Ritter

Articles

With A Song In My Heart


A popular singing star in the 1930s in nightclubs, radio, theater and films, Jane Froman was among the first entertainers to volunteer to entertain the troops during World War II. She was on a USO flight to Europe in 1943, when the plane crashed into the Tagus River in Lisbon, Portugal. Many of the passengers died, but Froman survived, critically injured, after she was rescued by the plane's co-pilot. One leg was nearly severed and doctors wanted to amputate, but Froman refused. She endured dozens of surgeries and struggled with physical and emotional pain for the rest of her life, but managed to resume her career.

In 1952, Froman's inspirational saga became a 20th Century Fox biopic, With a Song in My Heart, that combined the gloss of a 1940s Fox musical with a strong dramatic story tailor-made for the talents of Fox's powerhouse star, Susan Hayward. The Brooklyn-born Hayward had built an impressive career since arriving in Hollywood in the late 1930s, one of the many hopefuls who auditioned for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind (1939). In 1949, after working at several studios, she signed a contract with Fox. By the time she appeared in With a Song in My Heart, she had two Academy Award® nominations as Best Actress under her belt, for Smash-Up, the Story of a Woman (1947), and My Foolish Heart (1949), and was fresh off a popular success in Fox's biblical epic, David and Bathsheba (1951).

Hayward plunged enthusiastically into the role of Froman. Proud of her thick, lush mane of red hair, she had it written into her contract that she didn't have to cut it for a film. But for With a Song in My Heart, she agreed to a shorter hairdo more like Froman's. Hayward was on hand when Froman pre-recorded the songs for the film, studying Froman's gestures as she sang; in return, the singer was often on the set during filming of the musical numbers, watching Hayward closely and coaching her as she expertly lip-synched the songs. Fortunately, Hayward's low speaking voice was an excellent match for the singer's contralto vocals.

Hayward's co-stars in With a Song in My Heart were David Wayne as Froman's first husband and manager, and Rory Calhoun as the co-pilot who saved her life. Although it's not explicit in the film, Froman eventually divorced her husband and married the pilot. But the actor who made the biggest impression was a young newcomer who appeared briefly in only two scenes. Robert Wagner had recently been signed to a Fox contract, and had played bit parts in a few films. In his first scene in With a Song in My Heart, he plays a shy young paratrooper whom Froman singles out to croon to during a nightclub performance. Later in the film, the same soldier, now shell-shocked, is moved to tears when she sings "I'll Walk Alone" to him. Wagner later recalled that Hayward asked director Walter Lang to shoot the scene from behind her. Then, with her focus on Wagner and her own emotional reaction evident to him, she coaxed a tear from the young actor. The critics noticed him, and Wagner's career was launched. "One Robert Wagner plays the scene with quiet force," one reviewer wrote.

The public loved With a Song in My Heart, making it one of the top ten grossing pictures of the year, and hundreds of critics voted it one of the year's top ten films in Film Daily's poll. But New York Times critic Bosley Crowther disagreed. "[It] is just about as grandiose and mawkish as Hollywood homage can be." However, Crowther admitted that "The Technicolor is dazzling and the production numbers are full of splash." Variety was kinder, calling it "a heartening drama."

Hayward won the third of her five Academy Award® nominations for With a Song in My Heart. She lost to Shirley Booth in Come Back, Little Sheba, but Hayward won a Golden Globe for her performance. With a Song in My Heart won an Oscar® for Best Scoring of a Musical Picture, beating Singin' in the Rain. It also earned Thelma Ritter a Best Supporting Actress nod, as well as nominations for Color Costume Design and Sound.

Hayward finally got to sing in her own voice in I'll Cry Tomorrow (1955), the biography of alcoholic singer Lillian Roth, and earned another nomination. She finally won her Oscar® for I Want to Live! (1958), a true story about a woman convicted of murder who fights to avoid execution.

