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DIED
October 15, 1964

RECENT CREDITS
De-Lovely (FILM)  Jul. 2, 2004
Postcards from the Edge (FILM)  Jan. 1, 1990
Torch Song Trilogy (FILM)  Dec. 14, 1988
White Mischief (FILM)  Apr. 22, 1988
Frantic (FILM)  Feb. 26, 1988

BIOGRAPHY
For fairly obvious technological reasons, the film credits of celebrated Broadway composer Cole Porter begin with the 1929 all-talkie The Battle of Paris. Fifty Million Frenchman, filmed in 1931, started out as a....
For fairly obvious technological reasons, the film credits of celebrated Broadway composer Cole Porter begin with the 1929 all-talkie The Battle of Paris. Fifty Million Frenchman, filmed in 1931, started out as a reasonable faithful adaptation of Porter's Broadway hit. By this point in time, however, the filmgoing public was tired of musicals, thus Warner Bros. blithely chopped out all the tunes: we repeatedly hear the build-up to You Do Something to Me, but never the song itself! (Porter's "leftover" score was later presented intact in the 1934 Bob Hope 2-reeler Paree, Paree). Any other composer might have been crushed by this cavalier treatment, but Porter had never been defeated by any of life's disappointments -- probably because he was cushioned by his vast inherited wealth and a lavish, globetrotting social life. Educated at Yale, Harvard, and the Paris Schola Cantorum, Porter was by 1931 internationally renowned as a composer of sophisticated, wryly risque show tunes, so his early "failure" in Hollywood posed no threat to his career. Porter continued to be represented in films via adaptations of his Broadway successes (Gay Divorcee (1934), Anything Goes (1936)) until 1936, when he penned several original songs for MGM's Born to Dance, including I've Got You Under My Skin and Easy to Love. Among Porter's later direct-to-screen compositions were such hits as Don't Fence Me In (for Hollywood Canteen (1944)), Be a Clown (The Pirate (1948)) and True Love (High Society (1955)). Shortly after completing work on MGM's Rosalie (1937), Porter was seriously injured in a riding accident. Though his crushed legs caused him excruciating pain, Porter continued to maintain his flamboyant lifestyle, stubbornly refusing to allow the doctors to amputate until it became a life-or-death situation in 1958. When Warner Bros. produced its Cole Porter biography Night and Day (1946), with Cary Grant in the lead, the studio used Porter's crippling accident as the film's central dramatic crisis. After all, you couldn't do a rags-to-riches story with a leading character whose life was all riches-to-riches.

~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


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Teri Hatcher
Mar. 5, 2003
Actress Teri Hatcher has filed for divorce from her husband of nearly nine years, actor Jon Tenney. Also: Christina Aguilera Cher Andrzej Szpilman Wladyslaw Szpilman The Pianist Julianne More The Forgotten Ashley Judd De-Lovely Jeremy Piven Scary Movie 3




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Recently Worked With...

De-Lovely
Released: Jul. 16, 2004

Kiss Me Kate
Released: Jul. 7, 2000

Postcards from the Edge
Released: Jan. 1, 1990

Torch Song Trilogy
Released: Dec. 14, 1988

White Mischief
Released: Apr. 22, 1988


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