Director: Walter Lang
Producer: Lamar Trotti
Screenplay: Lamar Trotti
Cinematography: Leon Shamroy
Editor: J. Watson Webb, Jr.
Costume Design: Charles Le Maire
Art Direction: Lyle Wheeler, Joseph C. Wright
Musical Director: Alfred Newman
Principal Cast: Susan Hayward (Jane Froman), Rory Calhoun (John Burn), David Wayne (Don Ross), Thelma Ritter (Clancy), Robert Wagner (Paratrooper), Helen Westcott (Jennifer March), Una Merkel (Sister Marie), Richard Allan (Dancer), Max Showalter (Harry Guild), Lyle Talbot (Radio Director)
117 minutes

by Margarita Landazuri
With A Song In My Heart

With A Song In My Heart

A popular singing star in the 1930s in nightclubs, radio, theater and films, Jane Froman was among the first entertainers to volunteer to entertain the troops during World War II. She was on a USO flight to Europe in 1943, when the plane crashed into the Tagus River in Lisbon, Portugal. Many of the passengers died, but Froman survived, critically injured, after she was rescued by the plane's co-pilot. One leg was nearly severed and doctors wanted to amputate, but Froman refused. She endured dozens of surgeries and struggled with physical and emotional pain for the rest of her life, but managed to resume her career. In 1952, Froman's inspirational saga became a 20th Century Fox biopic, With a Song in My Heart, that combined the gloss of a 1940s Fox musical with a strong dramatic story tailor-made for the talents of Fox's powerhouse star, Susan Hayward. The Brooklyn-born Hayward had built an impressive career since arriving in Hollywood in the late 1930s, one of the many hopefuls who auditioned for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind (1939). In 1949, after working at several studios, she signed a contract with Fox. By the time she appeared in With a Song in My Heart, she had two Academy Award® nominations as Best Actress under her belt, for Smash-Up, the Story of a Woman (1947), and My Foolish Heart (1949), and was fresh off a popular success in Fox's biblical epic, David and Bathsheba (1951). Hayward plunged enthusiastically into the role of Froman. Proud of her thick, lush mane of red hair, she had it written into her contract that she didn't have to cut it for a film. But for With a Song in My Heart, she agreed to a shorter hairdo more like Froman's. Hayward was on hand when Froman pre-recorded the songs for the film, studying Froman's gestures as she sang; in return, the singer was often on the set during filming of the musical numbers, watching Hayward closely and coaching her as she expertly lip-synched the songs. Fortunately, Hayward's low speaking voice was an excellent match for the singer's contralto vocals. Hayward's co-stars in With a Song in My Heart were David Wayne as Froman's first husband and manager, and Rory Calhoun as the co-pilot who saved her life. Although it's not explicit in the film, Froman eventually divorced her husband and married the pilot. But the actor who made the biggest impression was a young newcomer who appeared briefly in only two scenes. Robert Wagner had recently been signed to a Fox contract, and had played bit parts in a few films. In his first scene in With a Song in My Heart, he plays a shy young paratrooper whom Froman singles out to croon to during a nightclub performance. Later in the film, the same soldier, now shell-shocked, is moved to tears when she sings "I'll Walk Alone" to him. Wagner later recalled that Hayward asked director Walter Lang to shoot the scene from behind her. Then, with her focus on Wagner and her own emotional reaction evident to him, she coaxed a tear from the young actor. The critics noticed him, and Wagner's career was launched. "One Robert Wagner plays the scene with quiet force," one reviewer wrote. The public loved With a Song in My Heart, making it one of the top ten grossing pictures of the year, and hundreds of critics voted it one of the year's top ten films in Film Daily's poll. But New York Times critic Bosley Crowther disagreed. "[It] is just about as grandiose and mawkish as Hollywood homage can be." However, Crowther admitted that "The Technicolor is dazzling and the production numbers are full of splash." Variety was kinder, calling it "a heartening drama." Hayward won the third of her five Academy Award® nominations for With a Song in My Heart. She lost to Shirley Booth in Come Back, Little Sheba, but Hayward won a Golden Globe for her performance. With a Song in My Heart won an Oscar® for Best Scoring of a Musical Picture, beating Singin' in the Rain. It also earned Thelma Ritter a Best Supporting Actress nod, as well as nominations for Color Costume Design and Sound. Hayward finally got to sing in her own voice in I'll Cry Tomorrow (1955), the biography of alcoholic singer Lillian Roth, and earned another nomination. She finally won her Oscar® for I Want to Live! (1958), a true story about a woman convicted of murder who fights to avoid execution. Director: Walter Lang Producer: Lamar Trotti Screenplay: Lamar Trotti Cinematography: Leon Shamroy Editor: J. Watson Webb, Jr. Costume Design: Charles Le Maire Art Direction: Lyle Wheeler, Joseph C. Wright Musical Director: Alfred Newman Principal Cast: Susan Hayward (Jane Froman), Rory Calhoun (John Burn), David Wayne (Don Ross), Thelma Ritter (Clancy), Robert Wagner (Paratrooper), Helen Westcott (Jennifer March), Una Merkel (Sister Marie), Richard Allan (Dancer), Max Showalter (Harry Guild), Lyle Talbot (Radio Director) 117 minutes by Margarita Landazuri

Quotes

Trivia

'Hayward, Susan' 's singing was dubbed by Jane Froman.

Notes

The working titles of this film were The Jane Froman Story, The Froman Story, Stardust, I'll See You in My Dreams and You and the Night and the Music. After the film's opening credits, a written foreword states, "This is a true story-the story of a girl and the story of a voice. The girl is Jane Froman, the voice is her own." Throughout the film, intermittent narration by Rory Calhoun, David Wayne and Thelma Ritter is heard as their characters describe their experiences with "Jane." At the end of the film, Jane sings a medley of songs with the soldiers, including "Deep in the Heart of Texas," "Give My Regards to Broadway," "California, Here I Come," "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny," "Chicago," "Maine Stein Song," "Back Home in Indiana," "Alabamy Bound" and "Dixie."
       The film is based on the life of popular singer and actress Jane Froman (1907-1980), who was seriously injured in a plane crash in February 1943, while she was on her way to entertain Allied troops in Europe. After more than twenty-five operations, Froman regained use of her legs and continued her successful career. [In the picture, it is stated that Froman's right leg was the one almost severed, but in a March 1952 The American Weekly article written by Froman, she related that it was her left leg which she almost lost.] As depicted in the film, John Burn was a co-pilot on the ill-fated flight, and held Froman afloat for forty-five minutes until they were both rescued. Froman divorced her first husband, comedian Don Ross to marry Burn in 1948, but they, too, divorced eight years later. Reviews of With a Song in My Heart noted that, ironically, Burn survived another plane crash on April 11, 1952, the day the film opened in Los Angeles. [Although studio publicity reported that the character of "Clancy," played by Thelma Ritter, was fictitious, the character of the wounded paratrooper, played by Robert Wagner, was based on a real soldier, according to a November 1953 Saturday Evening Post column.]
       An October 1950 New York Times article reported that M-G-M, Warner Bros., Wald-Krasna and Samuel Goldwyn were among the studios and producers bidding for the rights to Froman's story, but after meeting with producer Lamar Trotti, Froman decided to sell the rights to Twentieth Century-Fox. In mid-April 1951, Hollywood Reporter announced that Jeanne Crain had been set for the leading role, but according to a modern source, Froman preferred Susan Hayward, who resembled and sounded like her. Froman pre-recorded the songs for the picture herself, with Hayward lip-synching to the playback. According to June 1951 Hollywood Reporter news items, Dale Robertson was originally cast as "John Burn," but was replaced by Rory Calhoun after being cast in Lydia Bailey. Although Hollywood Reporter news items include the following actors in the cast, their appearance in the completed picture has not been confirmed: Joyce MacKenzie, Mae Johnson, Warren Mace, Phil Sylvester, Geraldine Farnum, Merry Anders and Joan Caton. Other Hollywood Reporter news items noted that dance director Billy Daniel was originally set to be Hayward's dance partner during "The Right Kind" number, but after he fractured his foot during rehearsals, he was replaced by Richard Allan. Actor Max Showalter changed his name to Casey Adams after finishing production on the picture, and although a December 1951 Hollywood Reporter news item reported that the studio had paid $1,650 to change the film's opening credits to include his new name, he was listed as Showalter on the viewed print.
       With a Song in My Heart, which received mostly glowing reviews, won an Academy Award for Best Scoring of a Musical Picture and was nominated for a Best Musical/Comedy Golden Globe award. Ritter received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress, and Hayward received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress and a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress in a Musical/Comedy. On February 9, 1953, Lux Radio Theatre broadcast a version of the story starring Hayward, Calhoun, Ritter and David Wayne, with Froman again singing the songs.